Category: Corona Virus

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COVID-19 in SD: 579 new positive cases; Death toll rises to 218; Active cases at 3,742 – KELOLAND.com

September 27, 2020

PIERRE, S.D. (KELO) The death toll from COVID-19 in South Dakota increased by two to 218 according to the latest update from the state department of health.

There have now been 51 deaths reported in September, the deadliest month of the pandemic. Of the two new deaths reported, both victims were men. One was listed in the 70-79 age range and the other man was 80+. The victims were from Codington and Pennington counties.

On Saturday, there were 579 new coronavirus cases announced, bringing the states total positive case count to 21,133, up from Friday (20,554). There have now been 17,173 recovered cases, up from Friday (16,831).

Active cases increased to 3,742 from Friday (3,507). Thats the highest number of active cases the state has ever seen.

Current hospitalizations rose to 213, up from Friday (194). Total hospitalizations, which include only South Dakota residents, are now at 1,434 up from Friday (1,400).

Total persons tested negative is now at 165,001, up from Friday (163,393).

A total of 2,187 new persons tested was reported on Saturday.

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Your Guide To Coronavirus

KELOLAND News is covering the COVID-19 pandemic. This is your guide to everything you need to know to prepare. We also have the latest stories from across the globe feeding into this page.

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At the onset and throughout the pandemic, health experts have warned Americans to remain vigilant of their mental health as communities grew distanced, work became home-bound and outings became dangerous.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Minnesota has recorded a grim milestone as health officials report that over 2,000 people have died from COVID-19 during the pandemic. The state also posted an all-time high for cases reported in a day []

Traditional trick-or-treating, crowded parties and indoor haunted houses are among the activities the CDC says pose the highest risk for coronavirus transmission, and families should avoid them this year.

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COVID-19 in SD: 579 new positive cases; Death toll rises to 218; Active cases at 3,742 - KELOLAND.com

Cluster of COVID-19 cases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital rises to 28 – Boston.com

September 27, 2020

A cluster of COVID-19 cases within Brigham and Womens Hospital rose to 28 confirmed cases among employees and patients alike on Friday, officials at the Boston hospital said.

To date, 310 employees have been tested with 19 testing positive. Fifty-four patients have been tested with 9 testing positive. This brings the total cases in the cluster to 28, the hospital said in a press release. There are more than 600 individuals connected to the cluster who are in the process of being tested.

Further information about specific cases was not available due to patient privacy.

The cluster was first identified by the hospitals Infection Control team Tuesday in two inpatient units at Braunwald Tower. The team believes the virus has been contained within those units, and officials said Friday the outbreak is not impacting other areas of the hospital.

But precisely how the coronavirus infiltrated and spread in the medical center remained unclear.

Our Infection Control team has investigated the source of the cluster through intensive contact tracing, testing, and staff interviews, the release says. Based on the information that we currently have, our Infection Control team is unable to determine whether the source of the cluster was a staff member or patient.

Still, an investigation found what the hospital considered possible contributing factors that precipitated the spread.

Many patients did not wear masks during clinical care interactions with hospital staff, and medical providers were inconsistent in their use of eye protection during encounters with patients, officials said.

Additionally, the hospital said the first patient who tested positive for coronavirus received an aerosol generating procedure prior to the positive test result, and added that a staffer, described as having mild symptoms consistent with historical seasonal allergies, continued to work.

Staff members also did not physically distance while not wearing masks as they ate, according to hospital officials.

One of the units involved in the cluster has been closed and the other has remained opened as the Infection Control team has documented a clear train of transmission, the hospital said. Both units have been or are being cleaned.

Brigham and Womens maintained its facilities are safe to visit.

The Brigham is committed to creating and maintaining a safe care environment by testing all patients admitted to the hospital, requiring staff to attest to their health daily before working, requiring all staff, patients and visitors to wear hospital-issued masks while on campus, insisting on frequent hand hygiene, frequently cleaning the environment, and enforcing appropriate physical distancing, the statement says.

On Friday, the hospital announced it is offering free COVID-19 testing for employees who have been working on its main campus since Sept. 14.

All patients (including those who have been discharged) and staff believed to have been exposed are being contacted by the Infection Control team to have testing arranged for them, the hospital said.

Staff who are symptomatic or who have tested positive for the virus have been sent home and are not permitted to return to work until they meet our systems return-to-work criteria, the hospital said.

All inpatients are now being tested for the virus as well. Patients had already, under previous protocol, been tested upon admission to the hospital and screened daily for symptoms, according to officials.

Free tests will be provided to individuals who believe they were exposed to the virus as a result of the cluster, the hospital said.

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Cluster of COVID-19 cases at Brigham and Women's Hospital rises to 28 - Boston.com

As the French Open Begins, Confusion and Fears About Coronavirus Dominate – The New York Times

September 27, 2020

In Paris, players are merely encouraged to take personal responsibility and respect social distancing guidelines but there are not strict rules on where they can venture or eat.

It is impossible to put a bubble around a tennis player, Montalvan said in the interview with Lquipe.

That was certainly true of the French tennis players who traveled for the tournaments in New York.

Benoit Paire, the French veteran known for both his smooth groundstrokes and active social life, tested positive just ahead of the U.S. Open. Paire, currently ranked No. 25 in mens singles, was found to have hosted a card game in his room with at least six other players, several of them from France.

Paire was barred from playing in the U.S. Open, and even though no one else tested positive, the other players who were near him had to follow more strict isolation rules even after they were eliminated and health officials eventually prohibited Kristina Mladenovic from participating in the doubles tournament.

The Paire saga has continued since the U.S. Open.

After quarantining for 14 days in New York, Paire traveled to Rome, where he tested negative but lost in the first round of the Italian Open. He then went to Hamburg, Germany, to play in the Hamburg European Open. He tested positive but medical officials allowed him to play because they determined that after 14 days an asymptomatic person was unlikely to continue to be contagious.

On Wednesday, he defaulted in the second set of his first round match against Casper Ruud. In a television interview following the match, Paire said, I cant take it anymore, Im breaking.

In Paris, a positive test would have resulted in Paires immediate elimination. Players who test positive in Paris are asked to isolate for seven days, compared with a mandatory 14-day isolation in New York.

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As the French Open Begins, Confusion and Fears About Coronavirus Dominate - The New York Times

The Solitude of Hiking Amid the Coronavirus Pandemic – The New York Times

September 27, 2020

Years ago, when Mr. Carcia first began hiking, he said he wasnt comfortable with where my mind would go during long periods of solitude.

Over years of hikes hes walked the Appalachian Trail and Pacific Crest Trail, each 2,000-odd miles he learned to live with the discomfort that comes from venturing into places where he didnt know what to expect. Thats why now, he said, Its no problem for me to be knee-deep in a river ford at 9 oclock at night, and not able to see where the trail picks up on the other side.

He had some years of wandering and some setbacks. He bummed around the West, seriously injured himself in a fall on Mount Whitney. While doing a partial hike of the Continental Divide Trail in Wyoming, he was involved in a car crash and the next day was going home on a Greyhound, battered.

The following year, in 2014, his father died of lung cancer. For weeks, Mr. Carcia slept on the floor of his fathers hospital room. Hed made the gambit we all make, that well work and make money and be able to enjoy it someday, but he didnt, he said.

Loss sharpened his resolve. He moved to New Hampshire in 2015 and started training to break the record on the two biggest challenges in the White Mountains the Grid and the Redline. I wanted to do something really big, he said.

On a recent day, he paused on a ridge to stare down the trail into a valley where he would backtrack 5.9 miles to his car, a distance he could cover in an hour if he ran. Nearing the end of the Redline, he said hes still sometimes plagued by the mental digressions everyone goes through, questions like, will he make it? And will it matter in the end?

Hiking, Mr. Carcia said, is hard, but not for the reasons people tell you its hard. Its hard because these mountains are mirrors, just like Covid is a mirror, and they force you to look at yourself. But I love that. I love getting into that underbelly and still having the grit to keep moving forward.

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The Solitude of Hiking Amid the Coronavirus Pandemic - The New York Times

Stalled Talks Over Covid-19 Stimulus in the U.S. Show Signs of Life – The New York Times

September 25, 2020

Released just as Britain is imposing new restrictions in response to a surge of cases, the app, called NHS Covid-19, uses technology created by Apple and Google to anonymously log when a person comes into close contact with another user of the app. If a person tests positive for the coronavirus, the app sends an alert to those they have come into contact with to get tested and quarantine.

The app, now available in Apples App Store and Googles Play store, also has a way for people to check in at restaurants, bars and other locations they visit by scanning a bar code, another measure to help track down individuals who have been exposed to the virus.

The release of the app follows various delays and challenges. The government had initially vowed to build an app without help from Apple or Google, saying it would offer more flexibility to track the spread of the virus. But after confronting technical challenges, the government reversed course. The switch delayed the release of the app, which at one point had been slated to be introduced in May. The app was released in England and Wales; similar technology had already been released in Northern Ireland and Scotland.

Some older phones are not able to handle the new app, which requires version iOS 13.5 or later for an iPhone and version 6 or later for Android.

The effectiveness of the app will in part depend on how many people use it. Without wide adoption, its usefulness is more limited. The technology could also test the governments overall track-and-trace system, which has been riddled with problems.

Everybody who downloads the app will be helping to protect themselves, helping to protect their loved ones, helping to protect their community because the more people who download it, the more effective it will be, Matt Hancock, the countrys health secretary, told the BBC.

Also on Thursday, Britains top financial official, Rishi Sunak, announced a range of new and extended measures to protect jobs and help businesses, including another government wage-paying program, just days after the prime minister, Boris Johnson, set new social restrictions that he warned could last for months.

Reporting was contributed by Matt Apuzzo, Pam Belluck, Aurelien Breeden, Ben Casselman, Choe Sang-Hun, Melissa Eddy, Farnaz Fassihi, Michael Gold, Maggie Haberman, Christine Hauser, Mike Ives, Miriam Jordan, Isabel Kershner, Gina Kolata, Mark Landler, Apoorva Mandavilli, Jeffery C. Mays, Jesse McKinley, Sarah Mervosh, Raphael Minder, Christina Morales, Eshe Nelson, Benjamin Novak, Richard C. Paddock, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier, Daniel Politi, Monika Pronczuk, Roni Caryn Rabin, Saw Nang, Simon Romero, Adam Satariano, Anna Schaverien, Christopher F. Schuetze, Dera Menra Sijabat, Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Eileen Sullivan, Sui-Lee Wee, Sameer Yasir and Elaine Yu.

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Stalled Talks Over Covid-19 Stimulus in the U.S. Show Signs of Life - The New York Times

Africa has held off the worst of the coronavirus. Researchers are working to figure out how. – NBC News

September 25, 2020

When the coronavirus first began spreading around the world, there was near-universal concern among experts that countries in Africa could be hit particularly hard, with high rates of transmission that could quickly overwhelm health care systems.

But roughly nine months into the pandemic, which has sickened over 31 million people and caused more than 950,000 deaths around the world, most African countries have fared significantly better than other parts of the world. The reasons are still something of a mystery more research is needed, and some studies that aim to answer the questions are only just beginning but scientists said the success of many African countries so far offers crucial lessons for the rest of the world and shine a light on how inherent biases can distort scientific research.

"The initial disease prediction models painted a very bleak picture of severe devastation of lives and economies in Africa," Dr. Sam Agatre Okuonzi, who works at Arua Regional Referral Hospital in northern Uganda, said Thursday in a World Health Organization news briefing. "In Uganda, it was predicted that by September, there would be 600,000 cases of Covid-19 and 30,000 deaths. But the reality is starkly different."

Uganda has 7,064 reported coronavirus cases and 70 deaths, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally. South Africa, the hardest-hit country on the continent, has recorded more than 665,000 cases and 16,206 deaths. That represents about 28 deaths per 100,000 people, compared to more than 61 deaths per 100,000 in the U.S.

Yet even though other countries, such as Ethiopia, Algeria and Nigeria, have struggled with bigger outbreaks, most countries on the continent have succeeded so far in containing the virus's spread.

Part of that success owes to aggressive measures enacted early in the pandemic to restrict people's movements and slow transmissions within communities, said Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, the WHO's regional director for Africa.

"Governments took early, quite drastic action through the lockdowns at great cost to their economies," Moeti said in the briefing. "This has bought us some time."

She said there are concerns that numbers of new infections could spike in the coming weeks as restrictions are eased and many African countries slowly return to normal. Moeti said upticks are already being observed in South Africa, Algeria, Mauritania and Ghana, likely as a direct result of the reopening of cities in May and June.

The WHO has stressed that the next few months in Africa but also elsewhere will be very important to stave off an anticipated second wave of infections.

Moeti said African countries should emphasize preparedness and must "put in place the public health capacities to contain the spread, so we don't have wide spread repeating itself in cycles."

As efforts to prepare for a possible second wave get underway, scientists are also trying to learn what African countries did right in the first phase of the pandemic.

More research is needed, but some early theories have emerged, Okuonzi said.

He said it's possible that some African countries are better equipped to respond to infectious disease outbreaks "because we have a lot of experience from Ebola and other diseases."

Shaun Truelove, an assistant scientist and modeling expert at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said it's also possible that some populations in Africa could have "cross-reactive immunities" from having been exposed to other circulating coronaviruses.

There's no firm evidence of that yet, but it's something researchers are actively studying. Francisca Mutapi, a professor of global health infection and immunity at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, is involved with research in Zimbabwe to assess people's immunity levels to six other known coronaviruses. Mutapi said she expects to know more about any potential cross-protections in the next four months.

Mutapi suggested that differences in culture and lifestyle could play a role. "One of the factors about the virus is it doesn't transmit very well outdoors," she said. "Africa has a significant population that is rural and spends a lot of time outdoors. That is one of the factors that we have found from our own work."

Moeti said it's also likely that demographics could explain why many African countries have had fewer Covid-19 deaths.

"In most African countries, we have about 3 percent of the population aged over 65 years," she said, adding that research has shown that young people are at lower risk of becoming severely ill from the coronavirus.

The trends in Africa stand in stark contrast to the experiences of African Americans, who, due to a range of other socioeconomic factors, are at a disproportionate risk of becoming severely ill from the coronavirus. Researchers have no reason to believe that Black people have a natural immunity to the coronavirus, despite some pseudoscience that has circulated about Black people in the U.S. The U.S. does, however, have a history of race- and socioeconomic-based health disparities.

Some researchers have raised the possibility that low numbers in Africa could be a result of underreporting, but Truelove said that's not likely to be the main reason.

"That doesn't fully explain it, because we would see health care systems being overwhelmed if there truly was an outbreak occurring," he said.

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Scientists like Truelove are eager to learn more about what has so far kept African countries from realizing the dire predictions from early on in the pandemic.

"It's really not clear why and if it's a combination of all these theories or other things, as well," he said. "It's going to be an interesting discovery process."

But beyond epidemiological concerns, the disconnect between early projections for what could happen in Africa and most of the continent's real-life experience exposes the limits of conventional infectious disease modeling, Okuonzi said.

Most models are "based on European populations, not on African populations, and they are also informed by very well-entrenched biases about Africa, that, for example, Africa is prone to disease," he said. "Covid-19 has shattered a lot of biases about the disease in general."

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Africa has held off the worst of the coronavirus. Researchers are working to figure out how. - NBC News

Texas COVID-19 response, data were impaired by a glitchy computer system – The Texas Tribune

September 25, 2020

A glitchy electronic system that state health officials had repeatedly warned was aging and at high risk of critical failure has stymied efforts to track and manage the coronavirus in Texas and left policymakers with incomplete, and at times inaccurate, data about the pandemics spread.

The states public health agency asked Texas lawmakers for money last year to improve a reporting system the National Electronic Disease Surveillance System, or NEDSS it said was several versions behind what other states used at the time. The work was months from being finished when the coronavirus pandemic struck.

Local health officials were left to navigate a public health disaster using a system they describe as cumbersome, archaic and really slow and which until August could not keep pace with the 60,000 or more coronavirus test results it received on many days.

It was also not equipped to manage the massive undertaking of tracking and tracing coronavirus infections. The state hired a contractor to build a separate system that was not ready until late May and is still not widely used by local health departments.

People dislike NEDSS because its so tedious, its so slow, said Diana Cervantes, an epidemiologist at the University of North Texas Health Science Center who has worked for the state health services agency and the local public health department. Until recently, the program ran only on the unpopular Internet Explorer web browser.

Just as hospital workers need protective equipment in the fight against the virus, epidemiologists and other disease detectives need fast, accurate data to track where the virus is spreading and recommend how the government should respond. Gathered quickly and efficiently, public health experts say it can guide interventions that save lives.

Chris Van Deusen, a spokesperson for the Texas Department of State Health Services, said the test information in NEDSS is just one indicator of the coronavirus spread and that a combination of data sets on hospitalizations and fatalities, for example has guided the state response.

NEDSS is now more reliable and stable after being upgraded in February and August, he said. Prior to that, it was last updated in 2017.

The scope of the pandemic, which has claimed the lives of more than 200,000 Americans, including more than 15,000 in Texas, has generated unprecedented demands for data even as it strains a low-tech public health sector already crippled by systemic underfunding, according to health experts. Thats been particularly true in Texas, a state with a highly decentralized public health system that spends less per capita on public health than 39 other states.

Gov. Greg Abbott, who has ultimate authority over the states response to the pandemic, has assured the public that crucial decisions hes made about allowing businesses to open or requiring Texans to wear masks are based upon data and doctors.

But the health agency has had to issue myriad corrections to its coronavirus data, acknowledging errors in counting deaths and announcing large testing backlogs that skewed a closely-watched metric Abbott cited as he let businesses start reopening in May.

Van Deusen said the recently corrected positivity rate, which represents the daily share of tests with positive results, doesnt change our understanding of what was happening during Texas summer surge of COVID-19 cases. The contours of both the old and the corrected rates are mostly similar, he said.

An Abbott spokesman did not respond to questions for this story.

One reason for the data inaccuracies was that the old NEDSS system could not process lab results fast enough, leading to a backlog of some 350,000 tests. The disclosure of the logjam sent some local health departments scrambling to sort through cases and explain the seeming sudden spike of infections to the public.

Some of the test results were so outdated by the time officials recorded them that follow-up efforts to trace the contacts of infected people were nearly pointless, local health officials said.

Laboratories also struggled to upload test results into NEDSS because of precise formatting requirements.

We are optimistic that the state will modernize their data reporting system and support it with the right resources, said CHRISTUS Health spokesperson Katy Kiser, when asked about a delay importing 95,000 test results this summer.

Texas health officials have faced the herculean task of assembling data including negative test results as well as positive ones from hundreds of different laboratories and testing sites and publishing it in near real-time. The health services agency hired a contractor to minimize problems getting lab results imported to NEDSS.

The state has done what they can under a trying situation, said Eduardo "Eddie" Olivarez, the chief administrative officer for Hidalgo Countys health and human services division. The pandemic just has astronomically increased the amount of work in things that we've never had to do in the past.

Even before the pandemic, the version of NEDSS used in Texas was very, very outdated, health commissioner Dr. John Hellerstedt told lawmakers in 2019. It was prone to blinking on and off, required a lot of maintenance and sometimes lost information that had been entered, he said.

In a plea for funding around that time, the health agency said NEDSS was at risk of failure due to aging infrastructure and was delayed in getting lab reports and other information vital to start disease investigations or inform treatment for affected patients. The delays would worsen as the system continues to deteriorate, they wrote in a 2018 appropriations request and would increasingly threaten the timeliness of public healths infectious disease response.

The agency received $3.5 million from lawmakers to upgrade NEDSS. The agency is also hiring seven people to help its four-person NEDSS team. Federal funding will pay for 18 more people for two years.

State and local authorities use NEDSS to collate information about public health threats from foodborne illnesses to diseases like mumps and measles and share it with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Used in Texas since the 2000s, the system is meant to serve as a central, electronic repository of crucial disease information.

All 50 states and the District of Columbia have an electronic system that works with NEDSS, many using commercially or custom built systems and about 20, including Texas, relying on the free base system developed by the CDC but those states may have to buy software licenses, hardware or pay for staff to tend to the technology.

The version Texas now uses looks like something out of the 1990s: gray, boxy graphics and sometimes lagging response times. Even after the August improvements, the state is not using the latest version of NEDSS, though Van Deusen said the state health department plans to upgrade and that other states arent using the latest version, either.

The upgrade had to be carefully planned so that it didnt cause information in the system to be lost, he said.

NEDSS is meant to collect standard data on each case, including things like race, age and date of onset, to ensure that what I'm calling a confirmed COVID case in Tarrant County is the same as somebody in Wisconsin, or Nevada, said Cervantes, the epidemiologist at the UNT Health Science Center. Local health officials can also use NEDSS to access COVID-19 test results that laboratories send to the state.

But NEDSS isnt robust enough for real-time tracking like tracing an infection to a local restaurant, Cervantes said. For that, health departments often turn to separate tools to organize complicated data about an infection and to trace clusters of cases, she said. National public health groups have criticized that trend as inefficient.

The state paid Deloitte more than $1.1 million in federal funds to create a separate program, Texas Health Trace, to help track coronavirus cases, and let local health officials draw on a statewide call center of contact tracers. But by the time it was rolled out in late May, some health departments had already created their own systems to investigate cases and have not merged them with Health Trace. Others decided not to switch over.

Harris County Public Health built a program it calls CRP, or COVID-19 Response Program, after finding NEDSS and other computer systems were overwhelmed and not nimble enough to handle an influx of coronavirus data, said Dr. Umair Shah, the departments executive director.

The department had already hired 300 contact tracers who were using the home-grown program which collects laboratory data and allows workers to document progress on case investigations and contact tracing before the state introduced Texas Health Trace. Shah said the department has no intention of switching to the states new system.

Austin Public Health turned to a Salesforce tool similar to Health Trace because NEDSS was a legacy system that was running really, really slow, said Chief Epidemiologist Janet Pichette. It just was not performing to meet the case demands of the department, she added.

Such pricey solutions are out of reach for other health departments, like Cameron County on the states southern tip, which has been among the hardest hit regions in Texas.

The local health department lacks the resources of some of its urban counterparts that can afford to hire contractors, buy specialized software or create polished maps, said Esmeralda Guajardo, health administrator for Cameron County Public Health.

They turned to Excel.

I cant afford to utilize NEDSS and then in the middle ... be told that theyre going to have to take it down for a few days for maintenance, as has happened before, Guajardo said.

Her department has begun to submit case information to the state through Health Trace instead of NEDSS, an improvement in her eyes even though they initially had to manually input the data.

The state is now trying to merge local systems with Health Trace and is actively importing data from jurisdictions on the back end, Van Deusen said.

The patchwork of local systems used to investigate infections before the pandemic did not allow for the kind of easy information sharing necessary to let state contact tracers augment work at the local level when needed, he said, adding that Excel and other simple tools are constrained by how many records they can store and are subject to corruption.

At Northeast Texas Public Health District, based in Tyler, officials said NEDSS was plagued by slowdowns and errors in the spring and that it was unrealistic to migrate to the Texas Health Trace application in the middle of a pandemic.

Though NEDSS responsiveness has improved since the pandemic began, epidemiologists said, they have no plans to abandon their strategy of working in Excel spreadsheets and other databases they consider more reliable.

In my 12 years of experience with [NEDSS], it crashes all the time and you just cant rely on it, said Russell Hopkins, the districts director of public health preparedness.

Compounding the states problems in getting ahead of the virus are complicated reporting chains that can make gathering raw information a nightmare. State and local officials often receive duplicate test or case information from hospitals, medical providers and laboratories.

A host of new players particularly nursing homes and other long-term care providers have begun to test for the virus and arent familiar with how to report results to state and local health officials, a process that can have exacting requirements. Health officials say crucial information is often missing, requiring them to track down additional detail or eyeball addresses to determine whether a case falls within their jurisdiction.

With so many people involved in collecting and transmitting information, there are data entry and translation errors. Olivarez, the Hidalgo County health official, has seen Hidalgo spelled with an E, or Donna written down as donut.

That has left health workers to spend hours sifting out duplicates, manually copying data into different data systems and being bombarded with faxes, particularly in the early days of the pandemic. Doctors and labs' lingering reliance on faxes which are relatively cheap and comply with federal privacy standards is in part due to lack of government funding.

Its appalling that in 2020 we're still dealing with so many of these paper faxes and having to hand enter lab data because we can't just automatically upload this sort of data, said Dr. Philip Huang, health authority for the Dallas County Health and Human Services Department.

Local and state officials have advocated for a federal fix, including $1 billion in new funding to the CDC to improve its public health surveillance systems.

In Cameron County, Guajardo said the pressure to get the data cleaned up and entered quickly is immense. Sixty percent of her public health preparedness staff has left since the pandemic began after having to work up to seven days a week, sometimes 14 hours a day, to manually input data and contact people who may have been infected. Some have sought better paying jobs.

The county has had to take an all hands on deck approach, drafting nutritionists and environmental health inspectors to track down information or sift through backlogged test results, Guajardo said. Each case is tied to a person who may be waiting to go back to work or be told what to do next if they test positive for COVID-19, she said.

The state temporarily sent staff and epidemiologists to help, and Guajardo said theyre grateful. But she worries that the backlogs, data errors and corrections will erode the publics confidence in her profession.

Because we don't have a technology in place, we're losing credibility overnight over this, she said. When you're in public health for 21 years, this is not the legacy you want.

Epidemiologists and other experts say they hope the public frustration over incomplete or delayed data during the pandemic will spur greater investment in public health technology.

Many have championed efforts to streamline the reporting process so that it can move seamlessly from medical providers to health authorities. But that goal has remained elusive.

Thats going to be one of the critical things that weve got to improve as a result of this whole situation, said George Roberts, chief executive of the Northeast Texas Public Health District. Local public health, state public health they all realize that we need to make vast improvements.

Guajardo is more blunt.

You don't put a Band-Aid on a broken leg. You don't. You have to figure out what the problem is and fix it, she said. That's what needs to happen here. We need to fix it.

Disclosure: Christus Health, Deloitte, Salesforce, University of North Texas and UNT Health Science Center have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Texas COVID-19 response, data were impaired by a glitchy computer system - The Texas Tribune

Coronavirus FAQs: Why Can’t The CDC Make Up Its Mind About Airborne Transmission? – NPR

September 25, 2020

Each week we answer some of your pressing questions about the coronavirus and how to stay safe. Email us your questions at goatsandsoda@npr.org with the subject line: "Weekly Coronavirus Questions."

What is up CDC? First you say airborne transmission is a thing. Then you rolled it back. So ... is this something I should be worried about?

Last Friday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention briefly became the first major public health agency in the world to say the coronavirus could be frequently spreading through the air. A page on the CDC website on "How COVID-19 Spreads" described the coronavirus as spreading "most commonly" through "respiratory or small particles, such as those in aerosols," which are tiny airborne particles expelled from people's noses and mouths when they speak, sing, cough or breathe and which can remain suspended in the air and travel further than six feet.

Aerosol researchers such as Linsey Marr, an engineering professor at Virginia Tech, who have been pushing for health agencies to officially recognize the potential importance of aerosol spread cheered over the weekend.

But then, on Monday, CDC walked it back. "A draft version of proposed changes to these recommendations was posted in error," notes a box at the top of the CDC's page, adding that the agency is still working out what to say about aerosol transmission.

In the midst of this confusion, you might be wondering what exactly is in dispute. Does the coronavirus spread through the air? What precautions can help protect you?

The bottom line is: Yes, the coronavirus may be spreading through the air, particularly in stuffy rooms where many people aren't wearing masks.

Public health agencies such as CDC and the World Health Organization agree on that it's why they've recommended that people avoid "confined and enclosed spaces with poor ventilation" and gather outdoors when possible.

They're just not clear whether it's one of the most common ways it spreads. CDC now maintains that the highest risk of catching the virus comes from spending prolonged time within six feet of an infectious person, and that it can also spread through touching a surface that someone infectious has sneezed or coughed on, and then rubbing your eyes, nose or mouth.

Some of the reluctance to describe COVID-19 as an airborne disease may stem from concerns that the label would scare the public and may require hospitals to take "a whole new level of precautions," says Marr, such as requiring an N95 mask, which blocks aerosols, to be worn around all potential COVID-19 patients.

Currently, WHO guidance considers surgical masks to be adequately protective for healthcare staffers working with potential COVID-19 patients, and advises using N95 masks in limited situations, such as when intubating patients, which is known to generate small particles from deep in the lungs. Healthcare workers who follow these recommendations have been generally protected against the virus, WHO notes.

Months of evidence point to the probability that COVID-19 is less contagious than measles, a designated airborne disease, but is still spreading through the air, says Jose-Luis Jiminez, an atmospheric chemistry professor at University of Colorado Boulder. He points to a March choir practice in Washington state, where 53 out of 61 attendees came down with COVID-19 after spending two and a half hours together at a singing rehearsal. "People who were 50 feet from the [person who was contagious] got infected," he says, based on investigations he and several colleagues conducted into the event.

Infection clusters have also emerged among students returning to college dorms, partiers in a nightclub district, guests at a wedding reception, residents in a nursing home, worshippers at a churches, staff and inmates at a prison. Most superspreading events, where many people catch the coronavirus at once, are occuring in indoor settings where people are sharing airspace.

So what precautions can you take to protect yourself against aerosol spread?

It means keeping that physical distance of six feet and then thinking beyond it. "Masks and ventilation and filtration," says Marr, can go a long way in "getting a better control on the spread of the virus."

First, that recommended six feet of distance between you and others allows more air to pass between you, helping to dispel any clouds of virus that get released. It reduces the risk that one of you will breathe in an infectious dose.

Second, wear a face mask that covers your nose and mouth. It blocks the spray of spit and breath you expel, and also affords some protection from other people's exhalations. Unlike N95 masks, which form a seal on your face, a typical cloth or surgical mask isn't foolproof against aerosols but Jimniez says that they offer reasonable protection, particularly when combined with other precautions.

"If you are outdoors with distance and with a mask that is well-fit, I would say it's extremely difficult to get the disease that way," Jiminez says.

If you do spend time indoors with others, work to improve the airflow and ventilation in the room. "We need to address ventilation in all of our public buildings, especially places like schools and restaurants," says Marr. "This can be as simple as opening doors and windows, it can be adjusting dampers and the HVAC system so that you bring in more outdoor air."

Air filters, which can be used to purify the air in a room, may help as well, she says. "There are simple things we can do to greatly improve ventilation in buildings that are not necessarily costly."

In most settings, these potential virus clouds can be dispersed with a light breeze and some fresh, clean air.

For more information about aerosols, read an FAQ explainer assembled by Marr, Jiminez and colleagues.

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Coronavirus FAQs: Why Can't The CDC Make Up Its Mind About Airborne Transmission? - NPR

Coronavirus updates: Pac-12 football returns; Cuomo says New York will review vaccines approved by feds; fears of a second wave in Europe – USA TODAY

September 25, 2020

The U.S. has reached 200,000 deaths from the coronavirus. Now experts are looking ahead, and the forecast for the fall and winter isn't good. USA TODAY

New York state officials will conduct a review of any coronavirus vaccines approved by the federal government before recommending them to New Yorkers, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Thursday.

Cuomo said he feared President Donald Trump would strongarm the Food and Drug Administration into using insufficiently rigorous standards to approve vaccines.

"We are going to put together our own review committee that will advise me, so i can look at the camera and Ican say, 'It is safe to take,'" Cuomo said.

In Houston, a new study indicates the coronavirus, which has infected almost 7 million people in the U.S. alone, may have mutated to a strain that's more contagious, though not more deadly.

In Britain, the government is considering a plan to intentionally infect healthy volunteers to expeditea determination on which vaccine candidates are effective.

In Missouri, the city of St. Charles has banned music in clubs after 11 p.m., citing rowdy crowds spilling into streets.In other cities around the world, peopleare finding workarounds to make Oktoberfest a thing. Think "yodelgram."

Without masks and a vaccine, we could reach Herd Immunity from COVID-19, but deaths would skyrocket. We break down the science of it. USA TODAY

Some significant developments:

Today's numbers: The U.S. has reported more than 6.9million cases, according to Johns Hopkins University data,and more than 202,000 deaths, a total that exceeds the population of cities such as Little Rock, Arkansas, Fort Collins, Colorado, and Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Globally, there have been more than 32 million cases and almost 980,000 fatalities.

What we're reading:Fever. Chills. Body aches. Shortness of breath. Some people infected with COVID-19 have battled such symptomsfor months, wondering if they'd ever feel better again. Now, finally, a treatment program originally intended for geriatric patients is bringing relief for long-suffering patients.

Mapping coronavirus:Track the U.S. outbreak, state by state.

This file will be updated throughout the day. For updates in your inbox, subscribe to The Daily Briefing newsletter.

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The Pac-12, the lone holdout against playing amid the coronavirus pandemic among the Power Five conferences, gave in on Thursday and announced a return to athletic competition. Most significantly, the conference said the high-revenue sports of football and basketball would be back on Nov. 6 and Nov. 25, respectively. Other winter sports will return to action as well.

The Pac-12 and Big Ten had simultaneously announced they would postpone fall sports, most notably football, on Aug. 11, citing health concerns during the pandemic. But the SEC, ACC and Big 12 pressed on and decided to play.

When the Big Ten changed its stance and opted to get back on the football field Oct. 24, the Pac-12 was left all alone, and there was little doubt it would resume play as well. The league's new seven-game schedule will allow its teamsto be considered for the College Football Playoff. Fans won't be allowed at the conference games.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he will establish a state panel to review any vaccines that win federal approval before he will recommend the vaccines to New Yorkers. Cuomo expressed concern over bickering between President Donald Trump and the Food and Drug Administration over the standards that will be required for approval. Trump has said he might not approvemore rigorous standards if the FDA attempts to enact them.

Cuomo said he hoped his state could become the first to become fully vaccinated. But he also said he wants to be able to assure New Yorkers the vaccines are safe.

"I'm not going to trust the federal government's opinion and Iwouldn't recommend to New Yorkers based on the federal government's opinion," Cuomo said.

Britain is reporting its highest number of new coronavirus infections in a single day, 6,632. France recorded 52 deaths and more than 16,000 new cases in a 24-hour period.Spain just went over 700,000 total cases, the first European country to reach that mark.

There are growing signs of a second wave of COVID-19 in the Old Continent, where the virus made its deepest imprint right after spreading beyond China.

While the spike in confirmed infections can be partly attributed to increased testing, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson reacted to the rise in cases across all age groups by ordering pubs and restaurants closed by 10 p.m., and he warned stricter measures may be forthcoming if transmission is not suppressed.Britain has the highest death toll in Europe, with nearly 42,000 fatalities.

The presidents of Michigan's three largest research universities -- the University of Michigan, Michigan State and Wayne State -- said Thursday that most students would probably taking classes online for the rest of the school year and won't return to classrooms until next fall.

M. Roy Wilson of Wayne State in Detroit said the winter semester will look like the current term because the pandemic is going to be with us for a while.

Oktoberfest devoteeshaveknown since Aprilthat there would be no massive festival in Munich, Germany, this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. But now that the season has arrived, the lack of crowdedtents filled with revelers dressed in dirndl skirts and lederhosen shouting "prost!" is having an impact.The loss of Oktoberfest, which had been scheduled to run from Sept. 19 through Oct. 4,is a huge hit for the Bavarian city, which last year saw 6.3 million guests drink 15.5 million pintsof beer and consume124 oxen, among other traditional foods.

All around the world, virtual fests are underway while many establishments hostsmall parties. In the Washington, D.C., area, you can even get a "yodelgram." Devils Backbone Brewing Co. says that's whena "real-life, yodeling TikTok sensation arrives at your house, armed with Devils Backbone Oktoberfest beer and steins plus a custom yodel."

Morgan Hines

United Airlines will roll out a new COVID-19 testing program for passengers beginning Oct. 15. The airline saidtesting at first will only be available for passengers traveling to Hawaii from San Francisco International Airport. Why Hawaii?The airline, the first in the U.S. to offer rapid testing,has more flights to the state than any other U.S. carrier, and theAloha State's new testing requirements beginthe same dayas United's.

"We'll look to quickly expand customer testing to other destinations and U.S. airports later this year," said Toby Enqvist, the airline'schief customer officer.Airlines and trade groups have been calling on the federal government to establish a testing program andrequire passengers to wear maskssince this summer. All major U.S. airlines now havetheir own mask policiesin place.

Jayme Deerwester

Global soccer star Zlatan Ibrahimovi hastested positive for COVID-19, AC Milan announcedThursday.The club said the Swede, one of the premierstrikers of the last two decades,tested positive ahead of Thursday night's Europa League qualifying matchagainst Bod/Glimt.AC Milan "has informed the relevant authorities"and Ibrahimovi is in quarantine at home, theteam said in a statement. Ibrahimovi's teammatesand club staff have tested negative.

"Covid had the courage to challenge me," Ibrahimovi, who scored both his team's goals in a game Monday,said in a Twitter post. "Bad idea."

Chris Bumbaca

A ban on "music activities" after 11 p.m. kicks in Friday in St. Charles, Missouri. The city has been overwhelmed with partiers denied entry to bars in St. Louis because of coronavirus restrictions. The ban has drawn mention of the 1984 movie Footloose, in which a small town bans dancing until a newcomer played by actor Kevin Bacon rolls into town and turns the tide.

I feel a little bit like the movie Footloose, but thats not what this is about, Mayor Dan Borgmeyer told KTVI-TV. The mayor blamed rowdy crowds that have spilled into city streets, resulting in fights and creating enough concern that police presence downtown at night has tripled in recent months.

Nearly two months after federal regulators unveiled rules for at-home coronavirus tests, no company has federal approval to sell these fast andcheaptests even though the technology is ready. No company has been cleared to sell tests directly to consumers for widespread screening a step some believe is necessary to slow the spread of COVID-19.Gaining FDA authorization for these inexpensive, at-home tests is no easy task.

The way to get this under control is if people find out as early as possible they are infected and then quarantine from others, said Dr. Yukari Manabe, a Johns Hopkins University professor of medicine.

Ken Alltuckerand Ramon Padilla

The coronavirus pandemic is putting pressure on many familieswith grown children. About two-thirds of parents say they are providing financial support to their adult children during the crisis, helping to pay for everything from groceries to health care expenses, a recent survey from Country Financial found.One in five has had their adult child move back home with them, according to the survey based on responses from more than 1,300 adults in mid-August.

This trend of adult children moving back at home was something we saw a lot of out of the Great Recession, says TroyFrerichs,vice president of investment services at Country Financial. Now you are seeing it happen again.

Aimee Picchi

Thecoronavirushas exposed a secret underbelly of the travel business. Many travel agencies operate Ponzi-style schemes where one traveler's deposit pays for a previous traveler's tickets and accommodations.Everything ran smoothly as long as bookings continued to roll in.The pandemic blurred the already muddy line between business ethics and fraud and has led to not just fried nerves, but official complaints and legal action.Through public records requests, USA TODAY obtained consumer complaints related to COVID-19 filed with attorneys generals and other agencies in 20 states. Scott Keyes, who runs the website Scotts Cheap Flights, said online travel agencies often save money by providing littlecustomer service.

If a catastrophic event happens like a worldwide pandemic, Keyes said, theyre really up a creek.

Nick Penzenstadler and Josh Salman

Children are not included in the ongoing trials for a COVID-19 vaccine, so it's likely to be well into next year or beyondbefore they can get vaccinatedagainst the coronavirus thatcauses the disease. The vast majority of children don't get severely ill from COVID-19, butkids can still pass on the virus to teachers, parents, grandparents, etc.Emory University School of Medicine pediatric infectious disease specialist Dr. Evan Anderson called for a rapid expansion of clinical trials to include children, ideally providing results in time for them to be vaccinated before the 2021 school year.

"We owe it to our children not to delay moving forward with initial studies to evaluate promising vaccine candidates," Anderson said.

Karen Weintraub

Britain could become the world's first country to intentionally infect healthy volunteers with the coronavirus in the worlds first "human challenge" trial to expedite a determination on which COVIDvaccines work. The Financial Times reported that the government-funded studies could be announced next week and begin in January. British government officials would only say that discussions were underway for such a trial. The BBC said no deal had been signed as of Thursday. Britain has been struggling to neutralize an uptick in cases in recent weeks. Tighter restrictions, such as closing pubs at 10 p.m., went into effect across the country Thursday.

Prof Peter Horby of Oxford University told the BBC such a trial was a good idea and could quickly advance knowledge of the virus.

"I think the challenge trial has the potential to save thousands of lives and really bring the world out of the pandemic sooner," Horby said.

Researchers at Houston Methodist Hospital say a study of the second wave of the coronavirus to sweep across the city indicates a mutation that ismore contagious than the original strain. The later infections show the virus still has the crown shape that gives the virus its name, but the newer version has more of the spikes that latch onto human cells. The study, which has not yet been subject to crucial peer review,found patients infected with the variant strain had more of the virus when diagnosed than the first round of patients in the spring. There was an upside:The study showed no indication that the mutation is any more deadly than the original. Outcomes remain primarily linked to pre-existing conditions such as diabetes and obesity.

Weve now done molecular analyses of the two waves of the pandemic and one thing that stands out is the increase in the mutated strains frequency over a short period of time, Dr. James Musser, the studys author, told the Houston Chronicle. Clearly, this strain is very different.

University of Wisconsin Chancellor Rebecca Blank said the Madison campus will begin to reopen Saturdayfollowing a two-week lockdown to curb the spread ofCOVID-19 among undergraduate students.

The university was only one week into the school year when leaders all but shut down campus facilities, movedclasses online and quarantinedtwo of thelargest dorms, which house 2,220 students in total.There will be changes. The reopening will be gradual. Not all classes will start immediately and not all will return to fully in-person instruction. Classes that require specialized equipment will still be in-person or hybrid, but others may be modified.

Devi Shastri, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

COVID-19 widespread testing is crucial to fighting the pandemic, but is there enough testing? The answer is in the positivity rates. USA TODAY

Hours after some of the administration's leading health officials offered assurances that the search for a coronavirus vaccine would be conducted free of political interference, President Donald Trump on Wednesday undercut that notion and suggested he may overrule the Federal Drug Administration.Trump, who has predicted the arrival of a vaccine before the Nov. 3 election, questioned why the FDA would set a higher standard for granting emergency authorization for a vaccine, as the agency is reportedly planning on in an effort to gain public trust.

The president said FDA guidance "has to be approved by the White House. We may or may not approve it.''Earlier in the day,FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn addressed concerns of politics playing a role in the approval process, emphasizing that career scientists at the FDA drive decision making: "Science will guide our decisions,'' Hahn said. "FDA will not permit any pressure from anyone to change that."

-- Jorge L. Ortiz

Contributing: The Associated Press

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Coronavirus updates: Pac-12 football returns; Cuomo says New York will review vaccines approved by feds; fears of a second wave in Europe - USA TODAY

COVID-19 Daily Update 9-25-2020 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

September 25, 2020

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of 10:00 a.m., September 25,2020, there have been 535,018 total confirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 14,953 totalcases and 330 deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of a 67-yearold female from Kanawha County, a 69-yearold female from Kanawha County, a 94-year old male from Harrison County, a 58-yearold male from Doddridge County, and a 67-year old female from Mercer County. Thecontinued loss of West Virginians weighs heavily on all of us, said Bill J.Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. During this difficult time for our state andnation, we extend our deepest sympathy.

CASESPER COUNTY: Barbour(53), Berkeley (976), Boone (218), Braxton (13), Brooke (111), Cabell (767),Calhoun (25), Clay (34), Doddridge (22), Fayette (599), Gilmer (43), Grant(158), Greenbrier (125), Hampshire (104), Hancock (148), Hardy (88), Harrison(349), Jackson (259), Jefferson (427), Kanawha (2,554), Lewis (38), Lincoln (164),Logan (606), Marion (265), Marshall (170), Mason (141), McDowell (81), Mercer(409), Mineral (172), Mingo (372), Monongalia (1,980), Monroe (147), Morgan(53), Nicholas (99), Ohio (367), Pendleton (52), Pleasants (17), Pocahontas(59), Preston (152), Putnam (538), Raleigh (501), Randolph (240), Ritchie (12),Roane (49), Summers (49), Taylor (120), Tucker (20), Tyler (16), Upshur (64),Wayne (389), Webster (7), Wetzel (53), Wirt (12), Wood (356), Wyoming (110).

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

Pleasevisit the dashboard located at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more information.

Free COVID-19 testing locations areavailable today in Cabell, Fayette, Kanawha, Logan, Nicholas, Wayne, and Wyomingcounties:

Cabell County, September25, 12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, Cabell County EMS Station No. 7, 1597 US Route 60,Milton, WV

Fayette County, September25, 1:00 PM 3:00 PM, J.W. and Hazel Ruby WV Welcome Center, 55 Hazel RubyLane, Mt. Hope, WV

Kanawha County, September25, 9:00 AM 3:00 PM, Shawnee Sports Complex, 1 Salango Way, Dunbar, WV

Logan County, September25, 1:00 PM 5:00 PM, Old 84 Lumber Building, 100 Recovery Road, Peach Creek,WV

Nicholas County,September 25, 12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, Nazarene Camp, 6461 Webster Road,Summersville, WV

Wayne County, September25, 11:00 AM 2:00 PM, Wayne County Health Department, 217 Kenova Avenue, Wayne,WV

Wyoming County, September25, 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, Oceana Square (former Magic Mart), Highway 971, Oceana,WV

Testing is available to everyone,including asymptomatic individuals. For upcoming testing locations, pleasevisit https://dhhr.wv.gov/COVID-19/pages/testing.aspx.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 9-25-2020 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

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