Category: Covid-19

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July 11, 2021

News Desk (The Jakarta Post)

Jakarta Thu, June 17, 2021 2021-06-17 18:13 24 ef61debc7c9ec5e1a7dfe462b79086be 1 National COVID-19,coronavirus,virus-corona,daily-rise,Delta-variant Free

Health authorities reported 12,624 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday, the highest daily rise since February, bringing the total number of cases to 1.95 million.

The national COVID-19 task force also reported 277 new deaths from COVID-19 on the same day, taking the total to 53,753. Meanwhile, a total of 1.77 million patients have recovered.

According to the official count, the number of active cases has risen by nearly 5,000 to 125,303. The highest number of active COVID-19 cases in Indonesia was recorded in February, when there were up to 177,000 active cases in one day.

Jakarta recorded the highest single-day jump in the archipelago with 4,144 additional cases. Significant surges were also reported in West Java and Central Java with 2,800 and 1,752 cases, respectively.

Read also: Delta variant behind Kudus COVID-19 spike, officials say

The country has seen surges of COVID-19 cases in several regions of the country, including Central Java and parts of East Java. The rising case numbers have occurred in the weeks following increased mobility during the Idul Fitri holidays.

Kudus regency became the hardest-hit region in Central Java after it reported nearly 930 new cases between May 24 and 30 -- up from 26 cases detected the week before. Cases in the regency grew by a factor of about 77 in the three weeks following the Islamic national holiday.

Health authorities found that the Delta variant of the coronavirus, which was first detected in India, most likely caused the recent surge in Indonesia.

Health Ministry spokesperson Siti Nadia Tarmizi said on Tuesday that authorities had found 145 samples containing any one of three variants of concern during a whole-genome sequencing effort conducted in 12 provinces. Of the 145 samples, 104 contained the Delta variant.

Read also: Back to square one

Many experts have urged the government to reimpose large-scale restrictions to prevent further COVID-19 transmissions as healthcare services in several regions have been overwhelmed by suspected and confirmed patients. The COVID-19 hospital bed occupancy rate has reached at least 70 percent in several regions.

However, the government has opted out of imposing stricter restrictions, with the Health Ministry saying that the current micro-scale public activity restrictions (PPKM Mikro) have been very effective. (kuk)

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Jamia Millia Islamia organises Living with the times …

July 11, 2021

As a part of series of health awareness lectures on Covid-19 Pandemic, Faculty of Dentistry, Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI) organized yet another e-lecture on Living with the times: Managing mental health during Covid-19 on June 11, 2021, through the Cisco-Webex platform.

The guest speakers for the programme were Dr Ashok Kumar Jainer, MBBS, MD Psychiatry (K.G.M.C, Lucknow), MRC Psych, U.K, FRC Psych, U.K, Consultant Psychiatrist, NHS, U.K and Ms Meena Arora Ex-Squadron Leader, Certified Life coach, NLP (Neuro linguistics Programming) practitioner & trainer and a Clinical Psychologist.

As a tradition of JMI, the programme commenced with seeking the blessing from the Almighty by rendition of verses from the Holy Quran by Dr Mohd Saleem, Associate Professor, Pathology.

Prof Najma Akhtar, Vice-Chancellor, JMI was the Chief Guest for the programme. Addressing the gathering, Prof Akhtar emphasized covid-appropriate behaviour (mask, sanitizer and social distancing) is the key to control the pandemic, the disregard of which a few months ago by the public lead to the emergence of the second wave.

She said Covids deadly second wave sparked off a visible yet hidden/silent outbreak of- fear-demic- the fear amidst the people are of dying, losing their loved ones, being alone, losing their jobsanxieties that add a new dimension of mental-health issues to the ongoing crisis. Other mental health issues such as helplessness, panic, grief and guilt, and post-traumatic stress disorders are also on rise.

She told the audience about the universities initiatives to cope with the mental stress during the pandemic by opening a dedicated cell to look after mental health last year in the first wave to help the students and staff to manage the anxiety and depression of the lockdown.

She also informed the success of the Covid-19 Vaccination camps for age groups above 45 and assured the possible arrangements for younger age groups soon.

Then, Prof (Dr) Sanjay Singh, Dean, Faculty of Dentistry, JMI and the organizing chairperson of the programme, welcomed and introduced both the speakers to the audience. He also announced the live broadcast of the programme on Radio Jamia 90.4 FM and the podcast will be uploaded on Radio Jamia app available on Google Play Store, to be seen anytime, and anywhere.

Dr Ashok Jainer began with how Covid has triggered the rising mental health issues, stress and personality changes, with younger adults more likely to report these symptoms. Focussing on how to deal with irrational fear/belief and anxiety, he gave the 4 magic bullets: time of Covid treatment; availability of correct life-saving information and treatment; evidence-based Uniform protocol; and centralised sources of information. He also emphasized on 3 Ds of Covid treatment: right Drug in right Dose for right Duration.

Meena Arora focussed on the psychological aspects such as the warning/red signs of the need for psychological help/ counselling. She gave important and precise tips to take care of yourself such as sleep, break from social media content, preventive measures, carefree and creative activities and most importantly exercise, meditation and family time. Throughout the speakers also highlighted Vaccination as the key to reduce the future burden of the disease.

Read: JMI research scholar receives Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Abstract Award for Scientists 2021

Read: 6 Jamia Research Scholars get Prime Minister Research Fellowship (PMRF)

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Jamia Millia Islamia organises Living with the times ...

These Countries Are Looking Ahead to Living With Covid-19 – The Wall Street Journal

July 11, 2021

A handful of countries, including the U.S., are leading the way toward a future where Covid-19 has faded into the background.

Even as the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus is propelling new infections world-wide, these governments are hoping that their high vaccination rates will protect many of the most vulnerable to the disease, allowing a return to more normal life.

It is a future where officials hope that they will be able to treat the coronavirus like influenza, which causes tens of thousands of deaths in the U.S. every year without prompting damaging economic lockdowns. Vaccinations are the key: Covid-19 causes many more fatalities per infection than the flu, but vaccines significantly reduce peoples chances of catching the coronavirus and the seriousness of the disease if they do.

The virus will remain, however, a fact of life. This is a virus that were going to have to learn to live with, and were going to have to learn to manage and were going to have Covid-19 patients for the foreseeable future, said Edward A. Stenehjem, an infectious-disease specialist at Intermountain Healthcare in Murray, Utah, where cases resulting from the Delta variant have risen lately.

These highly vaccinated countries are the exceptions in a world where most have largely unvaccinated populations. Their authorities appetite for risk varieseven across jurisdictions in the U.S. and Canadabut vaccinations are breaking a pattern seen earlier in the pandemic when rising case rates inevitably prompted tightening restrictions.

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These Countries Are Looking Ahead to Living With Covid-19 - The Wall Street Journal

South Africa extends tight COVID-19 restrictions for another 14 days – Reuters

July 11, 2021

A person crosses the street during sunset, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Soweto, South Africa, April 1, 2021. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

JOHANNESBURG, July 11 (Reuters) - South Africa extended tight COVID-19 rules on Sunday for another 14 days, maintaining restrictions that include a ban on gatherings, a curfew from 9 p.m. to 4 a.m. and a prohibition on the sale of alcohol.

The country, the worst-hit on the African continent in terms of recorded cases and deaths, is in the grip of a third wave of infections driven by the more infectious Delta coronavirus variant.

"Our health system countrywide remains under pressure," President Cyril Ramaphosa said in a televised address to the nation.

Early this month South Africa recorded a new record of over 26,000 daily cases, stretching hospitals to breaking point. read more

Ramaphosa moved the country to the fourth level of a five-tier restriction scale in late June as infections climbed, promising to review the restrictions after two weeks. read more

On Sunday he said the cabinet had decided to maintain "adjusted alert level 4" for another 14 days, although restaurants would be able to serve food on their premises again subject to strict health protocols. Gyms would also be allowed to reopen under certain conditions.

Ramaphosa added that a government advisory committee was working on how soon to bring Sinovac's CoronaVac vaccine into the COVID-19 immunisation programme.

So far the vaccine campaign has been slow, with 4.2 million doses administered out of a population of 60 million, but officials are hoping to ramp up daily vaccinations to at least 300,000 by the end of August.

Ramaphosa said the African Union and European Union had reached an agreement for local pharmaceutical company Aspen(APNJ.J) to deliver more than 17 million Johnson & Johnson(JNJ.N) vaccine doses to South Africa and other African countries over the next three months.

Aspen is sourcing vaccine ingredients from J&J to package them in South Africa, a process known as fill and finish.

Ramaphosa said his country was negotiating for the drug substance to be produced locally, "so that we have a fully-owned African vaccine manufactured on African soil".

Reporting by Alexander WinningEditing by Peter Graff

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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South Africa extends tight COVID-19 restrictions for another 14 days - Reuters

New Zealand, where Covid-19 is dormant, fights another respiratory virus, and other news from around the world. – The New York Times

July 11, 2021

Strict lockdowns in New Zealand last year appear to have contributed to a recent outbreak in children of respiratory syncytial virus, or R.S.V., a highly contagious, flulike illness whose symptoms include a runny nose, coughing, sneezing and fever.

Children in New Zealand were mostly stuck indoors amid lockdowns last autumn, which runs from March to May in the Southern Hemisphere. After the country reopened last winter, health officials say, few of them contracted seasonal viruses and infections, probably because they had been underexposed to germs.

In a typical year, New Zealand sees a peak of cases of respiratory infections from June to September. But in 2020, the country experienced the complete absence of an annual winter influenza epidemic, with a 99.9 percent reduction in flu cases and a 98 percent reduction in R.S.V., according to a study published in Nature in February.

This year, however, the same children have been more vulnerable than usual to those same ailments.

Since the start of winter five weeks ago, during which there have been no coronavirus restrictions, childrens wards in New Zealand have seen dozens of patients, many of them infants, battling the sometimes deadly disease, while some elementary schools have reported having as many as half their students absent because of respiratory illnesses.

The country has reported 969 cases of R.S.V. in five weeks, compared with an average of 1,743 cases over the entire 29-week winter season in the five years before the pandemic, according to New Zealands Institute of Environmental Science and Research.

The recent surge has yet to reach a plateau, said Dr. Sue Huang, a virologist at the Institute of Environmental Science and Research and the lead author of the Nature study.

The exponential increase is very sharp, she said in a statement. The absence of R.S.V. last winter meant there is a young cohort of children from last year, plus a new cohort this year, who have not been exposed to the seasonal virus.

Doctors around the world have warned of the risk of immunity debt, when a decline in the number of viral and bacterial infections during lockdowns is followed by more sickness once restrictions are lifted.

In a paper published in May in the journal Infectious Diseases Now, a team of French medical researchers suggested that less exposure to microbial agents could create a lack of immune stimulation for susceptible people, particularly in children. The longer these periods of viral or bacterial low-exposure are, the greater the likelihood of future epidemics, they wrote.

New Zealand closed its borders early in the pandemic, unveiling stringent lockdown measures that were lifted last April and May and have allowed the country to all but eliminate coronavirus transmission. No community cases have been reported for more than four months.

In other developments around the world:

Spain is facing a further hit to its summer tourism season after Germany classified the entire country as a risk area. As of Sunday, travelers entering Germany from anywhere in Spain, including its Balearic and Canary archipelagoes, will have to provide a negative coronavirus test or proof of vaccination or recovery to avoid quarantine. The Italian government also warned on Saturday that it was considering greater restrictions on travelers from Spain as well as Portugal. Both countries have been grappling with a surge in coronavirus cases fueled by the highly contagious Delta variant, particularly among unvaccinated young people.

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New Zealand, where Covid-19 is dormant, fights another respiratory virus, and other news from around the world. - The New York Times

A Breathalyzer to Detect Covid-19? Scientists Are on It. – The New York Times

July 11, 2021

People with diabetes, for instance, may have breath that smells fruity or sweet. The odor is caused by ketones, chemicals produced when the body begins to burn fat instead of glucose for energy, a metabolic state known as ketosis.

The idea that exhaled breath could hold diagnostic potential has been around for some time, Dr. Davis said. There are reports in ancient Greek and also ancient Chinese medical training texts that reference a physicians use of smell as a way to help guide their clinical practice.

Modern technologies can detect more subtle chemical changes, and machine learning algorithms can identify patterns in breath samples from people with certain diseases. In recent years, scientists have used these methods to identify unique breathprints for lung cancer, liver disease, tuberculosis, asthma, inflammatory bowel disease and other conditions. (Dr. Davis and her colleagues have even used V.O.C. profiles to distinguish among cells that had been infected with different strains of flu.)

Before Covid hit, Breathomix had been developing an electronic nose to detect several other respiratory diseases. We train our system, OK, this is how asthma smells, this how lung cancer smells, said Rianne de Vries, the companys chief technology and scientific officer. So its building a big database and finding patterns in big data.

Last year, the company and many other researchers in the field pivoted and began trying to identify a breathprint for Covid-19. During the viruss initial surge in the spring of 2020, for instance, researchers in Britain and Germany collected breath samples from 98 people who showed up at hospitals with respiratory symptoms. (Participants were asked to exhale into a disposable tube; the researchers then used a syringe to extract a sample of their breath.)

Thirty-one of the patients turned out to have Covid, while the remainder had a variety of diagnoses, including asthma, bacterial pneumonia or heart failure, the researchers reported. The breath samples from people with Covid-19 had higher levels of aldehydes, compounds produced when cells or tissues are damaged by inflammation, and ketones, which fits with research suggesting that the virus may damage the pancreas and cause ketosis.

The Covid patients also had lower levels of methanol, which could be a sign that the virus had inflamed the gastrointestinal system or killed the methanol-producing bacteria that live there. Those breath changes combined give us a Covid-19 signal, said Dr. Thomas, a co-author of the study.

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A Breathalyzer to Detect Covid-19? Scientists Are on It. - The New York Times

Bat Scientists Warn That the World May Never Know Covid-19 Origins – The Wall Street Journal

July 11, 2021

Since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, scientists all over the world have been struggling to pin down the origin of the coronavirus that caused it.

Linfa Wang knows they may never succeed.

Dr. Wang, a professor in the emerging infectious diseases program at Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore, is an expert in bat viruses. He has joined the hunt for the origin of Covid-19 even though he and fellow scientists are still searching for the precise source of a different coronavirus: the one that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS. That virus emerged in 2002 and killed nearly 800 people world-wide.

Research on the origin of SARS and other deadly viruses offers a cautionary example of the manifold challenges that confound the pursuit of the origin of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.

SARS started as an outbreak in China, rapidly traveled around the world infecting and killing people, and disrupted the global economy. The Chinese government was criticized at home and abroad for not sharing information quickly enough with the public and with World Health Organization officials trying to get a handle on the disease.

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Bat Scientists Warn That the World May Never Know Covid-19 Origins - The Wall Street Journal

After detecting COVID-19, unvaccinated crew of American Constellation will quarantine onboard ship while in Juneau City and Borough of Juneau – City…

July 11, 2021

The small cruise ship American Constellation is en route to Juneau from Petersburg after three people tested positive for COVID-19. The American Cruise Lines ship left Petersburg this afternoon and is due to arrive in Juneau tomorrow, July 10, around 3 or 4 a.m. where it will stay for the next 10 days. The three individuals who tested positive for COVID-19, along with their close contacts, remain in Petersburg to isolate. Any unvaccinated crew members will quarantine aboard the ship in Juneau.

The ship has 162 guests and 52 crew members, including an onboard nurse. All the guests are fully vaccinated. Once here, all guests will be flying out from Juneau.

The City and Borough of Juneau Emergency Operation Center in coordination with the Alaska Department of Health & Social Services and Juneau Public Health is working closely with American Cruise Lines on a testing plan for the unvaccinated crew during their quarantine on the ship.

The Constellations next voyage scheduled for July 14 has been cancelled.

For more information, contact the City Managers Office at 586-5240.

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After detecting COVID-19, unvaccinated crew of American Constellation will quarantine onboard ship while in Juneau City and Borough of Juneau - City...

Almost all new COVID-19 cases are among people who have not been vaccinated – CBS News

July 11, 2021

The Delta variant now accounts for more than half of the new coronavirus cases in the United States 52%. Almost all of the new cases 99.7% are among people who have not been vaccinated.

In Mississippi, a state with a low-vaccination rate, health officials urged people to avoid crowds. And in other vaccine-hesitant communities, there are new efforts to push back the Delta variant by encouraging more people to get the shot, Michael George reports for "CBS This Morning: Saturday."

The NAACP put boots on the ground in Louisville neighborhoods where only 30% of residents have been vaccinated, hoping flyers and conversations get more people to get shots.

The effort comes as cases are rising in 26 states. Hospitalization rates are up in 17 states 27% in Florida, almost exclusively among the unvaccinated.

The far corners of Utah are hit hard, too.

"We're seeing people that are extremely sick with it," said Dr. Greg Gardner, chief of emergency medicine at Mountain West Hospital in Tooele, Utah. "A lot sicker than what they were the majority of the time in the winter time."

The demographic is younger since then.

Gardner said, "We haven't seen anybody that has been vaccinated."

Fifty-five percent of all Americans have received at least one dose of the vaccine, and almost half of the nation is fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

With the pandemic persisting and the country yet to achieve herd immunity, there are questions about how long vaccinated people will remain protected. Questions like: Will the 158 million fully vaccinated Americans each need a booster shot?

Both the FDA and CDC said no on Friday; the fully vaccinated "do not need a booster at this time."

But both Pfizer and BioNtech officials announced they were seeking emergency-use authorization for a booster because antibody levels in the blood may decline six months after immunization, though studies dispute that, and leading physicians are counseling a go-slow approach.

Dr. Celine Gounder, a New York infectious disease specialist, said, "I think the headline here is that if you have received both doses of the Pfizer, or for that matter, the Moderna vaccine, you are fully protected against severe disease, hospitalization and death, even with the Delta variant."

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Almost all new COVID-19 cases are among people who have not been vaccinated - CBS News

Kansas prisoners still can’t have contact visits with loved ones. Health officials point to COVID-19 guidelines. – The Topeka Capital-Journal

July 11, 2021

For many, the most painful part of the COVID-19 pandemic was a lack of physical intimacy the inability to hug a loved one, to hold their hand, to give them a pat on the back.

The rise in vaccinations has made that a reality for many but not Trish Gaston.

Gaston's two sons are incarcerated at Lansing Correctional Facility, the largest prison in the state and the site of one of the worst COVID-19 hotspots in the nation.

Both of her sons have been vaccinated. But when Gaston drove the three hours from her Wichita home to visit them earlier this month, a hug was out of the question the Kansas Department of Corrections stillisn't allowing contact visits.

"It was hard," Gaston said. "I mean, I was thankful to see them. ...But it was just really hard. And you know, I borderline almost broke a rule because I'm like, 'How do I leave here and not hug them.' But I didn't want to take a chance on then losing what I do have."

Gaston was almost unable to see her sons at all. When she pre-registered for a time slot, the online system didn't flag that one of her sons was unable to have visitors on the day she selected something she only realized when she called to confirm.

While she acknowledges some changes are necessary from the normal system, Gaston said she believed there has to be a better way.

"Ithink that they (KDOC)feel likethis is easy for them," Gaston said."They don't have very many visitors anymore. People aren't driving to go sit six feet from their loved one for one hour."

As state workers return to the office in person, the Kansas Statehouse reopens and court hearings resume, prison visitation remains one of the areas that hasn't returned to a pre-pandemic norm.

More: Topekas primary elections are just weeks away. Here is what you need to know to make sure it goes smoothly.

Visitors must pre-register online and are limited to an hour-long visit no matter if they are driving 15 minutesor 5 hours. Previously, a full-day meeting could be requested if you were coming from a longer distance something many families often took advantage of.

Meanwhile, only two individuals can come for an appointment, meaning larger families or those requiring assistance are often shut out. Families with multiple children have to pick and choose which ones get to visit, for instance.

And inmates are forced to socially distance from their loved ones, either sitting across a room or meeting them behind glass, meaning hugs and kisses the physical affection craved by many during the pandemic are still not an option.

KDOC says their policies are consistent with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for correctional facilities, which encourage minimizing visits and using mitigation strategies if they occur. Most, but not all, states have imposed similar policies for visitors.

But family members and friendssay that doesn't make things any easier.

Brenda Woods, an activist for prison reforms and herself formerly incarcerated, said she had a friend who used to driveacross the state to El Dorado Correctional Facility each weekend to visit her son, who is serving a 12-year sentence. They have since stopped due to the restrictions.

"Most of these folks are going to come back out into the community," Woods said. "So their mental health needs to be good. They need to be able to be a productive memberof society when they come out."

More: Unvaccinated Shawnee County residents accounted for 86% of COVID-19 cases in June

Kansas, like virtually every other state, limited in-person visitation when COVID-19 struck the state last spring. While visits from attorneys have been allowed to take place for some time, the state relied on video and telephone meetings until physical, in-person visitation resumed April 18.

Other states, such as Vermont and Iowa, only began allowing visitors to return this week and some, like Mississippi, have even more restrictive policies.

That hasn't stopped frustration from families and friends of inmates in Kansas, however.

When the original protocols were rolled out, Audry Piert noted there were concerns but it was the expectation that they would be a starting point and evolve over time.

"Initially, I thought, 'OK, well, it spurred them to give us some kind of answer.' We've opened the door. We've started the process, you know," Piert said."And so we can take off from here. Well, April to Julyclearly, we're not taking off."

The state has offered inmates free visits via video conferencing and also allowed for free telephone calls, although families say the machines were not always functional, leading to conflicts between inmates seeking to see their loved ones.

"If any of your readers think that it was such a fantastic alternative to have these video visitsand it should have been good enough," Piert said."I guess, theoretically, if they all worked and you actually got them, it might have been but that's not how it went."

More: COVID-19 is making a Delta variant-fueled comeback in southeast Kansas. Health officials are urging vaccinations.

Randy Bowman, director of public affairs for KDOC, said the agencyis merely following guidance from the CDC and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

While CDC guidelines more broadly support relaxing social distancing and mask wearing requirements if a person has been vaccinated, that is not necessarily true for prisons. Bowman pointed to a section of its guidelines recommending that facilities "discourage contact visits" and suspend or modify visitation.

Updates as of June 6, however, note that facilities "may consider when to modify facility-level COVID-19 prevention measures."

While this shouldn't occur if transmission is occurring within a prison something KDOC insists isn't happening officials should consider vaccination rates, historic COVID-19 spread within a facility and other factors in determining whether to roll back some protocols.

More flexibility is possible if an individual is vaccinated, the guidelines say but masks should continue to be worn something families say isn't happening for corrections officers, staff and volunteers in KDOC prisons. Bowman saidagency protocol continues to recommend masks.

Despite controversy last yearover when prisonersshould get the COVID-19 vaccine, there is also a wide range ofuptake depending on the correctional facility in question.

Data as of mid-June showed a vaccination rate of 43% at Lansing Correctional Facility, the largest prisonin the state, all the way up to 84% at Winfield Correctional Facility. Most fell between 65% and 75% much higher than the vaccination rate among the general public in Kansas.

KDOC reported 44% of staff members had gotten the vaccine, although officials argue that is an undercount as employees who got vaccinated outside and didn't report it to the agency aren't counted.

Because state agencies can't inquire as to a person's vaccination status, mask-wearing and social distancing requirementsare still in place for visitors even if theygot jabbed despite the fact that vaccinated visitors to other public buildings can forgo a face covering.

And while Piert said temperature checks and COVID-19 screenings were conducted during her first visit, the practices have since been ditched during each of her subsequent trips.

"You can go to a weekend event where thousands of people are congregated together, some of them being (correctional officers), and they go right back in with our loved ones with no protection, no mask, no 6-foot distancing,and that's OK," she said."But the families have to be behind glass or six (feet away),no contact with a mask on for one hour. It's just hypocrisy."

More: Corrections officials tout program putting inmates in jobs. Others say it merits scrutiny.

For now, the visitation policies appear to be unlikely to change. A memo from KDOC to families last week acknowledged families' anxiety to return to normal but said the "short answer to these questions is we arent there yet."

"We continually review the CDC guidelines and our coronavirus protocols, but cannot forecast when these may change," Bowman, the KDOC spokesperson, said in an email."The KDOC also continues to work closely with and under guidance of KDHE."

For their part, families and loved ones have said they would have understood the procedures if there was better communication with the agency.

"We were just basically flat-out ignored," Piert said.

More: Clemency is rarely granted in Kansas. Advocates hope Gov. Laura Kelly is changing that.

For Gaston, the mother of two sons,one of her boyshas been at Lansing for some time. The other, however, has literally moved across the country in the last year he was one of several dozen inmates transferred to a private prison in Arizona because of overcrowding at KDOC facilities.

A visit to Phoenix, where he was being held, used to cost thousands of dollars, making an inter-state drive pale in comparison.But Gaston saidshe is waiting to make her next visit in hopes the policies will change before her trip.

"These people have been struggling for a year-and-a-half it's not just all of us out here," she said."And so they need a hug. They need to know that they're loved."

Originally posted here:

Kansas prisoners still can't have contact visits with loved ones. Health officials point to COVID-19 guidelines. - The Topeka Capital-Journal

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