Category: Covid-19

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Alexandrias Waterskiing Santa and New Years Eve events …

December 28, 2021

Santa won't be water skiing at Alexandria's waterfront this year after an uptick of COVID-19 cases in Virginia, according to a Facebook post from the company.

Santa wont be water skiing at Alexandrias waterfront this year after an uptick of COVID-19 cases in Virginia, according to a Facebook post from the Waterskiing Santa event organizers.

Waterskiing Santa has put on a live show for 35 years, but this year, the audience will have to watch past shows from home with a cup of hot chocolate in hand.

Santa, Mrs. Claus, Frosty the Snowman along with the Jet Skiing Grinch any many, many friends, have been working hard to make sure everyone stays safe, the company wrote on Facebook.

The event typically takes place the Old Town waterfront. But it was canceled based off of the Alexandria Health Departments recommendation, and the City of Alexandrias agreement, to avoid gathering in crowds as cases go up.

Mrs. Claus works with the various permits and sponsors to ensure we have a great show with their support. To move the show at this late date is not feasible. I am sorry! Moreover, Rudolph is on the roof threatening to cover his nose with the tar so I have to run and talk him down, Papa Noel wrote in the companys Facebook post.

The most recent show, from 2020, can be watched on the companys YouTube.

The First Night in Alexandria events were also canceled but a 10-minute firework show will still go on at midnight on New Years Eve over the Potomac.

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Maine records 1423 new cases of COVID-19 in first report since Dec. 24 – Press Herald

December 28, 2021

Maine is reporting 1,423 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday the first new report of cases since Dec. 24 and 17 additional deaths.

Tuesdays case counts are the first since Dec. 24 as state offices were closed on Friday for the Christmas holiday, and the state does not report case counts over the weekend. Hospitalizations on Tuesday stayed the same as Monday, at 330 statewide, down from a peak of 387 on Dec. 21.

While 1,423 cases over four days would be far below recent state averages, the CDC has not been able to keep up with a flood of positive tests in recent weeks and its updates no longer reflect all new infections. Because of the backlog, many of the cases reported Tuesday were submitted to the state in mid-December and had to be reviewed by CDC staff to eliminate duplicates.

Public health experts say to expect case counts to rise with the arrival of the more contagious omicron variant, which made up 10 percent of samples that were sequenced at Jackson Laboratories in Maine from Dec. 12-18, up from 1 percent from the previous week.

Because omicron in other places has caused exponential growth, public health experts say to expect the same type of growth in Maine. Preliminary research is indicating that omicron causes less severe disease on average than earlier variants, although if theres a flood of cases all at once it could still further strain hospitals.

The rate of omicron transmission in Maine is faster than health officials had expected based on the spread elsewhere. Nationally, the omicron variant is dominant, making up 58 percent of cases as of Dec. 25, the latest federal data available. The previous weeks estimate of 72 percent of all U.S. cases has been revised downward to 22 percent.

Maine does seem to be going slightly faster at the initial rate, so I would say its either the dominant variant now or will be between now and the 30th, said Ryan Tewhey, who leads a team of researchers at The Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor that monitors coronavirus strains for the state, on Monday.

Maine health officialshave predicted the spread of omicronand urged people to continue to exercise COVID-19 precautions, including vaccinations, wearing masks indoors and avoiding large gatherings.

We have to assume it is growing and will probably grow quite exponentially, as it has everywhere else, said Dr. Dora Anne Mills, chief health improvement officer for MaineHealth, on Monday.

But hospitalization reports from other countries deeper into the omicron wave hold potentially good news.

Report from UK on COVID hospitalizations: admissions are well below what was seen in prior waves, and on proportional basis, are significantly less relative to reported cases, said Dr. Scott Gottlieb, former FDA commissioner, in a tweet on Tuesday. Those people being admitted are also less severe, with fewer patients requiring oxygen or critical care.

Also, the Mills administration on Monday announced its support of new U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations that reduced isolation restrictions for Americans who catch the coronavirus from 10 to five days, and similarly shortened the time that close contacts need to quarantine.

I welcome this change in guidance, Gov. Janet Mills said in a statement. Protecting the health of Maine people while minimizing disruption to their lives is paramount. With these updated recommendations, more Maine people will now be able to return to their lives safely and more quickly, and that can help us keep our economic recovery moving forward, keep our kids in schools, and be with our loved ones during this important time of year.

Since the pandemic began, Maine has reported 143,213 cases of COVID-19, and 1,492 deaths.

The seven-day average of daily new cases stood at 752 on Tuesday, compared to 939 a week ago and 399 a month ago. Hospitalizations on Tuesday stood at 330, the same as Mondays totals. There were 11o people in intensive care with COVID-19 on Tuesday, and 56 on a ventilator.

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Maine records 1423 new cases of COVID-19 in first report since Dec. 24 - Press Herald

COVID-19 infections soar in Atlanta area as hospitals fill up – FOX 5 Atlanta

December 28, 2021

Demand for COVID-19 tests surges nationwide

The COVID-19 omicron variant is spreading rapidly but research shows patients are less likely to be hospitalized with serious cases of the disease.

ATLANTA - COVID-19s omicron wave is rapidly pushing up the number of patients infected with the virus in Georgia hospitals, particularly in the Atlanta area.

The number of patients hospitalized statewide with the virus has climbed by more than 50% in a week, rising above 1,900 on Monday. Thats the highest number since mid-October, when patient numbers were still falling after hitting a state record of more than 6,000 in early September.

The seven-day average of COVID-19 cases in Georgia rose to nearly 8,700 a day on Monday, according to the state Public Health Department. Thats nearing the peaks that Georgia saw in infection numbers in early January and early September.

COVID-19 TESTING SCARCE IN GEORGIA

The share of positive molecular PCR tests hit an all-time high of almost 31% on Monday. Enough positive tests have been recorded to account for more than 1% of all residents across a 19-county metro Atlanta area in the past two weeks. Thats 2 1/2 times the rate of positive tests in Georgias other 140 counties in the same period.

The crush is being seen in Atlanta-area emergency rooms. As of Monday evening, 21 Atlanta-area emergency rooms were turning away ambulances, while only 10 ERs at hospitals caring for adults were receiving them, according to state data. Among those turning away emergency medical transports were the flagship hospitals of three of the areas four major hospital systems: Emory, Piedmont and Northside.

OMICRON VARIANT CONTINUESTO DRIVE UP NEW CASES IN GEORGIA

Officials are urging people who need testing not to tie up emergency rooms, but to instead seek out testing sites and pharmacies.

Dr. Danny Branstetter, director of infection prevention for the 10-hospital Wellstar Health System, said infections are spreading and manifesting symptoms at least as quickly and maybe more quickly as the delta variant.

There is a severe shortage of both in-person and at-home testing for COVID-19 as the latest surge hits.

"Hospitalizations are not rising as rapidly as previous surges," Branstetter said. "However, hospitalization is a lag from new diagnosis of infection. So we may see hospitalization start to increase in the next week or so, hopefully not to the same exponential rate.

Branstetter said there is "a potential" for hospital capacity to be exceeded, especially as health workers get sick themselves.

"Were seeing an increase spread amongst our healthcare providers now," he said. "So that maybe even limit our healthcare personnel available to provide care even further."

Branstetter said hes also worried about a limited supply of effective monoclonal antibodies, which had been an useful therapy during the delta wave. He and other officials said vaccination and booster shots remain the most effective way of preventing severe illness.

Katherine Watson, spokesperson for the five-hospital Northside system, said that COVID-19 patients accounted for 25% of the systems total adult inpatient population as of Monday.

Watson said the hospitals continue to manage bed capacity.

"We expect the increase to continue, but dont know yet what the full impact will be to our inpatient census," Watson said.

Deaths are also inching up, now averaging more than 20 a day. More than 31,000 people in Georgia have died from COVID-19, according to state numbers.

In a hospital district that includes Cobb, Cherokee, Douglas and Paulding counties, COVID-19 patients made up almost of a quarter of all patients on Monday, according to state data.

Amid overwhelming demand for COVID tests, Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr and Public Health Commissioner Kathleen Toomey warned people to make sure they are using a valid testing center and arent being overcharged.

"Misinformation from unapproved COVID tests could result in people not following isolation and quarantine protocols and lead to further transmission of the virus and serious or life-threatening illness," Toomey said in a statement.

They also warned against accepting services from people going to door-to-door or approaching others on the street and said it could be a sign of a scam if someone tries to charge for an in-person test.

Georgians can find some testing sites at https://dph.georgia.gov/covidtesting, although that list may not include many private testing sites.

Carr said his office is aware of reports of overcharging for tests and urges consumers to report potential price gouging at consumer.ga.gov or by calling 404-651-8600.

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COVID-19 infections soar in Atlanta area as hospitals fill up - FOX 5 Atlanta

The nation’s capital is the worst place for COVID-19 infections right now – NPR

December 28, 2021

A line of people wait for COVID-19 testing at a D.C. Health- organized walk-up testing site at Farragut Square on Dec. 23, just blocks from the White House in Washington. Jacquelyn Martin/AP hide caption

A line of people wait for COVID-19 testing at a D.C. Health- organized walk-up testing site at Farragut Square on Dec. 23, just blocks from the White House in Washington.

Washington, D.C., is experiencing a major pandemic surge making it the highest-risk place for COVID infection in the nation.

D.C. experienced an average of 1,192 new cases per day for the week, and 169 cases per 100,000 people as of Monday, according to data from the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

Despite relatively high vaccination rates, D.C. is experiencing a surge due to several factors, according to Dr. Neil J. Sehgal, an assistant professor of health policy and management at the University of Maryland School of Public Health.

"I suspect what we are seeing in DC is the collision of increased opportunity for transmission due to the demographics of the District, a missed policy opportunity to prevent transmission, and the transmission dynamics of omicron while vaccinated people are less likely to contract or transmit, with omicron clearly both are happening," he told NPR.

Demographically, the D.C. area skews younger than the rest of the country, with about 50% of residents of the District between the ages of 20 and 49. Maryland and Virginia, which are experiencing a similar surge, have about 4 in 10 residents in the same age category.

"Before vaccines were available, we learned that transmission in the United States was largely driven by adults 20 to 49 years of age," Sehgal said. "People age 20-49 are simply more transmission-efficient."

That's thanks to an increased likelihood of in-person work, a greater likelihood of household transmission due to raising young children, and a greater chance of socializing outside the home, particularly during the holidays, he said.

COVID-19 test site lead Nardos Amare checks in a patient for a COVID test outside Benning Stoddert Recreation Center on Dec. 23 in Washington, D.C. Alex Wong/Getty Images hide caption

COVID-19 test site lead Nardos Amare checks in a patient for a COVID test outside Benning Stoddert Recreation Center on Dec. 23 in Washington, D.C.

Like many places around the country, the hunt for an at-home COVID test in the District meant long lines. The city started distributing free test kits to residents prior to the holidays as COVID case numbers reached new highs, alongside offering on-site testing.

D.C. COVID-19 public testing sites are set to be closed on New Year's Eve and New Year's Day, but the city will still be distributing test kits at select locations.

An indoor mask mandate would have helped cut down on transmission before they got so bad, Sehgal said. But the city dropped the requirement in November (it had a mask and social distancing advisory in place instead).

Sehgal said he and other health experts called on Mayor Muriel Bowser to bring the mandate back when cases began rising in the District just after Thanksgiving.

"We know now that omicron was circulating alongside delta at that time, and the reluctance to keep reasonable, science-based precautions in place seeded the transmission that we are seeing today," Sehgal said. "At that point we were on the 'flat' part of the exponential growth curve, but with every infected person passing the virus on to more than one other person on average, you can see how cases would continue to climb."

Now, the city has again cracked down on requirements for masks and vaccines. On Dec. 21, the city brought the mask mandate back through at least Jan. 31. At the time Bowser said she did not regret having dropped the mandate earlier and that "as conditions warranted, we've changed our interventions, and we are changing them again."

Starting Jan. 15, D.C. businesses including restaurants, bars, gyms, and music venues, and certain meeting spaces will be required to ask patrons ages 12 and older for proof of vaccination to enter. When enforcement begins, patrons will only need to show proof of one shot to enter. By Feb. 15, two shots will be required for entry.

For the latest on the coronavirus in the D.C. area, follow member station WAMU's coverage here.

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The nation's capital is the worst place for COVID-19 infections right now - NPR

COVID-19 hospitalizations edge up in Summit County. Drive-thru testing starts Tuesday – Akron Beacon Journal

December 28, 2021

The 3,500free COVID-19 test kits that arrived Monday at the Summit County health department were all given away in about two hours, despite a limit ofone kit per person.

Marlene Martin, administrative coordinator for Summit County Public Health, said the line to the health department'sAkron offices snakedfrom the door to West Market Street from the moment it announced the kits which each came with two tests insidewere available.

Local health officialsareordering more tests from from the state, but they have no idea when the kitsmight arrive.

The public and private testing shortagehas hit Northeast Ohio amid another pandemic surge, fueled at least in partby the omicron variant.

The number of people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Summit County also edged up slightly after the long Christmas weekend to 302 on Monday.

Stay home for New Year's Eve?: In current winter surge, Ohio ranks near top in US for COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations

To help ease the quest for tests,theOhio National Guardis joining with the healthdepartment and local hospitals tolaunch a free,drive-thru COVID-19 testing site in Akron on Tuesday

It will be able tohandle 300 free tests per dayand will be open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily except Dec. 31 and Jan. 1.

The testing site islocated at the Summa Health Corporate Office at 1077 Gorge Blvd. in Akron.

The test site will be open seven days a week beginning Jan. 2 and will remain open until there's no longer a demand.

But don't just show up there expecting a test. You must first register online for a time slot and there could be a wait.

Last week, when the Ohio National Guard opened a similar site in Cleveland,it was overwhelmed by people seeking tests andclosed early afterthree hours testing.

It has since implemented aregistration requirement aiming to cut wait times and avoid turning people away. The Akron site appears to be taking a lesson from Cleveland.

If you'd prefer to test at home, you might be searching for a test.

More home COVID testing: You took a home COVID-19 test and it's positive. Now what should you do?

Martin advised people to call local pharmacies to see if they have kits before traveling to a storeto buy one.

The rapid antigen home test kitswhich are often sold in pairs for about $22 are less sensitive than the PCRtests administered by many hospitals. If you take one during the earliest phase of an infection, before the virus has replicated widely, the test could return afalse negative, the New York Times has reported.

Yet some ofthe at-home rapid antigen tests catchabout85%of infections if the tests are done correctly. That, some public health experts have said, is a powerful tool to help people navigate the ongoing pandemic.

If you dotest positive at home, Summit County's health department wants you tofill out a form on its websiteto help track how widespread infections are here.

Cases last week were surging, Martin said, though it's unclear how many were omicron or the older variant, delta.From Dec. 22 through Dec. 24, Summit County reported between 1,026 and 1,116 new COVID cases per day.

Those numbers dropped over the weekend. On Christmas, there were 665 new cases and on Dec. 26, there were 756, Martin said.

It's unclear how much the holiday and the weekend may have contributed to the drop in numbers and whether they will rise again this week.

Hospitalizations in Summit County, meanwhile, edged up slightly, from 289 on Thursday to 302 on Monday. This is the breakdown of Monday's hospitalizations, with Thursday's number in parentheses: Western Reserve Hospital, 27(25); Akron General 115(115), Summa 148(140); Akron Children's 12(9).

Northeast Ohio currently has some of the highest COVID-19 case rates nationwide.

One Northeast Ohio man on the prowl for tests garnered more than 80,000 likes and nearly 10,000 shares onTikTok when he posted a short video abouthow he scored COVID test kits.

"I could not find a COVID test anywhere in Northeast Ohio," he said. "So I thought to myself, where am I going to find one...I looked at a map and was like, which county voted for Trump?"

The man, who goes byas AlexWheeler711 on TikTok, then holds up boxes of tests in a video as he drivesand says his theory worked because he found tests in a red county.

"Thank you, Medina," he says.

He doesn't say which store had the tests in the video, which he posted Saturday.

But by Sunday, theCVS drug store in Medina had posted signsSunday saying thatstore was sold out.

Beacon Journal reporter Amanda Garrett can be reached at agarrett@thebeaconjournal.com.

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COVID-19 hospitalizations edge up in Summit County. Drive-thru testing starts Tuesday - Akron Beacon Journal

Omicron: What are the symptoms that Coloradans should be looking for? – 9News.com KUSA

December 28, 2021

Dr. Payal Kohli said the symptoms of omicron may be different than those of the original virus strain.

COLORADO, USA As omicron spreads at a staggering speed, many of the top news stories are highlighting endless cancellations of sports games,showsandflightsin an effort to stop the spread of the new COVID variant.

These events have undoubtedly left many people questioning much of what they know about COVID-19 and what symptoms to look out for when it comes to omicron.

According to 9NEWS health expert, Dr. Payal Kohli, the symptoms of omicron may be different than those of the original virus strain.

"In particular, there is less cough, high fever and loss of taste or smell," she said.

Although there is still much to be learned about the new COVID variant, Kohli said that omicron symptoms may more mild than the initial strain which may give some people a false sense of security even when they do encounter symptoms.

The more prominent omicron symptoms are:

Now that the family gatherings are over, Kohli said the medical community is bracing for a surge in COVID-19 cases following family and friends gathering for the holidays.

"I have to say that the medical community is preparing for the worst because this variant is incredibly contagious more than any other variant we have seen," she said.

By the end of Christmas week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that variants will fuel a possible 55% spike in new infections and result in 1.3 million new cases.

Omicron also has a much shorter incubation period from the point of exposure.

"This is behaving very differently, and those three to five days that is stuck in everybodys head needs to shift up now, to more like two to three days just because of the incubation period being different," said Kohli. "Because its a shorter incubation period, you spread it more quickly without even realizing, so you need to test earlier in order to prevent the spread."

Kohli recommends the following for people that may experience omicron symptoms.

Although no deaths related to the new variant have been reported in Colorado, one unvaccinated man in his 50s has been reported to have died after being infected with the omicron variant in Texas.

Colorado COVID-19 data

Officials with the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) gave an update on the state's response to the COVID-19 pandemic last week and said that cases are trending up for the first time in weeks.

CDPHE State Epidemiologist Dr. Rachel Herlihy said the increase is likely being driven by the omicron variant. The percent positivity data also show an increase, with a current seven-day average positivity rate of 7.8%.

The state has detected key omicron signatures in all 21 wastewater systems that are participating in CDPHE's detection program. State labs have also seen a sharp increase in the percentage of positive PCR tests presenting the profile for the omicron variant, particularly since Dec. 10.

Herlihy said this data suggests that potentially half of all new cases detected in recent days could be caused by the omicron variant.

Isolation and quarantine

On Monday, CDPHE updated its guidance to match the new recommendations from CDC regarding COVID-19 isolation and quarantine.

The guidance reduces the recommended time in isolation for those in the general population with COVID-19 from 10 to five days, if asymptomatic on day five, followed by an additional five days wearing a mask when around others.

This change is based on data showing that the majority of COVID-19 transmission occurs early in the course of illness, according to CDPHE.

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Omicron: What are the symptoms that Coloradans should be looking for? - 9News.com KUSA

Reflections from first Californian to get COVID-19 vaccine – Los Angeles Times

December 28, 2021

Helen Cordova has celebrated two COVID-19 vaccinations in her family this month.

Her mother got a booster on her 66th birthday, then headed to a boisterous family dinner at Chilis, something that wasnt possible last winter when both indoor and outdoor dining were banned.

A few days later, Cordovas newly eligible 5-year-old niece got her first dose after being promised a lollipop.

Those shots among more than 62 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine that have now been administered in California were so easy to get that they were practically mundane.

How things have changed since Cordova, a 33-year-old nurse practitioner from the San Fernando Valley, got her own Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

A year ago this month, Cordova became the first person in California outside a clinical trial to get a COVID-19 vaccination, making history at a time when the virus was overwhelming hospitals and the first precious doses were limited to those most at risk: older people and front-line healthcare workers.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom looks on as Helen Cordova receives the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center in Los Angeles on Dec. 14, 2020.

(Associated Press)

I remember that hope I felt when I got the vaccine because it was probably the darkest period of the pandemic, said Cordova, who treated COVID patients in the intensive care unit at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center at the time.

The day the first shots in the United States were administered Dec. 14, 2020 marked a hopeful new chapter in the pandemic.

Ballparks and fairgrounds were quickly converted to mass vaccination clinics. Infections and deaths plummeted for months as the highly effective inoculations became widely available. Business restrictions and mask mandates lifted. Schools reopened.

But the vaccine anniversary is bittersweet.

This month, the U.S. death toll from the coronavirus topped 800,000. Cases and hospitalizations are rising again because of the Delta and Omicron variants. Vaccinations, hampered by political divisiveness and rampant misinformation, have stalled.

Over the last year, there have been some tremendous successes, not the least of which is the fact that these vaccines are universally available in the U.S., said UCLA epidemiologist Dr. Timothy Brewer. We went from identifying a new pathogen to a vaccine in under a year. That would have been unheard of even five years ago.

But one of the big tragedies of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S., he said, is the politicization of masks and vaccines that hastened too much preventable sickness and death.

In California, 67% of the population is fully vaccinated. Millions of people who are eligible for the shot have not received a single dose and they are, increasingly, hardliners who say they never will.

But it is important to acknowledge how far things have come, Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in an interview. In L.A. County alone, more than 16 million doses have been administered, according to The Times vaccine tracker. Thats a number Ferrer called staggering and the result of a herculean effort.

We had so much scarcity at the beginning; people were waiting months for their doses, she said. Now, you come to a site, you dont have to wait to get vaccinated.

I feel like we were very hopeful last December, and were very hopeful this December. We know these vaccines are super powerful, even with the threat of Omicron ... [and] we owe a lot of credit to the bravery of those initial people.

Cordova got the vaccine in front of news cameras, with Gov. Gavin Newsom standing beside her in a surgical mask.

At first, she didnt even want the shot, fearing it was developed too quickly.

I was like, that is too fast. I dont trust it. How are we going to know what its going to do? Others can go ahead, and Ill watch, Cordova recalled.

She changed her mind after talking with colleagues and reading data from the vaccines clinical trials. And after she considered the hell she had witnessed in the COVID intensive care unit.

In March 2020, Cordova was working at Kaiser while juggling her final semester at UCLA, where she was studying to become a nurse practitioner.

At the start of each shift, she and her colleagues would gather in a conference room and get their patient assignments. One day, she and a few other nurses were held back as others left. They were told they would be working in the new COVID unit.

I just remember feeling a bit of shock, then just nerves, and uneasiness because we didnt know anything about the virus. Zero, she said.

On the walls of Helen Cordovas room are framed newspaper stories from the day she became the first person in California outside a clinical trial to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in December 2020.

(Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

Cordova texted her mother and her two older brothers. Pray for me, she asked, before being led to the unit, which was locked and had security guards.

Shell never forget her first patient: a middle-aged Latina with a cough, who was terrified as Cordova walked up to her wearing head-to-toe protective gear.

The woman relaxed when Cordova started speaking to her in Spanish. The patient had been tested for the coronavirus, but thats when test kits were new, slow and scarce. She spent several days in the unit with another patient on a ventilator in the next room before learning she was negative.

It took a toll on Cordova, the daughter of Salvadoran immigrants, seeing the COVID unit filled with Latinos, who have been infected and have died from the virus at disproportionately high rates.

It was heartbreaking because theres so much distrust with the healthcare system, she said. Sometimes, in a pod of eight patient beds, seven were Latino.

Cordova said she was one of just three certified Spanish-language translators on staff in the ICU. She would be called in constantly to tell a dying patient they should call their family before being intubated. She held many an iPad for the final I love you and Im praying for you.

I probably have some unprocessed PTSD from this, she said. Its hard to talk about.

In getting the COVID-19 vaccine, Cordova wanted to set an example for those patients. And for her family.

Cordova lives with her mother, Betty, in the Winnetka house where she grew up. She was terrified of infecting her.

For months, Cordova showered before leaving the hospital, then again at home. She had two rotating pairs of work shoes that she left outside, drenching them in bleach after every shift. She stayed far from her mother.

Any time her mom had a sniffle, she panicked. And felt guilty.

I signed up to be a nurse, she said. That was my choice. I didnt sign her up to be exposed to this. I saw so many people in the hospital, and many who were otherwise healthy, struggling to breathe, and the deck of cards was stacked against my mom should she get it.

In 2001, Betty had extremely high blood pressure, and doctors discovered a thoracic aortic aneurysm. She was told to carry her chest X-rays wherever she went in the weeks before she could have surgery, in case it ruptured and emergency workers needed to know what happened.

Cordova was a 13-year-old middle-schooler at the time. If Betty was a little late picking her up, Cordova worried she had died.

Betty had surgery, a stroke in the hospital, and more surgery after a second aneurysm was found years later. It was because of her moms health issues that Cordova became a nurse.

On Dec. 13, 2020, Cordova was finishing a shift when her manager called and asked how she felt about the vaccine. She said she had finally decided: She was going to get it.

Helen Cordova with her mom, Betty Cordova, at home on Dec. 14 in the San Fernando Valley.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)

OK, so what are you doing tomorrow? she recalled him asking.

He told her the hospital had gotten some of the first doses and that she could get one because she had helped open the COVID ward. There might be some Kaiser internal media there, he said, but nothing too big.

She said yes. But her nerves had set in by the time she got home and told her mom.

At first, I was very nervous, very scared, Betty Cordova said. She worried what would happen to her daughters body. But at the same time, she said, she was filled with hope and relief, knowing there was finally something to combat the virus.

Cordova texted her brothers and said she was getting the vaccine the next day. Pray for me, she asked once again.

She stayed up all night texting friends, asking if she made the right choice.

Cordova woke up early and read the Pfizer studies again. Before she left, Betty told her she had decided that she, too, would get the vaccine when her time came.

When she got to work, someone told her that her vaccination would be a bit bigger event than they realized. L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti would be there. And Newsom. And every news outlet in the region.

Oh, they added, and she would be the first person in California to get the shot.

Protect me, she said with a laugh, just before a colleague stuck the needle in her arm as people cheered and cameras rolled.

Her phone blew up with ecstatic messages from friends and family who saw her on the news. But she also got hundreds of messages and friend-requests on social media from strangers and vaccine opponents.

She let herself peek at the comments on one TV news stations Facebook post about her vaccine Helen Cordova, you are going to die. Helen Cordova, you will never have children. and never looked again.

Cordova now works as a nurse practitioner in Tarzana, a job she started a few hours after her first shot. She cheers when she asks patients if theyre vaccinated and they proudly add, Yes, and Im boosted!

Im like, Yes, you are! Yes, you are!

Her mom now tells anyone she can at church, at the doctors office, at the store that her daughter is the nurse who got the first vaccine.

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Reflections from first Californian to get COVID-19 vaccine - Los Angeles Times

Local doctors urging residents to get tested for COVID-19 after the holidays – WWLP.com

December 28, 2021

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) Local doctors are urging people to get tested for COVID-19 as they return to work after the holidays.

22News spoke with people in Springfield about getting tested for COVID-19, some said they werent required to, but they wanted to get tested before heading into the office. Melissa Hickey of Windsor Locks enjoyed celebrating the holidays with family and like many other people, she plans to see family again for New Years Eve. Until then, she is working and she said she made sure she got tested for COVID-19.

We didnt have to but chose to as a family just to be safe. All of us have really been hunkering down and making sure that we are not with a lot of other people, Hickey said.

Here in Massachusetts, COVID-19 case totals are hitting an all time record and days after Christmas, doctors at Baystate Health are urging people who are heading into the office to get tested to stop the spread of COVID-19 in the work place.

If you are going to be working in a setting here, you are working indoors with a lot of people, I think its prudent to do that. If you have symptoms, you need to be tested, said Armando Paez, Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases at Baystate Health.

The CDC recommends that fully vaccinated people test five to seven days after a possible exposure. Non-vaccinated people should test immediately after a possible exposure, then test again five to seven days later.

A reminder if youre relying on a rapid test, many manufacturers ask you get tested twice within a 24 hour period for the most accurate results. Your best bet is a PCR test, but turnaround times for results could be up to a day or more.

Baystate Health officials are also are urging people to avoid the emergency rooms for a COVID-19 test and instead go to a community site.

Originally posted here:

Local doctors urging residents to get tested for COVID-19 after the holidays - WWLP.com

4 college football bowl games have now been canceled because of Covid-19 – CNN

December 28, 2021

Boise State Athletics announced Monday that it shut down all football team activities due to Covid-19 protocols. As a result, the Broncos will not compete against the Central Michigan Chippewas in the Arizona Bowl scheduled for Friday in Tucson, and the game has since been canceled, game organizers announced Monday.

Boise State's decision was made in consultation with its medical staff, in addition to campus and public health officials.

"We feel for the young men in our program who were very much looking forward to closing out their season, and for some, their football careers," Boise State Director of Athletics Jeramiah Dickey said in a statement. "I would personally like to thank Kym Adair and her team at the Arizona Bowl for putting together at first-class student-athlete and fan experience that we are extremely disappointed to miss."

The Sun Bowl will be played at noon ET Friday in El Paso, Texas.

Miami's deputy director of athletics, Jennifer Strawley said they were "extremely disappointed" not to participate in the Sun Bowl.

"But due to the number of Covid-19 cases impacting our roster we do not have enough student-athletes to safely compete, and the health and safety of our student-athletes will always be our top priority," Strawley said.

Three other bowl games were canceled

Monday's Military Bowl in Annapolis, Maryland, between Boston College and East Carolina University was canceled because Boston College did not have enough players available due to a rise in Covid-19 cases, Director of Athletics Pat Kraft said.

"Unfortunately, due to cases of Covid-19 rising within our program since our arrival, along with season-ending injuries, opt-outs and transfers, we just do not have enough players to field a team," Kraft said. "We are disappointed not to be able to finish the season together as a team, but the health and safety of our program is our highest priority."

Having to cancel is a "terrible situation," the bowl's president and executive director, Steve Beck, said in a statement.

"We appreciate everyone who worked so hard to try to make the game happen. Of course, the health and safety of the players and coaches is top priority," he said. "The decision not to play is understandable, but disappointing."

The Military Bowl Parade and the Military Bowl Tailgate Festival, also scheduled for Monday, were canceled.

The inaugural Fenway Bowl in Boston between the University of Virginia and Southern Methodist University -- scheduled for Wednesday -- was also canceled.

The University of Virginia's number of Covid-19 cases also prevented it from safely participating in the Fenway Bowl, the school said.

The team was "extremely disappointed," Virginia Athletics Director Carla Williams said.

"We appreciate all of the hard work by our team and coaching staff. They earned this bowl invitation, and it is unfortunate they will not be able to compete in the game to complete the season," she said. "We regret how this also impacts our fans who were planning on attending the game as well as the SMU program and its fans."

All activities associated with the Fenway Bowl will no longer take place, Fenway Sports Management said.

"Though we all are disappointed that the Wasabi Fenway Bowl will not be played this year, we are grateful to our community partners, sponsors, volunteers, and stakeholders for their hard work to introduce college bowl season to Fenway Park," Fenway Sports Management said in a statement. "We'd like to extend that appreciation to both schools and fanbases for their enthusiastic support. We look forward to seeing everyone at the 2022 Wasabi Fenway Bowl."

The Hawaii Bowl scheduled for Christmas Eve was canceled, as the University of Hawaii withdrew because of Covid-19 issues. Hawaii was scheduled to face the University of Memphis.

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly said the Sun Bowl was canceled. Washington State and bowl officials were working to find a team to replace the Miami Hurricanes in the game.

See more here:

4 college football bowl games have now been canceled because of Covid-19 - CNN

NFL COVID-19 tracker: Updated team-by-team list of players in protocol for Week 17 – Sporting News

December 28, 2021

For the past three weeks, NFL teams have been hit hard with COVID-19 cases because ofthe rise of the Omicron variant throughout the world.

More than 100players have alreadylandedon the COVID/reserve list ahead of Week 17 games, and there were 96 positive testsalone on Monday, a new high for a single day.

At the start of Week 16,more than 200 players were on the COVID/reserve list. At the beginning of Week 17, various players are being activated, but dozens more are being put into the league's protocols. One of the bigger names to go on the list in Week 17 is Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Evans. The Bucs were already dealing with a significant loss to their offensive unit, asrunning back Leonard Fournette is on the list, too.

Sporting News has the list of all of the players who have entered COVID-19 protocols ahead of Week 17 games.

NFL POWER RANKINGS: Cowboys, Billsrise; Patriots, Steelers fall

(Based onofficial team rosters as of Dec. 27)

MORE:New NFL COVID protocols, explained

Here is the COVID protocol for vaccinated players, according to the NFL:

The main difference between vaccinated and unvaccinated players is that vaccinated players don't have to worry about being a "high-risk" close contact at any point. They also have more freedom to participate in activities than their unvaccinated counterparts. Vaccinated players can go out on the road and more easily spend time with teammates outside the facility, among other perks.

The NFL's COVID protocols are stricter than those for vaccinated players. They are as follows, per the NFL:

Unvaccinated players also have more procedures they must follow to avoid falling into COVID protocol. They include the following:

The NFL considers a player fully vaccinated if they fall into one of the two following categories: They either are 14 days removed from their final dose of Pfizer, Moderna or the Johnson & Johnson vaccine or they previously contracted COVID and are 14 days removed from a single dose of any vaccine.

MORE:NFL players sound off on postponements amid COVID outbreak

The NFL has left the door open for potential postponements. That said, the league has said that "postponements will only occur if required by government authorities, medical experts, or at the commissioner's discretion."

Of course, the NFL has also said that it's hoping to play its full, 272-game schedule "in a safe and responsible way," so it seems likely that the league will consider postponements where appropriate.

However, the NFL has noted that the burden of postponements or cancellations will fall upon teams featuring COVID spikes among unvaccinated players. If outbreaks occur among vaccinated players, the league will seek to "minimize the burden" of that club.

If a game is canceled/postponed because a club cannot play due to a COVIDspike among or resulting from its non-vaccinated players/staff, then the burden of the cancellation or delay will fall on the club experiencing the COVIDinfection. We will seek to minimize the burden on the opposing club or clubs. If a club cannot play due to a COVIDspike in vaccinated individuals, we will attempt to minimize the competitive and economic burden on both participating teams.

What does that mean? If a team has an outbreak that impacts unvaccinated players, they're less likely to get a favorable ruling from the NFL. So, they may be forced to play significantly shorthanded or at a less convenient time.

The NFL also has stated that if a game cannot be rescheduled within its 18-week season due to a COVID outbreak amid non-vaccinated players, the team with the outbreak will be forced to forfeit.

Additionally, the league said that "games will not be postponed or rescheduled simply to avoid roster issues caused by injury or illness affecting multiple players, even within a position group." The Broncos were the best example of that principlein action. They had to play with practice squad receiver Kendall Hinton as their quarterback after their QB room was exposed to the virus.

No, it's not planning to add an extra week to the schedule. The NFL confirmed that they are hoping not to extend the regular season past 18 weeks (17 games and one bye).

"We do not anticipate adding a '19th week'to accommodate games that cannot be rescheduled within the current 18 weeks of the regular season."

Perhaps the NFL will change its tune if COVID becomes a bigger issue than the league anticipates, but for now, don't expect the league to add another week to the season.

Jake Aferiat contributed to this article.

Read more from the original source:

NFL COVID-19 tracker: Updated team-by-team list of players in protocol for Week 17 - Sporting News

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