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LAFD chief reports ‘sharp decline’ in COVID-19 cases after FF vaccinations

Los Angeles City Fire Department Chief Ralph Terrazas said data shows the department was averaging 15 new cases a day before the vaccines, which has now dropped to fewer than five

la times lafd vaccine decline in covid cases

Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) Fire Inspector John Novela receives a Moderna COVID-19 vaccine given by LAFD Firefighter-Paramedic Mario Guillen. LAFD Chief Ralph M. Terrazas reported a “sharp decline” in cases among firefighters after department members began receiving the vaccine.

Photo/Gary Coronado, Los Angeles Times

Dakota Smith and Ben Welsh
Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — The number of Los Angeles firefighters testing positive for the coronavirus has dropped significantly since the city fire agency began offering its members vaccinations, Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas said in a memo to firefighters this week.

Terrazas, in a memo dated Tuesday and obtained by The Times, said the LAFD has seen a “sharp decline” in cases since firefighters started getting the shots on Dec. 28.

A chart included with the memo shows that the LAFD was averaging more than 15 new cases per day before the vaccination program. The number soon plummeted. In the most recent week, the department has averaged fewer than five new cases per day.

“We are continuing to strongly encourage our sworn members to get the COVID vaccine and are offering it multiple times per week indefinitely,” Terrazas told The Times on Wednesday.

The city’s roughly 3,350 firefighters are on the front lines, working as paramedics and emergency medical technicians, and were among those first allowed access to the vaccinations.

The success cited by the chief comes despite the fact that in Los Angeles, and elsewhere, some first responders have been reluctant to be vaccinated.

Despite the urging of the chief and an incentive program that offers prizes to firefighters who volunteer for the shots, only 60% of the city’s firefighters had been vaccinated at the end of last week, according to the department.

Some officials said that firefighters don’t feel comfortable being among the first to take the vaccine. Other firefighters argue that they’ve already been infected, so they don’t feel they need the vaccine.

More than 860 city firefighters — nearly one-quarter of the force — have tested positive and two have died.

Terrazas, in his memo, also pointed to news coverage of the vaccine and wrote that the doses developed by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health have caused very few cases of severe allergic reaction during its initial rollout across the country.

Terrazas wrote that about 550 members have tested positive for the virus since Thanksgiving. “If you have had COVID-19, it is recommended that you wait 90 days after your diagnosis to get the COVID-19 vaccine,” Terrazas wrote.

The L.A. County Fire Department also has seen a sharp decline in new coronavirus cases within the department since beginning the vaccination process in December, said public information officer Jon Matheny.

Mayor Eric Garcetti said earlier this month that he would potentially make the vaccination mandatory if firefighters remain reluctant in a few months. He said Monday the city isn’t looking at enforcement right now.

“I would just encourage every single firefighter, follow your union chief, follow your chief, their example and get the vaccine,” Garcetti said. “You’re at that front of the line, you should.”

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