KTLA

L.A. County COVID-19 transmission rate hits lowest level, marking major coronavirus win

On Wednesday, Dr. Christina Ghaly, director of health services for L.A. County, said an increasing downturn in the daily number of new confirmed cases suggested that the effective transmission number was now slightly under 1. In this photo, Lindsay Rojas, owner of Lindsay’s Dog Walks in Culver City, walks golden retrievers Gomez, left, and Nikki.(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

Los Angeles County has reached a promising new milestone in its fight to control the spread of the highly infectious coronavirus.

The transmission rate in the nation’s most populous county, home to 56% of COVID-19 deaths in California, is now in its best position since the magnitude of the outbreak became clear in March.


At the start of the pandemic’s arrival in L.A., the transmission rate of the coronavirus was high; on average, every one person infected went on to infect more than three other people. Scientists call this rate of transmission the effective transmission number, or “R.”

But by late March, after the stay-at-home order was put into effect, the effective transmission number fell to 1, meaning that, on average, every person with COVID-19 infected one other person. That rate, if sustained, means that the number of people infected remains constant.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.