Update on California?s Pandemic Roadmap Reminder: Until CA is protected, our actions will be aligned to achieve the following: Ensure our ability to care for the sick within our hospitals Build the capacity to protect the health and well-being of the public Prevent infection in people who are at high risk for severe disease Reduce social, emotional and economic disruptions State Reopening Roadmap Report Card Key Metrics Stability of Hospitalizations Personal Protective Equipment Inventory Healthcare Surge Capacity Testing Capacity Contact Tracing Capability Public Health Guidance in Place On-Schedule State Reopening Roadmap Report Card Stability of Hospitalizations 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 20-Apr 21-Apr 22-Apr 23-Apr 24-Apr 25-Apr 26-Apr Total Hospitalized 27-Apr 28-Apr Total ICU 29-Apr 30-Apr 1-May 2-May 3-May State Reopening Roadmap Report Card Personal Protective Equipment Inventory On-Hand Today • 18.2 million surgical masks • 5.8 million face shields • 7.2 million gloves Ordered • Hundreds of millions of surgical and n95 masks State Reopening Roadmap Report Card Surge Capacity • 14 facilities statewide ready to accept patients • 2,072 beds ready to accept patients • 10,000+ ventilators throughout the state not in use • 94,000+ applications received to join the California Health Corps State Reopening Roadmap Report Card Growing Testing Capacity • Met goal of 25,000 tests per day • 86 new testing sites statewide to focus on rural, urban, underserved areas Move to Stage 2: Lower Risk Workplaces • California is on-schedule on our Reopening Roadmap Report Card • We will begin to move into Stage 2 on Friday, May 8 • Move into Stage 2 will be gradual and only include certain industries Move to Stage 2: Lower Risk Workplaces What does this include? • Expanded retail with curbside pickup and associated manufacturing and supply chains • Examples: Bookstores, clothing stores, florists, sporting goods Move to Stage 2: Lower Risk Workplaces What is NOT included at this time? • Offices (can telework) • Seated dining at restaurants • Shopping malls Move to Stage 2: Regional Variation • Counties can move more quickly through Stage 2, if they attest that they meet the State’s readiness criteria • Counties must create and submit a readiness plan which will be publicly available What is contact tracing? When someone tests positive for COVID-19, we identify those who have been in close contact with that person. For each person we contact, we check their symptoms, offer testing, and recommend isolation. Why is contact tracing important? Enables us to suppress spread of virus to avoid outbreaks Allows us to maintain our healthcare capacity and confidently modify our Stay-at-Home order. Contact Tracing: Workforce Expansion Building on Local Capacity • Identifying up to 10,000 individuals • Redirection of State staff • Staff requested by and assigned to local health authorities • Scalable model Contact Tracing: Virtual Training Academy • Statewide virtual training academy • High-quality, free training • Available to all local public health departments without charge Contact Tracing: Data Management Platform • Available to all local public health departments without charge • Focused on health and confidentiality • Supports both Case Investigation + Contact Tracing • Interoperability with disease surveillance system • Supports symptom checks via text, chat, email, phone, automation CALIFORNIA ALL Your Actions Save Lives covid19.ca.gov