Category: Corona Virus

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Ohio coronavirus alert map improves for first time in weeks; 4 counties downgraded from red alert to orange – cleveland.com

February 26, 2021

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Four Ohio counties were downgraded from Level 3 red alert for concern of coronavirus spread on Thursday, marking the first improvement in weeks for the Ohio Department of Healths alert warning map.

However, Cuyahoga County and every other county in the northeast corner of Ohio remain on red alert this week. Overall, 80 of Ohios 88 counties are on red alert, meaning that according to the health department there remains a public emergency for increased exposure and spread, and that people should exercise a high degree of caution.

Beginning with Dec. 24, the red counties had been the same with the exception of two weeks in mid-January when Hamilton County was listed at the higher concern level of purple.

Downgraded to the lower level of Level 2 orange were Holmes, Mercer, Shelby and Williams counties. They join four Southeast Ohio counties that have been on orange for weeks - Gallia, Hocking, Monroe and Vinton.

A key test in whether counties are downgraded to the lower concern of Level 2 orange alert is the per capita case rate. Once designed as red, counties stay there at least until their rate of new cases drops below 100 per 100,000 over the previous two weeks, excluding incarcerated individuals.

Drawing close are several counties, including Noble (104 cases per 100,000), Ottawa (111), Putnam (112.2), Harrison (113), Ashland 114.1) and Wayne (115.8). The highest rates are in Morgan County (344.6), Athens (313.8) and Jefferson (295.4).

Every county in Greater Cleveland has shown marked improvements in this measure:

* Cuyahoga: 187 cases per 100,000 this week, down from 239 a week ago and 673.4 in mid-January, on Jan. 14.

* Geauga: 223.2, down from 262.6 and 604.4.

* Lake: 213.3, down from 295 and 762.5.

* Lorain: 216.9, down from 308.2 and 774.

* Medina: 185.8, down from 262.6 and 647.6.

* Portage: 234.5, down from 285 and 667.8.

* Summit: 210.9, down 289.1 and 724.8.

Overall, the health department in making alert designations tracks seven measures, including hospitalizations, trips to doctors offices and emergency room visits.

Every Ohio county was flagged again this week for having new case rates in excess of 50 per 100,000 over the last two weeks. And 86 of the 88 counties were flagged for at least 50% of the new cases at some point in the last three weeks being outside congregate living centers.

Cuyahoga, Geauga and Lorain counties were cited for meeting three of the seven thresholds this week; Lake, Medina, Portage and Summit two each.

Heres a closer look at the advisory system Gov. Mike DeWine introduced in early July.

* 1. New cases - Alert triggered when there are 50 new cases per cases 100,000 residents over the last two weeks.

* 2. Increase in new cases - Alert triggered by an increase in cases for five straight days at any point over the last three weeks. This is based on the date of onset of symptoms, not when the cases are reported.

* 3. Non-congregate living cases - Alert triggered when at least 50% of the new cases in one of the last three weeks have occurred in outside congregate living spaces such as nursing homes and prisons.

* 4. Emergency rooms - Alert triggered when there is an increase in visits for COVID-like symptoms or a diagnosis for five straight days at any point in the last three weeks.

* 5. Doctor visits - Alert triggered when there is an increase in out-patient visits resulting in confirmed cases or suspected diagnosis for COVID-19 for five straight days at any point in the last three weeks.

* 6. Hospitalizations - Alert triggered when there is an increase in new COVID-19 patients for five straight days at any point over the last three weeks. This is based on the county or residence, not the location of the hospital.

* 7. Intensive Care Unit occupancy - Alert triggered when ICU occupancy in a region exceeds 80% of total ICU beds and at least 20% of the beds are being used for coronavirus patients for at least three days in the last week.

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Ohio coronavirus alert map improves for first time in weeks; 4 counties downgraded from red alert to orange - cleveland.com

Coronavirus Roundup: Administration To Deliver Millions of Masks; Agencies Have Yet to Implement Many of Watchdog’s Recommendations – GovExec.com

February 26, 2021

Vivek Murthy, President Bidens nominee to be surgeon general, testified during his confirmation hearing on Tuesday morning that one of the biggest challenges during the pandemic has been learning about the virus while responding to it and communicating clearly changes in the approach to fighting the pandemic to the public. He told lawmakers that if confirmed, he would first and foremost work with the [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention], with the [National Institutes of Health] and other scientific entities in government to make sure we are clear on what the science says and communicate that clearly to the public.Also, public education starts with listening to understand the publics needs and concerns, not just speaking, he said.

Dr. Rachel Leland Levine, nominee for Health and Human Services Department assistant secretary for health, also testified during the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing.

She said she has a unique perspective having been Pennsylvania secretary of health during the pandemic, in addition to being president of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials. I know first hand the importance of the collaboration and coordination between federal public health officials, state public health officials and local public health officials, she testified. Levine would be the highest-ranking transgender federal government official, if confirmed. Here are some of the other recent headlines you might have missed.

An analysis by the Food and Drug Administration, posted on Wednesday, says that Johnson & Johnsons coronavirus vaccine fits the requirements for emergency use authorization. The agencys advisory committee will meet on Friday to consider the findings.

The Biden administration brought on Lauren Silvis, former FDA chief-of-staff, to be a consultant on the COVID response team, BioCentury reported. The appointment brings regulatory expertise and a link to one of the few Trump administration officials who is widely respected across the political spectrum, said the report. Silvis served as chief of staff for former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb from May 2017 to June 2019, and as deputy director for policy of FDAs Center for Devices and Radiological Health from 2015 to 2017.

Dr. Stephen Hahn, former FDA commissioner, joined the board of directors of Blackfynn, which develops treatments for Parkinson's and neurodegeneration. This makes him among the first high-ranking Trump health officials to land a private-sector role since Bidens inauguration, Politico noted on Wednesday.

The White House said on Wednesday that the Health and Human Services and Defense departments will deliver millions of masks to federally qualified community health centers nationwide. These approximately 1,300 health centers will be eligible to receive high-quality masks for free. Two-thirds of the people served by community health centers are living in poverty, 60% are racial and/or ethnic minorities, and nearly 1.4 million are un-housed, said a fact-sheet from the White House. Anyone in the community will be eligible to pick up masks from their local community health center.

Also, Defense and USDA are working to distribute masks to many of the nations 300 food banks, which reach a vast network of 60,000 food pantries, soup kitchens, and other food distribution points where masks will be distributed to individuals and families, the White House said.

Using money from the COVID-19 package enacted in December, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is planning a $2 billion program to help families pay for coronavirus funerals, but it's being delayed over concerns that it is susceptible to fraud, Politico reported on Thursday. While the agency has run similar programs over the years for other emergencies and major disasters, this is poised to be the largest the agency has ever mounted, said the report. FEMA is scrambling to find safeguards that would prevent fraudsters from forging death certificates in an attempt to collect thousands of dollars for funerals that either never happened or were for people who died from another cause.

The Government Accountability Office summarized on Wednesday its 44 recommendations in its reports on the federal governments response to the pandemic between June 2020 and January 2021. Of the 44 recommendations we have made to date, 16 fall into one of the following public health areas: COVID-19 testing, vaccines and therapeutics, medical supply chain, COVID-19 health disparities, and COVID-19 health data, said the watchdog. Most of the recommendations have not been implemented. We maintain that doing so would improve the governments response.

The Agriculture Department outlined on Wednesday how its implementing President Bidens national strategy to combat the pandemic. In addition to various programs, it has 354 personnel deployed to help with vaccine efforts nationwide.

The New Yorker published a profile on the secret life of White House staff on Wednesday, which dives into how Trump officials functioned during the pandemic. Timothy Harleth, White House chief usher installed by President Trump then fired by the Bidens, told me that the residence staff took COVID-19 precautions more seriously than others at the Trump White House, said the report. By his count seven or eight residence staff workers contracted the virus. Once they recovered, those workers were asked to fill in for others, because of their presumed immunity...According to [a career White House employee] Jason, the lifers were given conflicting advice: stay home; later, come in.

Help us understand the situation better. Are you a federal employee, contractor or military member with information, concerns, etc. about how your agency is handling the coronavirus? Email us at newstips@govexec.com.

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Coronavirus Roundup: Administration To Deliver Millions of Masks; Agencies Have Yet to Implement Many of Watchdog's Recommendations - GovExec.com

Steuben County reports 15 new cases of COVID-19, more than 5,500 confirmed since last year – WETM – MyTwinTiers.com

February 26, 2021

BATH, N.Y. (WETM) The Steuben County Public Health Department is reporting 15 new cases of COVID-19 with 5,509 confirmed cases since the pandemic began last year.

The county currently has 106 active cases of the virus.

The individuals who recently tested positive are residents of the:

City of Corning (2)

City of Hornell (4)

Town of Bath

Town of Cameron

Town of Caton

Town of Hornby

Town of Prattsburgh

Town of Thurston

Town of Troupsburg

Village of Painted Post (2)

The individuals are isolated and being monitored by the County Health Department. Public Health staff investigated and identified close contacts of the confirmed cases and exposure risks. All those known to have direct contact with the individuals have been notified.

Per CDC and New York State Department of Health guidance, information is collected beginning 48 hours prior to symptom onset or date of test if asymptomatic through the day of the positive test result to identify any potential exposure risks.

The investigations indicate:

Four individuals had contact with previously reported Steuben positives

Two individuals are associated with Upstate Farms Cheese in Campbell

One individual is associated with the Steuben County Jail

In addition, the individuals reported visiting the following locations that could pose an exposure risk within their investigation timeframes:

2/18, 2/19 Tops in Riverside

2/20 Silgan Plastics in Penn Yan

Todays age groups for the positives are as follows:

0 9 years: 1

10 19 years: 1

20 29 years: 2

30 39 years: 3

40 49 years: 1

50 59 years: 4

60 69 years: 3

Over the last year we have seen case spread within workplaces, said Public Health Director, Darlene Smith. To keep spread low and protect coworkers, stay home if feeling unwell and get tested.

All residents should continue to monitor themselves for COVID-19 symptoms of fever, cough, shortness of breath, chills or repeated shaking with chills, muscle pain, headache, sore throat, and new loss of taste or smell and contact their healthcare provider for instructions if feeling ill.

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Steuben County reports 15 new cases of COVID-19, more than 5,500 confirmed since last year - WETM - MyTwinTiers.com

105-Year Old Woman Survived Spanish Flu, and Now, Coronavirus – The New York Times

February 24, 2021

Ask Lucia DeClerck how she has lived to be 105, and she is quick with an answer.

Prayer. Prayer. Prayer, she offers. One step at a time. No junk food.

But surviving the coronavirus, she said, also may have had something to do with another staple: the nine gin-soaked golden raisins she has eaten each morning for most of her life.

Fill a jar, she explained. Nine raisins a day after it sits for nine days.

Her children and grandchildren recall the ritual as just one of Ms. DeClercks endearing lifelong habits, like drinking aloe juice straight from the container and brushing her teeth with baking soda. (That worked, too: She did not have a cavity until she was 99, relatives said.)

We would just think, Grandma, what are you doing? Youre crazy, said her 53-year-old granddaughter, Shawn Laws ONeil, of Los Angeles. Now the laugh is on us. She has beaten everything thats come her way.

It is a long list. Born in 1916 in Hawaii to parents who came from Guatemala and Spain, she lived through the Spanish flu, two world wars and the deaths of three husbands and a son.

She moved to Wyoming, California and back to Hawaii before finally arriving in New Jersey, where she lived with her oldest son. After turning 90, she moved to an adult community in Manahawkin, N.J., along the Jersey Shore, where she remained active until she injured herself in a fall about four years ago.

She is just the epitome of perseverance, Ms. ONeil said. Her mind is so sharp. She will remember things when I was a kid that I dont even remember.

Ms. DeClerck, the oldest resident of her South Jersey nursing home, learned that she had contracted the virus on her 105th birthday, Jan. 25, the day after she had gotten her second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, according to Michael Neiman, the homes administrator.

At first, she said she was scared. She did not like being isolated, and she missed the daily chatter from the parade of caregivers at Mystic Meadows Rehabilitation and Nursing, a 120-bed facility in Little Egg Harbor.

She showed few symptoms, Mr. Neiman said. And within two weeks she was back in her room, holding her rosary beads and wearing her trademark sunglasses and knit hat.

Feb. 23, 2021, 8:18 p.m. ET

To her two surviving sons, five grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and 11 great-great grandchildren, who call her Grandma Lucia, she has a new moniker, Ms. ONeil said: The 105-year-old badass who kicked Covid.

On Monday, she got a shout-out from Gov. Philip D. Murphy, who described a phone call with her during a coronavirus news briefing. What an uplifting conversation, the governor said.

Ms. DeClercks family gathered in January 2020 at Mystic Meadows to celebrate her 104th birthday before the onset of the pandemic. When they learned that she had contracted the virus, they braced for the worst.

We were very concerned, her son, Phillip Laws, 78, said.

But shes got a tenacity that is unbelievable, he added. And shes got that rosary all the time.

A devout Catholic, Ms. DeClerck led rosary prayers each week at the nursing home and, before the pandemic, was a fixture at weekly Mass.

She raised three sons and ran a corner store for decades with her first husband, Henry Laws Jr., in Los Angeles. She married twice more after returning to Hawaii, where she worked as a home health aide and welcomed grandchildren for summerlong visits.

Ms. DeClerck is one of 62 residents of Mystic Meadows to have contracted the virus; four patients died, including three who were receiving hospice care, Mr. Neiman said.

Were as careful as possible, he said, but this finds a way of sneaking in.

In January, residents were being tested twice a week, and a rapid test in the last week of the month showed that Ms. DeClerck had contracted the virus.

At first she was a little apprehensive, a little scared, but she said, God will protect me, Mr. Neiman said.

She had also been vaccinated, which most likely contributed to her recovery. The first studies of Britains mass inoculation program showed strong evidence on Monday that even one dose of vaccine can help slash coronavirus-related hospitalizations.

Ms. DeClerck is not the oldest person to beat the virus.

Europes oldest known resident, Sister Andr, contracted the virus at 116. She celebrated with a glass of Champagne on her 117th birthday earlier this month at a nursing home in Toulon, a city in southeastern France.

Like Sister Andr, Ms. DeClerck may be ready for a toast.

But it is likely to involve gin and a handful of golden raisins.

Her family is following suit. Now all of us are rushing out and getting Mason jars and yellow raisins and trying to catch up, Ms. ONeil said.

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105-Year Old Woman Survived Spanish Flu, and Now, Coronavirus - The New York Times

Dallas County reports 412 coronavirus cases and 18 deaths, including woman in her 30s without underlying – The Dallas Morning News

February 24, 2021

Updated at 5:38 p.m.: Revised to include statewide data.

Dallas County on Tuesday reported 18 more COVID-19 deaths and 412 new coronavirus cases.

The latest victims were mostly in their 60s or older, but one was a Dallas woman in her 30s who did not have underlying high-risk health conditions.

Nine of the victims lived in Dallas, five were Garland residents, two were from Mesquite and one each lived in DeSoto and Irving.

County Judge Clay Jenkins said in a written statement that case numbers remain low because less testing took place last week, but officials believe the numbers are trending in our favor.

Of the new cases, 300 were confirmed and 112 were probable. The numbers bring the countys overall case total to 277,705, including 243,340 confirmed and 34,365 probable. The death toll is 2,874.

Health officials use hospitalizations, intensive-care admissions and emergency room visits as key metrics to track the real-time impact of COVID-19 in the county. In the 24-hour period that ended Monday, 540 COVID-19 patients were in acute care in hospitals in the county. During the same period, 349 ER visits were for symptoms of the disease.

According to the state, 257,725 people in Dallas County have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 116,941 are fully vaccinated.

Jenkins said the countys vaccination site would open Wednesday for people who were due to get second doses on or before Feb. 16. On Thursday, the site will be open for people due for second doses on or before Feb. 17.

Jenkins also said Dallas County, in partnership with the White House, FEMA and the U.S. Department of Defense, will administer about 3,000 first doses of vaccine a day to the countys underserved populations starting Wednesday.

Across the state, 11,809 more cases were reported Tuesday, including 9,704 new cases and 2,105 older ones recently reported by labs.

The state also reported 234 COVID-19 deaths, raising its toll to 41,641.

Of the new cases, 7,556 were confirmed and 2,148 were probable. Of the older cases, 463 were confirmed and 1,642 were probable.

The states case total is now 2,606,275, including 2,259,407 confirmed and 346,868 probable.

There are 7,014 COVID-19 patients in Texas hospitals, including 1,813 in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. On Monday, 11.3% of patients in the hospital region covering the Dallas-Fort Worth area were COVID-19 patients below the 15% threshold the state has used to define high hospitalizations.

The seven-day average positivity rate statewide for molecular tests, based on the date of test specimen collection, was 13.1% as of Monday. For antigen tests, the positivity rate for the same period was 3.7%. A molecular test is considered more accurate and is sometimes also called a PCR test; an antigen test is also called a rapid test. Gov. Greg Abbott has said a positivity rate above 10% is cause for concern.

According to the state, 3,146,940 people in Texas have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 1,422,169 are fully vaccinated.

About 1,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine spoiled last week when winter weather knocked out power to millions of Texans, state officials said Tuesday.

Imelda Garcia, associate commissioner for the Texas Department of State Health Services, called it a small amount of doses of the total received by the state each week. As providers get back into their officers, the state may get some more reports of additional lost vaccine, she said.

Tarrant County reported 368 coronavirus cases and five deaths Tuesday.

The latest victims were two Fort Worth men in their 50s, an Arlington man older than 90, a Haltom City woman older than 90 and a Saginaw woman in her 80s. All five had underlying high-risk health conditions.

Of the new cases, 246 were confirmed and 122 were probable. The numbers bring the countys case total to 239,188, including 203,949 confirmed and 35,239 probable. The death toll is 2,794.

According to the county, 629 people were hospitalized with the virus as of Monday.

According to the state, 197,531 people in Tarrant County have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 110,369 are fully vaccinated.

The state added 310 coronavirus cases and three deaths to Collin Countys totals Tuesday.

No details about the latest victims were available.

Of the new cases, 124 were confirmed and 186 were probable. The numbers bring the countys case total to 81,702, including 69,011 confirmed and 12,691 probable. The death toll is 697.

According to the county, 265 people are hospitalized with the virus.

According to the state, 121,421 people in Collin County have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 47,016 are fully vaccinated.

Denton County reported 837 coronavirus cases Tuesday. No additional deaths were reported.

The newly reported cases bring the countys case total to 61,991, including 47,500 confirmed and 14,491 probable. The death toll is 398.

According to the county, 129 people are hospitalized with the virus.

According to the state, 68,287 people in Denton County have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 30,288 are fully vaccinated.

The Texas Department of State Health Services has taken over reporting for these other North Texas counties. In some counties, new data may not be reported every day.

The latest numbers are:

Staff writer Allie Morris contributed to this report.

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Dallas County reports 412 coronavirus cases and 18 deaths, including woman in her 30s without underlying - The Dallas Morning News

Paid To Stay Home Coronavirus Aid Bill Pays Federal Employees With Kids Out Of School Up To $21K – Forbes

February 24, 2021

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Paid To Stay Home Coronavirus Aid Bill Pays Federal Employees With Kids Out Of School Up To $21K - Forbes

Coronavirus has stolen some kids’ sense of smell, and it stinks – The Colorado Sun

February 24, 2021

While quarantined in her bedroom with the coronavirus, 16-year-old Ellie Jotte stuck her nose in her sweetest-smelling candles, bottles of perfume and all kinds of fruit- and flower-scented lotions.

Nothing.

Nearly four months later, the teenagers senses of smell and taste are still messed up. Some days, Ellie smells nothing at all, and others, she gets a whiff of scent or a burst of taste, but often, its not quite right.

Chomping on peanut butter pretzels the other day, she tasted the salt but not the peanut butter. But then, I was eating a carrot and it literally tasted like peanut butter, she said.

A recent order of french fries tasted the exact same as the chicken, which is to say, not good. One main flavor: bitter, said Ellie, who is a sophomore at Regis Jesuit High School in Aurora.

The fact that COVID-19 has disrupted peoples ability to smell, for days or months, has been well-documented at this point in the pandemic, but researchers arent sure yet why. Even less is known about the long-term effects on children who have not regained their sense of smell months after recovering from the coronavirus, a phenomenon that doctors believe is vastly underreported. Kids are less likely to articulate to a doctor or even to their parents that they cannot smell or taste normally.

A new olfaction training clinic and study opening at Childrens Hospital Colorado in early March will focus on helping teens and children age 5 and older regain their sense of smell. The theory is that through repeated exposure to certain odors, children can increase their sensitivity and retrain their nose to communicate with their brain.

Various pre-pandemic studies have found positive results from olfaction training in adults, but only one study involved children, said Dr. Kenny Chan, a professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and chair of the otolaryngology department at Childrens Hospital.

Previous research has found that if you keep exposing known odorants to patents, that somehow it would get the connection going, he said.

The clinic will use four essential oils: orange, lavender, eucalyptus and peppermint. Children and teens will smell each oil for 20 seconds, twice per day, for three months. Parents, after receiving training from a nurse practitioner who will check in regularly via telehealth appointments, will record their responses, noting whether their kids can distinguish between the oils or smell any of them at all.

Chan is well aware that a 5-year-old child is unlikely to spit out the word eucalyptus.

No, they wont, he said. If they say, This smells like a plant, this smells like a forest, it will be good enough.

And Chan has doubts that children will specifically name lavender or peppermint, either. Hes hoping for flower to identify lavender, and probably candy or toothpaste if they can smell the peppermint oil. If they get a whiff of citrus while smelling the orange essential oil, thats considered progress.

We have to be very generous when we train these kids. For example, This smells like a fruit that you know.

We have to be very generous when we train these kids, he said, noting that coaxing is allowed. For example, This smells like a fruit that you know.

The study is for 5-year-olds and up because preschoolers and toddlers likely could not answer questions about the four scents. Chan wont know how well the participants could discern those scents before joining the study, only whether they improved during the three months.

Kids who attend the clinic and whose parents decide to enroll them in the accompanying study will take a 40-scent smell test thats been in use for decades, the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test, or the UPSIT. After three months, theyll take the test again to see whether their olfactory senses have improved.

Chan is particularly interested in finding out if losing sense of smell for longer makes it harder for a child to get it back. Hes hoping to study a broad range of kids, including those who havent been able to smell for a few weeks and those who caught COVID-19 early on in the pandemic but still have trouble smelling and tasting.

Research during the past year has found that about 45-50% of adults with coronavirus experience a loss of smell or taste for some length of time, and a fraction of those people still cant smell several months later. Doctors, including one at Childrens Hospital Colorado, have reported that 5-10% of children with coronavirus lose their sense of smell, but many doctors believe the true numbers are much higher.

Chan suspects that many young children with COVID-19 who were otherwise asymptomatic still have trouble with smell and taste, and that their parents are unaware. He suggests parents regularly ask their kids if they can smell certain odors, and if they cant, to go get a coronavirus or antibody test.

Humans have a sense of smell not only to enjoy food and other pleasant fragrances, but to survive, Chan said. If you think about it, if a house is on fire and you cant smell the smoke? Thats a survival sensory organ that we need, he said.

Nerve endings at the top of the nose are connected to olfactory bulbs, which are in the front of the brain. Odors dissolve in the liquid surrounding the lining of the cells in the top of the nose, allowing nerve fibers to fire and elicit smell. Sense of smell is linked to taste, which begins with receptor cells on the tongue.

Long before COVID-19, researchers studied cases of post-viral loss of smell, but it took a worldwide communal disease to bring the peripheral-neurological side effect to common conversation.

The known causes of olfaction dysfunction include being born without olfactory bulbs, and whiplash from a traumatic event such as a vehicle crash that shears off the nerve endings that connect the nose and the olfactory bulbs. Less is understood about how viral infections, including the coronavirus, destroy the sense of smell long term, but researchers are finding that viruses could damage the support cells surrounding those nerve endings, Chan said.

Olfactory research was revived by the pandemic, and similar smell-training clinics involving children are in the works around the country, including in Seattle.

Ellie hasnt enrolled in the clinic, but has been smelling the four essential oils in her room at home. On Dr. Chans advice, Ellies mom, Sonia Jotte, picked up the collection of oils at Costco.

So far, Ellie has had mixed results, much like her daily attempts to taste and smell her favorite foods, including Taco Bell and Bad Daddys burgers.

She can always detect the citrus scent of the orange, and the peppermint usually has a distinct smell. But she regularly mixes up the eucalyptus and the lavender, and has realized she has a better chance of getting lavender correct if she smells that one first.

The Greenwood Village teen first got sick in late October and complained of a sore throat coming on. The sore throat didnt worsen, but soon came a runny nose, what sounded to her mom like horrible congestion (though Ellie said she could breathe just fine), and the loss of smell and taste.

Sonia Jotte believes her daughter was exposed at a dance class the week before the symptoms arrived. Ellie went in for a COVID-19 test the same day the dance studio called and told Sonia that the dance teacher had tested positive.

Ellie quarantined in her bedroom, where her mom delivered her food. The precautions worked: no one else in the family, including Ellies dad and younger sister, got sick. Ellie kept requesting apples. She couldnt taste them, but her tongue could tell they were sweet, and she liked that they were juicy.

Sonia, a pediatrician who is not currently practicing, began researching why her daughter couldnt smell. When she read that COVID-19 was causing inflammation in the nose at the neurological level, she asked Ellies doctor for a steroid prescription. It didnt have much effect.

Now, after about four months, the fact that Ellie can smell or taste intermittently makes them believe she will eventually regain her sense of smell.

Some days are really good and she can walk in the house and smell a candle, and other days she cant smell anything at all. The other day she said, I can taste my Taco Bell today!

Some days are really good and she can walk in the house and smell a candle, and other days she cant smell anything at all, Sonia said. The other day she said, I can taste my Taco Bell today!

Ellie said that even when she can taste, its not how it was before. Its not like she can taste the whole taco or burger more like a burst of taste shoots through for a second, like the flavor of hot sauce or salt. Sometimes she concentrates hard, willing herself to taste, and there is no sensation, only bland nothing.

And some scents she used to love are now foul in her nose. She walked into a room a few days ago and was affronted by the sickeningly sweet smell of a burning candle, one that she used to like.

I couldnt stand it. I hated it, she said. I had to blow it out.

Still, Ellie has faith that her nose is making progress. If I keep trying new things and working toward it, she said, I know it will come back.

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Coronavirus has stolen some kids' sense of smell, and it stinks - The Colorado Sun

Who’s in the next coronavirus vaccine priority group in Louisiana? Higher education, clergy, more – The Advocate

February 24, 2021

Gov. John Bel Edwards administration has quietly added new groups of people to the next phase of vaccine priority, giving clergy, veterinarians and the faculty and staff of colleges and universities priority for the shots.

The University of Louisiana System in an email to its faculty said the Louisiana Department of Health had added higher education faculty and staff members to the Phase 1B Tier 2 of the vaccine rollout. Currently, the state is in "Phase 1B Tier 1," and it's not clear when Edwards plans to move to the next tier.

The email cited an LDH memo dated Feb. 18 that made two changes not announced by Edwards last week, when he retooled the current group of eligible people to add K-12 teachers and others. The memo said clergy and institutes of higher education faculty and staff were part of the next tier of eligible people. Veterinarians and staff were also added.

A spokesperson for the LDH confirmed the move Monday.

The state had already put judiciary personnel, corrections officers and jailers, food processing and agricultural workers, veterinarians and staff, postal personnel and others in the next-in-line group.

A date for when that group will get the vaccine hasnt yet been announced.

Edwards last week said he would add K-12 and daycare teachers and staff, along with pregnant women and people aged 55-64 with a list of specified health conditions, to the current eligibility group. People who are 65 and older already had access to the vaccine.

Louisiana received more than 90,000 doses of vaccine this week, an uptick from previous weeks that Edwards cited as a reason he was expanding the priority groups. A host of interest groups -- including state and federal judges -- have lobbied the governor to prioritize themselves or their workers for immunizations.

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Who's in the next coronavirus vaccine priority group in Louisiana? Higher education, clergy, more - The Advocate

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