Category: Covid-19

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Exposure to COVID-19 – The University of Tennessee System

May 4, 2021

A Decision Tree for UT System Administration employees

Contact within 6 feet for 10 minutes or more with a person with suspected or confirmed COVID-19.

Examples include:

If Yes, proceed to next question.

If Yes, proceed to next question.

If No, then self-isolate/quarantine for 14 days before returning to work and get tested. Continue to wear a mask, socially distance and wash your hands.

If Yes, proceed to next question.

If COVID-19 test is positive, you may return to work 10 days from onset of symptoms only if you are fever-free (without use of fever-reducing medication) and have improvement of symptoms for at least 24 hours.

If COVID-19 test is positive, you may return to work 10 days from onset of symptoms ONLY if you are fever-free (without use of fever-reducing medication) and have improvement of symptoms for at least 24 hours.

You may return to work 10 days from onset of symptoms ONLY if you are fever-free (without use of fever-reducing medication) and have improvement of symptoms for at least 24 hours.

Tennessee Department of Health Resources for Colleges and Universities. (Aug. 6, 2020)

Tennessee Department of Health: What to Do If Your Test Results are Negative. (April 2020)

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Exposure to COVID-19 - The University of Tennessee System

Sweetwater, TN Coronavirus Information – Safety Updates …

May 4, 2021

Powered by Watson:

Our COVID Q&A with Watson is an AI-powered chatbot that addresses consumers' questions and concerns about COVID-19. It's built on the IBM Watson Ads Builder platform, which utilizes Watson Natural Language Understanding, and proprietary, natural- language-generation technology. The chatbot utilizes approved content from the CDC and WHO. Incidents information is provided by USAFacts.org.

To populate our Interactive Incidents Map, Watson AI looks for the latest and most up-to- date information. To understand and extract the information necessary to feed the maps, we use Watson Natural Language Understandingfor extracting insights from natural language text and Watson Discovery for extracting insights from PDFs, HTML, tables, images and more.COVID Impact Survey, conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago for the Data Foundation

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Sweetwater, TN Coronavirus Information - Safety Updates ...

Availability – TN COVID-19 Hub

May 4, 2021

Walk-ins Accepted Daily at State Health Departments

I Want To Find... Search Site:

Find COVID-19 Resources For:

COVID-19 Vaccines are now widely available to all Tennesseans 16+ in all 95 counties across our state. Check COVID-19 vaccine appointment availability at any of the state health departments on the map below, or browse all vaccine providers and find a location close to you at VaccineFinder.org.

Percentage of Appointments Available

VaccineFinder helps you find clinics, pharmacies, and other locations across Tennessee that offer COVID-19 vaccines. Their interactive map lets you find a location close to you and segment by vaccine availability and manufacturer.

Safe and effective vaccines against COVID-19 have arrived in Tennessee. Lets set the record straight on myths circulating about the COVID-19 vaccine.

COVID19 Informational Video

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Availability - TN COVID-19 Hub

Cuomo, Governor Murphy and Governor Lamont Announce Significant Easing Of COVID-19 Pandemic Restrictions on Businesses, Gatherings and Venues -…

May 4, 2021

Event Venues

Congregate commercial and social events in New Yorksuch as those at venues that host sports competitions, performing arts and live entertainment, and catered receptionscan exceed the social gathering limits of 500 people outdoors or 250 people indoors if all attendees over the age of four present either proof of full vaccination status or recent negative COVID-19 test result and the required social distancing can be accommodated.

Starting May 19, large-scale indoor event venues willoperate at 30 percent capacity, which is an increase from the current 10 percent capacity limit.Large-scale outdoor event venues will operate at 33 percent.Social distancing, masks, and other applicablehealth protocols will still apply, including the requirement of attendee proof of full vaccination or recent negative COVID-19 test result.

Industry Reopening Requirements

While most industry capacity restrictions will be lifted, industry-specific requirements will remain in effect for a longer period of time, including state or local health authority event notification, health screening, contact information for tracing, enhanced air handling and building system standards, hand hygiene, and environmental cleaning and disinfection protocols. The State will continue to provide additional guidance on these provisions as they apply to each industry.

Today's announcement builds on GovernorCuomo's recent measures to further reopen the economy amid a steady decline in New York's COVID-19 positivity and hospitalization rates. On April 30, Governor Cuomo announced thatNew York City indoor diningwill expand to 75 percent capacity beginning May 7, bringing New York City in line with the rest of New York. The Governor also announced that hair salons, barber shops and other personal care services will expand to 75 percent capacity beginning May 7. New York City gyms and fitness centers will expand to 50 percent capacity beginning May 15. On April 28,Governor Cuomo announcedthat thefood and beverage service, and catered event, curfewswould end this month.

Connecticut Previously Announced:

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Cuomo, Governor Murphy and Governor Lamont Announce Significant Easing Of COVID-19 Pandemic Restrictions on Businesses, Gatherings and Venues -...

COVID-19 variants in Texas: What you need to know – The Texas Tribune

May 4, 2021

Last winter, health experts worried about COVID-19 variants spreading quickly across the state, further overwhelming already crammed intensive care units. While health officials remain concerned about the potential for a wider outbreak fueled by more contagious variants, new case averages, hospitalizations and deaths are still trending down in Texas as the number of people fully vaccinated statewide has passed 25%.

Nationwide, the average weekly number of new COVID-19 cases has dropped in more than half of states as 29% of Americans are now fully vaccinated.

While COVID-19 started out as one strain, it has since spawned dozens of recorded mutations, said Benjamin Neuman, a virologist and professor at Texas A&M University.

Variants are a concern because some spread more easily, may cause severe illness in more people and could be resistant to current treatments for COVID-19. Some experts worry that as more mutations pop up, hospitalizations and deaths may rise as well. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says vaccines and other preventive measures like social distancing and mask-wearing should protect people from variants.

Heres what you need to know about COVID-19 variants in Texas:

Which variants are being tracked by the state?

The most dominant strain in Texas and the country is currently the B.1.1.7 variant from the United Kingdom, first detected in the United States in December. The CDC has also listed mutations first discovered in California, South Africa and Brazil as variants of concern. So far in Texas, cases of the five CDC variants of concern have slowly increased since the winter: more than 2,000 variant cases have been reported to the Department of State Health Services as of April 29, though the actual number may be higher, said Jennifer Shuford, the chief state epidemiologist. In early March, Houston became the first city in the state to report at least one case of each variant of concern.

The first variant to be publicly identified and reported out of Texas, the Brazos Valley variant, was discovered by Texas A&M scientists in mid-April. Neuman said they identified three Brazos Valley mutations BV-1, BV-2 and BV-3 of which only five cases have been reported.

Neuman said while BV variants have gotten wide attention, others have been present in the state as well. From a public health standpoint, its important to keep watching for new variants while case numbers are still low, he said.

Texas is a gold mine, Neuman said. The COVID strains we have in Texas are largely unexplored at the moment, and the virus is out there changing and evolving every day, whether were paying attention to it or not. I would imagine there are quite a few other surprises lurking out there in places where were just starting to look.

How do they test for variants and how much testing is the state doing?

Checking for COVID-19 mutations starts with the typical PCR or antigen test, usually in the form of nose or mouth swabs tens of thousands of which are conducted every day in the state. However, not every test gets put through the rigorous genomic sequencing required to find a mutation, which can cost labs around $50 to $100 and on average takes a week or more. Shuford said many universities are sequencing all of their positive tests, but many public health labs prioritize certain types of cases for example, if an otherwise healthy child were hospitalized with COVID-19 and do additional random sampling.

More populous regions of the state, like the Dallas-Fort Worth area and southeast Texas, are reporting higher numbers of variant cases but this could be a reflection of more widespread testing in urban areas.

Houston Methodists genomics lab has sequenced every positive test from patients in its health care system roughly 50,000 genomes across 40,000 patients since the pandemic began, said James Musser, the networks chair of pathology. Musser said Houston Methodists sequencing effort may be the largest of its kind in the nation and the scale of its sequencing database allows it to have more detailed information about the progression of variants in Texas.

Musser estimated that up to 80% of new COVID-19 cases in Houston Methodists network have been the UK variant, peaking in April. Higher proportions of variants have not substantially impacted Houstons general case ranges, he said.

Will Texas do more testing for variants in the future?

Shuford said Texas needs to ramp up its genomic sequencing efforts, and once that happens, she said reported variant cases may increase as well.

Currently, the state is waiting on more federal funding to improve testing capacity for variants at public labs and help those labs better report and share data. Whether Texas sees a rise in variants is going to be dependent on testing, and testing was cut in half by the big freeze at the end of February, Neuman said. You cant find what you dont test for.

Can vaccination prevent more COVID-19 mutations?

Multiple experts said vaccination is one of the strongest ways to combat the spread of variants and reduce the chance that the virus will keep mutating. But vaccine rates have decreased in Texas, and rates among Black and Hispanic residents have lagged behind white and Asian Texans in part because of barriers like lack of transportation and distance from vaccine providers.

Because the state is far from herd immunity, transmission of more contagious variants will continue to increase, said Bhavna Lall, assistant professor of adult medicine at the University of Houston College of Medicine. No matter how much progress the United States makes toward testing and vaccinating residents, Lall said global inequities in vaccine distribution will continue to impact everyone, including Texans.

Pointing to Indias recent crisis the countrys seven-day average of new cases has passed 370,000 while hospitalizations and deaths have skyrocketed and new variants continuing to pop up worldwide, Lall said until the United States and other developed countries help vaccinate other parts of the world, we will always be in this pandemic."

Just because we vaccinate our population in America does not mean that we are going to be safe from other variants that are forming in other countries, Lall said.

Sign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

Disclosure: Texas A&M University has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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COVID-19 variants in Texas: What you need to know - The Texas Tribune

India is Added to COVID-19 Geographic Travel Ban – The National Law Review

May 4, 2021

Ashley Moore is a Business Immigration Associate in Wiggin and Danas Labor, Employment and Benefits Department in the New Haven office.

Prior to joining Wiggin and Dana, Ashley worked for a boutique immigration firm in St. Louis, MO, as an associate immigration attorney. She has experience with advising and counseling clients on immigration benefits and consequences and has worked on a wide range of immigration cases, including family-based immigrant visas, removal of conditions, naturalization, asylum, removal defense, employment-based visas...

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India is Added to COVID-19 Geographic Travel Ban - The National Law Review

Bentz urges Gov. Brown to lift renewed COVID-19 restrictions – KTVZ

May 4, 2021

WASHINGTON (KTVZ) -- Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ore., issued a statement Monday calling on Governor Kate Brown to end the recently reinstituted COVID-19 restrictions.

Here's the statement, in full:

"In the normal course, as a United States Representative, I would not enter debates regarding state-level politics. However, the Governors most recent response to the COVID-19 situation is not only historically broad in impact, but an action that causes far more serious damage than benefit.Additionally, in recent days, the Oregon Health Authority actually invited public input from Oregons congressional delegation.

"Governor Kate Browns decision to again lock down huge parts of Oregon has caused incredible frustration for many in my district, and I share their frustration. In a recent letter by Governor Brown, she commended Oregonians for helping make our state among the lowest COVID-19 case rates, hospitalizations, and deaths in the nation, to which she gave creditinlarge part to the actions of Oregonians to take seriously the health and safety measures.

"And indeed,today, nearly 70 percent of Oregons older population is fully vaccinated and many communities across our state were well on their way to safely returning to some sort of normal. However, Governor Brown has now done completely the opposite of many other states: imposing yet another lockdown.

"Sadly, Governor Browns proposed $20 million safety net for those harmed by this most recent lockdown is woefully inadequate for those Oregon businesses struggling to survive. I believe Oregon must reopen and stay open.

"The reinstatement of the Governors shutdown solution will do more harm than good to our loved ones, communities, and our state especially as risk drops with an ever increasing number of Oregonians being vaccinated.I am calling upon Governor Brown to reverse this unfortunate decision and focus her attention instead on vaccinations and making sure that COVID aid sent to Oregon by the Federal Government be quickly allocated to those in need."

Meanwhile, Sandy Mayor Stan Pulliam, who's exploring a possible Republican run for governor, says a lawsuit is being filed in federal court against Gov. Kate Brown, on behalf of several businesses and a union.

Pulliam, who says it's time to end the restrictions, said the suit will challenge Brown's authority to extend the state of emergency by executive order

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Bentz urges Gov. Brown to lift renewed COVID-19 restrictions - KTVZ

Daily active COVID-19 cases on the decline, vaccines on the rise – Columbia Missourian

May 4, 2021

This is a significant decline in active daily cases from the past two weeks. Last Monday, Boone County had 106 active cases, marking the third week in a row the total hovered around 100.

The number of deaths because of COVID-19 remained at 86. The last death was recorded April 22.

Hospitals in Boone County were in the green status zone Monday, which means they were operating within licensed bed capacity and were accepting patient transfers. There were 13 total inpatients positive with COVID-19 in Boone County hospitals. Of those, there was one patient in the ICU and one on a ventilator.

MU Health Carehad eight inpatients positive with COVID-19 and 43 pending test results.

Truman Veterans Hospital had one veteran inpatient with COVID-19, spokesperson Jeffrey Hoelscher said Monday.

MU reportedeight active student cases and zero staff cases Monday, showing a steady decline since the beginning of April.

The Health Department continues to push vaccine rollout and appointments. In Boone County, 44.3% of residents have received a COVID-19 vaccine and 32.4% have received all doses, according to the Missouri COVID-19 Dashboard. Both percentages are the highest in the state.

MU Health Care will holdanother vaccine eventfrom 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 14 at the Walsworth Family Columns Club at Faurot Field.

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Daily active COVID-19 cases on the decline, vaccines on the rise - Columbia Missourian

Oregon reports 540 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases, 1 new death – Tillamook Headlight-Herald

May 4, 2021

There is one new COVID-19 related death in Oregon, raising the states death toll to 2,502, the Oregon Health Authority reported at 12:01 a.m. today.

Oregon Health Authority reported 540 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 as of 12:01 a.m. today, bringing the state total to 186,877.

Vaccinations in Oregon

Today, OHA reported that 17,897 new doses of COVID-19 vaccinations were added to the state immunization registry. Of this total, 15,437 doses were administered on May 2 and 2,460 were administered on previous days but were entered into the vaccine registry on May 2.

The 7-day running average is now 33,153 doses per day.

Oregon has now administered a total of 1,647,730 first and second doses of Pfizer, 1,317,295 first and second doses of Moderna and 97,625 single doses of Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines. As of today, 1,295,638 people have completed a COVID-19 vaccine series. There are 1,860,194 who have had at least one dose.

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, 1,939,275 doses of Pfizer,1,584,800 doses of Moderna and 229,500 doses of Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines have been delivered to sites across Oregon.

These data are preliminary and subject to change.

OHA's dashboards provide regularly updated vaccination data, and Oregons dashboard has been updated today.

New features released on vaccination dashboards

The statewide and county graphs featured on the COVID-19 Vaccinations Trends dashboard now display the seven-day running averages of administered doses of COVID-19 vaccines. This improves information sharing for administered doses over time and may be helpful for showing trends for less populated counties.

The COVID-19 Vaccination Metrics dashboard now includes a toggle switch that lets users choose between two different population denominators: the total Oregon population and the population in Oregon eligible to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. The total Oregon population includes all people in Oregon, while the eligible population only includes people age 16 and older. As of today, 42.9% of the total Oregon population has been vaccinated with at least one dose of any COVID-19 vaccine, compared with 52.4% of people 16 years of age and older in Oregon.

COVID-19 hospitalizations

The number of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 across Oregon is 351, which is six more than yesterday. There are 80 COVID-19 patients in intensive care unit (ICU) beds, which is four more than yesterday.

The total number of COVID-19 positive patient bed-days in the most recent seven days is 2,354, which is an 18% increase from the previous seven days. The peak daily number of beds occupied by COVID-19 positive patients in the most recent seven days is 351.

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.

Cases and deaths

The new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases reported today are in the following counties: Baker (1), Benton (12), Clackamas (91), Clatsop (3), Columbia (5), Coos (1), Crook (3), Deschutes (49), Douglas (10), Harney (2), Hood River (1), Jackson (16), Jefferson (1), Josephine (3), Lane (56), Lincoln (4), Linn (42), Marion (74), Multnomah (137), Polk (12), Sherman (1), Tillamook (2), Wallowa (1), Washington (1) and Yamhill (12).

Oregons 2,502nd COVID-19 death is a 70-year-old woman from Douglas County who tested positive on April 2 and died on May 1 at Mercy Medical Center. She had underlying conditions.

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Oregon reports 540 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases, 1 new death - Tillamook Headlight-Herald

New wave of COVID-19 infection threatens Costa Rica tourist revival – Reuters

May 4, 2021

Costa Rica's internationally renowned green escapes are likely to suffer through a second year of costly tourist hesitancy as the spread of the pandemic intensifies in the Central American nation, further battering the key travel sector.

Amid an April surge of COVID-19 infections, hospital beds are scarce in the tropical country. Its infection rate last week surpassed even tragedy-struck India and Brazil, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Given the lack of widespread testing, the real figures could be even worse.

Costa Rica's hoteliers and other travel businesses expected increasingly vaccinated travelers from top markets in North American and Europe to inject an infusion of cash for the industry after record-low visits last year, but that does not seem likely anymore.

"We're anticipating a much worse year than 2020," said Shirley Calvo, head of the tourism business chamber.

"If there's no government aid, we will have a cemetery of companies by the end of this year," she added.

Costa Rica's tourism sector in pre-pandemic 2019 was estimated at about $5 billion, or about 8.5% of country's GDP.

The central bank forecasts less than 800,000 foreign tourists visiting Costa Rica this year, which would mark a more than 20% slide from last year. And last year saw only a third of the international travelers who visited in 2019, or about 1.01 million, which was the fewest in more than two decades.

During the first three months of this year, which is typically high season, visits were down a whopping 76% compared to the same period last year as lockdown-weary travelers with money to spend resisted the urge to vacation among the country's vibrant wildlife and pristine beaches.

Tourism Minister Gustavo Segura acknowledged a worsening scenario.

"We trust we'll be able to control the situation for our population soon, but we can't deny that some people will decide to postpone visits," he told Reuters, though he stressed he did not have official figures on cancellations.

He argued the country's famed eco-tourism naturally promotes outdoor social distancing, and pitched the travel sector's high standards for hygiene.

To bolster his point, the minister pointed to official data for the first four months of the year showing that less than 1% of tourists tested positive for COVID-19 as they exited the country.

Even so, the U.S. government issued a fresh travel warning for Costa Rica on April 20, citing a "very high level" of infections.

Local authorities responded by ordering new restrictions on activities and some businesses during the first week of May, but at the same time exempting hotels, beaches as well as most national parks in the hopes of nudging reluctant travelers.

But those tourist-friendly moves have yet to stop the bleeding, said Rolando Campos, local head of sales for Swiss Travel and owner of a boutique hotel in the mountains of Naranjo, about 30 miles (48 km), northwest of the capital.

"Four groups of between 20 and 30 people from the United States were coming in June," he said.

"But they've already canceled their trips."

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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New wave of COVID-19 infection threatens Costa Rica tourist revival - Reuters

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