Category: Covid-19

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Who is unvaccinated against COVID-19 in Connecticut? They are young, urban, rural, conservative, people of color and all are skeptical – Hartford…

August 29, 2021

There are many concerns about the vaccine. Thats the first thing, said Rashad Gibson, a 40-year-old Shelton resident, in a recent interview. But then also, Im a middle-aged man, Im in pretty good health, I dont take any medications, and I know that people my age the odds of succumbing to COVID is extremely low.

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Who is unvaccinated against COVID-19 in Connecticut? They are young, urban, rural, conservative, people of color and all are skeptical - Hartford...

DMV changing driver’s tests because of COVID-19 case spike – Associated Press

August 29, 2021

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) The rapid rise in COVID-19 cases in South Carolina has the Department of Motor Vehicles changing how it gives road tests for drivers licenses.

The agency started requiring masks for both new drivers and examiners on Wednesday.

On Monday, they will again require appointments for driving tests and on Sept. 7 they will go back to how they handled testing at the start of the pandemic where the examiner is outside the car, the DMV said in a statement.

The modified skills test evaluates the same abilities as the regular test with the examiner scoring the test from outside, the DMV said.

The agency is encouraging masks, but not requiring them in its branches. Officials also said many basic services, like drivers license renewal, can be done online.

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DMV changing driver's tests because of COVID-19 case spike - Associated Press

KDHO: 49 new cases of COVID-19 Saturday – The Garden Island

August 29, 2021

LIHUE The Hawaii State Department of Health Kauai District Health Office announced 49 new cases on Saturday.

Saturdays cases are three visitors and 46 residents. Of the 49 new cases, 15 are children and 34 are adults. Six of the cases are related to travel five mainland and one interisland. The remaining 43 cases are considered community-acquired. Thirty-four of the community-acquired infections are close contacts of previously announced cases or are tied to one of our active clusters. The remaining nine community-acquired cases have no known source of infection, including two cases whom investigators have been unable to reach after repeated attempts or who have refused to provide information. We currently have the following active clusters: two social gatherings, two places of worship, one shelter, one correctional facility, one educational, and one occupational cluster in a construction/industrial company.

All active cases are in isolation, and close contacts are being identified, offered testing, and directed to quarantine. Investigations are ongoing.

As of today, we have exceeded our capacity for case investigation and contact tracing on Kauai despite bringing on new staff daily. This means that you may not hear from us in the same timeframe our community has become accustomed to. If you test positive, please isolate yourself at home immediately and notify your close contacts, said Lauren Guest, Public Health Preparedness Planner for the Kauai District Office. I would like to take this opportunity to thank our entire Kauai District Health Office team for their tireless efforts to protect our community by controlling the spread of disease on our island. It can be a difficult and, at times, thankless job. Please know that your efforts have made an enormous difference and are greatly appreciated by the majority of our community.

Mayor Derek S. K. Kawakami also thanked the Kauai District Health Office team for their work to protect the health and safety of the community.

Words cannot express my infinite gratitude to our team at the Kauai District Health Office, said Mayor Kawakami. Mahalo to your families and loved ones for their sacrifice and patience as you have and continue to keep our island safe.

Dr. Janet Berreman, Kauai District Health Officer, emphasized that at this point, island-wide or statewide restrictions will be required to bring this surge under control.

Until such measures are in place, each of us can do our part. If you test positive, isolate at home immediately, and let your contacts know they have been exposed, said Dr. Berreman.

Todays cases bring the number of active cases to 276, with six hospitalized, and 1,322 cumulative cases. Kauais cumulative case count includes 1,265 confirmed locally, eight probable, and 49 positive cases diagnosed elsewhere, as they received their pre-travel test results after arriving on island.

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KDHO: 49 new cases of COVID-19 Saturday - The Garden Island

COVID-19 in Virginia: 20500+ new cases reported this week; 56.4% of Virginians now fully vaccinated – wtvr.com

August 29, 2021

RICHMOND, Va. -- In an effort to provide accurate, easy-to-read information on the COVID-19 pandemic and on-going vaccination efforts, WTVR.com will update this post weekly with statistics from the Virginia Department of Health.

COVID-19 IN VIRGINIA (Scroll to bottom for U.S. stats)

Positive COVID-19 Cases Since Start of Pandemic: 754,652 (+20,573 from last Friday)People Hospitalized Since Start of Pandemic: 33,344 (+674 from last Friday)COVID-19-Linked Deaths Since Start of Pandemic: 11,769 (+122 from last Friday)

Total Tests: 11,431,926 (+250,667 from last Friday)All Health Districts Current 7-Day Positivity Rate Total: 10.1% (Up from 9.7% last Friday)

People Vaccinated with at least One Dose: 5,440,879 (+62,627 from last Sunday)% of Population with at least One Dose: 63.7% People Fully Vaccinated: 4,812,333 (+53,867 from last Sunday)% of Population Fully Vaccinated: 56.4% (Up from 55.8% on last Friday)

Click here for complete city/county-by-county breakdown of COVID-19 cases in Virginia

NOTE: This update data is provided from the Virginia Department of Health daily at 10 a.m. Officials said their cutoff for data is 5 p.m. the previous day. (Cases/testing data is now available Monday-Friday while vaccination data is updated seven days a week.) Get the latest charts and updated numbers from VDH here.

WTVR

VACCINATE VIRGINIA: Virginians age 12+ are eligible for COVID-19 vaccine. Register for the COVID-19 vaccine on the Vaccinate Virginia website or call 877-VAX-IN-VA (877-275-8343). You can also search for specific vaccines as well as which ones are available near you via the Vaccine Finder website.

VACCINE SUPPLY USAGE

COMPLETE COVERAGE: COVID-19 HEADLINES (App users, click here for a complete list.)

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The Associated Press

7:00 AM, Aug 29, 2021

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WTVR CBS 6 Web Staff

3:40 PM, Aug 28, 2021

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8:22 AM, Aug 28, 2021

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Shannon Lilly

10:12 PM, Aug 27, 2021

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4:44 PM, Aug 27, 2021

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4:07 PM, Aug 27, 2021

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3:19 PM, Aug 27, 2021

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1:15 PM, Aug 27, 2021

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12:44 PM, Aug 27, 2021

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12:16 PM, Aug 27, 2021

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10:49 AM, Aug 27, 2021

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10:03 AM, Aug 27, 2021

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9:43 AM, Aug 27, 2021

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8:55 AM, Aug 27, 2021

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9:41 PM, Aug 26, 2021

Entertainment

Sarah Dewberry

8:11 PM, Aug 26, 2021

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WTVR CBS 6 Web Staff

7:48 PM, Aug 26, 2021

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WFTS Staff

2:19 PM, Aug 26, 2021

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Alex Hider

2:08 PM, Aug 26, 2021

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1:53 PM, Aug 26, 2021

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WTVR CBS 6 Web Staff

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COVID-19 in Virginia: 20500+ new cases reported this week; 56.4% of Virginians now fully vaccinated - wtvr.com

NBA requiring Covid-19 vaccinations for referees and others who work with players – CNN

August 29, 2021

"All referees must be fully vaccinated unless they have a religious or medical exemption. The referees have also agreed to take any recommended boosters," the league said in a statement Saturday. "Any referee who does not get vaccinated and is not exempt will be ineligible to work games."

The NBA said it had reached an agreement with the National Basketball Referees Association on the vaccination requirement.

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NBA requiring Covid-19 vaccinations for referees and others who work with players - CNN

Here’s what the seven stages of severe COVID-19 look like – Los Angeles Times

August 29, 2021

Im a respiratory therapist. With the fourth wave of the pandemic in full swing, fueled by the highly contagious Delta variant, the trajectory of the patients I see, from admission to critical care, is all too familiar. When theyre vaccinated, their COVID-19 infections most likely end after Stage 1. If only that were the case for everyone.

Get vaccinated. If you choose not to, heres what to expect if you are hospitalized for a serious case of COVID-19.

Stage 1. Youve had debilitating symptoms for a few days, but now it is so hard to breathe that you come to the emergency room. Your oxygen saturation level tells us you need help, a supplemental flow of 1 to 4 liters of oxygen per minute. We admit you and start you on antivirals, steroids, anticoagulants or monoclonal antibodies. Youll spend several days in the hospital feeling run-down, but if we can wean you off the oxygen, youll get discharged. You survive.

Stage 2. It becomes harder and harder for you to breathe. Like drowning, many patients describe the feeling. The bronchodilator treatments we give you provide little relief. Your oxygen requirements increase significantly, from 4 liters to 15 liters to 40 liters per minute. Little things, like relieving yourself or sitting up in bed, become too difficult for you to do on your own. Your oxygen saturation rapidly declines when you move about. We transfer you to the intensive care unit.

Stage 3. Youre exhausted from hyperventilating to satisfy your bodys demand for air. We put you on noninvasive, positive pressure ventilation a big, bulky face mask that must be Velcrod tightly around your face so the machine can efficiently push pressure into your lungs to pop them open so you get enough of the oxygen it delivers.

Stage 4. Your breathing becomes even more labored. We can tell youre severely fatigued. An arterial blood draw confirms that the oxygen content in your blood is critically low. We prepare to intubate you. If youre able to and if theres time, we will suggest that you call your loved ones. This might be the last time theyll hear your voice.

We connect you to a ventilator. You are sedated and paralyzed, fed through a feeding tube, hooked to a Foley catheter and a rectal tube. We turn your limp body regularly, so you dont develop pressure ulcers bed sores. We bathe you and keep you clean. We flip you onto your stomach to allow for better oxygenation. We will try experimental therapeutics.

Stage 5. Some patients survive Stage 4. Unfortunately, your oxygen levels and overall condition have not improved after several days on the ventilator. Your COVID-infested lungs need assistance and time to heal, something that an ECMO machine, which bypasses your lungs and oxygenates your blood, can provide. But alas, our community hospital doesnt have that capability.

If youre stable enough, you will get transferred to another hospital for that therapy. Otherwise, well continue treating you as best we can. Were understaffed and overwhelmed, but well always give you the best care we can.

Stage 6. The pressure required to open your lungs is so high that air can leak into your chest cavity, so we insert tubes to clear it out. Your kidneys fail to filter the byproducts from the drugs we continuously give you. Despite diuretics, your entire body swells from fluid retention, and you require dialysis to help with your renal function.

The long hospital stay and your depressed immune system make you susceptible to infections. A chest X-ray shows fluid accumulating in your lung sacs. A blood clot may show up, too. We cant prevent these complications at this point; we treat them as they present.

If your blood pressure drops critically, we will administer vasopressors to bring it up, but your heart may stop anyway. After several rounds of CPR, well get your pulse and circulation back. But soon, your family will need to make a difficult decision.

Stage 7: After several meetings with the palliative care team, your family decides to withdraw care. We extubate you, turning off the breathing machinery. We set up a final FaceTime call with your loved ones. As we work in your room, we hear crying and loving goodbyes. We cry, too, and we hold your hand until your last natural breath.

Ive been at this for 17 months now. It doesnt get easier. My pandemic stories rarely end well.

Karen Gallardo is a respiratory therapist at Community Memorial Hospital in Ventura.

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Here's what the seven stages of severe COVID-19 look like - Los Angeles Times

US Surgeon General urges parents and officials take these steps to protect children from Covid-19 – CNN

August 27, 2021

"If they are around people who are vaccinated, everyone in the household gets vaccinated, that significantly reduces the risk to our children," Dr. Vivek Murthy said in a conversation hosted by the US Chamber of Commerce Foundation.

In the classroom, there are layers of protection that the CDC has laid out to keep children safe -- including wearing properly fitting masks, properly ventilating buildings and regular testing, Murthy said.

"Even though our kids do better, that doesn't mean that Covid is benign, it doesn't mean that it's harmless in our children," Murthy said. "In fact, we've lost hundreds of children to Covid-19."

The misperception that young people don't have to worry about Covid-19 may also be hindering their motivation to get vaccinated, Murthy said.

Vaccination is key to protecting against Covid-19 and the serious illness that could come with it. But for many children, vaccination still isn't an option.

Children ages 5 to 11 are the next group in line to become eligible to receive the Covid-19 vaccine, and an updated emergency use authorization from the FDA would make at least 28 million additional children, but the process of authorizing a vaccine may not come until the end of the year, Murthy told CNN's Briana Keilar earlier this week.

In the meantime, Murthy stressed that "there are steps we can take to keep our kids safer. It's all the more important with Delta."

Students sent back into quarantine

The stress over safety precautions in schools is growing, as many students have already faced exposure to Covid-19 in the early days of their new school year.

At least 14,746 students and 2,984 employees have tested positive for Covid-19 throughout the 15 largest school districts in Florida since the start of school, according to a CNN analysis.

Several districts in the state are at odds with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis over mask mandates in the classroom after the governor banned such measures and some districts chose to implement them anyway.

In Georgia, six schools in Henry County are temporarily conducting remote learning through August 27 due to "a consistent increase in the number of the individuals required to quarantine."

With the start of school fast approaching for New York City, officials there announced a change to last year's quarantine policy based on vaccinations.

City Department of Education Chancellor Meisha Ross Porter and Mayor Bill de Blasio said Thursday that only unvaccinated students will be subject to quarantine if exposed to positive cases

"This is crucial to remember -- anyone vaccinated who is not symptomatic, adult or child, even if there's been contact, they're going to stay in school," de Blasio said Thursday. "I don't want people thinking of last year's model and assuming everything's the same now. It's not the same. Why? Because of vaccination."

Hospitals stretched thin as ICU beds run out

The rise in cases has overwhelmed many health care workers trying to keep up with the more than 100,000 Americans hospitalized with Covid-19.

In Georgia, many hospitals have requested ambulance transports be sent to other facilities because they're stretched thin. The Georgia Department of Public Health on Thursday asked residents to help reduce the strain on EMS and emergency departments by getting vaccinated, wearing a mask and getting tested for Covid-19 somewhere other than the state's hospitals.

And in Illinois, ICU beds are running out, particularly in southern Illinois and parts of central Illinois, Illinois Department of Public Health Dr. Ngozi Ezike said.

Nearly all of the people hospitalized with Covid-19 are unvaccinated, Gov. J. B. Pritzker said Thursday, and those hospitalizations have "multiplied" the state's ICU usage "by a factor of seven this summer."

Kentucky has also seen a steep increase in hospitalizations. On July 14, 239 people were hospitalized with Covid-19 -- on Wednesday that number had grown to 2,074, marking 42 straight days of increases, Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday.

Some states are calling for reinforcements to support staffing at overwhelmed hospitals.

The Texas Department of State Health Services will deploy 2,500 additional medical staff to support health care facilities in the state, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced. Medical equipment such as ventilators, oxygen concentrators, heart monitors, IV pumps, feeding pumps, and hospital beds will also be provided.

In Nebraska, the shortage of nurses and spike in hospitalizations has prompted Gov. Pete Ricketts to declare a hospital staffing emergency. Ricketts announced two new measures to help address the personal strain: making it easier for health care professionals to defer continuing education or licensing requirements and limiting elective surgeries.

By limiting elective surgeries across the state, Ricketts hopes "to help free up hospital capacity, to take on some of the other patients that are coming into the hospital, both non-Covid and Covid patients," he added.

CNN's Virginia Langmaid, Jacqueline Howard, Mallory Simon, Elizabeth Stuart, Maria Cartaya, Elizabeth Joseph, Devon Sayers, Rebekah Riess, Carma Hassan, Melissa Alonso and Keith Allen contributed to this report.

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US Surgeon General urges parents and officials take these steps to protect children from Covid-19 - CNN

Father warns others to get vaccinated after 7 kids catch COVID-19 – NEWS10 ABC

August 27, 2021

by: Regan Porter, Nexstar Media Wire

CAMERON, Mo. (WDAF) A Missouri father got COVID-19. Then every one of the seven children living at home did, too.

The only person who didnt get sick? His wife who is fully vaccinated. The family credits the vaccine with protecting her.

Its a good reminder of the miracle we faced, Ben Anderson said about the hole in his throat. Its from the tracheotomy doctors had to do to keep him alive. The 42-year-old had COVID-19 and pneumonia.

I would think, OK my number one job is dont die, Anderson said.

Anderson went on a trip in late June. He came back with what he thought was a cold and immediately self-isolated away from his family.

After two weeks of not getting better, his wife, Tammy, took him to the emergency room. He needed a breathing tube and a higher level of care, so he was transferred to another hospital an hour away.

He spent 42 days there, most of them unconscious. For 35 days, he was on a ventilator.

I was pretty close to being dead, he said.

Anderson wasnt vaccinated. He said he intended to get the shot, but admitted he was busy and didnt make it a priority.

There was a time it appeared when he may not have survived, Dr. David McKinsey said. Receiving the vaccine should be an extremely high priority for everyone at this time.

McKinsey said 95% of the patients theyre now seeing in the ICU are unvaccinated, and only about 20% who need a ventilator survive.

Anderson was discharged from the hospital last week. Oxygen tubing now lines the familys living room floor and get well soon cards cover the door.

Its real. Its so real, Tammy warned. We almost didnt get his birthday that we celebrated in the hospital. We almost didnt have our next anniversary.

Tammy and Ben have seven children at home, ages 3-18. All of them tested positive less than a week after their dad. Its unclear where exactly the kids were exposed to the virus. Tammy said there were known positive cases out of the several activities the kids were involved in at that time.

If you were going to be home by yourself, husband in the hospital, seven kids at home with COVID would you get vaccinated? Tammy said. Yeah.

Why didnt you get vaccinated? FOX4 asked Anderson.

I was busy, he said, shaking his head.

I got COVID and almost died, he continued. She got vaccinated but did not contract it.

Andersons kids who are eligible plan to join their dad in getting the vaccine as soon as they recover.

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Father warns others to get vaccinated after 7 kids catch COVID-19 - NEWS10 ABC

Memphis-area hospitals hit record number of COVID-19 patients as third-wave intensifies – Commercial Appeal

August 27, 2021

COVID hospitalizations in Shelby County hits 'unfortunate milestone'

Shelby County reaches 'unfortunate milestone' with COVID hospitalizations

Nate Chute, Wochit

Memphis-area COVID-19 hospitalizations hit a new record this week when the region reached 700 people hospitalized with COVID-19 for the first time.

The Shelby County Health Department released the sobering data point Thursday. There were 515 people with COVID-19 in acute care beds and 186 in intensive care units on Wednesday, according to hospital data.Data showed 10 remaining staffed intensive care units in the Memphis metro area.

"We've reached an unfortunate milestone," Doug McGowen, the city of Memphis chief operating officer and task force member, said of the hospitalizations.

The numbers reflected single-digit growth from a week earlier when 173 people were in the ICU and 473 people in acute care beds.The rate of hospitalizations, McGowen added, is expected to increase in the weeks to come.

'We are scared': Unvaccinated COVID-19 patients bring Methodist LeBonheur system toward 'darkest days'

Unvaccinated patients: Can doctors and hospitals deny treatment for unvaccinated COVID-19 patients?

The new record comes 10 days after the heads of Memphis emergency rooms wrote local leaders a letter that said they could soon have to triage care based on the probability of survival. Their letter asked the Shelby County Health Department to enact a mask requirement and the county complied an indoor mask mandate started last Friday.

The level of hospitalizations in Memphis continues to make projections come true. Projections from the joint task force show that 1,040 people could be in the hospital on Sept. 1. To get there, Memphis would simply stay on the trajectory it is on now, according to data shared with the joint task force and obtained by The Commercial Appeal.

The projections also estimate 285 people could be in intensive care units by Sept. 1, an increase of about 100 people and reflecting more than 50% growth from Wednesday.

It was not immediately clear how much additional hospitalization growth local hospitals could sustain without being forced to implement crisis standards of care.

In the latest surge, cases among children continue to stay elevated compared to previous surges.

Currently, pediatric cases of COVID-19 make up 32.5% of all active COVID-19 infections in Shelby County, according to Shelby County Health Department Director Michelle Taylor.

The total of kids 17 and under with an active COVID-19 infection has surpassed active cases in the 18 to 24 category, another pandemic first.

COVID cases for kids: 2,500 recent COVID-19 cases among Memphis area kids, at least 4 school clusters investigated

Virtual schooling: Shelby County Schools to press state to allow return of last year's virtual learning option

The delta variant has put more children in Le Bonheur Children's Hospital than previous strains of the virus. As of Monday, 28 children are patients at Le Bonheur. Seven of those patients are receiving treatment in the intensive care unit. Two children are breathing with the assistance of a ventilator.

In mid-August, Dr. Nick Hysmith, thedirector of infection prevention at Le Bonheur, expressed some level of hope that cases among children would level-off once vaccinations increased and mask mandates in Shelby County Schools were enacted.

At the time of Hysmith's remarks, there were eight fewer children in the hospital than there are today. And since his remarks, one child has succumbed to COVID-19.

Taylor could not definitively say whether Hysmith's hopes have materialized. Raw hospitalizations numbers among children suggest it hasn't.

The current amended health directive is set to expire on Aug. 31. When asked if the county could expect to see additional restrictions in the next health directive, Taylor said it was unlikely.

Previous restrictions have included limits on crowd capacity in restaurants and bars in order to uphold physical distancing.

For now, Taylor said, the county will continue to lean on masking, urging residents to follow Centers for Disease Control and Preventionguidelines, and urging the public to get vaccinated.

As of Thursday, just 39% of the entire population of Shelby County, a figure that includes children too young to be vaccinated, are fully inoculated against COVID-19.

At least one mass vaccination site at the Pipkin building in the Mid-South Fairgrounds will now stay open until the wintertime, McGowen said.

As the delta variant of COVID-19 continues to drive record infections, more residents are seeking testing. This, McGowen acknowledged Thursday, has led to longer wait times in acquiring tests, and longer turnaround times for test results.

To meet testing demand, testing sites are increasing their capacity; it is too early to know if the measures will be sufficient for the number of Shelby County residents seeking to know their COVID-19 status.

The locations set to increase testing capacity are:

A list of all community testing locations can be found on the city's website.

Samuel Hardiman covers Memphis city government and politics for The Commercial Appeal. He can be reached by email at samuel.hardiman@commercialappeal.com or followed on Twitter at @samhardiman.

Micaela Watts is a reporter for The Commercial Appeal. She can be reached at micaela.watts@commercialappeal.com.

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Memphis-area hospitals hit record number of COVID-19 patients as third-wave intensifies - Commercial Appeal

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