Two new COVID-19 vaccination sites are coming to Del Mar and San Marcos.
A super vaccination station will open on February 12 at Del Mar Fairgrounds, 2260, Jimmy Durante Boulevard. The drive-up and walk-up site, operated by Scripps Health, will be open from Friday to Sunday and can increase to deliver 5,000 doses daily. Meetings are needed.
The COVID-19 vaccination site in San Marcos now immunizes seniors 65 and older, especially those who do not have access to a computer or someone to help them.
When fully operational, the site will offer approximately 500 doses daily from 7 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. The clinic is located at 1706 Descanso Ave. from San Marcos and requires appointments that can only be made by calling 2-1-1 San Diego. This San Marcos clinic will be open Monday through Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., including holidays.
The clinic is a public-private effort between Gary and the Mary West Foundation, West PACE, Gary and Mary West Senior Dental Center, West Health, San Diego County, San Marcos City and 211 San Diego.
All county top vaccination stations and distribution points or PODs currently vaccinate people in phase 1A – mainly health workers – and people aged 65 and over in phase 1B. All require appointments that can be made at vaccinationsuperstationsd.com.
How to request an appointment for the second dose
If you were unable to schedule your second dose at the time you planned or received your first dose, you should receive an email on how to schedule your second dose within five days of the due date.
If you do not receive the email five days before the due date, you can complete a San Diego 2-1-1 form so that you can schedule your second appointment.
Before doing this, please make sure you have checked all your email folders, including the junk / spam folder, before submitting a request via the form.
County-funded community health workers, known as promoters, will also reach people 65 and older in the national city of Chula Vista, the imperial city and San Ysidro directly to help them make vaccination schedules. .
The metropolitan transit system offers free travel to people with proof of a vaccination meeting. 2-1-1 San Diego and the promoters also have the ability to arrange transportation.

To date, more than 703,000 doses of COVID-19 have been delivered to the region. Of these, nearly 551,000 were administered, including more than 95,000 San Diegans who are fully vaccinated and 15.5 percent of the population over the age of 16 who received at least one dose. More information about the distribution of vaccines can be found on the county dashboard.
State values:
- The state-adjusted case rate, calculated by the state, is currently 34.2 cases per 100,000 residents, and the region is at the Purple or Tier 1 level.
- The percentage of test positivity is 9.1%, placing the county in level 1 or purple level.
- The value of county health equity, which analyzes the positivity of testing for areas with the lowest health conditions, is 12.1% and is in Purple or Level 1. This value does not move counties to more restrictive levels, but it is necessary to advance to a less restrictive level.
- The California Department of Public Health evaluates counties on a weekly basis. The next report is scheduled for Tuesday, February 16th.
Community outbreaks:
- 17 community outbreaks were confirmed in February 10:10 in business environments, two in faith-based environments, one in a hotel / resort / spa, one in a restaurant, one in a government setting, one in a setting commercial and one in a medical setting.
- In the last seven days (February 4 – February 10), 76 community outbreaks have been confirmed.
- The number of Community outbreaks remains above the trigger of seven or more in seven days.
- A community outbreak is defined as three or more cases of COVID-19 in a setting and in people from different households in the last 14 days.
Testing:
- 21,356 tests were reported to the county on February 10, and the percentage of new positive cases was 5%.
- The average continuous percentage of 14 days of positive cases is 6.4%. The target is less than 8.0%.
- The daily average of 7 days of tests is 18,738.
- People at higher risk of COVID-19 who are with or without symptoms should be tested. People with any symptoms should be tested. Nurses and essential workers should also receive a test, as well as people who have had close contact with a positive case or live in communities that are severely affected. Those who have recently returned from travel are also urged to be tested.
Cases, hospitalizations and admissions to the ICU:
- 1,113 cases were reported to the county on February 10. The total for the region is now 249,974.
- 11,193 or 4.5% of all cases required hospitalization.
- 1,532 or 0.6% of all cases and 13.7% of hospitalized cases had to be admitted to an intensive care unit.
Deaths:
- 51 deaths were reported with COVID-19. February 10. The total of the region is 2,955.
- 33 men and 18 women died between December 14 and February 10.
- Of the 51 new deaths reported today, 19 people who died were 80 years of age or older, 14 people were 70 years old, nine people were 60 years old, five people were 50 years old, two were 40 years old, and two people were 20 years old.
- 47 had underlying medical conditions, two did not and two had a pending medical history.
More information:
More detailed summaries of the data found on County coronavirus-sd.com website are updated daily around 17:00.