Health & Fitness

Omicron Cases Explode In CA: See Latest CDC Data

As Newark residents prepare for holiday gatherings, the majority of sequenced COVID-19 cases in California are now the omicron variant.

Omicron has pushed aside delta as the most common COVID-19 variant.
Omicron has pushed aside delta as the most common COVID-19 variant. (Caren Lissner/Patch)

NEWARK, CA — The omicron variant has overtaken the delta coronavirus variant, including in California, and is now dominant in the United States, accounting for 73 percent of new cases, federal health officials estimate.

The omicron spike comes three weeks after the variant was detected half a world away and days before residents of Newark gather for the holidays, sparking fears among health officials that COVID-19 cases could return to early pandemic levels.

In the region that includes California, Nevada and Arizona, omicron variant cases make of 59.5 percent of cases, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Find out what's happening in Newarkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

To the north of us, in Oregon, Washington and Idaho, it's 96 percent.

The CDC numbers reported Monday show how quickly omicron is spreading. Nationwide, omicron variant cases increased six-fold in only a week.

Find out what's happening in Newarkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In some regions of the country, the spike is higher than 73 percent. The variant accounts for at least 90 percent of new infections in the New York area, the Southeast, the Midwest and Pacific Northwest.

The delta variant had been dominant since June, and as recently as the end of November represented 99.5 percent of new cases.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky told reporters Monday that omicron’s rapid spread matches what other countries have seen.

“These new numbers are stark, but they are not surprising,” Walensky said.

Only about 28 percent of Americans have gotten their COVID-19 booster shots, which health officials say is the best defense against the omicron variant. Only about 61 percent of Americans are fully vaccinated but aren’t boosted, and health officials are worried about the nation’s ability to withstand a fifth wave of COVID-19.

For more information, go to the CDC data tracker.

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