Category: Corona Virus

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COVID-19 Daily Update 1-28-2021 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

January 29, 2021

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of January 28, 2021, there have been 1,882,860 total confirmatory laboratory results received for COVID-19, with 118,562 total cases and 1,983 total deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of a 70-year old female from Jefferson County, a 59-year old female from McDowell County, a 92-year old female from Hancock County, a 66-year old male from Monongalia County, a 70-year old male from Mercer County, a 74-year old male from Hampshire County, a 74-year old female from Ohio County, an 82-year old male from Upshur County, a 74-year old male from Berkeley County, a 73-year old male from Harrison County, a 68-year old male from Raleigh County, a 53-year old female from Marshall County, an 89-year old female from Mercer County, a 91-year old female from Harrison County, a 60-year old male from Hancock County, a 65-year old male from Cabell County, a 66-year old male from Wood County, a 92-year old female from Mercer County, a 57-year old female from Preston County, a 59-year old female from Upshur County, an 84-year old female from Marshall County, a 93-year old female from Hancock County, a 70-year old female from Upshur County, an 83-year old female from Cabell County, a 78-year old male from Harrison County, a 69-year old female from Putnam County, a 78-year old male from Ohio County, a 79-year old male from Ohio County, an 83-year old female from Mason County, and a 72-year old female from Fayette County.

The continued loss of West Virginians weighs heavily on all of us, with the greatest sadness borne by family and friends, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. During this difficult time for our state and nation, we extend our deepest sympathy.

CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (1,094), Berkeley (8,762), Boone (1,411), Braxton (745), Brooke (1,884), Cabell (6,936), Calhoun (209), Clay (342), Doddridge (402), Fayette (2,341), Gilmer (562), Grant (981), Greenbrier (2,205), Hampshire (1,362), Hancock (2,451), Hardy (1,187), Harrison (4,384), Jackson (1,580), Jefferson (3,270), Kanawha (10,920), Lewis (823), Lincoln (1,118), Logan (2,349), Marion (3,255), Marshall (2,740), Mason (1,519), McDowell (1,220), Mercer (3,864), Mineral (2,455), Mingo (1,896), Monongalia (6,944), Monroe (876), Morgan (858), Nicholas (1,036), Ohio (3,334), Pendleton (545), Pleasants (764), Pocahontas (554), Preston (2,392), Putnam (3,778), Raleigh (4,038), Randolph (2,173), Ritchie (553), Roane (460), Summers (659), Taylor (996), Tucker (449), Tyler (563), Upshur (1,462), Wayne (2,318), Webster (245), Wetzel (987), Wirt (325), Wood (6,442), Wyoming (1,544).

Delays may be experienced with the reporting of information from the local health department to DHHR. As case surveillance continues at the local health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certain county may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individual in question may have crossed the state border to be tested.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 1-28-2021 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

How Dangerous Is Coronavirus to the Middle-Aged? – WebMD

January 27, 2021

By Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, Jan. 26, 2021 (HealthDay News) -- Middle-aged folks' risk of dying from a COVID-19 infection is higher than they might think, a new study reports.

The risk of death from COVID increases with age, but researchers have found that the upward curve grows exponentially steeper with every extra decade.

One out of every 800 people entering early middle age at 45 will die from their COVID infection, 55-year-olds have a 1 in 240 risk of dying if they contract the coronavirus, and 65-year-olds have a 1 in 70 chance, said lead researcher Andrew Levin, a professor of economics at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H.

By comparison, people who are 25 have a 1 in 10,000 risk of dying from COVID, and 35-year-olds have a 1 in 2,700 chance, Levin said.

"This isn't just dangerous for elderly people in nursing homes," Levin said. "COVID gets progressively more and more dangerous, even in middle age."

The new numbers come from a systematic review of all available studies of COVID-19 incidence in countries with advanced economies, and are based specifically on data from 27 studies covering locations in the United States, Canada, Asia and Europe.

"Risk increases as age increases, and even those who are in middle age have a substantial [death] risk that they should account for when making risk calculations regarding the virus," said Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar with the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore. He is not connected to the study.

The new analysis found that a middle-aged American's risk of death from a COVID-19 infection is many times greater than their risk of dying in a car crash, Levin added.

People between 45 and 55 die nearly 18 times more often from COVID-19 than from an auto wreck, according to the study, while those aged 55 to 64 are almost 58 times more likely to die from a COVID infection than a crash.

Middle-aged people should keep this in mind when deciding whether to slip on a mask, wash their hands or practice social distancing, said Dr. Abhijit Duggal, a critical care doctor with the Cleveland Clinic.

"The risk is there," said Duggal, who wasn't part of the study. "It's not just older folks that really are going to have a high risk of dying from this disease process. Middle-aged people do, too."

Duggal added that while this study solely looked at the risk of death from COVID, the coronavirus also can damage the body in ways that could potentially lead to years of suffering for survivors.

"Death is not the only bad outcome associated with the COVID-19 pandemic," Duggal said. "If someone develops chronic lung disease at the age of 40 because they were exposed to this virus, their life for the next 20 to 30 years is going to be negatively impacted. So absolutely, we have to be very mindful that we're not reckless."

That also goes for younger people who might spread COVID to a more vulnerable middle-aged or older person, Levin added.

"There is a real responsibility here for a high school student whose parents may be in their 40s or 50s to be careful not to get it, not to just treat it like, "Oh well, I'm safe,'" Levin said. "If it's a 41-year-old with two kids who gets COVID and you think you might be the one who gave it to him, that would be awful to think about."

The study was published recently in the European Journal of Epidemiology.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have more about groups at increased risk from COVID-19.

SOURCES: Andrew Levin, PhD, professor, economics, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H.; Amesh Adalja, MD, senior scholar, Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, Baltimore; Abhijit Duggal, MD, critical care doctor, Cleveland Clinic; European Journal of Epidemiology, Dec. 8, 2020

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How Dangerous Is Coronavirus to the Middle-Aged? - WebMD

Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA Takes Action to Place All Alcohol-Based Hand Sanitizers from Mexico on Import Alert to Help Prevent Entry of…

January 27, 2021

For Immediate Release: January 26, 2021

Espaol

As part of the U.S. Food and Drug Administrations continuing efforts to protect consumers from potentially dangerous or subpotent hand sanitizers, the agency has placed all alcohol-based hand sanitizers from Mexico on a countrywide import alert to help stop products that appear to be in violation from entering the U.S. until the agency is able to review the products safety. Over the course of the ongoing pandemic, the agency has seen a sharp increase in hand sanitizer products from Mexico that were labeled to contain ethanol (also known as ethyl alcohol) but tested positive for methanol contamination. Methanol, or wood alcohol, is a substance that can be toxic when absorbed through the skin and life-threatening when ingested. Methanol is not an acceptable ingredient in hand sanitizer or other drugs.

Under the import alert, alcohol-based hand sanitizers from Mexico offered for import are subject to heightened FDA scrutiny, and FDA staff may detain the shipment. As part of their entry review, FDA staff will consider any specific evidence offered by importers or manufacturers that the hand sanitizers were manufactured according to U.S. current good manufacturing practice requirements. This marks the first time the FDA has issued a countrywide import alert for any category of drug product.

"Consumer use of hand sanitizers has increased significantly during the coronavirus pandemic, especially when soap and water are not accessible, and the availability of poor-quality products with dangerous and unacceptable ingredients will not be tolerated," said Judy McMeekin, Pharm.D., FDA Associate Commissioner for Regulatory Affairs. Todays actions are necessary to protect the safe supply of alcohol-based hand sanitizers. We will continue to work with our stakeholders to ensure the availability of safe products and to communicate vital information with the health and safety of U.S. consumers in mind.

The FDAs analyses of alcohol-based hand sanitizers imported from Mexico found 84% of the samples analyzed by the agency from April through December 2020 were not in compliance with the FDAs regulations. More than half of the samples were found to contain toxic ingredients, including methanol and/or 1-propanol, at dangerous levels. The agency has posted and regularly updates a list of hand sanitizer products that consumers should not use, which include those that FDA has found to contain methanol and/or 1-propanol. In most cases, methanol does not appear as an ingredient on the product label.

The agency continues to take action to help prevent potentially dangerous or violative hand sanitizers from entering the United States by placing specific products on import alert, proactively working with companies to recall products and encouraging retailers to remove violative products from store shelves and online marketplaces. As part of these actions, the agency has also issued 14 warning letters since July 2020 for distributing hand sanitizer with undeclared methanol, inappropriate ethanol content, misleading claimsincluding incorrectly stating FDA approvaland improper manufacturing practices. The FDA continues to proactively work with Mexican government authorities, manufacturers and retailers to ensure potentially dangerous or violative products are not distributed to consumers.

The agency reminds manufacturers, distributors, repackagers and importers they are responsible for the quality of their products and urges manufacturers to test their raw ingredients to ensure they meet labeling specifications and are free from harmful contamination. The FDA recently issued a guidance outlining the agencys policy for drug manufacturers and compounders to test alcohol or isopropyl alcohol for methanol contamination prior to using the alcohol to produce drugs, including hand sanitizer products.

Methanol-contaminated hand sanitizers are a serious safety concern, and the FDA is aware of adverse events, including blindness, cardiac effects, effects on the central nervous system and hospitalizations and death, primarily reported to poison control centers and state departments of health. Methanol exposure can result in nausea, vomiting, headache, blurred vision, permanent blindness, seizures, coma, permanent damage to the nervous system or death. Although people using these products on their hands are at risk for methanol poisoning, young children who ingest these products and adolescents and adults who drink these products as an alcohol substitute are most at risk.

Consumers who have been exposed to hand sanitizer contaminated with methanol and are experiencing symptoms should contact their local poison control center and seek immediate medical treatment for potential reversal of the toxic effects of methanol poisoning. The FDA encourages health care professionals, consumers and patients to report adverse events or quality problems experienced with the use of hand sanitizers to FDAs MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program (please provide the agency with as much information to identify the product as possible). For more information, consumers should refer to the FDAs guidelines on safe use of hand sanitizer as well as a question and answer page.

Need help now? Call 9-1-1 if the person is unconscious or has trouble breathing. Call Poison Help at 800-222-1222 to connect to your local poison center. Learn more at https://poisonhelp.hrsa.gov/.

The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and security of our nations food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, products that give off electronic radiation, and for regulating tobacco products.

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Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA Takes Action to Place All Alcohol-Based Hand Sanitizers from Mexico on Import Alert to Help Prevent Entry of...

Former State Rep. Steve Carter dies of coronavirus complications – WAFB

January 27, 2021

I am deeply saddened to learn that former Representative Steve Carter lost his battle with COVID-19 this evening. Steve served the Baton Rouge community in the Louisiana Legislature for 12 years, and I was honored to serve with him during that time, Edwards said. I hope you will join me and Donna in praying for his wife Gloria, his children Amelia and Solomon and their families, including his four granddaughters, Yvie, Carter, Julia and Addie during this very difficult time.

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Former State Rep. Steve Carter dies of coronavirus complications - WAFB

Should You Avoid Pain Relievers After the COVID-19 Vaccine? – Healthline

January 27, 2021

The coronavirus vaccine helps protect you from getting COVID-19. It can also prevent you from having the long-lasting health problems experienced by some COVID-19 patients, or COVID-19 long haulers.

As with all vaccines, you may have some side effects, such as pain or swelling at the site of the injection, fever, chills, tiredness, or headache.

Dr. David J. Cennimo, an infectious disease physician and assistant professor at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, said these are signs of an appropriate recognition and immune reaction to the vaccine.

The side effects show that the vaccine is teaching your immune system how to recognize and attack SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, if it encounters it.

Although some of the vaccine side effects are similar to the symptoms of COVID-19, the coronavirus vaccines wont give you COVID-19. The vaccines will also not make you contagious.

For most people, the side effects of the vaccine are mild or moderate and last only a day or two. However, for some people the side effects make them feel like they have the flu, or affect their ability to perform daily activities.

Faced with a couple of days of flu-like discomfort, many people including physicians will reach for an over-the-counter medication such as ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) or acetaminophen (Tylenol) to relieve their fever and pain.

But if these drugs reduce the side effects of the vaccine, is there a chance that theyll also depress the immune systems beneficial response to vaccination?

No research has been done to look specifically at whether acetaminophen or ibuprofen can interfere with how well the coronavirus vaccine works.

But Cennimo said some earlier research suggests that some drugs may affect the immune response to vaccines.

There are data in the vaccine literature, long predating COVID-19 and almost all [done] in children, that premedication with [fever-reducing drugs] like acetaminophen or ibuprofen decrease the antibody response to the first dose of vaccine, Cennimo said.

Parents would sometimes give their child a pain reliever before their vaccine injection to head off the discomfort.

Cennimo said its not known how these medications interfere with vaccines, but the drugs may dampen the inflammatory response which shows up as fever and aches.

With less inflammation, he said, there may also be a lower immune response to the vaccine.

More recently, a study published this month in the Journal of Virology found that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) which include ibuprofen reduced the production of antibodies and other aspects of the immune response to SARS-CoV-2.

Antibodies are proteins made by the immune system to fight viruses like SARS-CoV-2. The COVID-19 vaccines stimulate the body to produce antibodies that specifically target the coronavirus without causing disease.

The authors of this study said that this raises the possibility that NSAIDs might also affect the immune response to coronavirus vaccination. But additional studies would be needed to know for certain.

Some earlier research in the laboratory suggests that fever-reducing pain medications may blunt the antibody response to vaccination, but its not clear what this means in the real world.

Cennimo said the pre-COVID-19 research in children found that taking a fever-reducing drug only affected the production of antibodies if the drug was taken before the injection.

More research is needed, of course. But COVID-19 vaccine studies that have already been done suggest that taking a pain reliever after injection, if needed, may not cause that much of a problem.

The protocols for the late-stage clinical trials of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna-NIAID coronavirus vaccines didnt prevent people from taking pain-relieving medications if they felt they needed it.

Even with that, those studies still showed that both vaccines have a high efficacy rate: 95 percent for Pfizer-BioNTech and 94.1 percent for Moderna-NIAID.

In spite of the need for more data, Cennimo doesnt think theres a problem with taking ibuprofen or acetaminophen after your coronavirus vaccine injection, as long as you dont exceed the recommended amount.

He had his second dose of the coronavirus vaccine last week and took ibuprofen afterwards for a low-grade fever and some aches.

As for whether you should try to preempt your vaccine side effects with a pain reliever, Cennimo advises against it.

In the COVID-19 vaccine trials, people were not given an NSAID or acetaminophen before the injection, so we do not know what if any effect premedication would have, he said. Because of these theoretical risks, it is not advised.

Dr. Sherrill Brown, medical director of infection prevention at AltaMed Health Services, a federally qualified healthcare center serving Los Angeles and Orange counties in California, agrees.

I would recommend waiting until someone experiences side effects of fever or pain that require fever-reducing or pain-reducing medications, she said, and not to take them as a prophylaxis to prevent vaccine related symptoms.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued similar guidelines for how to deal with the side effects of the two mRNA vaccines that have been approved in the United States.

Brown also cautions that even over-the-counter pain relievers may not be appropriate for everyone.

Some people are not able to take either acetaminophen or ibuprofen due to other underlying health conditions, she said. In those cases, it would be best to consult with their trusted healthcare provider or physician before taking these medications.

If you cant take pain relievers, or you would like to avoid taking them after your coronavirus vaccine injection, there are other ways to relieve vaccination side effects.

To reduce pain and discomfort at the site of injection, apply a cool, wet washcloth over the area to reduce the swelling. Gently exercising the arm also increases blood flow to the area which can provide additional relief.

For fever, drink plenty of fluids, wear light pajamas or clothing, sponge your body with lukewarm (not cold) water, and eat popsicles. And of course, rest.

If your fever lasts longer than 3 days, or reaches 103F (39C) or higher, seek medical care. Seek treatment right away if you develop a rash, difficulty breathing, or chest or abdominal pain.

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Should You Avoid Pain Relievers After the COVID-19 Vaccine? - Healthline

White House to tell governors that they will get more coronavirus vaccines starting next week – The Philadelphia Inquirer

January 27, 2021

In the United States, vaccine appointments have been canceled throughout the country as state and local health officers and medical providers confront a limited supply of vaccine, which is being targeted at medical workers, older people, some frontline workers and other highly vulnerable people. The patchwork of rules about eligibility has deepened confusion about access to the shots.

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White House to tell governors that they will get more coronavirus vaccines starting next week - The Philadelphia Inquirer

In Denver, getting the coronavirus vaccine may depend on where you live – The Colorado Sun

January 27, 2021

In Washington Park, where the streets are lined with multimillion-dollar homes, sushi restaurants and breweries, 247 of every 1,000 residents who are 70 or older have already received a first dose of the coronavirus vaccine.

The numbers are even better in the east Denver neighborhood of Central Park, formerly known as Stapleton, where 461 out of every 1,000 older residents have been vaccinated.

But then check out Sun Valley, one of the poorest neighborhoods in Colorado and home to several government-supported housing projects. Out of every 1,000 residents 70 or older in the west Denver neighborhood, just 42 have received the coronavirus vaccine.

And in Elyria-Swansea, a predominantly Latino neighborhood in the shadow of industrial plants in north Denver, 119 out of 1,000 older residents have been vaccinated, well below the rate of several wealthier neighborhoods. This is despite Elyria-Swanseas high rate for the virus itself the latest data from mid-January shows the area has a 10.6% positivity rate for coronavirus tests, compared with 3% in Central Park.

Its still early in Colorados vaccination rollout, but the initial statistics about who is getting word about vaccine clinics, who is seeking out appointments and who is showing up to be immunized reveal gaping disparities along racial and economic lines.

Even though the work to create an equitable distribution began months ago, the way the first doses have been spread across the state has favored white Coloradans. Those who are active patients in a health system, who are tuned in via social media and online networks, and who are native English speakers are more likely to have access to the coronavirus vaccine, public health officials say.

In response, public health workers and newly formed vaccine equity task forces are mobilizing to bring the vaccine to places where vaccination rates have been lower historically in Colorado. To reach communities of color, the strategy is twofold breaking down logistical barriers such as in language and transportation, and battling an ingrained mistrust of the government and medical providers, several advocates told The Colorado Sun.

A key strategy is locating the trusted community leaders who can spread the message, which is why advocates are setting up vaccine clinics at places including St. Cajetan Catholic Church rectory and the Denver public housing authority.

Sending invitations via email or social media is easy, but that wont cut it for the 70-plus crowd or folks who are not connected to a health care system, particularly in low-income neighborhoods, said Dr. Ozzie Grenardo, co-chair of the Colorado Vaccine Equity Taskforce.

For those harder-to-reach groups, and those who are reluctant, there needs to be a different type of effort, he said.

Initial statewide data shows that white Coloradans have accounted for about 68% of those receiving at least one dose of coronavirus vaccine so far, which is roughly equal to white representation in the state. Black Coloradans, however, have accounted for just 1.8% of vaccinations, even though they represent about 4% of the population. And Hispanic Coloradans have received 4.3% of the vaccines despite representing 22% of the population. The data is incomplete, however, and in some cases, race was not recorded.

Those are total vaccination numbers from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, so they include vaccines for health care workers, first responders and those 70 and older, the three groups at the top of the states priority list.

Brig. Gen. Scott Sherman, who is in charge of the states coronavirus vaccine distribution, said the data so far is heavily influenced by the makeup of the health care and fire responder workforces, which are predominately white. It just mirrors what that demographic looks like, he said. The state will release demographic data for vaccinations specifically among the 70 and older population later this week, he said.

Grenardo, also the chief diversity and inclusion officer for Centura Health, was alarmed when he saw the racial breakdown of hospital system employees who have gotten the coronavirus vaccine.

Black, Latino and other minority staff were far less likely to get the vaccine than their white peers. By mid-January, Centura had administered 25,736 doses to its workers. Black workers were 44% less likely to get vaccinated than white workers and Latino workers were 22% less likely.

And they all got the same email inviting them to get vaccinated, said Grenardo, who also works as a family doctor for a Centura health clinic in diverse, southeast Aurora.

Its a sign that there is still, even in those who work in health care, a disconnect from either the information that people are receiving about the vaccine or the mistrust or issues around discrimination that have been present for many years in the industry with communities of color.

Its a sign that there is still, even in those who work in health care, a disconnect from either the information that people are receiving about the vaccine or the mistrust or issues around discrimination that have been present for many years in the industry with communities of color, he said.

Grenardo is expecting similar results when Centura crunches the numbers on the racial makeup of patients age 70 and older who have gotten the vaccine so far.

I can only imagine that those numbers are even more significantly problematic, he said.

The doctor is one of three co-chairs of a vaccine equity task force that began its work this month to make sure COVID-19 vaccines are distributed equitably to communities of color, the same communities that have experienced the most severe outcomes from the coronavirus. The task force is working to overcome long-standing distrust of the medical community, language barriers and less access to health care.

The first step, he said, is messaging.

Having the message come from a trusted community leader or provider is much more impactful than someone from the government or someone they dont know giving the information, Grenardo said.

Finding trusted, local leaders whether a doctor at a health clinic, a pastor or a neighborhood organizer to spread the word about the coronavirus vaccine is also high priority among a group of Latina government leaders who represent the west side of Denver.

Denver City Councilwoman Jamie Torres, state Sen. Julie Gonzales and state Rep. Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez meet weekly to discuss the effects of COVID-19 on Latino and immigrant communities in their districts. Now their conversations are focused on overcoming language barriers and trust issues to get their constituents vaccinated, and other government leaders, including a few other city council members and a representative from the mayors office, are joining the calls.

Torres thinks of an 88-year-old woman in one of the neighborhoods she represents, a woman who has no ID and has very real fears around immigration questions, even though the state and city have said they will not ask anyone to prove their citizenship status when its their turn to get a coronavirus vaccine. Torres knows that a government official even a local city councilman isnt likely to persuade the woman.

Its more difficult for me to walk up to their door and ask them to sign up, Torres said. But she trusts someone in that neighborhood.

The goal is to find that person.

The women are working with community organizations and housing programs for senior citizens, searching for the trusted community leaders who will spread the vaccine message. The older residents are some of the hardest to reach, considering they are less likely to use the internet.

We recognized from the beginning how difficult it is to capture that population, Torres said.

The data is concerning so far, Gonzales said, noting that her constituents already were less likely to get tested for the coronavirus. It means that weve got to do extra work to make sure there is equity baked into who receives the vaccines, she said. We have seen COVID disproportionately impact Black and brown communities and other communities of color since March.

While Latino people are 29% of Denvers population, they make up 50% of the coronavirus cases in the city to date, according to Denver health department data.

The reasons for the disparity are in part logistical folks in lower-socioeconomic neighborhoods are more reliant on public transportation, some dont use the Internet, and some dont speak English as a first language. But there is another factor at work: a legacy of medical racism that has led communities of color to have additional questions that need answered before they feel comfortable, Gonzales said.

What I expect and what I need from the governors office, and what we are starting to receive, and Im appreciative for that, is data, is process, is structure, Gonzales said.

Still, the group is moving forward on building its own network in communities where vaccine numbers are low. Theyre coordinating with St. Cajetan Catholic Church to set up a drive-up, appointment-only vaccine site at its Alameda and Stuart location, and for a second drive-up site at Servicios de la Raza, a Latinx community group that provides services ranging from behavioral health to employment.

We just cant wait anymore. We cant just sit and wait for them to recognize our communities.

We just cant wait anymore, Gonzales-Gutierrez said. We cant just sit and wait for them to recognize our communities.

Denver Health is attempting to email, text, call or mail letters to about 16,000 people this month, a roster of patients who are at least 70 years old and have yet to register for a coronavirus vaccine.

No matter whether those are active patients or people who visited the hospital or one of its clinics just once in the last few years, Denver Health hopes to find and vaccinate them. The hospital, which serves a huge portion of the citys low-income and Medicaid population, has assigned the task to its patient navigators, who speak at least 13 languages among them.

The massive effort is but one part of a plan at Denver Health and its public health side, Denver Public Health, to try to reach patients in racially and ethnically diverse neighborhoods. Denver Public Health is also bringing vaccines to areas of the city with historically low vaccination rates for the flu vaccine and childhood immunizations, including through the public housing authority.

The effort began back in May, when a COVID-19 vaccine was only an aspiration, said Dr. Judy Shlay, associate director of Denver Public Health and a family physician. Thats when she started worrying about how the agency would equitably distribute a coronavirus vaccine.

Denver Public Health mapped out the pockets of the city where vaccination rates were low and then last fall used outreach teams to bring the flu vaccine and childhood immunizations, including the measles vaccine, to targeted areas. The teams set up in food banks, community organizations and fire stations.

Thats the model we are using now for the COVID vaccine, Shlay said.

During its trial-run last fall, everyone was invited because flu vaccines are for all ages. Now, though, the clinics are targeted to the segment of the population currently eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine, which includes health care workers, first responders and people at least 70 years old.

So far, Shlay is not satisfied with the rollout, in terms of equity. Were very transparent and were not there yet, she said, noting the west side of Denver, with a large Latino population, is lagging behind the east side. Now weve got to build out those approaches to be able to reach other populations.

Part of the problem, though, is that the incoming supply of vaccine has been inconsistent and too low, she said. Its difficult to ramp up vaccination distribution and schedule clinics throughout the city when Denver Health doesnt know how much vaccine to expect each week through its state health department allocation.

Denver Public Health has been giving out about 1,000 doses per day, but should be dispensing 7,000 per day or more than 200,000 per month, Shlay said. And its not just the weekly allocation thats slowing the process its the staff to administer the shots.

Its building a whole army of people to do it, she said. Were at the beginning stages.

Denver Public Health wants to make sure the coronavirus vaccine is available in about 25 pharmacies, including inside King Soopers and Safeway stores. Right now, its only available at three Safeways and one King Soopers in the city, Shlay said.

Denver Health has the vaccine available in three of its community clinics, but is trying to expand that to all 10 as soon as there are enough doses available.

The hospital system is trying to avoid a situation in which it would have to cancel a patients appointment because it didnt have enough of the vaccine. We are at the whim of the state right now, said Rachel Hirsch, public information officer for Denver Health.

So far, the rollout is disjointed across the city. Denver Public Health, for example, was unaware that the city-county health department hosted a vaccine clinic at a historic Black church in north Denver, Shlay said, and had to field questions from patients who wondered why they werent invited.

Gov. Jared Polis has frequently used the church vaccination clinic to show the states commitment to equity. But Shlay said there needs to be a more systematic approach.

It wasnt equitable in the sense that anybody in the community was aware it was happening, she said of the church clinic.

The Polis administration has announced plans for a broader equity effort, hoping to hold pop-up clinics in half of the states top 50 census tracts for low-income, high-density minority neighborhoods. And Shlay said she has hope that the vaccine distribution will improve as supply increases and public health agencies have an infrastructure in place.

This work, if we do it right and we cover the community well, we could get back on track as a society, she said. I want to go and hug my friends. I want all my patients to come in and see me.

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In Denver, getting the coronavirus vaccine may depend on where you live - The Colorado Sun

Coronavirus: Heres how Ohios curfew could be lifted – dayton.com

January 27, 2021

DeWine noted that its still important to follow health guidelines if the curfew is adjusted, especially with concerns about a more contagious variant.

Our case numbers are improving because of what you are doing -- and what youre not doing, he said. More people are wearing masks. Please continue wearing masks.

He added that if hospitalizations start to increase again, a curfew could be reinstated.

The curfew went into effect on Nov. 19 and initially was scheduled to last 21 days. However, after cases and hospitalizations surged in November and through early December, DeWine opted to expand the curfew.

Last week it was extended again and is now scheduled to last through Jan. 30.

Coronavirus vaccinations for K-12 school staff will begin this week in Cincinnati, with Ohio aiming to administer the first dose of the vaccine to all school personnel who want it by the end of February, DeWine said.

Districts scheduled to receive the vaccine next week have already been notified. The remaining districts will be contacted by Friday and a time and date for vaccinations will be set up.

The vaccinations will mainly be distributed in closed clinics so staff will not have to compete with the general public. The governor hopes that by expanding vaccines to school staff, most districts will back to in-person or hybrid learning by March 1.

More coronavirus vaccines are expected to be available to older Ohioans as the state wraps up Phase 1A, DeWine said.

On average, the state is receiving 146,000 first doses each week. With Phase 1A finishing up, about 110,000 to 120,000 vaccines will be available to those eligible in Phase 1B.

DeWine also said that another 77,000 doses will be available in the next two weeks because the state isnt drawing down all the vaccines required to be set aside for nursing homes in the federal vaccination program.

Starting Feb. 8, the state will bring vaccines to affordable senior housing locations in an effort to distribute the vaccines to Ohioans of different backgrounds.

Our team is concentrating efforts to get these residents vaccinated and is working with local partners to offer assistance through onsite clinics, DeWine said. These clinics will help ease the burden for many seniors having trouble with the registration process and arranging transportation.

Ahead of the clinics, there will be an onsite resource guide with information on vaccine, when the clinics will be available and a sign up sheet for those who are interested.

The governor also said his office is working to set up town halls, create a vaccine toolkit for partners and other educations strategies to reach minority communities and address vaccine hesitancy.

Ohio recorded fewer than 5,000 daily cases of coronavirus for the third day in a row and the fourth day in a week, according to the Ohio Department of Health.

The 4,262 cases reported Tuesday is the lowest number of cases reported in the last three weeks.

Throughout the pandemic, there have been 872,918 total cases reported.

Hospitalizations increased by 295 for a total of 45,276. Its nearly 100 more than the 198 hospitalizations recorded on Monday and the 98 reported Sunday.

However, the total number of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in Ohio decreased to 2,964 on Tuesday. Its the first time ODH has reported fewer than 3,000 hospitalized patients in at least two weeks.

In southwest Ohio hospitals, coronavirus patients dropped to 824, also a two-week low. The region had 208 patients in ICUs and 176 on ventilators.

Throughout the pandemic, there have been 6,600 COVID-19 patients admitted to ICUs in Ohio.

The state also reported 88 deaths on Tuesday, bringing the total to 10,856,

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Coronavirus: Heres how Ohios curfew could be lifted - dayton.com

Twelve months of coronavirus in Europe and how Red Cross Red Crescent responded – World – ReliefWeb

January 27, 2021

The moment the first coronavirus case was reported in Europe -- on 24 January 2020, in Bordeaux, France - no one could have possibly imagined the monumental scale of the year of loss and struggle ahead.

Nor could they have foreseen how Red Cross and Red Crescent National Societies stepped up their activities across Europe and Central Asia, enabling them to be at the heart of the response.

Staff and volunteers from the movement have been running first aid tents, delivering critical supplies to the elderly, caring for the sick and dying, at the end of the phone for people unable to leave home. They've provided food, shelter, a kind word and a friendly face, supported those who fall through the cracks -- the migrants, people on the move, people who are homeless. They've provided trusted information.

The numbers are staggering.

More than 12.5 million people across the region have received food and other material aid from Red Cross Red Crescent[1]. More than 2.8 million people have received direct cash or voucher assistance and 1.3 million more received psychosocial support to help them through the tough times.

Red Cross Red Crescent ambulances carried more than 325,000 COVID-19 patients to hospitals. Accurate information was shared to help inform people about the virus and how to stay safe, and an estimated 60 million people in the region have been reached with this messaging.

The breathtaking spread of the virus

With Italy the centre of the first wave, and the first country to go into lockdown, it remained the hardest hit country in Europe for months. Italian Red Cross was the first National Society in Europe to deliver food and medicine to people in quarantine, and ramped up their ambulance service to cope with the escalating number of people infected.

By March Europe was the epicentre of the COVID-19 pandemic, so much so that on 18 March more than 250 million people were in lockdown in Europe. And now, nearly 12 months after the first case, sadly by 19 January 2021, 30.8 million cases were confirmed and 674,00 people in the region had died. [2]

The Red Cross Red Crescent response needed to be swift. On 30 January the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak a public health emergency of international concern and the following day the International Federation of Red Cross Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) allocated funds for a Disaster Relief Emergency Fund (DREF) and a preliminary Emergency Appeal. With its long experience in health emergencies it anticipated COVID-19 could develop into a pandemic with a devastating humanitarian impact and sadly it has shaped up to be one of the world's most challenging crises, affecting every corner of the region with everyone vulnerable to contracting this virus.

In line with Red Cross Red Crescent's unique role as auxiliary to government, and as a community-based and widely-trusted organization, in Europe region the Red Cross movement came up with innovative responses. The Austrian Red Cross developed a contact tracing app. British Red Cross surveyed people on their loneliness and pivoted to provide extra support for those newly alone. The Czech Red Cross trained volunteers to work in hospitals which had become overwhelmed. The Turkish Red Crescent researched people's knowledge and attitudes towards the virus and pivoted to fill the gaps they discovered. Swedish volunteers helped children with their homework. The Red Crosses of the countries of Italy, Slovenia and Croatia worked together to get supplies across their borders to people in an isolated part of Croatia. Extra support was given to people with HIV in Eastern Europe and Central Asia whose treatment was disrupted by the pandemic.

With the rapid surge in prevention activity, while case numbers grew at an alarming rate, by the end of Spring the situation had improved somewhat.

By summer as numbers plateaued government restrictions relaxed. The movement urged people to stay the course and maintain prevention measures in the face of pandemic fatigue and a sense the worst was behind us.

Second wave

Sadly conditions deteriorated, leading to a second wave. From late July case and death numbers steadily worsened again. By October, the Europe region accounted for the greatest proportion of reported new cases globally, with over 1.3 million new cases in the last week of October, a 33% leap in cases in a week.

The national societies doubled down. Many had by now switched to remote and on-line support, however 23 National Societies continued to deliver COVID-safe clinical and paramedical services, including those in Germany, Italy, Israel, Spain and the UK. As well they ran quarantine and testing stations, triage facilities and outpatient fever clinics to support the public emergency medical service, and provided mobile care services.

Some National Societies also supported experimental treatments by collecting plasma from patients who recovered from COVID-19 and had antibodies, and in turn provided this plasma to hospitals to treat very sick patients. Countless training and guidance sessions for staff and volunteers on COVID-19 were helped across the region, on the proper use of personal protective equipment and ambulances cleaning and disinfection.

Vaccines -- a potential game changer

By the start of December, the future started to look brighter. Countries started to plan for the possible arrival of vaccines, but this was taking place against a background of a relentless resurgence in the number of people infected with COVID-19. In the WHO Europe region, there had been more than 4 million new cases in November alone, with the region accounting for 40 % of new global cases and 50% of new global deaths. [3]

The vaccine results have come to be seen a large part of the solutions to containing the virus, but it has brought with it the challenge of countering misinformation and building trust in vaccines, as well as managing expectations that they will bring about a quick end to the pandemic. IFRC has supported local efforts to educate communities about their safety and efficacy.

Those hardest hit

In January more evidence came to light of the disproportionate impact the coronavirus was having on older people when the IFRC's Europe office published the results of a survey[4] which found older people had become sicker, poorer and more alone as a result of the pandemic. It added to a growing body of evidence that coronavirus had harmed the poor and most vulnerable the most, pushing millions more into poverty. [5] Sadly, migrants were also identified in new IFRC research as those least protected and most affected by the pandemic. [6]

And now, as we enter the start of the second year of the pandemic under ongoing harsh lockdowns, many countries are starting to see cases stabilise and even reduce.

This emergency has had significant challenges, including global flows of misinformation and disinformation, response fatigue and system-wide impacts of multiple waves of cases. The Red Cross Red Crescent movement is well-placed to do its part in the regional response given its extensive history with disease outbreak.

And planners in the movement acknowledge that vaccines will not be the silver bullet to end this pandemic alone. Red Cross will continue to work with communities to ensure they are informed about the virus, how it spreads and what to do to keep safe. It's continuing to advocate for tracing and isolation of people who are ill as a central part of the response. To keep in the fight against COVID-19, the entire population must stick to the preventative measures which have been proven to help stop the spread of the virus -- even as a vaccine becomes more widely available.

Original post:

Twelve months of coronavirus in Europe and how Red Cross Red Crescent responded - World - ReliefWeb

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