Category: Corona Virus

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The Real Reason Americans Aren’t Isolating – The Atlantic

January 13, 2022

The life of a hotel front-desk clerk in a red state can tell you a lot about Americas COVID-19 failures. He doesnt want to be identified, because he is worried about being fired, but I can tell you this: He doesnt have paid sick days or health insurance. About a month ago, he got COVID and took four days off, using three of his seven vacation days and going a day without pay. Last week, one of his kids tested positive for COVID, and he thinks he has it again. But when he tried to get tested, the earliest appointment was in a few days. So with a headache, a sore throat, and a runny nose, he went into work anyway. If I need to pay rent and buy food, I gotta go to work, he told me. I was feeling pretty bad earlier, but its like, well, I could just take some DayQuil.

He wears a mask. He tries to be careful. He is worried about infecting other workers and guests. But sometimes it feels pointless, because some hotel guests have walked in maskless, announced that they have COVID, and later summoned the hotel staff to their room for fresh towels.

When the CDC shortened isolation guidelines for people with COVID to five days, from 10, some people felt that the agency was prematurely pushing sick people back to work. But realistically, many Americans were never able to take a full 10, or even five, days off to recover from the coronavirus. Like the hotel worker, many people who think they might have COVID cant immediately find tests. The federal government offers no services for or payments to people in isolation, and has no one checking in with the sick. Most local and state governments dont do anything for people in isolation either. Most important, millions of Americans still dont have paid sick leave, so taking any time off workfive days, 10, or twocan be financially ruinous. The CDC issuing isolation guidelines of any length to workers without paid leave is the equivalent of the government telling people to make sure that they quarantine inside a lime-green Lamborghini. The lack of guarantee to paid leave is the key missing public-health element in our response to the crisis, says Hannah Matthews, the deputy executive director for policy at the Center for Law and Social Policy.

Read: A hidden COVID-19 risk factor: your boss

About a fifth of all U.S. workers dont get paid sick leave, and the lowest-paid workersthose who serve food, clean hotels, or stock groceriesare least likely to have it. Fourteen states and Washington, D.C., plus about two dozen cities and counties, have paid-sick-day laws, but approximately 75 million private-sector workers live in jurisdictions not covered by those measures, according to the paid-leave-advocacy group A Better Balance. Some states expanded paid leave during the pandemic, but many of those programs have since expired. Some employers also began offering paid leave, but its not clear how long theyll continue to do so. Already, Walmart, taking a cue from the CDC, has cut paid leave for workers who get COVID down to one week from two.

The emergency paid-sick-leave law passed by Congress in 2020 prevented about 400 COVID cases per state per day. That provision has since expired, as has a second one granting tax credits to employers that offered paid leave voluntarily. Even when the 2020 measure was in effect, it didnt cover every worker; only half of all workers knew about it; and about 15 million Americans a month still lacked sufficient sick leave, a study found. Since then, theres been nothing. Were allergic to imposing new regulations on workplaces in this country, says Vicki Shabo, a senior fellow for paid-leave policy at the think tank New America.

A good way to make sure a problem is never solved is to avoid measuring it. This is perhaps why no American agency appears to measure whether COVID-positive Americans can afford to self-isolate, or whether they are actually doing so. Were running on a nationwide honor system, and skyrocketing case numbers suggest that we arent behaving particularly honorably.

Other countries provide money or paid sick leave to people in COVID isolation, but even in those places adherence to quarantine rules is not great. In the United Kingdom, where low-income people received 500 (about $680) each time they were required to isolate, about 80 percent of people admitted to leaving home at least once in the week after developing COVID symptoms. In Norway, where sick pay is statutory, 65 percent of people who were supposed to isolate didnt. In Japan, where COVID-positive people received a sickness allowance, just 17 percent of people who had fever or cold symptoms in the spring of 2020 practiced strict self-isolation.

Its therefore unlikely that sick Americans, many of whom get no money while they isolate, are isolating more consistently. Daniel Schneider, a Harvard sociologist, surveyed hourly workers in the fall and found that just 45 percent of those who had contracted COVID had paid sick leave. These workers practically live in poverty: A fifth of them told Schneider that they had gone hungry in the past month because they couldnt afford enough food. Of those who reported feeling ill at some point during the pandemic, 65 percent worked while they had symptoms, many because they were afraid theyd get in trouble for calling out sick.

Another major reason Schneiders survey respondents gave for going into work was I didnt want to let down my co-workers. In many jobs, coming in sick is a virtue, or at least the norm. Lots of things in public health get upheld through norms, rather than fines or punishment, and this norm has been slow to change with COVID, says Marcus Plescia, the chief medical officer of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials.

Read: The real reason Americans arent quarantining

A Better Balance, which runs a helpline for workers struggling with paid-leave issues, gets calls more or less daily from people saying, Ive tested positive; is there any compensation I can get? says Marcella Kocolatos, the helplines director. I often have to tell them no, unfortunately there isnt. She recalled one fast-food worker who was ordered to finish her shift even though she tested positive in the middle of the workday.

Employees who dont have a unionwhich is the large majority of workershave little recourse after being asked to work while sick. Last year alone, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the branch of government that polices employers, received dozens of complaints from employees saying that their boss was allowing sick workers to return to work, or that workers were being disciplined for not returning to work while still in isolation. A liquor store in Pennsylvania was allegedly telling employees to come into work before the criteria to discontinue home isolation are met; employee forced to return to work before isolation period over and then another 2 employees got sick, someone at a cellphone store in Virginia said; employees are being encouraged to work when sick due to limited staffing, according to a pizzeria worker in Minnesota. Some of these are closed complaints, which during the Trump administration usually just meant that OSHA had called the employer and told them to stop, says Deborah Berkowitz, a former OSHA senior policy adviser and a fellow at Georgetown University. (OSHA did not reply to requests for comment.)

The law behind the agency is weak and OSHA is underfunded, Berkowitz told me. Under Republican administrations, like the one that governed the United States for all of 2020, the agencys enforcement work grinds to a halt. When Berkowitz was at OSHA, she worked on a regulation that was meant to protect workers from silica dust. It took six years to issue it. Workplace exposures are a significant driver of this pandemic, Berkowitz said. And workplace exposures put workers at a heightened risk of COVID.

The government could fix the paid-leave issueit showed in 2020 that it is capable of doing so. Instead, it issues guidelines and watches people spread COVID because they cant afford not to.

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The Real Reason Americans Aren't Isolating - The Atlantic

COVID-19 in South Dakota: 2,584 total new cases; Death toll rises to 2,544; Active cases at 24,796 – KELOLAND.com

January 13, 2022

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) There are now 343 people hospitalized due to COVID-19 as of Thursday, up from Wednesday (336). Throughout the pandemic, there have been 9,381 total people who have been hospitalized.

With 10 new deaths reported on Thursday, the death toll is now at 2,544. While the difference in total deaths between Wednesday and Thursday is 10, the number of male deaths reported went up by 12 and there were four deaths added to the total for female. New deaths were reported in the following age ranges: 50-59 (2); 60-69 (3); 70-79 (3); 80+ (2). The following counties reported deaths: Bon Homme (2); Brown (1); Hughes (1); Lake (2); Minnehaha (2); Pennington (1); Sanborn (1).

South Dakota reported its first COVID-19 death in the 0-9 age range on Wednesday, according to data from thestate health department.

All of South Dakotas 66 counties are listed as having high community spread. High community spread is 100 cases or greater per 100,000 or a 10% or greater PCR test positivity rate.

The latest seven-day PCR test positivity rate for the state is 35.7% for Jan. 5 11.

On Thursday, 2,584 total new COVID-19 cases were reported, bringing the states total case count to 200,496, up from Wednesday (197,912).

The active case count is at 24,796, up from Wednesday (22,743). Total recovered cases are now at 173,156, up from Wednesday (172,635).

There have been 1,286 Delta variant cases (B.1.617.2, AY.1-AY.25) detected in South Dakota through sentinel monitoring, an increase of three over the previous report. There have been 176 cases of the B.1.1.7 (Alpha variant), four cases of P.1. (Gamma variant) and two cases of the B.1.351 (Beta variant).

The number of Omicron cases is at 24, up one from the previous report. On Dec. 22, the state reported its first Omicron variant case in a man in his 20s from Minnehaha County.

On November 24, the South Dakota Department of Health updated how it reports the percent of the population getting vaccinated. To align with the vaccine-eligible population, the Department of Health is including children who are 5-11 years old. The state says there was a decrease of 7% from the 12+ year old population.

For COVID-19 vaccines, 68.6% the population 5-years-old and above has received at least one dose while 56.3% have completed the vaccination series. For booster doses, 28.35% of those eligible have completed their booster dose.

There have been 631,503 doses of the Pfizer vaccine administered, 447,079 of the Moderna vaccine and 36,160 doses of the Janssen vaccine.

There have been 169,747 persons who have completed two doses of Moderna. There have been 245,845 persons who have received two doses of Pfizer.

As for booster doses, 101,855 people have received a 3rd Pfizer shot, 79,753 people have received a 3rd Moderna dose and 2,318 have received a Janssen booster.

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COVID-19 in South Dakota: 2,584 total new cases; Death toll rises to 2,544; Active cases at 24,796 - KELOLAND.com

China: Over 20 million in COVID-19 lockdown ahead of 2022 Olympics – NPR

January 13, 2022

A volunteer receives daily necessities on behalf of residents under home quarantine in Xi'an, capital of northwest China's Shaanxi Province, Jan. 12, 2022. Tao Ming/Xinhua via AP File Photo hide caption

A volunteer receives daily necessities on behalf of residents under home quarantine in Xi'an, capital of northwest China's Shaanxi Province, Jan. 12, 2022.

TAIPEI, Taiwan Just weeks before hosting the Beijing Winter Olympics, China is battling multiple coronavirus outbreaks in half a dozen cities, with the one closest to the capital driven by the highly transmissible omicron variant.

With the success of the Games and China's national dignity at stake, Beijing is doubling down on its "zero-tolerance" COVID-19 policy.

Across China, more than 20 million people are in some form of lockdown, with many prevented from leaving their homes.

Tianjin, only about an hour from Beijing, is on high alert, although it has refrained from imposing a complete lockdown such as that in Xi'an, a city of 14 million.

Instead, it has sealed off several residential communities and universities, canceled almost all flights, suspended high speed train service and closed highways. People leaving the city are required to present negative COVID-19 tests and receive special permission.

The city conducted mass testing for a second time for its 14 million residents on Wednesday, and asked them to stay put in their homes until they receive a negative result.

Tianjin's proximity to Beijing makes the timing particularly fraught. During the Tokyo Olympics in July, Japan saw a widespread outbreak driven by the delta variant.

Despite that, the disruptions for people in Tianjin remain relatively light.

"Everything is fine, the supermarkets and restaurants, you can go to all normally," said Yu Xuan, who works at a university in Tianjin.

Wang Dacheng, another resident, said his father who has trouble walking was able to get tested in their apartment.

"Tianjin people are pretty optimistic, everyone's been very calm and collected," Wang said.

Elsewhere, in Xi'an to the west and several cities in Henan province, the measures are far more onerous, leading to complaints that people sequestered in their apartments were running out of food.

Workers wearing face masks to protect against coronavirus stand inside a screening area for Winter Olympic spectators set up near the Olympic Green in Beijing, Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2022. Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo hide caption

China has followed the uncompromising policy almost from the start of the pandemic, beginning with the unprecedented step of sealing off 11 million people in the central city Wuhan where the virus was first detected, along and other parts of Hubei province in January 2020.

It has been able to deal with local outbreaks through lockdowns, strict border controls and contact tracing aided by increased digital surveillance. The measures have kept the virus from spreading into a full-fledged national outbreak so far. The vaccination rate now tops 85%.

With the Olympics due to begin on Feb. 4 and support staff already arriving, the task has become even more critical. Whether Beijing' s safeguards will hold up in face of the omicron variant is a crucial question.

"I think it truly is a critical juncture for China. Can it stave off omicron?" said Dali Yang, a professor of Chinese politics at the University of Chicago.

China reported 124 domestically transmitted cases on Thursday, including 76 in Henan province and 41 in Tianjin. Authorities have reported a total of 104,379 cases, 3,460 of them currently active, and 4,636 deaths, a figure that hasn't changed in months.

Beijing's Olympic bubble is even stricter than Tokyo's, which was mostly effective in stopping transmission, despite some leakages, said Kenji Shibuya, research director at the Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research and a public health expert.

Beijing faces a potentially bigger risk because the more contagious omicron variant has shown itself adept at evading vaccines.

Moreover, the lack of widespread outbreaks means the Chinese population is protected only by vaccines and not from antibodies produced by previous infections, said Dr. Vineeta Bal, a top Indian immunologist.

"The Olympics would be the first trial," said Bal. Omicron "can easily travel in China."

Unlike the Tokyo Olympics bubble, there will be no contact between those inside and the outside world.

Officials, athletes, staff and journalists will travel between hotels and competition venues on specially designated vehicles in what is described as a closed-loop system. Chinese will have to quarantine for three weeks upon leaving the bubble.

Even trash from within will be handled separately and Beijing's traffic police say anyone involved in a collision with a designated Winter Olympics vehicle should take care to not come into contact with those on board and wait for a special team to handle matters.

If strictly enforced, such measures should be able to prevent the spread of the virus within the bubble, said Kei Saito, a virologist at the University of Tokyo. But outside, it could be a different story.

"Omicron is three to four times more transmissible than delta ... I think it's almost impossible to control the spread of omicron," Saito said.

Yet, despite the unabating global pandemic and controversies including a U.S.-led diplomatic boycott, organizers are determined that the Games will go on.

"The world is turning its eyes to China, and China is ready," the Chinese president and leader of the ruling Communist Party, Xi Jinping, said during an inspection tour of competition venues last week.

___

Associated Press researcher Chen Si in Shanghai and AP Science Writer Aniruddha Ghosal in New Delhi contributed to this report.

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China: Over 20 million in COVID-19 lockdown ahead of 2022 Olympics - NPR

Coronavirus in Arkansas: another record as over 10,000 new cases reported, 14 more deaths – KNWA

January 13, 2022

Posted: Jan 12, 2022 / 02:49 PM CST / Updated: Jan 12, 2022 / 02:49 PM CST

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) The Arkansas Department of Health reported another single-day record with 10,974 new cases on Wednesday, bringing the total during the pandemic to 640,799.

There were 14 deaths due to COVID-19.

The number of individuals hospitalized by the virus grew by 37, to 1,185. Of those patients, 167 are on ventilators, an increase of four over Tuesdays numbers.

The number of vaccine doses administered rose to 3,786,351, an increase of 7,570 from the day before. Of all doses received, 79.8% have been administered.

The ADH lists 1,521,763 Arkansans as fully immunized, with 366,295 qualifying as partially immunized.

The counties reporting the most new cases on Wednesday are:

Our second shipment of at-home tests has been received and were working to get those tests around the state, said Gov. Asa Hutchinson in a Tweet. Were monitoring our hospital space and providing resources when needed.

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Coronavirus in Arkansas: another record as over 10,000 new cases reported, 14 more deaths - KNWA

Utah surge ongoing with 12,990 new COVID-19 cases Thursday – fox13now.com

January 13, 2022

SALT LAKE CITY The ongoing omicron surge in Utah continued Thursday as the state reported 12,990 new COVID-19 cases, marking the second straight day Utah topped 10,000 daily cases.

READ: Alpine School District announces remote learning days

The state also reported seven additional deaths. There are currently 638 people hospitalized in Utah with COVID-19.

The rolling 7-day average for positive tests is now at 9,564 per day. The rolling 7-day average for percent positivity of "people over people" is 36.5%. and the rolling 7-day average for percent positivity of "tests over tests" is 25.2%.

Among the new cases, school-aged children accounted for 3.002 of them, including 797 cases in children ages 5-10, 659 cases in children ages 11-13, and 1,551 cases in children ages 14-18.

WATCH: Utah Jazz welcome fans to stadium with mask mandate in place

"In the last 28 days, people who are unvaccinated are at 15.2 times greater risk of dying from COVID-19, 6.7 times greater risk of being hospitalized due to COVID-19, and 2.3 times greater risk of testing positive for COVID-19 than vaccinated people," UDOH reports. "Since February 1, 2021, people who are unvaccinated are at 6.8 times greater risk of dying from COVID-19, 5.1 times greater risk of being hospitalized due to COVID-19, and 1.9 times greater risk of testing positive for COVID-19 than vaccinated people."

With seven additional deaths reported Thursday, Utah's death toll stands at 3,943:

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Utah surge ongoing with 12,990 new COVID-19 cases Thursday - fox13now.com

Increasing demand for coronavirus tests in Southern Oregon – KDRV

January 13, 2022

MEDFORD, Ore. Covid-19 tests are in high demand as Omicron cases surge throughout Southern Oregon. Since more people have needed a test, testing sites requiring appointments must be booked days in advance. While some other sites are able to test people without an appointment, long lines have deterred some locals from going to get tested.

Medical Director for Jackson County Public Health, Dr. Leona OKeefe said, I havent heard yet of delays in the report of the actual result of the test, but I wouldnt surprised if that starts happening soon. As the volume of tests increase, the workload increases and just like everywhere else in our country, theres a shortage of staff which can lead to a delay in the reporting.

Newswatch 12 asked if Jackson County has the staffing necessary to support another clinic and OKeefe said, We have to reach outward for that staffing. Staffing is the main limitation.

Of course, home tests are another option but nationwide again, those are limited and were doing everything we can to get those out there. When theres a shortage in the actual test itself, theres only so much we can do unfortunately.

Siskiyou Community Health Center in Grants Pass is expecting a federal shipment of at home tests to distribute to people who need it, according to Jennifer Johnstun who is a registered nurse and Chief Quality Officer at the health center.

Thats coming but its not here yet, there are other resources in the community also for testing and were doing our very best to get our tests turned around as rapidly as possible. All of our tests are rapid result, but with the number of tests were getting, we try to get those results out within 24 hours.

Siskiyou Community Health Centeroffers both the PCR and Antigen tests. PCR tests detect viral RNA while antigen tests detect specific proteins and provide results in as little as 15 to 45 minutes.

Health officials are recommending seemingly symptomatic people not minimize what they are experiencing to a cold, but rather get tested or quarantine as if it is Covid-19.

Covid-19 Testing Resources:

Jackson County

Jospehine County

Follow@KDRV12on Facebook and@KDRVon Twitter for the latest news, sports, and weather in Southern Oregon and Northern California.

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Increasing demand for coronavirus tests in Southern Oregon - KDRV

The Mood in the Capitol Was Already Dark. Then Came Omicron. – The New York Times

January 13, 2022

(Ms. Greenes father built a significant Atlanta-area building company before selling it to his daughter and son-in-law, while Mr. Clydes hulking gun shop, Clyde Armory, has kept him flush. They have already absorbed more than $100,000 in fines for their mask strike.)

Speaking just outside the chamber with his mask off, Representative Lee Zeldin, Republican of New York, was nonchalant. Omicron is mild, he said, and the steep rise in cases, in his home county on Long Island and across the country, will be followed, he hoped, by an equally steep decline.

Those who are testing positive include the vaccinated and the unvaccinated, but for those I speak to and there are many who have tested positive in recent weeks fortunately for them, every single person Ive spoken to has had a much milder experience than what was experienced in past variants, said Mr. Zeldin, who is running for governor of New York.

Democrats tend to be a little less sanguine. Signs posted throughout the House proclaim in all capital letters USE OF FACE COVERINGS REQUIRED, but they appear to have only made the defiant dig in.

Jan. 13, 2022, 5:27 p.m. ET

That kind of defiance, we see it all across the board here, said Representative James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, the Democratic whip, who missed his granddaughters wedding last month as he battled Covid. And these are people who I hope will be able to survive whatever comes their way.

The procedural machinations around voting rights legislation and the hand-wringing over President Bidens social safety net and climate change bill can seem a bit beside the point when cases are soaring, hospitalizations nationwide are up 84 percent over the past two weeks and the average number of deaths now exceeds 1,700 a day.

Behind those marquee issues, the pandemic is again rising as a political focus. House Democrats on Wednesday rushed out new legislation to provide free at-home coronavirus tests while Senator Bernie Sanders, independent of Vermont, reintroduced his bill to send N95 masks to every home.

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The Mood in the Capitol Was Already Dark. Then Came Omicron. - The New York Times

Information for travellers in regards to the corona virus …

January 10, 2022

Travelling restrictions for Sweden

A Covid certificate is needed for foreign nationals in order to travel to Sweden. The certificate shows that a person has been tested negative, has been vaccinated against, or recovered from Covid-19.

From 28 December all travellers over the age of 12 need to presenta negative Covid-19 testwhen arriving in Sweden, regardless of which country you are travelling from and regardless of whether you have been vaccinated or have recovered from Covid-19. Antigen tests and PCR tests (NAAT test) are allowed as a test, which can be up to 48 hours old when entering Sweden.

Those who enter Sweden from abroad are also recommended to take a Covid-19 test on arrival in Sweden. This applies to both vaccinated and unvaccinated people, even if they have had Covid-19 in the past six months. This also applies to those who have shown a negative test in connection with the entry. Children under pre-school age are exempt.

There is a ban on non-essential travel to Sweden from countries outside the EU/EEA until 31 January 2022. A number of countries are exempt from the entry ban.

For more information about the Covid certificate, travel to Sweden and a list of the countries that are exempt from the entry ban, please visit krisinformation.se: International travel restrictions and the FAQ page of the Swedish Government.

You can also use Re-open EU, an official website of the European Union, that provides information on the various measures in place, including on quarantine and testing requirements for travellers, the EU Digital Covid certificate to help you exercise your right to free movement, and mobile coronavirus contact tracing and warning apps. The information is updated frequently and available in 24 languages.

As of 1 December, organizers of public gatherings or public events can choose that everyone who participates in the event must show proof of vaccination if the event is indoors and more than 100 people participate. If the participants do not need to present proof of vaccination, special infection control measures must be taken by the organizers. For more information, please visit krisinformation.se: Current rules and recommendations and folkhalsomyndigheten.se: Covid-19 infection control measures as from 22 November and 1 December.

As of 8 December, The Public Health Agency of Sweden (Folkhlsomyndigheten) recommends the following:

Those running a venue serving food and drink are responsible for ensuring that the premises are designed so that crowding can be avoided. Read more at krisinformation.se: New measures to reduce the spread of infection.

As of 23 December, the following applies:

Read more at krisinformation.se: New measures against Covid-19.

Please keep yourself informed of the different regulations that may apply in different countries for travelling from Sweden.

Please noteThis page is based on information from the Swedish authorities. We strive to keep it updated with the latest changes, but as this kind of information may be due to change quickly and may also differ for parts of the country, you need to check what applies by visiting the links of this page as well as the relevant authorities in the country you are travelling from. Please note that Visit Sweden accepts no responsibility for the accuracy of this information.

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Information for travellers in regards to the corona virus ...

Corona Virus Update, Currently There Are 179 active …

January 10, 2022

Avery County Government would like to share that Avery County Emergency Management and the Health Department are working with local officials, Cannon Hospital, Avery County School System, 911 Communications, EMS Ambulance Services, and fire and rescue to ensure and protect the health and well-being of Avery County citizens.

For the latest updates click here for the NCDHHS state web site, for information.

Health officials continue to encourage good respiratory etiquette and hand hygiene. These are the best preventive measures for this virus. These include covering coughs and sneezes, washing hands frequently with soap and water, staying home when you feel sick or when you have a fever and cleaning surfaces with sanitizing cleaners.

The Avery Health department began vaccines on 1/12/2021 9668 first doses administered as of December 24,2021 9054 (52.0%) fully vaccinated Avery citizens as of of December 24,2021

The County of Avery's top priority is and always will be the safety and security of the county while providing the best service available. While it has been necessary to make some changes to the county's services please know that we will resume all regular services as soon as possible.Update 7/30/2021Governor Roy Cooper and North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Mandy K. Cohen, M.D. announced that state government would begin verifying vaccination status of its workers. Employees not vaccinated are required to wear a mask and be tested at least once a week. Todays announcement comes as North Carolinas latest upswing in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations is driven by unvaccinated North Carolinians.

Until more people get the vaccine, we will continue living with the very real threat of serious disease, and we will continue to see more dangerous and contagious variants like Delta, said Governor Cooper.Click Here for the FAQ Document

Update 6/29/2021Declaration Of A Local State Of Emergency - This is an update of the original Emergency Ordinance

Update 5/14/2021Today, Governor Roy Cooper and North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Mandy K. Cohen, M.D. shared an update on the states COVID-19 progress. Following yesterdays guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that fully vaccinated individuals can safely do most activities without wearing a mask or the need to social distance from others, the state will remove its indoor mask mandate for most settings. Additionally, the state will lift all mass gathering limits and social distancing requirements. These changes are now in effect as of 1:30 PM today.Click Here for the FAQ Document

Update 5/14/2021 Avery County governmental offices are now open, except the senior center they will resume regular services soon.Senior Center Schedule

The Avery County Senior Center will continue offering Drive-Thru Meal Service at the Center.; Clients can drive to the side door of the dining area and pick up a hot meal. Clients must be registered to receive meal, and are asked to call and RSVP (not required) to help with headcount. Home delivered meals will continue as scheduled. For more information, call 828-733-8220

Filing For Unemployment Insurance Benefits Due To COVID-19

This is a link to an adobe document from the office of NC Senator Thom Tillis.Reboot Your Small Business During COVID-19Avery County Chamber Of Commerce Disaster Relief InformationNew website available from VISIT NC and others to assist in the re-opening of hospitality type business and industry for North Carolina. Please share with any and all. Spread the word!!https://countonmenc.org/ [countonmenc.org]NC COVID-19 Rapid Recovery for Small Business WebsiteNew Grant Program Accepting Applications to Help Businesses and Nonprofits Hurt by COVID-19

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Corona Virus Update, Currently There Are 179 active ...

A Surge in Hospitalized Young Children Infected With the Coronavirus – The New York Times

January 10, 2022

The number of hospitalized young children infected with the coronavirus rose precipitously last week to the highest levels since the beginning of the pandemic, according to data released on Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The increase was observed in children who were 4 and younger, who are not eligible for vaccination, and the data included children who were admitted to hospitals for reasons other than Covid.

The rise may be partly explained by the surge of Omicron cases, which affects all populations, and the spread of other respiratory infections.

But the data do not show a similar steep rise in coronavirus infections among hospitalized children of other ages, and federal health officials were considering the possibility that Omicron may not be as mild in young children as it is older children.

Children infected with the variant are still at much less risk of becoming severely ill compared with adults, and even young children seem less likely to need ventilators than those admitted during previous surges, doctors said.

We have not yet seen a signal that there is any increased severity in this age demographic, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the C.D.C.s director, told reporters at a news briefing on Friday.

More than four in 100,000 children ages 4 and younger admitted to hospitals were infected with the coronavirus as of Jan. 1 double the rate reported a month ago and about three times the rate this time last year.

By contrast, the rate of hospitalized 5- to 11-year-olds with Covid was 0.6 per 100,000, roughly the same figure reported over past many months.

Dr. Walensky noted that only 16 percent of children from 5 to 11 had been fully vaccinated, and she urged everyone who was eligible for vaccines and boosters to receive them as soon as possible.

Sadly, we are seeing the rates of hospitalizations increasing for children 0 to 4, who are not yet currently eligible for Covid-19 vaccination, she said. Its critically important that we surround them with people who are vaccinated to provide them protection.

The rise has been noticeable at a number of regional medical centers. The hospitalizations of young children now are blowing away our previous Delta wave at the end of the summer, early fall, which had been our highest prior to that, said Dr. Danielle Zerr, a pediatric infectious diseases expert at Seattle Childrens Hospital.

Experts are typically cautious about interpreting an increase in pediatric hospitalizations as a sign that a variant is particularly severe in children relative to adults. There were similar fears about the Delta and Beta variants, but the rise in pediatric hospitalizations then turned out to be more a consequence of the contagiousness of the variants.

This time, too, at least part of the increase in cases is a reflection of Omicrons surge across all age groups. The nation is now recording roughly 600,000 cases on average per day, about one in five of them in children.

The more kids that get infected, the more youre going to have kids who are going to be sick enough to be hospitalized, said Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, chair of the committee on infectious diseases at the American Academy of Pediatrics and a physician at Stanford University.

Jan. 9, 2022, 3:48 p.m. ET

At Seattle Childrens Hospital, for example, about 21 percent of children are testing positive for the coronavirus, compared with the average of about 1 percent and a high during the Delta wave of about 3 percent.

That is just a game changer, Dr. Zerr said of the more recent figures.

Doctors may be quicker to admit a young child than an adult with similar symptoms, and that may account for some of the rising rates in young children. But some experts said the increase this time might be too steep to be explained only by the usual factors.

One alternative hypothesis for the rise may be that young children are particularly vulnerable to infections in the upper airway exactly where Omicron is thought to be more concentrated in comparison with other variants.

Theyre smaller, their airways are smaller, Dr. Kristin Oliver, a pediatrician at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, said of young children.

It does seem reasonable in a disease that if it looks like its affecting the upper airway more, that they would be more impacted, she added. They are more at risk for that for longer, prolonged cases, as well as the hospitalization that can come along with a more severe case.

That may explain why more hospitalized children aged 4 and younger have tested positive for the coronavirus throughout the pandemic than those 5 and older. Its also why young children are more vulnerable to other pathogens, like respiratory syncytial virus, and to having the seal-like cough associated with croup.

For parents of young children, the numbers add another layer of worry as they wait for vaccines to become available.

Alicia Henriquez, a public-school teacher in Chicago, has three children, two of them younger than 5. Her younger children Maxi, 4 and Sofia, 2 are both infected with the coronavirus, but Maxi has no symptoms at all, and Sofia has only a cough.

Still, Ms. Henriquez said she was monitoring their symptoms carefully. You dont know if your child is going to end up in the hospital or not, so I think you still have to be careful, she said.

The C.D.C.s new data were collected by Covid-Net, the agencys hospitalization surveillance network, which includes 14 sites and covers about 10 percent of the U.S. population. The rates are likely to be underestimates because of the lack of availability of tests, according to the agency.

Many children who become severely ill have other conditions or have weak immune systems. Those kids are definitely at high risk right now, Dr. Maldonado said. Were seeing more of them now than we were before.

Dr. Julie Binder, a gastroenterologist in Philadelphia, has two daughters under 5. Her older daughter, Annie, 4, has an undiagnosed medical condition that results in some very bizarre reactions to viruses, Dr. Binder said. After a viral infection landed Annie in the hospital two years ago, she had complications for months.

Dr. Binder and her husband have been adamant about maintaining as normal a life for Annie as possible, even during the pandemic. But they have kept her home from day care the past couple of weeks to shield her from the post-holiday spike in infections.

Hearing this information, Im certainly glad that I did, Dr. Binder said of the data released on Friday. I would have felt much more comfortable through this wave right now if she had been vaccinated.

A coronavirus vaccine is not yet available in the United States to children under 5, and is unlikely to be for a few more months. But many older children are also still unvaccinated.

Fewer than 25 percent of children from 5 to 11, and just over 60 percent of adolescents from 12 to 17, have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine.

If youre really worried about your child getting sick, you should be vaccinating your child, Dr. Maldonado said. Its the easiest thing we can do right now to keep our kids healthy.

As of Oct. 31, about one in three children hospitalized with Covid was obese. Still, about half had no other known medical conditions, according to data collected by the C.D.C.

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A Surge in Hospitalized Young Children Infected With the Coronavirus - The New York Times

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