Category: Covid-19

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COVID-19 Hospitalizations Increase to 104 in San Diego County – Times of San Diego

April 24, 2022

FILE PHOTO: An unidentified COVID-19 patient is treated in the ICU at Providence St Joseph Hospital in Orange, U.S. July 23, 2021. REUTERS/Omar Younis

There were 104 San Diego County residents hospitalized with COVID-19 Saturday, an increase of 15 from Friday, according to the latest data from the state.

The total number of COVID patients in intensive care beds was 17, an increase of four from the previous day. The total number of available hospital beds countywide increased by 22 to 264.

The latest numbers come one day after San Diego Countys Health and Human Services Agency reported 389 new COVID-19 infections and three more deaths associated with the virus, as case numbers showed a week-over-week increase in the region.

The county does not report cases and deaths on weekends.

In the past week, a total of 2,277 infections were reported, 318 more than the previous weeks 1,959. The countys cumulative totals increased to 756,718 infections and 5,236 deaths with Fridays data.

More than 30,000 San Diegans have been hospitalized with COVID-19 locally since the beginning of the pandemic, the HHSA reported this week. The first one was hospitalized on Feb. 25, 2020.

While hospitalizations have been slowing since the Omicron variant hit its peak earlier this year, new COVID-19 infections reached a two-week high Wednesday with 411 reported, followed by 518 on Thursday. Though the figure is still well below daily case counts repeatedly over 10,000 in January of this year, county health officials are urging vulnerable populations to practice increased caution when out in public.

The unfortunate hospitalization milestone and bump in cases in the region and across the country are a reminder that the COVID-19 pandemic is not over, said Dr. Wilma Wooten, county public health officer. San Diegans, especially those at higher risk for severe outcomes from an infection, should continue to utilize non-pharmaceutical interventions, like masking and staying away from sick people. Everyone should get vaccinated and boosted when they are eligible, protecting themselves and those around them.

In San Diego County, 94.3% of residents eligible age 5 and older have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. A total of 82.8% of those eligible or 2.61 million are fully vaccinated and 55.9% from a smaller eligibility group 1,229,500 have received boosters.

City News Service

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COVID-19 Hospitalizations Increase to 104 in San Diego County - Times of San Diego

Curious if, or when, COVID-19 will end? Meet the Russian Flu, a forgotten pandemic from the late 1800s that might still linger today – Yahoo Finance

April 24, 2022

Patients suffering from respiratory and neurological symptoms, including loss of taste and smell.

Long-haul sufferers who struggle to muster the energy to return to work.

A pandemic with a penchant for attacking the elderly and obese with particular force.

Sounds a lot like COVID, right?

Its not.

Rather, its the Russian Flu, the worlds first well-documented pandemic, occurring as modern germ theory rose to prominence and miasma theory dispelled, ushering in the era of modern medical science and public health.

A quick check of the textbooksthe few that actually mention the thingwill inform you that the pandemic, which killed an estimated 1 million worldwide, lasted from 1889 to 1890.

Experts will tell you it likely hung around much longerand might still lurk, in some form, today.

Predating the now oft-discussed Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918, which killed an estimated 50 million worldwide, the Russian Flu likely wasnt a flu at all, some contend.

Instead, its symptoms more closely resemble a coronavirusa category of viruses named for their crown-like appearance under a microscope, of which COVID-19 is a member.

Coronaviruses typically cause mild to moderate upper-respiratory infections in humans and are responsible for a handful of common colds. But some have turned deadly, including COVID-19; SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome), an epidemic that emerged in 2002 and killed hundreds; and MERS (Middle Eastern respiratory syndrome), another epidemic that emerged in 2012 and killed hundreds.

The epidemiology and clinical symptoms of the Russian Flu are much more in line with COVID than what we know about influenza pandemics, said Dr. Harald Bruessow, editor of Microbial Biotechnology and a guest professor at KU Leuven in Belgium who has studied and published extensively on the esoteric ailment.

You have respiratory infection, but at the same time there are strong neurologic symptoms, he said of both the Russian Flu and COVID. Theres also something like Long COVID that was observed following the Russian Flu pandemic. These people were incapacitated for a really long time, with an increase in suicide rate and an inability to return to full work capacity.

Story continues

All this stuff makes one think that one is dealing with a coronavirus infection in the 1880s.

Lets say the so-called Russian Flu was a coronavirus. Does it serve as a better lens through which to view the current pandemic than the Spanish Flu? What lessons can we learn? Does it offer any clues to how the COVID-19 pandemic might endor linger, rather, as viruses tend to?

"If we say maybe the Russian Flu went extinct by a deus ex machina event, the odds are much lower for COVID," Dr. Arijit Chakravarty, Fractal Therapeutics CEO and COVID researcher, toldFortune.

"We're past that point."

When "nobody really dared to predict the trajectory of the COVID pandemic, how it will develop or end"frustrated by short-term computer simulations with a tendency toward inaccuracyand looking to glimpse into a COVID-19 crystal ball, Bruessow turned to the past.

What pandemic might serve as the best paradigm for COVID? He first examined the Spanish Flubut that was a different virus, he reasoned. Traveling backward in history from there, his options were limited, with the Russian Flu being the next chronological optionand, ironically, the first pandemic for which data was collected en masse.

As it turns out, it was a great fit.

The Russian Flu was actually the best case I could figure out of a respiratory pandemic of a comparable size to COVID that was sufficiently medically documented, Bruessow said of the disease, thought to have originated in cattle in Turkestan before enveloping the Russian empire and sweeping the world.

While considered a flu at the time, scientists did not yet have a solid grasp on what caused disease, with germ theory arising nearly simultaneously and duking it out with the miasma theory, the pre-scientific notion that disease was caused by "bad air" rising from the ground.

In one of his articles on the ailment, Bruessow refers to a 344-page doctors report from 1891 London, which describes Russian Flu patients as suffering from a hard, dry cough, fevers of 100-105 degrees, frontal headache of special severity, pains in the eyeballs, general feeling of misery and weakness, and great depression of spirits, and weeping, nervous restlessness, inability to sleep, and occasional delirium.

As with COVID, children seemed relatively spared, often only mildly affected, if they fell ill at all. Those who were elderlyin addition to those with pre-existing conditions like heart disease, tuberculosis, or diabeteswere more apt to take a fatal course, Bruessow wrote.

And theres more: Nearly 10% of cases saw continued symptoms, referred to by European doctors of the time as long enduring evil effects.

As with COVID, it was noted that patients were likely infectious before developing symptoms, and were occasionally reinfected, as was the case with a patient who fell ill with the flu in December 1889 in France, and then again a month later in January 1890 in England.

Dr. Tom Ewing, a history professor and associate dean at Virginia Tech who has published extensively on the topic, considered the Russian Flu an apt comparison during the first three months of the COVID pandemic due to its quick spread and global efforts to track symptoms.

He now considers the Spanish Flu to be a better comparison due to the body count: It's thought to have killed about 650,000 people in the U.S. in eight months, and COVID has killed nearly a million in the U.S. in a little over two years. In contrast, the Russian Flu is thought to have killed a million worldwide, in sum.

"I think where the useful comparisons are is, how do people react?" Ewing said. "How do they respond to first reports? How do physicians deal with a new threatening scale of disease? What we're all living with right nowat what point do you say it's all over?

The Russian Flu is typically considered to have lasted from 1889 through 1890, but in reality, it lasted much longerthrough 1894, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health National Library of Medicineand nearly a decade, depending on whom you talk to. Major mortality peaks, as seen in public health data from the United Kingdom, continued through 1899 or 1900, Bruessow said, adding that the mortality peaks in England during that period are nearly as high as they were during what was likely the first phase of the Russian Flu.

It is unknown if later deaths were from additional waves of the Russian Flu or something else. But reports of symptoms from potential later waves, found in The Lancet and other British medical journals, are strikingly similar, and contemporary researchers were formulating the suspicion of an up-flair, he said.

All this makes me think that we should consider the possibility that the Russian Flu agent was evolving and hanging around and even causing a major mortality peak in the United Kingdom and elsewhere, he concluded.

While its unknown if the Russian Flu was indeed a coronavirus, some believe it lives on today as OC43, a common human coronavirus that often causes upper-respiratory track illness, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While its presentation is often mild, the pathogen is known to cause bronchitis, bronchiolitis, and pneumonia in children and the elderly, as well as immunosuppressed patients, and its presentation may be easily confused with that of COVID-19, according to a 2021 article in The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles.

The thought that the Russian Flu endures as OC43 is a fascinating hypothesis, developed when scientists realized how genetically similar OC43 is to bovine coronavirus and projected a common ancestor arising around 1890the Russian Flu era, and a time of major cattle pandemics that may have spread to humans.

If theyre correct, the Russian Flu is still circulating, and it's still occasionally deadlya 2021 study published in Nature found a 9.1% mortality rate for those hospitalized with confirmed cases of OC43, though it only tracked 77 patients between 2012 and 2017 at one Korean hospital.

The Russian Flu may indeed be "still killing people off, and we're just not paying attention to it, which is totally plausible," Chakravarty said. "We used to think the Epstein-Barr Virus was harmless," and now we know it raises the risk of developing multiple sclerosis by more than 30 times.

"There's a lot of sort of 'dark matter' in the infectious disease world that we haven't fully mapped out."

Such a future may await COVID, Bruessow contends.

This is what virologists working in the viral evolution field are thinking we should expect from SARS-CoV2, he said regarding the potential of COVID to persist well into the future. Some people think the Omicron variant that dominates now is already going a bit in this direction, because this variant is much less affecting the lung and much more targeting the upper respiratory tract.

Bruessow hopes Omicron is the last hoorah of COVID-19s acute phasethe Russian Flus lasted about three yearsbut hes well aware this may not be the case.

Personally, I would be a bit skeptical that Omicron would be the end of this, he said. The virus will still occupy our societies for a while.

Even if the Russian Flu eventually became less severe, theres no reason to necessarily think COVID-19 will go the same route, Bruessow cautions, nor is the Russian Flu's presumed attenuation necessarily permanent.

Viral evolution is really neutral with respect to virulence," he said. "The indication is that [COVID-19] will try to escape from the immune response, simply to infect the maximum number of people, and the virus with the highest efficiency will replace less efficient viral types.

This is the dynamic we are seeing, of increasing transmission. Theres no guarantee that the next wave wont be a virus that has, once again, increased virulence, like Delta.

Among Chakravarty's take-aways from the Russian Flu: "The body count can still pile up" over several years, even if a disease isn't incredibly transmissible and has a relatively low fatality rate, as was the case with the Russian Flu.

Even so, "mortality bounced around," he said. "There wasn't a steady decrease toward endemicity."

Regardless, COVID is "much more contagious" than the Russian Flu was, Chakravarty cautionsand the world is much better connected than it was in the industrial era, allowing for greater ease of disease spread.

COVID has a "screamingly high" transmission rateone person with Omicron infects, on average, eight to nine others, making it nearly as infectious as mumpsand the duration of immunity is low, he cautioned.

"You can sneeze in Wuhan in the morning and someone can be really ill the next day in Frankfurt."

The potential Russian Flu wave of 1900 is the last mention of the illness Bruessow sees in medical literature. There seem to have been seasonal, legitimate influenza outbreaks up until the onset of the Spanish Flu in 1918, after which major respiratory pandemics were all influenza related.

After that, theres no indication of a coronavirus causing a major epidemic in the 20th century," he said.

It's possible that a "very mild" coronavirus continued to circulate throughout the 20th century but was less impactful due to improvements in public health and quality of life, Ewing said.

During the early 20th century "health was getting better, mortality rates were decreasing, life expectancy was going up." This, in addition to tuberculous public health campaigns encouraging people to beware of coughing, sneezing, and spitting in public, may have blunted any circulating coronaviruses, he said.

While the Spanish Flu may not be the best lens through which to view COVID-19, it does contain pertinent lessons, Bruessow contends.

While the Spanish Flu is generally thought to have subsided in 1919 after three waves, later waves occurred periodically in the late 1920s into the 1940ssome as virulent as the initial Spanish Flu, with even higher mortality, he contends.

As U.S. COVID czar Dr. Anthony Fauci and colleagues pointed out in a 2009 New England Journal of Medicine article, "It is not generally appreciated that descendants of the H1N1 influenza A virus that caused the catastrophic and historic pandemic of 1918-1919 have persisted in humans for more than 90 [now 100] years and have continued to contribute their genes to new viruses, causing new pandemics," including the 2009 H1N1 "swine flu."

"We are living in a pandemic era that began around 1918," they wrote 13 years agolong before the advent of COVID-19.

Bruessow agrees with Fauci and his colleagues that viruses do not simply disappear."

"They change and hopefully they adapt and behave," Bruessow said. "But there are still some escapes, and we might see a return with higher virulence.Vigilance is indicated.

Chakravarty is of a similar mindset but cautions that one can't draw too many inferences from any particular pandemic, regardless of similarities.

"Each new pandemic, new plague is a new chapter in the history books," he said. "Your mileage may vary."

But one thing remains constant.

"There's no two-year timeline for pandemics," he warned.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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Curious if, or when, COVID-19 will end? Meet the Russian Flu, a forgotten pandemic from the late 1800s that might still linger today - Yahoo Finance

More COVID-19 restrictions are removed for visitors to Canada – The Points Guy

April 24, 2022

More COVID-19 restrictions are removed for visitors to Canada

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More COVID-19 restrictions are removed for visitors to Canada - The Points Guy

Mass. doctor on signs recent COVID-19 wave may have peaked – WCVB Boston

April 24, 2022

>> THANK Y.OU THE RECENT RISE OF COVID-19 LEVELS IN LOCAL WASTEWATER MAY BE LEVELING OFF. >> HERE TO ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS IS DR. EMILY HYLE, AN INFECTIOUS DISEASE SPECIALIST AT MASS GENERAL HOSPIT.AL GOOD MORNING. YOUVE BEEN TRACKING THIS DATA CLOSELY. ARE YOU SEEING ANY EARLY SIGNS THAT THIS WAVE MAY BE PEAKING? >> I THINK IT IS PROBABLY EARLY TO SAY ALTHOUGH YOU CAN SEE FROM THE WASTEWATER THAT THERES A LITTLE LEVELING OFF. I WONDER ABOUT THE INFLUENCE OF PEOPLE POTENTIALLY BEING AWAY FOR PART OF THE RECENT SPRING WEEK, SO IFT I GETS -- SO IT GETS HARD TO KNOW. NEXT WKEE WILL BE INTERESTING AND HELPFUL TO SEE WHETHER THE PATTERN OF LEVELING OFF OR DECLINE CONTINUES OR WHETHER THINGS GO UP AS PEOPLE RETURN TO BOONST OR DIFFERENT PATTERNS OF MIXING HAPPEN AFTER THE HOLIDAYS. >> THIS WEEK WAS A VACATION WEEK FOR MANY FAMILIES AND MASSACHUSETTS -- IN MASSACHUSETTS, SO ARE THERE CONCERNS FOR A NEW SEARCH WHEN EVERYBODY RETURNS? >> IT IS UNCERTAIN. I WOULD SAY THERE ARE DEFINITELY SOME CCEONRNS, ESPECIALLY WITH PEOPLE TRAVELING TO SEE FRIENDS AND FAMILY. DOI THINK THAT NOW IS A REALLY SMART TIME TO BE A LITTLE CAUTIOUS, ESPECIALLY IF YOU WORK WITH PEOPLE WHO ARE PARTILACURLY VULNERABLE TO SEVERE COVID INFECTION, OLDER PEOE,PL PEOPLE WITH IMMUNOSUPPRESSION WERE MULTIPLE COMORBIDITIES. I DO THINK IT IS AN IMPORTANT TIME, IF YOU ARE FEELING A LOT ALL, TO GET TESTED, GET A RAPID OR PCR TESTS, OR IF YOU HAVE TRAVELED RECENTLY AND ARE GOING TO SEE SOMEBODY YOU DONT NORMLYAL SEE, EVEN IF YOU FEEL WELL, TEST, BECAUSE WE KNOW THERETHS E TIME BEFORE SYMPTOMS START WHERE YOU C PANOTENTIALLY BE INFECTIOUS TO OTHERS. >> HAVE SEEN A CHANGE IN MASK POLICIES THIS WEEK. LOGAN AND MANY AIRLINES ARE ALL NOW MASK OPTIONAL. WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THE TIMING OF THAT DECISION? >> WELL, I PERSONALLY THINK IT IS STILL A GOOD TIME TO CONTINUE MASKING INDOORS BECAUSE WE ARE CERTNLAIY SEEING IN OUR REGION A RISE IN CASES AND I DO THINK WITH A LOT OF MIXING ON AIRLINES OR PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION LIKE US IS AND TRAINS -- LIKE BUSES AND TRAINS, IT IS SMARTOT CONTINUE MASKING TO PROTECT YOURSELF AND OTHERS. >> THERE ARE PLACES WHERE YOU WILL CONTINUE TO WEAR A MASK EVEN IF IT IS NOT REIRQUED? >> I CONTINUE TO MASK IN ALL DOINOR SPACES. I HAVE AN UNDER-FIVET A HOME WHO IS UNABLE TO BE VACCINATED YET BECAUSE THERES NO ELIGIBLE VACCINE AND HAVE MANY FAMILY AND FRIENDS WHO ARE OLDER OR IMMUNOSUPPRESSED SO I PERSONALLY CONTINUE TO WEAR MASKS INDOORS TO PROTECT MYSELFND A OTHERS IM AROUND. >> OK. DR. EMILY LEHY, AN INFECTIOUS DISEASE SPECIALIST AT

Mass. doctor on signs recent COVID-19 wave may have peaked

Updated: 10:28 AM EDT Apr 23, 2022

Dr. Emily Hyle, an infectious disease specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital, examines if Massachusetts wastewater data shows that this recent COVID-19 wave may be peaking."I think it's probably a little early to say, although you can see from the wastewater that there's a little bit of leveling off," Hyle said Saturday. Hyle said she wonders about what the influence of people potentially being away for part of the recent spring week will have on COVID-19 case counts. "I think it's really hard to know," Hyle said. "I do think the next week will be really interesting and really helpful to see whether that pattern of leveling off or declining continues -- or whether things go up a little bit as people return to the Boston area or different patterns of mixing happen after the spring holidays."I do think that now is a really smart time to be a little cautious, especially if you live with people who are particularly vulnerable to severe COVID-19 infection," Hyle said. "It's a really important time, if you're feeling ill at all, to get tested," Hyle said. "Do a rapid test, get a PCR test, or if you have traveled recently or are going to see somebody you don't normally see or who would be at high risk, to test before seeing them, even if you feel well."

Dr. Emily Hyle, an infectious disease specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital, examines if Massachusetts wastewater data shows that this recent COVID-19 wave may be peaking.

"I think it's probably a little early to say, although you can see from the wastewater that there's a little bit of leveling off," Hyle said Saturday.

Hyle said she wonders about what the influence of people potentially being away for part of the recent spring week will have on COVID-19 case counts.

"I think it's really hard to know," Hyle said. "I do think the next week will be really interesting and really helpful to see whether that pattern of leveling off or declining continues -- or whether things go up a little bit as people return to the Boston area or different patterns of mixing happen after the spring holidays.

"I do think that now is a really smart time to be a little cautious, especially if you live with people who are particularly vulnerable to severe COVID-19 infection," Hyle said.

"It's a really important time, if you're feeling ill at all, to get tested," Hyle said. "Do a rapid test, get a PCR test, or if you have traveled recently or are going to see somebody you don't normally see or who would be at high risk, to test before seeing them, even if you feel well."

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Mass. doctor on signs recent COVID-19 wave may have peaked - WCVB Boston

As reinstate LHP Snead and OF Piscotty from Covid-19 IL – MLB.com

April 24, 2022

OAKLAND, Calif. The Oakland As reinstated left-handed pitcher Kirby Snead and outfielder Stephen Piscotty from the Covid-19 injured list, the club announced today. The As also placed infielder Drew Jackson on the Covid-19 IL and returned left-handed pitcher Sam Selman to Las Vegas.

Snead had a 5.40 ERA in four relief appearances when he was placed on the restricted list April 15. He was transferred to the Covid-19 IL on Monday.

Piscotty was 4-for-14 (.286) with two walks in five games when he was placed on the Covid-19 IL on April 15.

Jackson was added to the As roster as a substitute player on April 15 and was 0-for-3 in three games.

Selman was added to the As roster as a substitute player on Monday and made his As debut last night, tossing 2.2 scoreless innings and striking out a career-high five.

See more here:

As reinstate LHP Snead and OF Piscotty from Covid-19 IL - MLB.com

COVID-19 Daily Update 4-22-2022 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

April 24, 2022

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of April 22, 2022, there are currently 544 active COVID-19 cases statewide. There has been one death reported since the last report, with a total of 6,823 deaths attributed to COVID-19.

DHHR has confirmed the death of a 93-year old male from Mason County.

As we send sympathies to this family, I urge everyone in West Virginia to do their part to stop the spread of this virus and prevent further loss of life, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. Please schedule your COVID-19 vaccine or booster shot today.

CURRENT ACTIVE CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (6), Berkeley (43), Boone (8), Braxton (6), Brooke (9), Cabell (26), Calhoun (11), Clay (0), Doddridge (0), Fayette (9), Gilmer (1), Grant (3), Greenbrier (14), Hampshire (10), Hancock (4), Hardy (4), Harrison (18), Jackson (3), Jefferson (24), Kanawha (35), Lewis (4), Lincoln (6), Logan (8), Marion (14), Marshall (23), Mason (8), McDowell (4), Mercer (18), Mineral (13), Mingo (0), Monongalia (46), Monroe (2), Morgan (11), Nicholas (3), Ohio (15), Pendleton (5), Pleasants (0), Pocahontas (1), Preston (11), Putnam (30), Raleigh (22), Randolph (10), Ritchie (2), Roane (0), Summers (3), Taylor (10), Tucker (1), Tyler (1), Upshur (6), Wayne (6), Webster (0), Wetzel (3), Wirt (0), Wood (14), Wyoming (10). To find the cumulative cases per county, please visit http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov and look on the Cumulative Summary tab which is sortable by county.

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. Please visit http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

West Virginians ages 5 years and older are eligible for COVID-19 vaccination; after the primary series, first booster shots are recommended for those 12 and older. Second booster shots for those age 50 and over that are 4 months or greater from their first booster have been authorized by FDA and recommended by CDC, as well as for younger individuals over 12 years old with serious and chronic health conditions that lead to being considered moderately to severely immunocompromised. To learn more about COVID-19 vaccines, or to find a vaccine site near you, visit vaccinate.wv.gov or call 1-833-734-0965.

Free pop-up COVID-19 testing is available today in Barbour, Berkeley, Braxton, Cabell, Clay, Fayette, Gilmer, Grant, Greenbrier, Hampshire, Hancock, Jefferson, Lewis, Logan, Marion, Marshall, Mason, Morgan, Nicholas, Ohio, Putnam, Raleigh, Randolph, Taylor, Upshur, Wayne, and Wood counties.

Barbour County

8:30 AM - 3:30 PM, Community Market, 107 South Main Street (across the street from Walgreens), Philippi, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVBBC)

1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, Junior Volunteer Fire Department, 331 Row Avenue, Junior, WV (optional pre-registration: https://unityphr.com/campaigns/wvlabs/covid)

Berkeley County

8:30 AM - 3:30 PM, Airborne Church, 172 Creative Place, Martinsburg, WV

8:30 AM - 4:00 PM, Shenandoah Community Health, 99 Tavern Road, Martinsburg, WV (optional pre-registration: https://unityphr.com/campaigns/wvlabs/covid)

9:00 AM - 3:00 PM, 891 Auto Parts Place, Martinsburg, WV (optional pre-registration: https://unityphr.com/campaigns/wvlabs/covid)

Braxton County

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, Braxton County Memorial Hospital (parking lot), 100 Hoylman Drive, Gassaway, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=Braxton)

Cabell County

8:00 AM - 4:00 PM, Marshall University Campus (parking lot), 1801 6th Avenue, Huntington, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

8:00 AM - 4:00 PM, Cabell-Huntington Health Department (parking lot), 703 Seventh Avenue, Huntington, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Clay County

8:30 AM - 3:00 PM, Lizemores Volunteer Fire Department, 13175 Clay Highway, Lizemores, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVClayCounty)

Fayette County

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, Fayette County Health Department, 5495 Maple Lane, Fayetteville, WV

Gilmer County

8:00 AM - 3:00 PM, Minnie Hamilton Health System (parking lot), 921 Mineral Road, Glenville, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVMHCT11)

Grant County

11:00 AM - 3:00 PM, Petersburg City Parking Lot, South Main Street (across from Walgreens), Petersburg, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Greenbrier County

9:30 AM - 3:00 PM, State Fair of WV, 891 Maplewood Avenue, Lewisburg, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVGBC)

Hampshire County

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, Hampshire Memorial Hospital, 363 Sunrise Boulevard, Romney, WV (optional pre-registration: https://unityphr.com/campaigns/wvlabs/covid)

Hancock County

10:00 AM - 12:00 PM, Hancock County Health Department, 100 North Court Street, New Cumberland, WV (optional pre-registration: https://roxbylabs.dendisoftware.com/patient_registration/)

Jefferson County

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, Hollywood Casino, 750 Hollywood Drive, Charles Town, WV (optional pre-registration: https://unityphr.com/campaigns/wvlabs/covid)

Lewis County

8:30 AM - 3:00 PM, City Parking Lot, 95 West Second Street, Weston, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVMavLewis1)

Logan County

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, Town of Man Fire Department, Administration Building, 110 North Bridge Street, Man, WV

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, Old 84 Lumber Building, 100 Recovery Road, Peach Creek, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Marion County

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, Dunbar School Foundation, 101 High Street, Fairmont, WV

Marshall County

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, Cameron City Building, 46 Main Street, Cameron, WV

Mason County

8:30 AM - 3:00 PM, Krodel Park, 1186 Charleston Road, Point Pleasant, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVMavCOUNTY12)

Morgan County

8:30 AM - 3:30 PM, The Blue (of First United Methodist Church), 440 Fearnow Road, Berkeley Springs, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVMavMorgan1)

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, War Memorial Hospital, 1 Health Way, Berkeley Springs, WV (optional pre-registration: https://unityphr.com/campaigns/wvlabs/covid)

Nicholas County

9:00 AM - 3:30 PM, Summersville Regional Medical Center, 400 Fairview Heights Road, Summersville, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVNL)

Ohio County

9:00 AM - 3:30 PM, Ohio Valley Medical Center (back parking lot at the top of 22nd Street), 2000 Eoff Street, Wheeling, WV (optional pre-registration: https://roxbylabs.dendisoftware.com/patient_registration/)

Putnam County

9:00 AM - 6:00 PM, Putnam County Health Department (behind Liberty Square), 316 Putnam Village Drive, Hurricane, WV

Raleigh County

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, Beckley-Raleigh County Health Department, 1602 Harper Road, Beckley, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=MavBeckleyRaleigh)

Randolph County

8:30 AM - 3:30 PM, Davis Health Center, 812 Gorman Avenue, Elkins, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVRDC)

Taylor County

10:00 AM - 12:00 PM, Grafton-Taylor Health Department, 718 West Main Street (parking lot at Operations Trailer), Grafton, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Upshur County

8:30 AM - 3:30 PM, Buckhannon Fire Department (parking lot), 22 South Florida Street, Buckhannon, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVUSC)

Wayne County

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, Wayne County Health Department, 217 Kenova Avenue, Wayne, WV (optional pre-registration: https://unityphr.com/campaigns/wvlabs/covid)

Wood County

8:00 AM - 3:00 PM, Vienna Baptist Church, 3401 Grand Central Avenue, Vienna, WV (optional pre-registration: https://labpass.com/en/registration?access_code=WVMavWood1)

Please check with the testing site, DHHRs social media pages and the COVID-19 website https://dhhr.wv.gov/COVID-19/pages/testing.aspx for any last minute cancellations, and to find other free testing opportunities across West Virginia.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 4-22-2022 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

COVID-19 and its impact on veterinary care | Lifestyle | news-journal.com – Longview News-Journal

April 24, 2022

The COVID-19 pandemic has placed historic pressures on the veterinary field and pet owners across the country.

These challenges impact patients, especially at a provider like VCA Animal Hospitals, which has more than 1,000 locations across the United States and Canada that care for more than 4 million pets each year. Consider these tips to help navigate this new reality and ensure your pet has access to the care needed to stay healthy.

Establish a relationship with a veterinarian. Establishing a relationship with a veterinary hospital means your pet will have a team to help that is familiar with his or her medical history and can identify concerns early to improve chances of a positive outcome. Just like your own health, dont wait until something goes wrong to visit your pets veterinarian.

Book appointments in advance and outside peak hours. The best appointments to book early include annual and semi-annual wellness check-ups, vaccinations, dental cleanings and elective surgeries. If youre unsure which appointments to schedule, ask your veterinarian. Booking your pets next recommended exam while youre checking out from your last one is an easy way to find an appointment time that works best for you.

Have a financial plan. Veterinary care for unexpected events and emergencies can often be costly, just like human health care. Owners should consider the total cost of caring for a pet and create an emergency fund to use should something happen to your pet. Obtaining pet insurance or enrolling in a wellness plan are other strategies that can help lighten the financial load.

Know where to go for emergency care. Its important to know where you can take your pet in case of an emergency. Know where several veterinary emergency hospitals are in your area just in case your pets primary care doctor is unable to see you. You can also ask if your veterinary hospital offers tele-triage or other virtual care options. For example, through the myVCA app, you can access 24/7 live chat with licensed veterinary professionals to help answer questions and offer advice.

Be patient. Veterinary medicine is undergoing a surge in demand. Remember that caring for pets is not just a career, but a passion for veterinarian professionals. They are working to ensure you and your pets receive world-class medicine and hometown care you expect and deserve, even with the increased patient load.

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COVID-19 and its impact on veterinary care | Lifestyle | news-journal.com - Longview News-Journal

COVID-19 Therapeutics Information Page – Michigan (.gov)

April 22, 2022

Talk to your doctor about whether you should get antibody or antiviral treatment, and where you can find treatment.Therapeutics are authorized for people who meet select high-risk criteria. Vaccinations remain the best way to protect from COVID-19.

Providers or patients in need of assistance locating an infusion site or connecting with a clinical trial, call the Monoclonal Antibody Therapy Call Center.English: 877-332-6585Spanish: 877-366-0310.

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COVID-19 Therapeutics Information Page - Michigan (.gov)

What experts told me to do after my positive COVID-19 at-home test – Science News Magazine

April 22, 2022

After two years of successfully evading getting COVID-19 including a few brushes with close contacts, a couple of are-they-just-colds? scares and lots of negative tests I recently tested positive.

It felt both inevitable and shocking. I somehow avoided testing positive during the omicron surge that infected most of my friends this winter, so I figured that either I was invincible or I was next. Staring at my at-home rapid antigen test, I had to acknowledge that the long game of high-stakes tag was finally over. I was now it.

COVID-19 snuck up on me when I least expected it. Cases are low where I live in Queens, N.Y. And riding the subway felt low risk thanks to the federal public transit mask mandate. (A federal judge struck down the mandate on April 18, although the Biden administration announced April 20 it would appeal the ruling and some places, including New York City, are keeping masking requirements in place for the time being.) I had dined indoors, but I still wore my mask inside public spaces (SN: 3/25/22). So when I woke up with a sore throat on a Wednesday, I chalked it up to needing more sleep. Before I tested Friday evening, I was still convinced it was just another cold.

Two thick lines on my rapid test said otherwise (SN: 12/17/21). OK, I thought, I definitely have COVID. Now what?

I had a pretty good idea of the first few steps, which had been drilled into my head ad nauseam: Isolate immediately. Text close contacts from the 48 hours before first symptoms. Stay away from other people and pets in the house.

It got blurrier from there. Since I tested myself at home, my COVID-19 test wasnt official. Surely I should report my positive test; after all, public health regulations are often based on case numbers. But it turns out that playing my part was a lot harder than I would have thought.

When it comes to reporting at-home tests, there is no formal recommendation, says Autumn Gertz, an epidemiologist at Boston Childrens Hospital who works on COVID-19 surveillance. Without a federal program for reporting at-home tests, states are left to their own devices, and its confusing to make sense of where to report, which means that many people wont.

Thats problematic: Now that at-home tests are free and easy to access, at-home testing is becoming increasingly common. Gertz and colleagues are tracking at-home testing trends and say they have noticed a gradual increase in their use to detect COVID-19. In the coming weeks, Gertz says they expect 50 percent of people who get COVID-19 to find out from an at-home test.

Cases being underreported is nothing new. Even early on, asymptomatic and mild cases where the person never got tested wouldnt make the case count. But at-home testing will make underreporting even more prevalent. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluations data show that only an estimated 7 percent of all U.S. COVID-19 cases are being reported, Katelyn Jetelina, an epidemiologist at the University of Texas in Dallas who writes the Your Local Epidemiologist newsletter, reports April 13 in a post titled Can we trust case numbers?

To make my case count, I donned two KN95 masks and walked to the COVID-19 testing booth on my street to get a PCR test that would be officially reported. (An official PCR test result may also be necessary for insurance coverage in cases that require medical care.) The downside is that I was contagious so there was a risk of exposing others to the virus, though I was masked for all but the swab. An alternative, Gertz suggests, is reporting your positive at-home test to a primary care provider. Some at-home test manufacturers also provide information about how to report results from that test.

But until public health reporting catches up with the quick transition to at-home testing, were flying blind. There are ways to find clues about whats going on in your community, though.

For starters, become familiar with your local public health department website, says epidemiologist Michael Mina, the chief science officer at eMed, a company developing a system for at-home test reporting. Check to see if your community monitors wastewater, which is a better way to track the amount of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, in communities than case numbers or hospitalizations. Outbreaks Near Me, a project Gertz works on, also collects results from volunteers to help track COVID-19 trends down to the local level.

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In general, be aware, and try to keep your eyes open for signals, Mina says. That includes not discounting anecdotes: If you start to hear, like, Hey, you know, Ive had a bunch of friends who are positive lately, thats probably a really good indicator that theres a lot of COVID happening in our community right now. And that its a good time to start taking extra precautions again.

Speaking of precautions, according to the isolation guidelines put out by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, I could have returned to the world without a mask on the 10th day after my symptoms started. But I learned from Mina that you can still be contagious after 10 days. So how do I know if I can still infect others?

Turns out its a complicated question. Theres no magic number of days in which all people will no longer be contagious. And you can still have symptoms and not be contagious, and vice versa. But rapid at-home tests are a great indicator albeit imperfect of current contagiousness. (Thats unlike PCR tests, which are extremely sensitive to any remaining virus in your system long after you stop shedding it.)

How contagious a person is roughly relates to their viral load, or how many virus particles they have in their body. Early research suggested that the viral load of SARS-CoV-2 is at its highest just before or when symptoms emerge and then rapidly declines after onset of symptoms. That data informed the CDCs decision to cut its isolation recommendation from 10 days to five days.

But several recent studies suggest that people infected during the recent COVID-19 surge continue to be contagious after five days. A preprint that studied omicron infections in NBA players found that, after five days of symptoms, about half of the players still showed significant viral load. In another preprint, Mina and researchers at the University of Chicago found that 43 percent of rapid tests from 260 vaccinated health care workers were still positive between five and 10 days after their symptoms appeared. Both studies have yet to be peer-reviewed.

This isnt like a small fraction of people who are still positive and infectious at five days, Mina says. One possible explanation for these observations is that people who are vaccinated or have been previously infected have a quicker immune system response to the virus. So initial symptoms are caused by your immune response, not a high viral load, which comes later. I would highly, highly, highly recommend people not listen to the five-day-to-exit-isolation recommendation, Mina says. That was based on old data.

Instead, experts say, the best way to figure out whether youre contagious after day five is by taking a rapid at-home test, which measures the amount of viral proteins in your system in real time. You can even get a sense of how infectious you are by the intensity of the positive line on your test, and the speed at which it develops. If your positive line appears quickly, chances are you have an extremely high viral load. If it takes most of the allotted test time and the line is faint, theres likely less virus in your body.

But because it takes a lot of virus for the tests to turn positive, you should assume that youre infectious if any line shows up, Mina says. Even after youve tested negative (twice, if possible), still avoid high-risk activities, like visiting an elderly relative.

By my 12th day in, my symptoms were mostly gone but for a lingering cough and a new proclivity for napping. But I was still testing positive on my rapid test, even though the line was much fainter than it used to be.

I wish there was an on-off switch. But, like with most things in this pandemic, its a squishy gray area. For all the public health recommendations, personal navigation of this virus comes down to individual everyday decisions. We hold a lot of power, and often, it feels like, not enough knowledge to make such decisions (SN: 6/16/21).

Its OK to be confused about all this, Mina says. I think a lot of people feel isolated right now and feel confused by this pandemic. Even doctors have a hard time keeping up with the nuances and changes, he adds.

As for me, I finally tested negative 14 days after my symptoms started. Given Minas advice on testing negative twice, Im still going to be careful, but I feel a little safer now.

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What experts told me to do after my positive COVID-19 at-home test - Science News Magazine

A senior living community with a ‘post COVID-19 design’ is set to open in Greenfield in early spring 2023 – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

April 22, 2022

Bob Dohr|Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

A new senior living community in Greenfield, which wentthrough several design changesover the last several years, has broken ground and plans to open in early spring 2023.

TheWoods, a 120-unitranch-style senior living development at 11800 W. Edgerton Ave., will feature a "post COVID-19 design," according to a news release from GreatLife Communities, giving each resident their own ranch home with a private front door entry and patio.

The neighborhood of connected leased residences will offer studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom floor plans on an 11.38-acre parcel just west of Whitnall Middle School.

The south neighborhood will contain 58one-bedroom residences and 14two-bedroom residences, all with laundry, full kitchens and available underground parking, according to the GreatLife Communities website. Residents will have access to a community room, exercise gym, lounge, general store, beauty shopand a food service area.

The north neighborhood will feature 48 studio units, each with a small kitchenette and private full bathroom. The studios will have a private front entry and patio, along with a back door for interior access to community amenities. The common spaces will includea dining room, food service area, telehealth room, activity area and a beauty shop.

Other available amenities and services at the complex will includechef-prepared meals, housekeeping, transportation, personal care services, nature walking trails and a dog wash.

Ground was broken March 21.

DeveloperGreg Petrauski, who has along history of building senior living communities and healthcare facilities, said he's glad construction is finally underway.

"Despite the years of challenges to develop this property, including COVID-19, we are grateful to finally start moving dirt and create the next generation senior living neighborhood community," Petrauski said in an email. "Allowing seniors to live with the privacy of their own residence along with the benefits of community and service is well overdue."

Monthly rents will start in the low- to mid-$2,000s, depending on specific service options and the residence layout chosen, Petrauski said.

Rents for each unit type include one home-cooked meal per day,housekeeping, maintenanceand full use of all community amenities, he said.

Those wishing to reserve a unit candownload, print and fill out a deposit agreement on the "Leasing" tab of GreatLife's website.

The project was given final approval by the city's common council in January 2021, according toGreenfield Community Development Manager Kristi Porter.

Small adjustments were made to the number of units in April 2021 and November 2021, she said.

Permits for the project were issued by the city on March 15.

The plan isa pared-down version of what Petrauski originally proposed, and won't reach nearly as high into the sky.

Petrauski presented a plan in 2019 for a192-unit complex that would have been four stories high.

It was rejected by the common council because of concerns about the building height, size, density and traffic impact,according to city documents.

More: Senior assisted living facility Courtyard of Sussex plans to open in April

More: A senior-focused group hopes to make Oconomowoc resources more accessible

Contact Bob Dohr at 262-361-9140 or bob.dohr@jrn.com. Follow him on Twitter at @BobDohr1.

Our subscribers make this reporting possible. Please consider supporting local journalism by subscribing to the Journal Sentinel at jsonline.com/deal.

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A senior living community with a 'post COVID-19 design' is set to open in Greenfield in early spring 2023 - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

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