Category: Covid-19

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Counties with the highest COVID-19 vaccination rate in Alabama – The Alexander City Outlook

April 10, 2022

Country

United States of AmericaUS Virgin IslandsUnited States Minor Outlying IslandsCanadaMexico, United Mexican StatesBahamas, Commonwealth of theCuba, Republic ofDominican RepublicHaiti, Republic ofJamaicaAfghanistanAlbania, People's Socialist Republic ofAlgeria, People's Democratic Republic ofAmerican SamoaAndorra, Principality ofAngola, Republic ofAnguillaAntarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S)Antigua and BarbudaArgentina, Argentine RepublicArmeniaArubaAustralia, Commonwealth ofAustria, Republic ofAzerbaijan, Republic ofBahrain, Kingdom ofBangladesh, People's Republic ofBarbadosBelarusBelgium, Kingdom ofBelizeBenin, People's Republic ofBermudaBhutan, Kingdom ofBolivia, Republic ofBosnia and HerzegovinaBotswana, Republic ofBouvet Island (Bouvetoya)Brazil, Federative Republic ofBritish Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago)British Virgin IslandsBrunei DarussalamBulgaria, People's Republic ofBurkina FasoBurundi, Republic ofCambodia, Kingdom ofCameroon, United Republic ofCape Verde, Republic ofCayman IslandsCentral African RepublicChad, Republic ofChile, Republic ofChina, People's Republic ofChristmas IslandCocos (Keeling) IslandsColombia, Republic ofComoros, Union of theCongo, Democratic Republic ofCongo, People's Republic ofCook IslandsCosta Rica, Republic ofCote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of theCyprus, Republic ofCzech RepublicDenmark, Kingdom ofDjibouti, Republic ofDominica, Commonwealth ofEcuador, Republic ofEgypt, Arab Republic ofEl Salvador, Republic ofEquatorial Guinea, Republic ofEritreaEstoniaEthiopiaFaeroe IslandsFalkland Islands (Malvinas)Fiji, Republic of the Fiji IslandsFinland, Republic ofFrance, French RepublicFrench GuianaFrench PolynesiaFrench Southern TerritoriesGabon, Gabonese RepublicGambia, Republic of theGeorgiaGermanyGhana, Republic ofGibraltarGreece, Hellenic RepublicGreenlandGrenadaGuadaloupeGuamGuatemala, Republic ofGuinea, RevolutionaryPeople's Rep'c ofGuinea-Bissau, Republic ofGuyana, Republic ofHeard and McDonald IslandsHoly See (Vatican City State)Honduras, Republic ofHong Kong, Special Administrative Region of ChinaHrvatska (Croatia)Hungary, Hungarian People's RepublicIceland, Republic ofIndia, Republic ofIndonesia, Republic ofIran, Islamic Republic ofIraq, Republic ofIrelandIsrael, State ofItaly, Italian RepublicJapanJordan, Hashemite Kingdom ofKazakhstan, Republic ofKenya, Republic ofKiribati, Republic ofKorea, Democratic People's Republic ofKorea, Republic ofKuwait, State ofKyrgyz RepublicLao People's Democratic RepublicLatviaLebanon, Lebanese RepublicLesotho, Kingdom ofLiberia, Republic ofLibyan Arab JamahiriyaLiechtenstein, Principality ofLithuaniaLuxembourg, Grand Duchy ofMacao, Special Administrative Region of ChinaMacedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic ofMadagascar, Republic ofMalawi, Republic ofMalaysiaMaldives, Republic ofMali, Republic ofMalta, Republic ofMarshall IslandsMartiniqueMauritania, Islamic Republic ofMauritiusMayotteMicronesia, Federated States ofMoldova, Republic ofMonaco, Principality ofMongolia, Mongolian People's RepublicMontserratMorocco, Kingdom ofMozambique, People's Republic ofMyanmarNamibiaNauru, Republic ofNepal, Kingdom ofNetherlands AntillesNetherlands, Kingdom of theNew CaledoniaNew ZealandNicaragua, Republic ofNiger, Republic of theNigeria, Federal Republic ofNiue, Republic ofNorfolk IslandNorthern Mariana IslandsNorway, Kingdom ofOman, Sultanate ofPakistan, Islamic Republic ofPalauPalestinian Territory, OccupiedPanama, Republic ofPapua New GuineaParaguay, Republic ofPeru, Republic ofPhilippines, Republic of thePitcairn IslandPoland, Polish People's RepublicPortugal, Portuguese RepublicPuerto RicoQatar, State ofReunionRomania, Socialist Republic ofRussian FederationRwanda, Rwandese RepublicSamoa, Independent State ofSan Marino, Republic ofSao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic ofSaudi Arabia, Kingdom ofSenegal, Republic ofSerbia and MontenegroSeychelles, Republic ofSierra Leone, Republic ofSingapore, Republic ofSlovakia (Slovak Republic)SloveniaSolomon IslandsSomalia, Somali RepublicSouth Africa, Republic ofSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSpain, Spanish StateSri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic ofSt. HelenaSt. Kitts and NevisSt. LuciaSt. Pierre and MiquelonSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudan, Democratic Republic of theSuriname, Republic ofSvalbard & Jan Mayen IslandsSwaziland, Kingdom ofSweden, Kingdom ofSwitzerland, Swiss ConfederationSyrian Arab RepublicTaiwan, Province of ChinaTajikistanTanzania, United Republic ofThailand, Kingdom ofTimor-Leste, Democratic Republic ofTogo, Togolese RepublicTokelau (Tokelau Islands)Tonga, Kingdom ofTrinidad and Tobago, Republic ofTunisia, Republic ofTurkey, Republic ofTurkmenistanTurks and Caicos IslandsTuvaluUganda, Republic ofUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited Kingdom of Great Britain & N. IrelandUruguay, Eastern Republic ofUzbekistanVanuatuVenezuela, Bolivarian Republic ofViet Nam, Socialist Republic ofWallis and Futuna IslandsWestern SaharaYemenZambia, Republic ofZimbabwe

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Counties with the highest COVID-19 vaccination rate in Alabama - The Alexander City Outlook

Dine Out Maine: Two years after COVID-19 upended the food world, we’re reviewing restaurants again – Press Herald

April 10, 2022

Years ago, I helped plan a major milestone reunion for my high school class. I was neither the student body president nor the valedictorian, but I did have one qualification that my former classmates did not: I knew how to use Microsoft Excel. Hence, my promotion from potential attendee to (assistant) party planner.

My job was to enter names and contact details into Excel as each RSVP arrived. I remember smiling and paging through an old yearbook as I input the information. The act of typing those names alone felt like a mini-reunion.

About two weeks ago, I had a flashback to that feeling when I started to compile another spreadsheet, this one of restaurants to be reviewed in 2022. Before the pandemic, I maintained a version of the same list. Each week, Id update it, adding color-coded highlights to help me (and my editor) see what was eligible for coverage, what I was writing next, and any complicating factors (dress code, expense, seasonality).

This time around, I started with a blank document and began adding entering names cell by cell. Some were new: places I had only heard whispers about before the pandemic, like Caf Louis, Radici and Crispy Gai. But what really made me start welling up was transferring names that still lingered on my old spreadsheet. Waiting for more than two years were now-familiar restaurants like The Knotted Apron, Magnus on Water in Biddeford, and Nura, all of which were newly opened (within our three-month grace period), back when everything tilted off its axis in 2020.

If you havent worked it out yet, be patient, reader: Please remain seated and keep your hands and feet inside the ride at all times were about to start reviewing again.

As I gear up for a return to thinking critically about restaurant dining, Ive also been realizing how different writing a full review will be. Its pure denial to insist that our world is normal again, so why should we expect our food writing to be the same as it once was?

Before COVID, I rated restaurants on a five-star scale, taking into account the unique aspirations of each business while factoring in food, service, atmosphere and value. I havent always loved the constraints of awarding stars, but for many people, theyre intuitive.

More than two years after my last starred review (Anoche), I think its important to engineer some consistency into the rating system for 2022 and beyond, such that a four-star review means approximately the same thing now as it would have in 2019.

Service

I dont believe for a second that people dont want to work. What the Great Resignation actually signifies is that people are unwilling to shoulder the multiplex burdens of low wages, overwork and customer abuse. Were seeing it play out across the service industry, especially in restaurants. Servers, bartenders, dishwashers, line cooks, even sometimes senior kitchen staff (chefs de cuisine, executive chefs) are harder to hire and harder to retain than ever before.

Restaurant owners and managers Ive spoken with over the last two years have said that they now spend much of their time training and retraining new front-of-house staff. Some cant hire enough people to stay open five or six days a week, others barely can. The upshot is that when I review a restaurant, I cant think about service the same way as I once did.

So when I visit, I need to keep in mind that my server might be a newbie perhaps new to this restaurant or maybe new to waiting tables in general. Or perhaps the front-of-house team is just scraping by with a skeleton crew that can barely cover the tables in the dining room. No doubt, my baseline standard will always be competent, considerate service. But when it comes to a servers deep knowledge about the chef, the wine list, the venue and the menu, Ill be grading on a curve for now.

Food

For most diners, there have been a few positives to come out of the pandemic. Better outdoor dining options (more on that later) and take-out alcohol sales certainly count. But so does the recent trend toward smaller, well-edited menus. To be fair, not all restaurants are happy about being forced to trim their dining options in response to labor and supply shortages. But theres a silver lining stitched around this particular cloud.

If youve been reading Dine Out Maine since before COVID, you know that I have long admired businesses that understand their craft well enough to pare a menu down to its essentials. Theres a swagger to a full-service establishment confident enough to present a scant few options for appetizers, entrees and desserts. But until recently, concise menus were the exception, not the rule.These days, it seems like most restaurants, especially full-service establishments, have winnowed their offerings, eliminating scruff in favor of dishes the kitchen knows it can execute well.

I recognize that these dishes might not be the chefs favorites, but the choice of what to eliminate and what to keep can be illuminating. In some ways, short menus make my job easier. No longer do I have to gamble when my dinner guest and I choose our meals; our odds of picking something representative of the kitchens talents are automatically much higher.

At the same time, with supply-chain uncertainty still a fact of life, I also have to be understanding about shortages or last-minute alterations to dishes. As a reader, youll have to share some of that responsibility and accept that something I rave about in a review might not be available when you visit. Naturally, we should all still expect high-quality execution seasoning, technique and flavor from the dishes the kitchen elects to keep, especially as the price of eating out has ballooned. But we all must acknowledge that we live in a world of restricted options, and that extends to dining out.

Atmosphere

Not too long ago, my favorite spot to sit at any restaurant was at a tiny two-top, wedged in so tightly that I could hear what my neighbors were whispering about their meal.

In 2022, I have more in common with the elderly woman I stood behind at a local bistros host station last month. If theres anyone coughing, I want a seat as far from them as possible, please, she requested. When the host offered her a table directly underneath the rumbling air purifier, she grinned as if shed just won a raffle.

Rest assured, I do not intend to talk about HVAC and Plexiglas barriers on a regular basis. Not every business can afford expensive retrofits.

Instead, I plan to continue to describe the design elements of the restaurants I write about, especially layout and dcor, while also taking better advantage of the widespread availability of full-service outdoor seating. As the weather warms, more of you are doing the same, and ultimately, my meals should echo yours.

Speaking of echoes, I will continue to report back on noise level, regardless of where I sit. A reader from Cumberland emailed me last year about my metaphorical noise-level ratings, telling me how much he missed reading them. I ate outside at Thoroughfare (in Yarmouth) for the first time this week, he wrote. And I was trying to imagine what youd call the tables full of teenagers eating burgers. I think youd call it noisy cafeteria. Having downed a gochujang chicken sandwich on Thoroughfares patio myself that weekend, Id have gone with rowdy class reunion, but I think were on the same wavelength.

Andrew Ross has written about food and dining in New York and the United Kingdom. He and his work have been featured on Martha Stewart Living Radio and in The New York Times. He is the recipient of five recent Critics Awards from the Maine Press Association. Contact him at:

[emailprotected]Twitter: @AndrewRossME

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Dine Out Maine: Two years after COVID-19 upended the food world, we're reviewing restaurants again - Press Herald

COVID-19 cases double over the course of a week on Space Coast – Florida Today

April 10, 2022

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Cases of COVID-19 in decline since the last surge in January increased for the first time in nine weeks on the Space Coast, according to data released by the Florida Department of Health Friday.

From April 1 to April 7,there were 312 cases in Brevard County, or 51 cases per 100,000 population compared to 26.3 cases per 100,000 population from the last period. This makes for an increase of 24.09cases per 100,000 population in just one week.

Because FDOHhas moved to releasing COVID-19 data on a biweeklybasis, they did not release a COVID-19 report last week. However, theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention which releases data weeklyshowed that there were 26.91 cases per 100,000 population.

Florida hospitalizations at record low: Statewide COVID-19 hospitalizations at pandemic low as cases continue rising due to BA.2

COVID medications: Previously unavailable COVID-19 antiviral medications now available on Space Coast

COVID-19's toll on the Space Coast: Help us tell the stories of those we've lost

The omicron variant of the novel coronavirus fueled the January surge. Now a variant of that variant, nicknamed omicron stealth, is on the rise in Florida and across the country.

The stealth omicron subvariant, dubbed BA.2, has quickly become the most common strainin the U.S., according to the latest data from the CDC.The new strain,now accounts for more than half (72.2%) of coronavirus infections in the country, according to the CDC. But while the cases are increasing, medical experts predictit will be milder than the surges that preceded it.

Based on new CDC transmission guidelines, the Space Coast is still a community of low transmission. Old CDC guidelineswould have categorized Brevard County as a community of substantial transmissiontransmission, whencases per 100,000 population are between 50 and 100and the positivity rate is between 8% and 10%.

The are other signs that Brevard County could be on the cusp of a new wave of infections:Deaths on the Space Coast also rose, according to a provisional CDC database.From March 26 to April 2, there were 17 COVID-19 related deaths compared totwo deaths during the previous week.

Despite the jump in cases,the vaccination rate remain stagnant,according to FDOHdata.And its a figure that may remain stagnant as the HRSA ran out of funds to reimburse healthcare providers for uninsured testsand vaccines. FDOH data shows that as of April 7 only 70% of eligible residents those ages five and older were vaccinated.

Testing, a tool used in tandem with vaccinations to monitor and control the spread of COVID-19, saw a decrease.

Last week's numbers: COVID-19 hospitalizations increase in Brevard County, though cases show a decline

According to CDC figures, there were 4,834 tests performed from March26 to April 1. Yet, the amount of individuals testing positive for COVID-19 increased from 2% last week to 4.8% from April 1 to April 7, according to FDOH data.This could also be an undercount because most at-home test kits do not get counted and those who may have signs and symptoms may choose not to take a COVID-19 test.

Statewide, FDOH data shows thatthere were COVID-19 511related deaths in the past two weeks. Since the start of the pandemic 73,538Floridians have died of COVID-19 as of April 7. Additionally, 3.8%Floridians tested positive for COVID-19, representingan infection rate of almost 51.6cases per 100,000 population. Statewide, vaccination rate remainsat 74%.

According to FDOH, of the eligible population in Florida, age group vaccination rates across the state are:

Nationwide, 69.9%of eligible Americans have been fully vaccinated. There have been 80,146,451COVID-19 cases and 981,748deaths nationwide since the start of the pandemic.

The following Brevard County Emergency Management Office-supported sites are available for COVID-19 testing.

Florida Department of Health-Brevard, 2555 Judge Fran Jamison Way, Viera; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays.This is a walk-up site.Preregister at nomihealth.com.

Testing also is available to established or new Omni Healthcare patients at itsofficesin Brevard County. To book an appointment, patients can call theirOmni doctor's office.

Various other urgent-care centers, private physicians' offices and pharmacies also provide COVID-19 tests, and some retailers sell in-home test kits. Additionally, thewebsite http://www.211Brevard.orghas a list of sites offering testing.Some of those sites require reservations, while others allow walk-ins.

The Florida Department of Health is offering COVID-19 vaccines at three sites.

Residents also can get vaccinated at Omni Healthcare's offices, as well as at its walk-in vaccination clinic located in Suite 303 on the third floor of 1344 S. Apollo Blvd.in Melbourne, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.weekdays. Vaccinations also are available from 9 a.m. to noon in Suite 2C of Omni's 1344 S. Apollo Blvd. complex.

Walk-ins are accepted. Butappointments can be made by calling 321-802-5515 or by emailing the request and including a name and phone number toCOVID@OMNIhealthcare.com.

COVID-19 vaccines also are available at pharmacies at various local CVS, Publix, Sams Club, Walgreens, Walmart and Winn-Dixie stores, as well as some urgent-care centers and physician offices. Check the individual site for appointment requirements and vaccine availability.

Amira Sweilem is the data reporter at FLORIDA TODAY.Contact Sweilemat 386-406-5648orasweilem@floridatoday.com.

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COVID-19 cases double over the course of a week on Space Coast - Florida Today

COVID-19 cases are rising again in Wisconsin, but DHS says a backlog of data has elevated the numbers in the last 24 hours – Milwaukee Journal…

April 10, 2022

Biden orders new national research on long COVID

Confronting the pandemic's lasting shadow, President Joe Biden on Tuesday is ordering a new national research push on long COVID, while also directing federal agencies to support patients dealing with the condition. (April 5)

AP

According to state Department of Health Services data, Wisconsin has seen a rise in COVID-19 cases throughout the week.

But, due to a backlog of data being entered, Friday's case totals are elevated.

"While we have seen an increase in COVID-19 cases recently, data from April 8, 2022 does not reflect the actual number of new COVID-19 cases in Wisconsin in the last 24 hours," a statement from DHS' website reads.

The seven-day average of daily cases increased by nearly 200 cases from last Friday. However, based on DHS' statement, Friday's seven-day average of 568 cases might be elevated. The seven-day average should become a better indicator in coming days.

The seven-day percent positive by test increased throughout the week to 3.8%.

On a positive note, the number of deaths reported by DHS dropped considerably throughout the week. The state is currently averaging three confirmed deaths a day, which is down 23 deaths from a month ago.

According to the Wisconsin Hospital Association, COVID-19 hospitalizations seems to have reached a flattening in patient totals data. Hospitalizations have been in a relatively steady decline since its peak of more than 2,250 patients in January.

On the vaccine front, the number of people receiving the shot continues to decline. The seven-day average of daily booster doses fell below 1,000 for the first time since the booster became readily available.

Track COVID and the vaccine in Wisconsin: See the latest data on cases, deaths and administered doses

State and private labs regularly do further tests on a portion of positive COVID-19 samples to find the prevalence of different variants of the virus. The numbers below are just a fraction of the total number of variant cases.

Omicronvariant was identified in 100% of tests sequenced during the week starting March6.

Contact Drake Bentley at (414) 391-5647 orDBentley1@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DrakeBentleyMJS.

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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COVID-19 cases are rising again in Wisconsin, but DHS says a backlog of data has elevated the numbers in the last 24 hours - Milwaukee Journal...

CMS Returning to Certain Pre-COVID-19 Policies in Long-term Care and Other Facilities – CMS

April 10, 2022

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is taking steps to continue to protect nursing home residents health and safety by announcing guidance that restores certain minimum standards for compliance with CMS requirements. Restoring these standards will be accomplished by phasing out some temporary emergency declaration waivers that have been in effect throughout the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE). These temporary emergency waivers were designed to provide facilities with the flexibilities needed to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic.

During the PHE, CMS used a combination of emergency waivers, regulations, and sub-regulatory guidance to offer health care providers the flexibility needed to respond to the pandemic. In certain cases, these flexibilities suspended requirements in order to address acute and extraordinary circumstances. CMS has consistently monitored data within nursing homes and has used these data to inform decision making.

With steadily increasing vaccination rates for nursing home residents and staff, and with overall improvements seen in nursing homes abilities to respond to COVID-19 outbreaks, CMS is taking steps to phase out certain flexibilities that are generally no longer needed to re-establish certain minimum standards while continuing to protect the health and safety of those residing in skilled nursing facilities/nursing facilities (SNFs/NFs). Similarly, some of the same waivers are also being terminated for inpatient hospices, intermediate care facilities for individuals with intellectual disabilities (ICF/IIDs), and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) facilities.

Patient and resident health and safety are top priorities for CMS, and todays actions are focused on ensuring every nursing home resident is cared for in a safe, high-quality environment, said CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. Weve learned a lot from the pandemic over the last two years and are committed to using that knowledge to re-envision the next chapter of health care quality and patient safety and build a stronger health care system.

Recent onsite long-term care (LTC) survey findings have provided insight into issues with resident care that are unrelated to infection control, such as increases in residents weight-loss, depression, and pressure ulcers. The lack of certain minimum standards, such as training for nurse aides, may be contributing to these issues. By ending some of the temporary waivers, CMS is helping nursing homes to redirect efforts back to meeting the regulatory requirements aimed at ensuring each residents physical, mental, and psychosocial needs are met. In addition, CMS expects providers to have integrated practices to address any COVID-19 outbreaks into their normal operations.

CMS will maintain flexibility for certain requirements, such as making temporary waivers available for nurse aides certification if there are documented capacity issues in training or testing programs, and CMS will retain the ability until the expiration or termination of the national COVID-19 PHE to issue individual state-based, county-based, or facility-based waivers as needed. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention and CMS data, tracking trends in the number of COVID-19 cases in local communities and nursing homes, provide CMS with the ability to grant waivers in specific situations. For example, if there is a severe outbreak in a facility or geographically distinct group of facilities, CMS can quickly grant waivers to support the facilities response to COVID-19. If there is a nationwide surge of nursing home COVID-19 cases in the future, CMS can quickly re-issue national blanket waivers during the PHE.

CMS is ending specific waivers in two groups: one group of waivers will terminate 30 days from the issuance of this new guidance, and the other group will terminate 60 days from issuance. These timeframes give providers and state agencies time to adjust their operations to the reinstituted requirements.

Details can be found in the Quality, Safety, and Oversight (QSO) memo here:https://www.cms.gov/medicareprovider-enrollment-and-certificationsurveycertificationgeninfopolicy-and-memos-states-and/update-covid-19-emergency-declaration-blanket-waivers-specific.

###Get CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on Twitter @CMSgov

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CMS Returning to Certain Pre-COVID-19 Policies in Long-term Care and Other Facilities - CMS

Nursing Homes Face Growing Number of Lawsuits From Covid-19 Fallout – The Wall Street Journal

April 10, 2022

Two years after the coronavirus ravaged through nursing homes, families of residents who died from Covid-19 are bringing a wave of negligence and wrongful death lawsuits against the facilities.

The surge of suits, spurred by a repeal of liability protections and statutory deadlines to file the suits, largely accuses nursing homes of failing to properly curb the spread of disease, identify infected residents and treat their illnesses.

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Nursing Homes Face Growing Number of Lawsuits From Covid-19 Fallout - The Wall Street Journal

Renewing faith, or losing it, in the time of COVID-19 – Los Angeles Times

April 10, 2022

One roamed for hours through an oak preserve asking God to speak to her through the silence.

Another spent her days in meditation, using each exhale to send relief to her son, who had, by then, slipped out of consciousness. Not long before, a third woman had awakened in the middle of the night to what became a terrifying, recurring dream about descending into hell.

Each woman members of three generations went through a spiritual journey that had been sparked, sped up or heightened by the pandemic.

The last two years have transformed the stability of our families, our jobs and our collective understanding of science and sacrifice. But, for many of us, COVID-19s reach also rewired something more elemental: our faith.

A Pew survey conducted early in the pandemic, found that nearly 3 in 10 Americans said their religious faith had become stronger since the coronavirus outbreak.

Grace leads a meditation session for attendees from across the country.

(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

For others, this time has fundamentally changed their place within their religious traditions or led them to question long-held beliefs altogether processes of introspection and transfiguration that can be, at once, painful and deeply fruitful.

Suffering, one of the women said, sometimes forces us to look at the gold mine were sitting on.

During the first fall of the pandemic, as she was clawing her way through a blinding depression, Esther Loewen told her wife, Paige, something shed long feared would end both her marriage and her career as a Seventh-Day Adventist pastor.

Im afraid I might be trans.

They sobbed and hugged and Paige made a promise: Im not going anywhere.

A few months later, Loewen emailed her mother to explain that the person shed long thought of as her eldest son was, in fact, her daughter. Her new name was Esther Elizabeth.

Esther Loewen with her son as he practices the cello at home in Redlands.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)

The revelation was hard for her mother. But Loewen, now 40, said her mother has come far in a short time, switching from using her deadname to Elle, a short version of her new middle name. Next, Loewen and her wife told their two sons, then 9 and 6, who quickly settled on a nickname of their own: Mapa.

In many ways, she said, the pandemic shutdowns provided the framework she needed to come out. For the first time ever, she was isolated from the social pressures and fears that had prevented her from transitioning. From her home in Redlands, she connected with other transgender Christians in Zoom support groups, which provided some relief from the bone-deep exhaustion that had come with pastoring a congregation with split views on masking and other COVID-19 safety measures.

Loewen knew her denomination had a longstanding record of barring LGBTQ people from church leadership, but because she was preaching remotely at the time, shed felt comfortable to begin growing out her hair, keeping her beard closely cropped and painting her toenails. But she hadnt yet decided whether to take hormones.

Before she took that step, she wanted to hear a blessing from God and it finally came in January 2021 while at a retreat for church leaders at an oak preserve in Yucaipa.

Esther Loewen poses for a portrait at her home.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)

During several hours of solitude, she prayed What do you want to tell me today? then she rounded a corner and saw hundreds of monarch butterflies. Like many trans people, she sees the caterpillar-to-butterfly transition as a beautiful analogy and, in that moment, she burst into laughter and then tears.

It shifted from being like, Can I do this? she said, to I have to do this in order to be faithful to God.

It felt just as clear as the calling, years earlier, to a life of ministry a vocation born out of the faith shed clung to as a teenager after surviving a house fire that killed her younger brother. It was a job she loved dearly, but also one that often made her think about privacy and secrecy.

Dont put your trash in the can out front, an older pastor once had advised her, explaining that church members had interrogated him after finding an empty carton of ice cream, which would be off limits to the strictest Adventists, who are vegan.

She wouldnt lie outright, but Loewen decided that church members didnt need to know everything about her private life, including the time she wrote a letter to a friend, who is a lesbian, telling her she was loved by God exactly as she was and that the church was wrong on this issue.

She never dared say such a thing publicly, a reality that made her feel complicit then and guilty now. She sometimes thinks about times she sat around boardroom tables, listening to church leaders say hurtful, exclusionary things and didnt speak up. And yet, she tries to welcome Gods grace, understanding that deep down, even then, she knew she was trans.

Last summer, as her depression deepened, she sat down with fellow church leaders and told them she was trans. She desperately hoped she could keep her job, she told them, suggesting they move her to a church in a more liberal area. The leaders handled the situation about as generously as they could have given church rules, she said, but it was clear she had to resign.

Esther Loewen outside her home while her two boys play.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)

It was one of the heaviest losses of her life, she said, but still she feels closer to God than ever.

On a recent afternoon, Loewen, who is studying to become a therapist, picked up her younger son from school and took him to a park. A little girl on the swing next to him looked over at Loewen and then turned to her grandmother.

Whats wrong with that lady?

Her son turned confidently toward the girl.

Shes transgender and shes my Mapa.

One day, when she was 9, Hasasha Hasulube-George recalls sitting on her bed sobbing.

Im such a bad girl, shed written in her journal.

She cant remember what she got in trouble for that day forgetting to clean her room, perhaps. But she vividly recalls her mother assuring her that if she asked Jesus into her heart, he would help her. So she prayed and relief washed over her.

By 12, she had pored through the Bible and soon after she read I Kissed Dating Goodbye, a purity culture classic during the early aughts. She proudly wore a silver promise ring inscribed with True Love Waits and woke up early on schooldays to pray.

And yet, a countervailing force buffeted her spiritual life: a dawning awareness that her familys racial identity her father is Black, her mother white set them apart from the rest of their worship community in suburban Chicago.

Hasasha Hasulube-George flips through a religious journal she kept as a girl.

(Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times)

Hasulube-George, now 24, recalls a church picnic where members of their congregation repeatedly told her brothers to only take what they could eat and not go back for seconds. They said nothing to the other teenagers in line, who were white.

So often, she said, conversations about race in white, evangelical circles when they happened at all quickly pivoted to the same line: One day well all go to Heaven and color will not matter.

Still, she found deep community among fellow believers. When she thought about her few friends who werent Christians, it filled her with dread. What if she never tried to convert them and they died? Going to hell, shed learned, was like getting stuck in a dark cave, separated from God for eternity and surrounded by deafening silence.

It was that same image that had haunted her dreams during the first summer of the pandemic.

By then, her then-fianc, Hunter George, whom shed met in college in Indiana, had been laid off from his job at a nonprofit and the cleaning job she had lined up after graduation fell through. The couple moved into Hunters parents basement in Rochester, N.Y.

Hasulube-George in the courtyard of her apartment in North Hollywood.

(Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times)

She could almost always hear Fox News on the TV upstairs, with rotating headlines about the impending presidential election and mask mandates, or talking heads framing the social justice protests after the killings of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd only in the context of property damage. Family members sent her and Hunter, who is white, emails suggesting that Black Lives Matter was against God and Trump was ordained by the Lord.

Thats when the nightmares started.

Like Arbery, who was shot to death by a white man while out for a jog, in her dreams Hasulube-George would be running when someone, often a neighbor, would shoot her dead. Shed then descend into the quiet-cave version of hell and be trapped there until she woke up in a panic.

She told Hunter she needed to get rid of her Bible. She couldnt stop thinking about verses shed underlined years earlier that she now felt condemned by. He understood.

In the weeks that followed, she remembers sitting on Zoom calls for Christian premarital counseling with a longtime mentor and thinking it felt like a farce. She and Hunter were actively trying to get pregnant, but she knew she couldnt be upfront about that. She was trying to hold onto the final shreds of her faith until her wedding day in September 2020.

My farewell party to my old life, she came to think of it.

Hasulube-George has begun researching African spiritualism, specifically traditions from her fathers native Uganda.

(Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times)

Soon after, she started having conversations, sometimes painful ones, with friends and family about her decision. A verse shed once memorized Children, obey your parents in the Lord now felt like a dagger.

Her mother initially responded with deep fear, she said, but time has softened the situation.

Since moving to North Hollywood last summer, the couple has continued to deconstruct their faiths. Hunter has vowed off organized religion and she has begun researching African spiritualism, specifically traditions from her fathers native Uganda.

She misses the structure her faith offered for years, she relied on prayer as a tool to regulate her anxiety but she has, again, found community in an online book club for fellow exvangelicals.

While she thinks she probably would have left her faith eventually, she said that watching the trifecta of pandemic-era scenarios play out in 2020 the dont-wear-a-mask-God-will-protect-you comments, the evangelical fervor for Trump and the response she saw from many Christians during the social justice protests both crystalized and sped up her decision.

That pushed me to decide, Im done.

Fran Grace clearly remembers the origin point of a twisting spiritual pathway that has helped guide her through the pandemic.

It was four decades ago and her high school English teacher was reading aloud from The Scarlet Letter. Only half-listening to Nathaniel Hawthornes tale of sin and repentance, she saw a pillar of light slice down, as if piercing through the ceiling, and felt as if she melted into the incandescence.

She interpreted it, at first, as a sign that something infinitely loving existed inside of her. But the revelation calcified into fear after her mother took her to see the pastor of a small Protestant church in her Florida town.

Youve got the devil inside you, young lady, he proclaimed.

Now, further along in a journey that has included joining and leaving a fundamentalist Christian church, divorcing her husband, falling in love with a woman for the first time, drinking herself to near-death, finding sobriety and traveling to study world religions, Grace a professor of religious studies at the University of Redlands looks back fondly on that day in high school as the start of a lifelong quest that has buoyed her during the hardest times in her life.

Graces spiritual tools, including meditation and dream work, have grounded her since her 29-year-old son died of COVID last year.

(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

At the tail end of last summer, Peter Boyko her partner Diane Eller-Boykos son, whod shed come to think of as her own was hospitalized with COVID-19. Before long, the 29-year-old father of three was struggling to breathe.

Restricted from frequent visits, Grace and Eller-Boyko, who both follow the Sufi path, dug into spiritual tools theyd long relied on: meditation, dream work and paying attention to small signs.

Soon after Peter died, a letter addressed to him showed up at the couples home. The note from a childrens charity included a line about accepting people just as they are a trait that was exceptionally true of Peter. It was a hint, Grace believed, from the inner world.

She felt more tuned into the kindness of others, often reflecting on the proverb about how suffering often points us to the goldmine beneath us. And as the pandemic lingers, she has tried to help others find that spiritual gold.

One Wednesday in December, Grace, 57, sat cross-legged in front of a camera inside the Meditation Room, an airy, carpeted space adjacent to her office at the University of Redlands.

Column One

A showcase for compelling storytellingfrom the Los Angeles Times.

For years, Grace has led free, weekly meditation sessions for students and other members of the community and although shed returned in person by December, most of the attendees were still joining virtually. One by one, their smiling faces popped up in small squares as they joined from San Diego, Tucson, Canada.

Grace asked everyone to close their eyes.

Relax, relax, relax, she guided them.

Sense your right leg, she said, and then your left. Let your belly fall open and relax the muscles in your throat. Open your heart and offer yourself in service to others. Think of a stranger and send them love.

Later, they went around the virtual circle, sharing about their weeks and whom they had selected as their stranger while meditating.

A 91-year-old from San Diego had thought of the volunteer who drove her to a dentist appointment a few days earlier. An Iowa State University student pictured the cafeteria employee who handed her ice cream on her birthday. A Presbyterian minister recalled a man on Death Row at San Quentin who had started as a pen pal and became a close friend; during the meditation, the minister said, she had prayed for the women he killed.

Wow, Grace whispered.

When it was his turn to share, a man from British Columbia, who was sitting cross-legged on his floor, told the group that his father had died a week earlier. He began to cry, resting his forehead on the ground.

Grace closed her eyes. As she inhaled, she focused on breathing in his suffering. With her exhale, she sent out hope.

Read more here:

Renewing faith, or losing it, in the time of COVID-19 - Los Angeles Times

Thousands of people have tested positive for COVID-19 in Oregons prisons. This man hopes to lead them in a class-action lawsuit. – Oregon Public…

April 10, 2022

Thousands of people have tested positive for COVID-19 in Oregons prisons. This man hopes to lead them in a class-action lawsuit. - OPB

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Attorney Juan Chavezs legal career focuses on gaining justice for people whove been injured by systems that are supposed to help keep us safe. As project director for the Civil Rights Project and a prison and police accountability lawyer with the Oregon Justice Resource Center, hes won six-figure settlements in wrongful death lawsuits against the Portland Police Bureau.

His next case could potentially be worth millions of dollars for people incarcerated in Oregon and their families.

Last year, a report from the Prison Policy Initiative found that the COVID-19 mortality rate for incarcerated Oregonians was five times higher than it was for the states general population. Since the beginning of the pandemic, 45 people in the custody of the Oregon Department of Corrections (DOC) have died after testing positive for COVID-19. Another 5,000 people have tested positive for the virus while in custody.

Last week, a federal judge approved a class-action lawsuit over the states response to the pandemic inside Oregons prisons. Chavez is one of the attorneys representing the prisoners in that lawsuit. He recently spoke with OPB Weekend Edition host John Notarianni about the case.

John Notarianni: This lawsuit initially began way back in April of 2020, actually. Thats when a group of people who contracted COVID-19 in custody decided to sue the state. What were they alleging?

Juan Chavez: At the beginning of the pandemic, I think we understood that this was a communicable disease. I dont know if we knew precisely how communicable, how it was transmitted, but the best we could understand was it was transmitted by being in close proximity to each other.

That became an immediate concern given what prisons are: these folks cant leave. Theyre not going to be able to be distant from one another, they cant stay at their homes, they cant limit their exposure to other folks. So, a few of these folks, all of whom had some pre-existing condition that would make them medically vulnerable to COVID-19, decided that they needed to act now and get the protections ordered by a federal court so that they could be safe.

Notarianni: Broadly speaking, how has the Oregon Department of Corrections response to this pandemic stacked up against whats been happening in other states?

Chavez: The Oregon Department of Corrections, during the height of the pandemic in the winter of 2020 into 2021, was one of the worst states for [COVID-19 related] deaths and transmission across the country. I think we were, at its height, the third-worst per capita on death. And so, a lot of folks were suffering, and it was just not being abated. We brought an injunction that we were hoping the court would order the department of corrections to institute some measure of social distancing, masking rules, and other protections that we knew folks needed. Unfortunately, the court rejected that motion for an injunction, and thats why we filed the damages class action in addition to this.

Notarianni: Yeah, and there are a number of criteria that need to be met for a class-action suit to be able to go forward. U. S. Magistrate Judge Stacie Beckerman issued a ruling just about a week ago, on April 1st, and said that it has a green light; that this class-action suit can go forward. What was she looking to establish in order to permit this lawsuit to move ahead?

Chavez: Well, the biggest question in every class action is whether everybodys more or less in the same boat, in terms of what kind of claims can they bring and what kind of defenses the will defendants use. In this case, we were very particular with who it is that we were suing and what it is that we were saying was the problem. We sued the top-level officials for DOC, and we sued them because they did indeed have a heavy hand in how it is that the pandemic response was managed in DOC. They werent shy about saying that on a number of occasions. The problem started at the top; if the problem started at the top, it affected everybody downwards. So, the only way that this case could properly be managed would be through a class action. Otherwise, the courts would also be facing 5,000 separate lawsuits.

Notarianni: What could this lawsuit eventually mean for the plaintiffs: those thousands of Oregonians who contracted COVID-19 while they were incarcerated and for the families of people who died in state custody?

Chavez: You know, this is a remarkable thing to say after two years, but it might be too early to tell, to be honest. Its probably the biggest unknown right now, whether or not the state will seek an appeal on this. Most cases cant be appealed until the case is entirely done, but there are some rules that could allow the state to try to seek an appeal. If this is appealed, then that puts things on pause for a very long time, more than likely.

Notarianni: Well, even with all of those unknowns in place, legal experts are saying this could be a first-of-its-kind class-action suit. So, putting aside what we know right now, looking towards a hypothetical future, do you have a sense of what implications this could have nationwide?

Chavez: I think what courts have done in the past, and what certainly departments of corrections across the country have done, is the strategy of divide and conquer amongst prisoners themselves. Theres a federal law called the Prison Litigation Reform Act that Congress passed in the nineties, during the tough on crime period. That was solely focused on diminishing the ability for prisoners to bring lawsuits, and it was definitely effective. But, I think more importantly, what it did was discourage prisoners from asserting their rights. What I think this class action does is give the power back to the people who are being harmed, which is prisoners in this context. So, if in the future there are these mass harms that are caused by administrators in departments of corrections, this could be a big game-changer.

Listen to Juan Chavezs conversation with OPB Weekend Edition host John Notarianni using the audio player above.

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A federal judge is warning prison staff at Oregons Two Rivers Correctional Institution in Umatilla to not retaliate against an adult in their custody who sued corrections officials because they wouldnt follow masking rules.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Stacie Beckerman largely ruled in favor of Aaron Hanna, a prisoner at Two Rivers. Hanna asked the court in October to force prison officials and correctional officers at Two Rivers to comply with the Oregon Department of Corrections policy on masks.

The U.S. Department of Justice unsealed a 25-count indictment on Monday, charging a former nurse at Oregons only womens prison with sexually assaulting a dozen women while they were incarcerated.

Continued here:

Thousands of people have tested positive for COVID-19 in Oregons prisons. This man hopes to lead them in a class-action lawsuit. - Oregon Public...

Given The High-Profile Cases, How Prevalent Is COVID-19 In DC? – DCist

April 10, 2022

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Given The High-Profile Cases, How Prevalent Is COVID-19 In DC? - DCist

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