Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California newsletter. It’s Friday, Feb. 5, and I’m writing from Los Angeles.
I can no longer smell cigarette smoke, feces or garlic. It’s not that the odors are gone entirely — I still smell something, but it’s an amorphous and earthy scent, indistinct from any particular thing.
One could argue that these were pretty lucky losses, as far as olfactory disappearances go. Though I do find myself obsessively checking the bottoms of my shoes every time I return from a walk.
Anosmia, or the complete loss of smell, has become one of the hallmark symptoms of COVID-19. Most people who recover from COVID-19 also recover their sense of smell and taste within weeks. But researchers estimate that long-term smell dysfunction affects about 10% of COVID patients.
I had COVID early last spring, and my sense of smell and taste began to return about a month after I first got sick. But not entirely.
Have you ever run a chunk of text through Google Translate a few times, before eventually translating it back to the original language? It’s a bit like that. A few smells are gone entirely. But far more appear as awkwardly translated versions of the originals, similar but not entirely right.
In a new story, my colleague Brittny Mejia writes about parosmia, the medical term for this distortion of smell, and the suddenly booming business of olfactory restoration.
[Read the story: “Months after contracting COVID-19, some will try anything to regain their sense of smell” in the Los Angeles Times]
Even before the pandemic hit, a small percentage of the population dealt with smell loss for a variety of reasons. But COVID has pushed the formerly niche issue into an unlikely spotlight. AbScent, a United Kingdom charity that helps those suffering smell loss or disorders, saw its membership jump from 1,500 in February 2020 to more than 40,000.
My smell distortions rank as little more than an annoyance, but the issue has been life-altering for some, leaving them perpetually nauseated and unable to partake in foods and activities they once enjoyed.
As Mejia reports, people dealing with smell dysfunction have scheduled medical appointments, joined support groups and spent months using smell kits to retrain their noses. Universities have launched studies on recovering smell after COVID-19, starting treatment trials using nasal rinses and essential oils.
Her whole story is fascinating, and delves beyond the science of errant smells to lyrically explore the emotional connections that people have to certain scents.
And now, here’s what’s happening across California:
Jockeying over who gets the COVID-19 vaccine next: Teachers? Workers? The disabled? The sick? The state has launched a high-level task force to sort out logistics for how residents with disabilities and underlying health conditions will be prioritized next, state officials announced at Wednesday’s vaccine advisory committee meeting. The group spent significant time discussing how those residents will be factored into the state’s priority guidance — a recommendation that could come as early as Friday. Los Angeles Times
Johnson & Johnson has asked the FDA to authorize its COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use, setting up what is likely to be a fast-moving review process that could lead to millions more doses becoming available to step up a stumbling immunization drive. Bloomberg
Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing.
L.A. STORIES
The radical anti-vaccine faction that shut down Dodger Stadium says it is not done: “Ignoring public health orders and the coronavirus deaths of 450,000 Americans, they are entering stores without masks, eating at restaurants that refuse to shut down, hosting curfew-breaking parties at the beach — and thinking of ways to go bigger.” Los Angeles Times
COVID-19 in L.A. County is finally on a sustained decline after catastrophic winter: The numbers of new COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations are nosediving in Los Angeles County, but officials stress that the county is far from out of the woods. The figures remain well above their pre-surge levels. Los Angeles Times
Kids have returned to this Sherman Oaks elementary school, but they’re paid actors. The Los Angeles Unified School District is facing criticism from parents who question why child actors can film an Apple TV show on campus when high-needs students can’t return for in-person services. Los Angeles Daily News
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