See how COVID deaths are plummeting this spring in California and the U.S.

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The number of COVID deaths continues to fall in California and the rest of the country, dropping 65% in the last three months in the Golden State, another sign that the virus is losing its grip on our lives.

In March, California added just 540 names to its COVID death total, and numbers for April could be even lower.

After three years of the pandemic, the state has shown a notable pattern of decline in deaths from the virus: An average of 5,100 Californians died in each of the first 12 months, starting in April 2020. That dropped by more than half in the second year to 2,400 and by even more to 900 in the most-recent 12-month period. A total of 101,000 Californians have died from COVID since the pandemic began.

“I think we’re finally seeing the fruits of the fact that we’re dealing with a less virulent organism,” said Dr. John Swartzberg, clinical professor emeritus of infectious diseases and vaccinology at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health. “And we’ve got a high immune population to withstand serious infection.”

The declining number of deaths — mirroring a drop in COVID hospital patients — comes despite the long-anticipated end to California’s COVID emergency and almost universal shedding of masks and other precautions over the last months.

March saw one of the lowest death tolls since the virus first overwhelmed hospitals and intensive care units in early 2020. The pattern is similar across the country, with nearly 8,800 Americans dying in March, the lowest monthly death total since last summer. But the virus continues to be a significant health threat for the elderly and others with compromised health: In California, COVID still claimed more lives in February and March of this year than died in the entire “severe” 2017-2018 flu season.

Across the country, an average of nearly 300 people died from the virus every day in March. Who is dying still?

“They tend to be over 75,” said Dr. Chin-Hong, a UCSF professor of medicine who specializes in infectious diseases. “And they tend to have gotten the first two shots in December of 2020 but didn’t get a booster,” he said, reminding those who are over 65 or eligible to get the most recently available booster.

“Age is the most powerful risk factor,” said Chin-Hong. “It’s still the same group in the hospital that I’m seeing, even though it’s fewer.”

COVID hospitalizations in the state have been declining since a winter surge, approaching but not quite reaching the lows we saw in the summer of 2021.

Along with stronger population immunity from infections and vaccinations and low community spread, Chin-Hong has noticed another factor that might be contributing to better outcomes and fewer deaths. “There’s more comfort in Paxlovid,” he said, pointing to the trend over the past six months with Pfizer’s anti-viral medication to treat the illness.

“At some points in the pandemic there were a lot of fears about Paxlovid,” he said, including high-profile reports of “rebound” infections after taking the drug. But now? New evidence suggests the rebound infections can happen at a similar rate without Paxlovid use, and primary care physicians are getting more familiar with the drug. “I think there’s more comfort in health care providers and prescribing it.”

And that’s having an impact. The last time deaths were this low in the Golden State was May of last year when 512 died, before growing in June to 833.

Now, on the heels of mask mandates ending in many places, the national COVID emergency is set to end in May, and with it the availability of the free at-home test kits. You have a few days left to order more tests for your household from the federal website if you have yet to reach the limit.

Experts warn that COVID outbreaks are not a thing of the past. After mandatory masking in medical facilities was lifted in California in early April, it didn’t take long before Kaiser Permanente’s Santa Rosa Medical Center had a COVID outbreak, with more than a dozen staff and patients testing positive, prompting them to reinstate their mask mandate last week.

And as many of the structural protections disappear, it is also getting harder to track how prevalent the virus is in the community. For those who are elderly or immunocompromised or who simply would like to continue taking precautions to lower their risk of catching the virus, case data is becoming increasingly unreliable as a way to assess relative risk.

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