Category: Covid-19

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Maine reports 38 new cases of COVID-19 – Portland Press Herald – Press Herald

July 7, 2021

Maine reported 38 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, with one additional death. The case total represents infections detected over the previous two days.

With the pandemic easing, the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention is not routinely updating its case counts on holidays and weekends. Because July 4 fell on a Sunday, state offices and many workplaces were closed on Monday.

The seven-day average of daily new cases stood at 18.4 on Wednesday, compared to 25.1 a week ago and 72.9 a month ago.

Since the pandemic began, Maine has recorded 69,156 cases of COVID-19, and 861 deaths. The most recent death was a man age 80 or older who lived in Cumberland County, the Maine CDC said.

The number of people hospitalized in Maine with COVID-19 rose slightly to 31 on Wednesday, including 16 in critical care beds and six on a ventilator.

On the vaccination front, 791,510 people in Maine have received their final dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, representing 58.9 percent of the states 1.3 million population. Maine has the third-highest percentage of its population fully vaccinated, according to the Bloomberg vaccine tracker, behind Vermont and Massachusetts. The New England states take up the top six spots in the nation for the highest percentage of people who are fully vaccinated.

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Maine reports 38 new cases of COVID-19 - Portland Press Herald - Press Herald

The US health care system will be worse after the Covid-19 pandemic – Vox.com

July 7, 2021

Take a long enough lens say, 25 years and it seems as though health care in America is inarguably getting better.

People are living longer than they did a quarter century ago. The burden of disease, a metric that includes premature deaths and disability, has dropped. The number of avoidable hospitalizations and hospital errors is lower.

But below those rosy numbers is the truth: American health care has been falling behind other countries in the developed world for decades.

Life expectancy has increased, but by less in the US than in the wealthy nations of Europe and Asia. The improvement in disease burden has likewise been less impressive than that of comparable countries. Meanwhile, to achieve those mediocre results, the United States continues to spend more money on medical care than any other country in the world; while health spending in the US isnt going up faster than in other countries, it was higher to begin with and continues to increase. Weve maintained a sizable lead in health care spending while getting outcomes that are worse than countries that spend less.

And all of that was true even before the United States experienced one of the worst Covid-19 outbreaks in the world.

Kaiser Family Foundation researchers recently warned of a further widening of the gap between the US and other countries as a result of the pandemic. Life expectancy in the US had already stagnated in the last few years, driven by a rise in drug overdoses and suicides; now Covid-19 will shorten it further. Disease burden had been trending upward in the US while dropping elsewhere; the Covid-19 pandemic is likely to widen that disparity too.

You could say the trajectory of American health care before, during, and after the pandemic is like that of an individual vulnerable patient: It was sicker to begin with, hit hard by Covid-19, and will be dealing with the lingering effects for a long time.

When it comes to getting value for money in health care, America slowly but perceptibly fell behind other developed countries over the last 25 years.

It starts with life expectancy, the bluntest measure of how well people are served by their health system. Life expectancy in the developed world has steadily improved over the past few decades, driven primarily by major breakthroughs in the treatment of heart disease and other cardiovascular problems, which rank near the top among causes of deaths in wealthy nations.

But not as much in the United States as in other countries. According to a KFF analysis of health care trends from 1991 to 2016, Americans saw their life expectancy rise by 3.1 years during that period a meaningful improvement, to be sure, but substantially less than the 5.2 years gained in comparable countries.

And in the US specifically, that progress has stagnated in recent years. With tens of thousands of people dying of opioid overdoses every year and a sustained increase in the number of suicides, American life expectancy actually started tailing off in 2014, according to a 2019 analysis published in JAMA. The gap between the US and other wealthy countries was already growing before Covid-19 struck.

Likewise, disease burden had steadily improved until a recent downturn separated the US from other countries. The reasons for the improvement were the same: better medical treatment for chronic diseases. But once again, America did not improve to the degree that comparable countries did, seeing a 12 percent improvement versus an average of 22 percent elsewhere. In the United States, the burdens from disease of the heart, lung, kidney, and liver as well as from diabetes remain stubbornly high compared with the rest of the developed world.

And the reasons for Americas recent stagnation are the same, too: Suicides and drug overdoses, plus a rise in the number of young people with chronic health conditions, are robbing people of years of healthy living.

The same pattern holds for medical errors. They have been declining in the US over the last 25 years but are still more common in America than in comparable countries. Avoidable hospitalizations and adverse drug events are down, but not as much as in wealthy European or Asian nations. Americans are roughly twice as likely to experience an error in their medical care as their counterparts the world over.

One metric known as mortality amenable to health care combines all of these characteristics and grades a countrys health system on how well it prevents deaths from conditions that should be treatable with timely access to health care. The US ranked behind the biggest countries in Europe, as well as Japan, as of 2016.

A country like Taiwan, which performed much worse than the US on the same metric 30 years ago, is now nearly its equal.

And for those middling outcomes, the US still spends more on health care than other countries: nearly 18 percent of its GDP versus about 11 percent, on average, in comparable nations. Health spending has been rising at the same rate in the US and its peers over the last few decades, and yet those other countries have seen more improvement in their health outcomes.

They are, in other words, getting more value out of their health systems than the US.

One could conclude that the comparable ... countries value improvement was greater, the KFF researchers wrote in 2018, even though they started at a higher threshold in terms of better outcomes and a lower percentage of GDP consumed to achieve it.

One possible explanation for Americas poor performance: We underinvest in social spending and overspend on medical care compared with other developed countries. If you combine social services spending and health spending, the US and its peers actually spend about the same amount of money, a little more than 30 percent of their GDPs. But spending in those other countries is more slanted toward social services, while America spends more on medical care.

Americas underinvestment exacerbates disparities between haves and have-nots: 18 percent of Americans live in poverty versus 10 percent in other wealthy countries. We know that people with lower incomes have structural challenges access to healthy food, clean water, and fresh air, for starters that lead to worse health outcomes. When they get sick, they have a harder time finding a doctor and affording their medical care.

Economic inequality is increasingly linked to disparities in life expectancy across the income distribution, and these disparities seem to be growing over time, wrote the authors of a 2018 review of relevant research in Health Affairs. Poor health also tends to lead to lower incomes, creating a feedback loop known as the health-poverty trap.

And those disparities between rich and poor, white and Black only worsened during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The gap between the US and other wealthy nations is expected to grow because of the pandemic. America has lost more than 600,000 people to Covid-19, the highest confirmed death toll in the world. Adjusting for population, the US has lost more people on a per-capita basis than most of the European and Asian countries to which it is compared.

Official death counts can be somewhat arbitrary because they depend on testing to identify cases. Excess deaths the number of deaths from all causes above what would be expected in an ordinary year are considered by experts to be a more reliable gauge. On that metric, too, and adjusting for population, the United States is one of the worst performers among wealthy nations.

The outsized effect of the pandemic on the U.S. will likely widen the existing gap in mortality rates between the U.S. and peer countries, wrote the authors of an October 2020 analysis on Covid-19 death rates and life expectancy.

America is also likely to experience a higher disease burden (thats the years of quality life lost to premature death and disability) as a result of its pandemic failures. People under 65 in the US have died from Covid-19 at higher rates than their peers elsewhere.

A prolonged mental health crisis may linger after a year of disrupted social lives and isolation. More than 4 in 10 Americans reported experiencing symptoms of anxiety or depression in 2020, according to US census surveys.

Health spending actually slowed down in 2020, a historic aberration, as people postponed medical care during the pandemic. But medical spending did not slow down as much as the rest of the economy: As of October 2020, it had fallen 0.5 percent versus a 1.8 percent contraction overall. So even as spending dropped, health care likely consumed an even greater share of Americas GDP than in years prior.

And the short-term drop in spending could have long-term consequences. Last year, 24 percent of Americans said in a census survey that they did not get needed medical care during the pandemic, with 33 percent saying they delayed care. To give one example, cervical cancer screenings dropped about 80 percent from normal levels in spring 2020, and while they rebounded later in the year, they were still 25 percent down by the end of September.

While patient volume generally has recovered, we still dont know what the long-term effects of people missing care or receiving belated diagnoses will be. And there are tens of millions of people recovering from a Covid-19 infection; as many as 15 million of them may struggle with long Covid for the foreseeable future, according to a new analysis in the New England Journal of Medicine that called long Covid-19 our next public health disaster in the making. Those direct health aftershocks from the pandemic will be yet another burden on the US health system long after the coronavirus itself starts to subside.

Long-term spending trends were already prompting health plans to push more of the cost of health care onto patients. Deductibles and worker premiums have been increasing for years.

Post-Covid-19, at least as a relative share of the economy, health care is eating up even more of the countrys resources. Americas health outcomes have been set back by the pandemic, and the spending crunch is intensifying.

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The US health care system will be worse after the Covid-19 pandemic - Vox.com

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-6-2021 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

July 7, 2021

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of July 6, 2021, there have been 3,027,206 total confirmatory laboratory results received for COVID-19, with 164,279 total cases and 2,901 deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of a 72-year old female from Kanawha County and a 93-year old male from Mercer County.

We offer our deepest condolences to these families, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. Eligible West Virginians must choose to get vaccinated to stop the spread of COVID-19. The vaccine is available statewide to all residents age 12 and older.

CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (1,515), Berkeley (12,856), Boone (2,179), Braxton (1,020), Brooke (2,249), Cabell (8,888), Calhoun (394), Clay (543), Doddridge (646), Fayette (3,558), Gilmer (888), Grant (1,317), Greenbrier (2,902), Hampshire (1,928), Hancock (2,845), Hardy (1,584), Harrison (6,209), Jackson (2,265), Jefferson (4,807), Kanawha (15,505), Lewis (1,298), Lincoln (1,607), Logan (3,303), Marion (4,660), Marshall (3,539), Mason (2,064), McDowell (1,615), Mercer (5,200), Mineral (2,990), Mingo (2,771), Monongalia (9,400), Monroe (1,226), Morgan (1,230), Nicholas (1,908), Ohio (4,317), Pendleton (725), Pleasants (959), Pocahontas (682), Preston (2,962), Putnam (5,334), Raleigh (7,096), Randolph (2,860), Ritchie (761), Roane (665), Summers (865), Taylor (1,283), Tucker (547), Tyler (749), Upshur (1,973), Wayne (3,183), Webster (547), Wetzel (1,393), Wirt (457), Wood (7,953), Wyoming (2,059).

Free pop-up COVID-19 testing is available today in Barbour, Berkeley, Boone, Brooke, Clay, Grant, Lincoln, Logan, Morgan, and Wyoming counties.

Barbour County

9:00 AM 11:00 AM, Barbour County Health Department, 109 Wabash Avenue, Philippi, WV

Berkeley County

1:00 PM 5:00 PM, Shenandoah Community Health, 99 Tavern Road, Martinsburg, WV

Boone County

Brooke County

Clay County

1:00 PM 3:00 PM, Clay County Health Department, 452 Main Street, Clay, WV

Grant County

Lincoln County

Logan County

Morgan County

1:00 PM 5:00 PM, Valley Health War Memorial Hospital, 1 Health Way, Berkeley Springs, WV

Wyoming County

11:00 AM 3:00 PM, Wyoming County Fire Department, 12 Park Street, Pineville, WV

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COVID-19 Daily Update 7-6-2021 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Health Workers Abandoned in Yemen’s Covid-19 Fight – Human Rights Watch

July 7, 2021

Health workers in Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen have recently reported that they face significant barriers to obtaining vaccines, and existing vaccines may expire before they are used. By failing to take all available measures to address the Covid-19 pandemic, Houthi authorities are subjecting the countrys medical workers to unnecessary risk, which could further devastate the countrys healthcare system.

Human Rights Watch and others have previously criticized Houthi authorities disinformation about the pandemic and their undermining international efforts to distribute vaccines. On June 1 the World Health Organization (WHO) announced that a vaccination campaign would finally begin in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen, starting with 10,000 doses for healthcare workers. This was a welcome step for desperate health workers battling the deadly coronavirus with little to no assistance from the authorities. But in the past month, even this small distribution has proved elusive.

Most of the barriers to vaccination are directly tied to the Houthi authorities apparent unwillingness to take the pandemic seriously. They have not advertised vaccination center locations or encouraged health workers to take the vaccines. They have also prevented any information about the campaign to appear on the Houthi health ministrys website, and mandated that health workers give blood before they can receive a vaccine.

At least 150 doctors in Yemen have died from Covid-19, according to the Yemeni Doctors Living Abroad Association. Last year, most of the 97 health workers who died from Covid-19 were in Yemens Houthi-controlled capital, Sanaa. The death of health workers has serious consequences in a country with a healthcare system decimated by years of war, a shortage of medical professionals, and what the United Nations has called the worlds worst humanitarian crisis. It is estimated that only half of Yemens healthcare system is functioning and is heavily reliant on support from international donors, whose aid has decreased in recent years.

In May, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Mark Lowcock indicated that Covid-19 was pushing Yemens healthcare system to collapse. Given the urgent medical needs of the Yemeni people, Houthi authorities should immediately lift all barriers to vaccination and allow health workers to safely perform their vital role.

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Health Workers Abandoned in Yemen's Covid-19 Fight - Human Rights Watch

Oregon reports 1 more COVID-19 related death, 463 new cases over holiday weekend – KTVZ

July 7, 2021

(Update: OHA corrects, breaks down weekend case count)

PORTLAND, Ore. (KTVZ) -- There is one new COVID-19 related death in Oregon, raising the states death toll at 2,782, the Oregon Health Authority reported Tuesday.

OHA also reported 85 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 as of 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, bringing the state total to 209,494.

OHA also reported 463 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 over the holiday weekend, as of 12:01 a.m.Tuesdaybringing the state total to 209,494. Oregon reported 85 new confirmed andpresumptive COVID-19 cases onJuly 5, 66 new confirmed and presumptive cases onJuly 4, 123 new confirmed and presumptive cases onJuly 3and 189 new confirmed and presumptive cases onJuly 2.

Vaccinations in Oregon

OHA reported Tuesday that 1,707 new doses of COVID-19 vaccinations were added to the state immunization registry. Of this total, 1,233 doses were administered on Monday and 474 were administered on previous days but were entered into the vaccine registry on Monday.

The seven-day running average is now 5,746 doses per day.

Oregon has now administered 2,553,609 first and second doses of Pfizer, 1,748,032 first and second doses of Moderna and 171,120 single doses of Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines.

As of Tuesday, 2,413,181 people have had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 2,205,984 people have completed a COVID-19 vaccine series.

Cumulative daily totals can take several days to finalize because providers have 72 hours to report doses administered and technical challenges have caused many providers to lag in their reporting. OHA has been providing technical support to vaccination sites to improve the timeliness of their data entry into the states ALERT Immunization Information System (IIS).

To date,2,964,195 doses of Pfizer, 2,240,820 doses of Moderna and299,100 doses of Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines have been delivered to sites across Oregon.

These data are preliminary and subject to change.

Updated vaccination data are provided on Oregons COVID-19 datadashboardsand have been updated Tuesday.

COVID-19 hospitalizations

The number of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 across Oregon is 125, which is 15 fewer than Monday. There are 29 COVID-19 patients in intensive care unit (ICU) beds, which is one more than Monday.

The total number of patients in hospital beds may fluctuate between report times. The numbers do not reflect admissions per day, nor the length of hospital stay. Staffing limitations are not captured in this data and may further limit bed capacity.

More information about hospital capacity can be found here.

St. Charles Bend reported 13 COVID-19 patients as of early Tuesday, three of whom were in the ICU, all on ventilators.

Cases and deaths

The new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases reported Tuesday are in the following counties: Baker (1), Benton (1), Clackamas (11), Columbia (2), Deschutes (2), Douglas (11), Jackson (13), Josephine (4), Klamath (1), Lane (9), Linn (5), Multnomah (22), Sherman (1), Union (1) and Wasco (1).

Note:Oregon reports 66 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases on July 4, 123 new confirmed and presumptive cases on July 3 and 189 new confirmed and presumptive cases on July 2. OHA is no longer providingcounty-level datafor weekends or holiday weekend periods.

Oregons 2,782nd death is a 63-year-old man from Douglas County who tested positive on May 23 and died on June 10 at Asante Three Rivers Medical Center. Presence of underlying conditions is being confirmed.

Oregon updates non-viable vaccine disclosure (1,2,3)

OHAs non-viable vaccine table has been moved to the Tableau dashboard. You can find thatlink to the weekly tab here. OHA reports updates on vaccines not being used each Tuesday in its daily media release.

1 Updated: 07/06/21

2 Data source: ALERT Immunization Information System (IIS)

3 Data is preliminary and subject to change.

Learn more about COVID-19 vaccinations

To learn more about the COVID-19 vaccine situation in Oregon, visit OHA's webpage (EnglishorSpanish), which has a breakdown of distribution and other information.

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Oregon reports 1 more COVID-19 related death, 463 new cases over holiday weekend - KTVZ

Port Washington nurse who received first COVID-19 vaccine honored by Biden – Featured – Port Washington Times

July 7, 2021

The Northwell Health nurse who received the first dose of the coronavirus vaccination in the United States was honored by President Joe Biden on Friday.

Sandra Lindsay, an intensive care nurse at Northwell Healths Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park, received the Pfizer vaccine on the morning of Dec. 14. Lindsay, a Port Washington resident, was awarded the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Outstanding Americans by Choice recognition at the White House on Friday.

During the height of the pandemic, Sandra poured her heart and soul, working with patients and keeping her fellow nurses safe, Biden said. When the time came she became the first person in America to get fully vaccinated outside the trials. She can now hug her grandson. Shes out there making sure her patients and folks in the community get vaccinated.

Biden said Lindsays vaccination card, identification badge, and hospital scrubs will be on display at the Smithsonian Institutions National Museum of American History in a COVID-19 exhibit.

Lindsays journey to becoming the first person in the nation to receive the coronavirus vaccine began nearly three decades ago outside of the United States. When she was 18 years old, Lindsay immigrated from Jamaica to the United States. Lindsay took classes to achieve her first nursing degree from the Borough of Manhattan Community College while working at a grocery store and babysitting to pay bills. Lindsay ended up earning her nursing degree in 1994, and became a U.S. citizen three years later.

I came to this country for the opportunities not only for myself but to be able to help others, Lindsay said. As a nurse, I do everything to care for the sickest patients and lead by example. More than 24 years after becoming a naturalized citizen, I could never have imagined where I am today, at the White House receiving high honors from the President. Its truly a privilege to be a part of this great nation and I will continue to lead and help those in need.

Lindsays role at Northwell went beyond being the first person to be inoculated in the United States. During the pandemic, Lindsay led a team of nurses in some of the most negatively impacted coronavirus wards at the Long Island Jewish Medical Center. Since March of last year, Northwell has treated more than 200,000 patients for COVID-19, officials said.

Northwell Health President and CEO Michael Dowling touted Lindsay for her continuous work throughout the pandemic, aside from receiving the first inoculation. Dowling, a fellow immigrant, reflected on how the ripple effects from Lindsays tireless work and historic vaccination will live on throughout history.

Sandra came to this country to make a difference and on that December day she courageously decided to get that shot and help lead this country out of the pandemic, Dowling said.As an immigrant myself, Sandra is the epitome of the power immigrants hold in writing this great nations history and on behalf of the entire Northwell Health family, we are proud to support her.

It was also announced on Tuesday that Lindsay will be the grand marshal in New York Citys Hometown Heroes Parade on Wednesday morning. The parade, which will be one of the largest ticker-tape parades in New York City history, will honor all of the essential workers who aided the city in recovering from the coronavirus pandemic.

It is truly an honor and privilege to serve as the grand marshal in the Hometown Heroes ticker-tape parade and represent all health care and essential workers whose heroic efforts saved lives during the COVID-19 pandemic, Lindsay said.

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Port Washington nurse who received first COVID-19 vaccine honored by Biden - Featured - Port Washington Times

Denver Zoo joins Oakland Zoo in vaccinating animals against COVID – CBS News

July 7, 2021

A donation of doses from the veterinary pharmaceutical company Zoetis will allow Denver Zoo to vaccinate some of its animals against COVID-19 within the next few weeks, CBS Denver reports. The zoo joins Oakland Zoo in aiming to vaccinate some of its residents.

Denver Zoo VP of Animal Health Dr. Scott Larsen stressed that the doses are specifically made for animals. "We are not taking any vaccines away from humans," Dr. Larsen told the station.

The Denver Zoo has reported that none of its animals have contracted COVID-19 but transmission is possible, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Big cats and monkeys in zoos can become infected, likely from zookeepers that have tested positive for the virus.

The first shipment of 40 doses enough to vaccinate 20 animals is scheduled to arrive at Denver Zoo within the next few weeks. Each animal that is vaccinated will have its status documented and undergo blood samples when possible.

"We'll vaccinate, in the gorilla's case, maybe one, maybe two. In the lions we may do two or three, and make sure it's working before we give it to everybody," Larsen explained.

The Denver Zoo could vaccinate up to 100 animals by the end of the summer.

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Denver Zoo joins Oakland Zoo in vaccinating animals against COVID - CBS News

Greek bars and clubs face new COVID-19 curbs as summer starts – Reuters

July 7, 2021

ATHENS, July 7 (Reuters) - Greek bar and nightclub owners fear new restrictions allowing seated customers only will hit business during the vital summer season but said on Wednesday they accept the rules are needed to contain a surge in COVID-19 infections.

Authorities reimposed curbs on restaurants, nightclubs and bars this week, with effect from July 8. No standing customers will be allowed.

"It is a step back, it will surely influence tourism, but it is deemed necessary so we do not lose the rest of the summer. We will be patient," said Ilias Babatsikos, 27, a beach bar manager at Athens' coastal suburb of Alimos.

Health experts are concerned about a recent spike in infections and the more contagious Delta variant. On Tuesday health authorities reported 1,797 new confirmed infections, more than twice the level seen on Monday.

Babatsikos said it would be difficult to discipline people but hoped customers would respect the measures.

Authorities said on Tuesday many of the new cases involved young people and were linked to entertainment venues.

Premises found to be violating the new rules will face hefty fines and repeat offenders could lose their operating licences.

"I believe it was the wrong decision because at bars made for people to stand it is very difficult to have to tell someone they must sit down," said Marios Markou, 37, who manages a bar in central Athens. "This is going to cause a lot of damage."

About 38% of Greece's eligible population is fully vaccinated and the government has offered incentives to entice more people to get the jab, including cash and free mobile data for youth, to bring that rate up to 70% by the autumn.

"It's a very unfortunate development but we understand why it's happening," said businessman Kosmas Theodoridis, 48, a customer at a bar in Athens. "The essential thing is for everyone to get vaccinated."

Reporting by Stamos Prousalis and Deborah Kyvrikosaios, Writing by George Georgiopoulos, Editing by Catherine Evans

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Greek bars and clubs face new COVID-19 curbs as summer starts - Reuters

COVID-19 Survivors Honor Those Lost With Splash of Yellow During July 4th Celebrations – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

July 5, 2021

In stark contrast to the Fourth of July just a year ago, people were eager to break out the picnic tables and grills Sunday. But, for many its a day without a loved one lost to COVID-19.

One North Texas woman is asking her fellow Americans to stand in solidarity with those still dealing with the pain of that loss.

Like many others, Rosie Davis enjoyed the Fourth of July holiday on Sunday, complete with cupcakes and decorations. Sitting among the red, white and blue decor inside her house, were splashes of yellow.

Full coverage of the COVID-19 outbreak and how it impacts you

This is a turning point for our country and we just want to make sure that our loved ones are remembered, she said.

Davis is founder of the Yellow Heart Memorial, created after the loss of her mother to COVID-19. Shes among the family members impacted by the more than 600,000 COVID-19-related deaths in United States. For them, holidays will never be the same.

Were always going to have that missing part of our family, she said. Well never get them back.

Davis teamed up with Chris Kocher with COVID Survivors for Change to launch the Add Yellow Campaign a splash of yellow on one's clothing or decorations in solidarity with those lost and the loved ones left behind.

Just a simple way to say, At the same time, Im remembering and honoring all the lives that have been changed forever. And its not an either-or. We can do both, Kocher said. We can celebrate that fewer people are being infected and at the same time remember the families devastated by COVID over the past year.

Davis said it's encouraging to know her mother and the names and faces of others wont be forgotten.

The yellow heart has become our symbol and thats how we identify each other, she said. When we see other people supporting us it means more than they know.

Davis is working with cities throughout the United States to add permanent Yellow Heart Memorials to public spaces in honor of those lost.

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COVID-19 Survivors Honor Those Lost With Splash of Yellow During July 4th Celebrations - NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

Concern about COVID-19 spike looms over Fourth of July celebrations – WNCT

July 5, 2021

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (WDAF) As America celebrates Independence Day, doctors warn we arent free from the danger of COVID-19 or its variants.

While some aspects of the Fourth of July weekend differ between 2020 and 2021, others are much the same. In 2021, swimming pools are open, large gatherings are organized and public fireworks displays are planned. But, in 2021, just like in 2020, doctors are warning of the danger of spiking COVID-19 cases across the country.

Yes, it is a concern. July 4, Dr. Raghu Adiga, chief medical officer at Liberty Hospital, said during an update with The University of Kansas Health System. Mostly those gatherings happen to be outside rather than indoors. Thats a plus, but again, not always.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infections Disease, said people can celebrate this Fourth of July, but the nature of that celebration should greatly depend on ones vaccination status.

But at some point, you have to ask yourself, are you really safer not getting vaccinated when over 2 billion doses of vaccine have been administered throughout the world and people have not died from the vaccine? Its just unheard of. You know whats not unheard of? Dying of COVID-19.

If you were vaccinated, you have a high degree of protection. If you are not, you should wear a mask, and you should think very seriously about getting vaccinated, Fauci said. So, in so many respects, nothing has really changed. We are celebrating as a country at the same time as we recognize the fact that were in a serious situation for those who have not been vaccinated. And the message is: Get vaccinated.

The countrys seven day case average from June 23-29 has seen a 10 percent jump, according to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky.

If youre not vaccinated, youre not safe, said Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer at the University of Kansas Health System.

This 4th of July holiday, please remember, a new, more contagious strain of COVID is rapidly spreading. The best way to stay healthy is to get vaccinated. If you choose not to be vaccinated, please be responsible around others. Our PSA w/ @RepDavids: https://t.co/vVv7wJ4wiR

During an update on Facebook Thursday morning, the University of Kansas Health System warned that hospitals in the Kansas City metro are already full because of illnesses other than COVID-19. They warn that a large surge following the holiday weekend will be dangerous.

One of the things we should be afraid of is that hospitals are full and theyre full throughout our community, Stites said. Thats because all the normal stuff is back out there again. As masks have come off what were seeing is that people are getting sick.

Routine colds, heart failure acting up, all of the things that would happen to us normally are happening now. And just to say were not usually this full in June, but were really full. And everybodys really full. So if we have a surge, trouble will come a lot sooner this time than it did last time.

Health experts warn the delta variant is much more transmissible than other strains of coronaviruses. They say the best protection against COVID-19 and the delta variant is to get vaccinated, something health departments in many states are struggling to convince people to do.

Theres just not a lot of defense against not getting vaccinated except, Im gonna say it, paranoia, Stites said.

I understand fear, everybody has the right to make that choice on their own, I have a fundamental belief in that. But at some point, you have to ask yourself, are you really safer not getting vaccinated when over 2 billion doses of vaccine have been administered throughout the world and people have not died from the vaccine? Its just unheard of. You know whats not unheard of? Dying of COVID-19.

Something else thats not unheard of is cities and countries going backwards that are now reinstating restrictions because of a concerning spike in COVID-19 cases. Los Angeles County, Britain, and Israel have taken steps to try to stop another surge in cases.

Its all about the people who arent immunized, Stites said. I think we need to be really concerned and Im not saying its time to do that in Kansas City, but Im saying we may enter into that, so I just urge everyone out there, over the holiday weekend to please be safe and remember, the rules of infection control, whether theyre required or not, are the rules that will keep you safe and if youre not vaccinated, you frickin need to have a mask on. If you dont have a mask on youre throwing the dice.

Many retail pharmacies, grocery stores, and health departments have walk-in vaccination times available, no appointment necessary. Check with yours for availability if you need to get vaccinated.

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Concern about COVID-19 spike looms over Fourth of July celebrations - WNCT

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