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Newly identified COVID-19 strain in Los Angeles could be driving region's virus surge, study suggests - CBS News
Jan 20, 2021 56 secs

A newly identified strain of the coronavirus prevalent in Southern California could be contributing to the drastic spike in cases in the region, according to new research released Monday.

The study, which has not been peer-reviewed, found that more than a third of recent COVID-19 patients at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles were infected with the strain, according to a release summarizing its findings. .

CAL.20C was nearly nonexistent in October — but by December, it accounted for 36% of virus samples from Cedars-Sinai patients and 24% of all samples from Southern California, according to the release.

"The double-digit prevalence of the CAL.20C strain in November and December was striking given that it was first observed in July 2020 in just one of 1,230 virus samples in Los Angeles County and had not again been detected in Southern California until October," said Jasmine Plummer, a research scientist at the Cedars-Sinai Center for Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics and a co-corresponding author of the study

That strain, which is 50% more contagious than other forms of the virus, has been identified in at least 20 states, according to CBS News' David Begnaud. 

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