Category: Covid-19

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I took 5 COVID-19 tests to go to Hawaii, and it was worth it – The Points Guy

April 12, 2021

I took 5 COVID-19 tests to go to Hawaii, and it was worth it

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I took 5 COVID-19 tests to go to Hawaii, and it was worth it - The Points Guy

If you travel far for first COVID-19 vaccination shot, is it OK to get second shot closer to home? – Chicago Tribune

April 12, 2021

Im tired of seeing people say they have two or more appointments scheduled for themselves at different locations, and that theyre going to pick whatever is more convenient for them and cancel the rest, one member posted on the site. This group is filled with people who cant find appointments. No one should be scheduling themselves for more than one. Plus, this HAS to be causing havoc on scheduling systems.

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If you travel far for first COVID-19 vaccination shot, is it OK to get second shot closer to home? - Chicago Tribune

Baker says two million people will be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 in Mass. by end of week – The Boston Globe

April 12, 2021

Governor Charlie Baker said Monday that the state hopes to pass 2 million people fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by the end of the week, even as Massachusetts deals with a temporary shortage of single-shot Johnson & Johnson doses.

Baker made the comments during a briefing in Worcester following a tour of a local vaccination site, at the Family Health Center of Worcester.

And as I said many times, and I will continue to say, we have the infrastructure to administer a lot more vaccine than weve actually got, Baker said. But unfortunately, weve been told by the federal government that shipments, especially respect to the J&J vaccine, will be much lower this week after we received a one-time increase last week.

The governor said officials continue to hope that the federal governments increases with regard to vaccine supply generally and especially with respect to J&J, to get resolved and that the supply numbers, not just here in Massachusetts but around the rest of the country, get to the point where they can actually meet demand.

Baker reiterated that the vaccine saves lives and that people should get it once theyre eligible. So far 1.7 million people have been fully vaccinated in the state.

And on the question of the Johnson & Johnson shot, Baker said his team will touch base with the federal government again Tuesday.

We have a call tomorrow, and hopefully [theyll] shed a little more light on what the plan is for the J&J vaccine after this week and next, Baker said. Obviously you go from 100,000 doses, which created all kinds of opportunities to use that one dose in a variety of strategic ways, to 12,000 to four [thousand] makes it really hard to create a sustainable program with this. And what I think all of us are hoping happens is that we can get into, as a country, the same kind of rhythm on the one-dose J&J that weve been in for about a month now.

He said he hopes the weekly shipments remain consistent going forward.

Whatever the number is going to be, just stay there, Baker said, adding that he hopes the allotment remains consistent whether its anywhere from between 30,000 or 60,000 each week.

And Ive said several times that, you know, supply will be an issue. But I do believe that ... by the time we get to Memorial Day a significant number of people in Massachusetts will have been vaccinated, Baker said.

Family Health Center President and CEO Louis Brady also briefed reporters and said his organization has been battling the pandemic on the front lines and has long been dedicated to serving local residents.

I want to acknowledge that we at the health center have been committed to this for 49 years, that we have been working to ensure access and equity and making sure that anyone and everyone who wants healthcare can achieve it, Brady said.

He said his center felt that its important that our folks have access to this vaccine if were going to get any traction on rebuffing the pandemic. ... Were very pleased that we are now able to access the federal supply, and thats a critical component to the supply chain opening up.

This is a breaking news story that will be updated.

Travis Andersen can be reached at travis.andersen@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @TAGlobe.

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Baker says two million people will be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 in Mass. by end of week - The Boston Globe

Four new deaths from COVID-19 in Wisconsin; 23.8% fully vaccinated – WKOW

April 11, 2021

MADISON (WKOW) -- Wisconsin reported four new deaths due to COVID-19 on Saturday, according to the latest numbers from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

Deaths for each day arereported by DHS HERE.

DHS also reported 60 people were newly hospitalized.

As of Saturday afternoon, 283COVID-19 patientswere being treated in Wisconsin hospitals, down seven from the day prior.

Of those, 72 are in the ICU, down two from the day before,according to the Wisconsin Hospital Association.

There have been 804 positive COVID-19 tests since yesterday in Wisconsin and 3,610 negative results.

(CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL DHS DASHBOARD)

The Department of Health Servicesdashboardshows the seven-day average of positive tests.(CHART)

(App users, see the daily reports and charts HERE.)

Of all positive cases reported since the pandemic began, 569,194, or 97.4 percent, are considered recovered.

As of Saturday, a total of 3,471,590 vaccines have been administered throughout Wisconsin.

So far, 36.6 percent of Wisconsinites have gotten at least one dose of the vaccine, and 23.8 percent of the state has complete the vaccine series.

Vaccination numbers can change on a rolling basis as the state gets more data each day.

DHS has a county-level dashboard to assess the COVID-19 activity levelin counties and Healthcare Emergency Readiness Coalition regions that measure what DHS calls the burden in each county.View the dashboard HERE.

The Wisconsin Department of Health Services updates the statistics each dayon its website around 2 p.m.

(Our entire coronavirus coverage is available here.)

The new strain of the coronavirus causes the disease COVID-19. Symptoms include cough, fever and shortness of breath. A full list of symptoms is available onthe Centers for Disease Control website.

In severe cases, pneumonia can develop. Those most at risk include the elderly, people with heart or lung disease as well as anyone at greater risk of infection.

For most, the virus is mild, presenting similarly to a common cold or the flu.

Anyone who thinks they may have the disease should call ahead to a hospital or clinic before going in for a diagnosis. Doing so gives the staff time to take the proper precautions so the virus does not spread.

Those needing emergency medical services should continue to use 911.

(County by county results are available here).

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Four new deaths from COVID-19 in Wisconsin; 23.8% fully vaccinated - WKOW

Taking this step after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine makes a difference, CDC says – WANE

April 11, 2021

by: Kaylee DeWitt, Nexstar Media Wire

FILE In this Jan. 18, 2021, file photo, a vial of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine against COVID-19 is prepared at a vaccination center of the 3rd district, in Paris. Japans COVID-19 vaccinations are beginning Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2021, after the government granted belated first approval to a shot co-developed by Pfizer Inc. that the United States and many other countries started using two months ago.(AP Photo/Francois Mori, File)

(KTVX) Millions of vaccine shots have been given across the U.S., and as that number grows, there is the potential for researchers to learn more about how the vaccine affects peoples health.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is currently tracking any side effects of receiving the vaccine through a tool called v-safe.

No, COVID-19 vaccine patients are not being injected with a microchip

V-safe is a tool that can be accessed using a smartphone and allows users to track their health after getting the vaccine and communicate any side effects to the CDC. Anyone who has been vaccinated within the last six weeks can participate, according to CDC.

Once you get your COVID-19 vaccine, you can enroll in v-safe. You just use your smartphone and those places that are administering the vaccination will give you a handout to tell you how to do that, Kayla Rypien, Early Childhood Coordinator Utah Immunization Program, explains.

Participation is voluntary. You can opt out at any time, but what this does is you receive text messages from them in the afternoon, and they will ask you how youre feeling. And theres just a few pretty easy questions that you answer.

The app sends text messages and web surveys to check in with the users health following the vaccine. Users can inform the CDC about any side effects they may experience after the vaccine, and depending on the side effects, they may receive a call from CDC personnel checking on them and to gather more information.

V-safe will also send users a reminder to get the second COVID-19 vaccine dose. The app is not for rescheduling, scheduling, or canceling vaccine appointments, CDC says.

What should and shouldnt I do after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine?

According to Rypien, if any questions arise from side effects that people experience, the app will immediately alert VAERS, which stands for Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, and is run by the FDA and CDC. She says v-safe is a faster way of getting reports of adverse events to them.

A VAERS customer service representative will contact the person and decide if a VAERS report needs to be filled out for the adverse event. So its just a faster way of alerting them. Anybody can report a vaccine adverse event through VAERS, but its a faster way of alerting VAERS because not everybody knows to do that, she says.

A CDC handout about the online tool says that participation in v-safe helps keep COVID-19 vaccines safe. Rypien says that after people receive the vaccine, if they dont receive any information about v-safe, they should ask. They may be provided with a QR scanner so they can just bring v-safe up on their phone.

Health officials track safety as COVID-19 vaccines roll out

The handout states that text messages from v-safe begin arriving around 2 p.m. To opt-out, text STOP and to opt back in, text START. V-safe will send a text message every day to ask how you are doing throughout the first week following the vaccine.

Check-in messages will continue once a week for up to five weeks afterward. Questions take less than five minutes to answer. After participants receive the second dose of the vaccine, they will be prompted to begin a new check-in process to monitor side effects from the second dose. Participants can also expect to receive check-ins at the three, six, and 12-month marks following the vaccine.

Rypien says vaccine recipients have to wait 15 minutes after receiving the vaccine anyway, so that is a great time to fill out information for the app.

All personal information is protected and will be kept confidential, the handout states. Visit cdc.gov to learn how to register for v-safe.

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Taking this step after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine makes a difference, CDC says - WANE

COVID-19 Daily Update 4-10-2021 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

April 11, 2021

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of April 10, 2021, there have been 2,541,058 total confirmatory laboratory results received for COVID-19, with 145,754 total cases and 2,742 total deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of a 74-year old female from Kanawha County, a 62-year old female from Ohio County, a 65-year old female from Taylor County, a 66-year old female from Kanawha County, and a 73-year old female from Harrison County.

In the last 24 hours, we have lost another five West Virginians. Each loss is a heartbreak to a family and to our state. I urge you to remember your actions for safety result in saving the lives of your family, neighbors and friends, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary.

CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (1,329), Berkeley (11,196), Boone (1,820), Braxton (849), Brooke (2,084), Cabell (8,529), Calhoun (261), Clay (428), Doddridge (531), Fayette (3,166), Gilmer (733), Grant (1,221), Greenbrier (2,560), Hampshire (1,662), Hancock (2,671), Hardy (1,422), Harrison (5,296), Jackson (1,860), Jefferson (4,208), Kanawha (13,643), Lewis (1,122), Lincoln (1,377), Logan (2,976), Marion (4,038), Marshall (3,223), Mason (1,915), McDowell (1,449), Mercer (4,467), Mineral (2,711), Mingo (2,366), Monongalia (8,830), Monroe (1,042), Morgan (1,049), Nicholas (1,436), Ohio (3,962), Pendleton (675), Pleasants (826), Pocahontas (627), Preston (2,777), Putnam (4,699), Raleigh (5,904), Randolph (2,477), Ritchie (650), Roane (561), Summers (742), Taylor (1,175), Tucker (521), Tyler (668), Upshur (1,806), Wayne (2,788), Webster (453), Wetzel (1,203), Wirt (371), Wood (7,531), Wyoming (1,868).

Delays may be experienced with the reporting of information from the local health department to DHHR. As case surveillance continues at the local health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certain county may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individual in question may have crossed the state border to be tested.

Free COVID-19 testing is available today in Jefferson, Lewis, Putnam, and Raleigh counties:

Jefferson County

10:00 AM 2:00 PM, Hollywood Casino, 750 Hollywood Drive, Charles Town, WV

10:00 AM 2:00 PM, Shepherd University Wellness Center Parking Lot, 164 University Drive, Shepherdstown, WV

Lewis County

10:00 AM 5:00 PM, Stonewall Jackson Home Oxygen Therapy, 456 Market Place, Suite A, Weston, WV

Putnam County

9:00 AM 1:00 PM, Liberty Square, 613 Putnam Village, Hurricane, WV

Raleigh County

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COVID-19 Daily Update 4-10-2021 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

COVID-19: Study finds link with brain, mental health conditions – Medical News Today

April 11, 2021

From the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, there have been concerns that survivors may have an increased risk of neurological and mental health conditions.

Initially, these concerns were based on past experience with other coronaviruses, but suspected cases linked with COVID-19 soon followed.

There was also early evidence that the illness can affect the central nervous system.

Stay informed with live updates on the current COVID-19 outbreak and visit our coronavirus hub for more advice on prevention and treatment.

In November 2020, an observational study from scientists at the University of Oxford, in the United Kingdom, reported that survivors had a greater risk of developing mood and anxiety disorders in the 3 months after receiving a COVID-19 diagnosis.

The same researchers have now used the health records of more than 236,000 patients in the U.S. to estimate the risks of developing neurological and psychiatric conditions in the 6 months after a COVID-19 diagnosis.

Participants had received COVID-19 diagnoses between January 20 and December 13, 2020.

The researchers estimate that the overall incidence of neurological or mental health diagnoses was 34%.

In the 6 months after their COVID-19 diagnoses, 13% of the participants received their first diagnosis of a neurological or psychiatric condition.

The most common diagnoses were anxiety disorders, in 17% of all the participants, mood disorders, in 14%, substance misuse disorders, in 7%, and insomnia, in 5%.

The incidence of neurological disorders was lower 2.1% of all the participants experienced an ischemic stroke, 0.7% developed dementia, and 0.6% developed a brain hemorrhage.

This new study has been published in The Lancet Psychiatry.

Those who experienced more severe COVID-19 had a greater risk of mental health and neurological diagnoses.

Participants who experienced delirium, which is a sudden state of confusion, or encephalopathy, which is brain disease or damage, during their illnesses had the highest overall risk, at 62%, during the following 6 months.

Prof. Paul Harrison, the senior author of the study, says that the results confirm the high rates of mental health diagnoses after COVID-19.

He emphasized that while the incidence of neurological disorders was much lower than that of mental health conditions, this risk was still significant, particularly among people with severe COVID-19.

Prof. Harrison believes that resources to cope with the extra demands on primary and secondary care services should be provided.

Although the individual risks for most disorders are small, the effect across the whole population may be substantial for health and social care systems due to the scale of the pandemic, and [] many of these conditions are chronic, he adds.

The researchers analyzed data from the health records of 236,379 people with diagnosed COVID-19 in the TriNetX database.

They compared outcomes for this group with those of 105,579 people with influenza and 236,038 people with any respiratory tract infection diagnosed between January and December 2020. The latter two groups acted as controls.

To account for underlying health risks, the team matched the people in each group in terms of characteristics such as age, sex, ethnicity, and other ongoing health conditions.

The odds of having a diagnosis of a neurological or mental health condition were 44% higher after COVID-19 than after the flu. These odds were 16% higher after COVID-19 than after another respiratory tract infection.

Meanwhile, there was no clear evidence of more diagnoses of Parkinsonism or Guillain-Barr syndrome after COVID-19 than after the flu or other respiratory tract infections.

We now need to see what happens beyond 6 months, says Dr. Maxime Taquet, the lead author of the research paper.

The study cannot reveal the mechanisms involved but does point to the need for urgent research to identify these, with a view to preventing or treating them, he adds.

Dr. Musa Sami, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Nottingham, in the U.K., who was not involved in the research, agrees that the causes of the increased risk of neurological and mental health conditions were unclear.

He told the Science Media Centre, in London:

What we do not fully understand at the moment is the mechanism by which COVID-19 has this effect psychological stress, longer stays in hospital, and characteristics of the illness itself may play a part.

The authors of the present research acknowledge that studies like theirs, which are based on electronic health records, have some inherent weaknesses.

For example, the records may be incomplete, the diagnoses were not validated, and there was insufficient information about participants lifestyles and socioeconomic statuses.

In addition, the authors note that the flu and other respiratory tract infections are seasonal, so most occurred earlier in 2020 than the COVID-19 infections.

This may have led to an underestimation of the additional risks, as the majority of COVID-19 infections occurred when access to regular health services was limited by the pandemic.

In addition, some people in the control groups may have had undiagnosed COVID-19, which would also lead to an underestimation of the additional risks.

For live updates on the latest developments regarding the novel coronavirus and COVID-19, click here.

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COVID-19: Study finds link with brain, mental health conditions - Medical News Today

COVID-19 in South Dakota: 238 total new cases; Death toll remains at 1,946; Active cases at 2,413 – KELOLAND.com

April 11, 2021

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) -- A unique invention by a Tea chiropractor was recently used to help a COVID patient in the Sioux Falls ICU.

"It comes from our patients laying on the table, being in comfort, supporting the chest, supporting the abdomen," Dr. Chris Lane said.

Tea chiropractor Chris Lane developed the tummy cradle in 2015 for his pregnant patients to use at home.

"If you've been pregnant before, you'll know there's just not a lot of great positions that give you a lot of relief," Lane said.

Over the weekend, he found out this same position could also provide some much-needed relief for a COVID patient.

"I get a text that says hey its Shawn, I will pay you double if you will get me one of those things to the COVID ICU," Lane said. "He goes, I need to lay on my stomach and I think your pillow would be perfect."

Shawn Ericcson is a businessman who helped Lane figure out some manufacturing logistics for the tummy cradle, a product he remembered as he struggled to get rest on his stomach in the COVID ICU.

"He texted me six hours later and said Chris, I literally think this is saving my life right now," Lane said.

Ericcson's wife shared photos of him with the device on Facebook to let others in the same position know this is an option; she says it helped delay his intubation for several days.

"Shawn being a businessman, before they were going to put him into a medically induced coma, he had somebody in the room take pictures of him lying on his tummy cradle. He said, here you go, here's some pictures, hopefully this helps you out with Sanford getting this in here," Lane said.

Lane said his business partner had thought about using the product for COVID patients early last year, but they both forgot about the idea when their chiropractic business picked back up. Now he's in the process of getting the Tummy Cradle FDA registered to see if it can help more COVID patients in the hospital.

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COVID-19 in South Dakota: 238 total new cases; Death toll remains at 1,946; Active cases at 2,413 - KELOLAND.com

Many of Michigans Thumb residents are done with COVID-19 pandemic, even as virus rages like wildfire – MLive.com

April 11, 2021

Michigans Thumb region is the hottest of U.S. hot spots for coronavirus right now.

But at Marks Barbershop in the small downtown of Sandusky, masks are optional.

Just so you know, you dont have to wear that if you dont want to, owner Mark Heberling says as a masked visitor walks through door.

Across the street at the Downtown Deli, an sign at the entry says: If we see you without a mask, we will assume you have a medical condition and we will welcome inside.

The same philosophy holds true down the road at the Sandusky Family Diner, a former Big Boy that had its franchise terminated after violating states the indoor dining ban in November.

I didnt sign up to be the mask police, says restaurant owner Troy Tank, as a handful of maskless employees clean up after the lunch rush. Tank casually mentions one worker is home quarantining after a positive COVID test.

Big Boy restaurant in Michigans Thumb stays open, owner says hell fight cease-and-desist order

Past the diner is the Sandusky Walmart, where mask use has been 50/50, Tank says. After a coronavirus outbreak among workers, the Walmart was closed for part of the day Monday and all day Tuesday for deep cleaning.

Troy Tank talks with MLive about the COVID-19 outbreak in the Thumb area of Michigan and how it has affected his business Sandusky Family Diner, while at his diner in Sandusky, on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. (Mike Mulholland | MLive.com)Mike Mulholland | MLive.com

Sandusky, population 2,500, is the county seat of Sanilac County, 40 miles north of Port Huron and in the heart of the Thumb, a region known for its expansive Lake Huron shorelines, its rolling farmlands and its friendly small towns.

In recent weeks, its also become known for its coronavirus rates.

On Friday, five of the nations top 15 counties in per-capita coronavirus cases were in Michigans Thumb -- St. Clair, Huron, Sanilac, Tuscola and Lapeer.

Collectively, the five counties have reported 3,167 new cases of COVID-19 reported in the past seven days, a per capita daily rate of 1,216 cases per million residents -- six times the national average and eight times the benchmark for the states highest risk level of 150 cases per million residents.

The region also has an eye-popping 32% positivity rate as a seven-day on coronavirus diagnostic tests, more than six times the level considered safe.

These communities are literally on fire, said Dr. Mark Hamed, public medical director for Lapeer, Huron, Sanilac and Tuscola counties.

Patients wait for their COVID-19 vaccine dose at a Sanilac County Community Mental Health building in Sandusky, on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. The facility can handle about 300 vaccines a day. (Mike Mulholland | MLive.com)Mike Mulholland | MLive.com

Ask the regions health experts for the reasons behind the spike, they point to multiple factors.

Compared to the rest of Michigan, the Thumb was less impacted by previous surges, which meant fewer people had natural immunity coming into the spring. The area appears to be hard-hit by the new B.1.1.7. variant which is much more contagious and also more lethal. Restrictions implemented in November have been eased, increasing social interactions.

And fanning the flames is widespread resistance among local residents to coronavirus mitigation strategies such as masking and avoiding indoor gatherings, said Bryant Wilke, Sanilac County public health director.

Theres been a defiance towards masks, Wilke said, and I think it was because it got so political at the beginning of the pandemic. People said, We dont trust this. We never had to do it before, even through its been proven that it is a protective factor. People havent gotten over the hump to say, We need to do this, and now were seeing the causation of not doing it and thats the skyrocketing numbers in cases.

I compare us to a potential wildfire, Wilke said. Youve got fuel out there and the virus hadnt hit us that bad yet. Now its hitting us and were dealing with the U.K. variant, and its just moving through the population rapidly.

At the same time, Thumb residents -- like many in Michigan -- are thoroughly sick of more than a year of various coronavirus restrictions. They are ready to move on, whether the pandemic is over or not.

Were just f----- done with it, Heberling said.

At the beginning of the pandemic, Tank said, people were scared enough about the virus to pay attention to emergency orders issued by the state.

But people have moved beyond that now, he said. Theyve had it.

Joseph Schlichting, 29-year-old who grew up in Sanilac County and moved back just before the pandemic, He said hes not surprised that the Thumb has become an epicenter for coronavirus.

Some people who took the restrictions seriously saw the numbers go down, so they stopped working with the restrictions, he said. But I think theres a large group of people who just never followed the rules from Day 1.

Its been kind of eye-opening to see people that youve known all your life, people you would think would take this kind of risks seriously or take precautions seriously, but they dont or seem to just flat out think its a lie.

The politics of COVID

Hamed has long worried that the Thumb is vulnerable because of residents disdain for coronavirus restrictions.

Still, good luck and geographic isolation meant the Thumb wasnt hit as hard as other parts of Michigan in 2020.

I think that allowed people to discount how serious this is, Hamed said.

But as COVID-19 numbers came down statewide in January, the numbers dropped less in the Thumb.

So we were still at a higher level, higher than average, Hamed said. Than gradually as the variants became more predominant, combined with the behaviors on mask use and distancing, the numbers took off.

We kind of saw this coming, he said.

Fueling the attitude around the pandemic are the regions political leanings. In the November election, 72% of voters in Sanilac County cast their ballots for Donald Trump, one of the highest percentages in the state. In the five-county Thumb region, it was 67%.

Trumps popularity in the region certainly didnt help with public health messaging around COVID-19, considering the former presidents skepticism of the masks and the seriousness of the pandemic in general, Hamed said.

It created mixed messages that muddied the waters for a lot of rural Michigan where Trump is revered, Hamed said.

No question, echoes of Trumps talking points about the pandemic are apparent in talking to his supporters about the pandemic. That said, the rhetoric of conservatives has shifted over time. A year ago, some were suggesting the pandemic was a hoax, something no more harmful than seasonal flu. Today, skeptics are less likely to offer that argument.

I definitely dont think its a hoax, Tank said. I do think the virus is real. I know people who have had it. I know people who have gotten very sick from it. My father got it, and he was very sick. My brother, whos a couple years younger than me, relatively healthy guy in his 30s, had it quite bad.

But Tank is among those who question whether the mitigation strategies have made any difference.

We all just need to live our lives, he said. My opinion is that youve either had coronavirus or youre going to get it.

A sign posted on the door of Downtown Deli & Catering in downtown Sandusky states that if customers are without a mask, staff will assume they have a medical condition and do not need to wear one. (Mike Mulholland | MLive.com)Mike Mulholland | MLive.com

He points to states such as Florida that have far less restrictions than Michigan and currently lower caseloads. In his reading on the topic, he said, it appears that coronavirus particles are too small to be contained by cloth masks. Hes highly skeptical that indoor dining contributes to coronavirus transmission rates. The vaccine makes him a little nervous and he questions whether it really works.

Tank said he greatly resents what he feels is government overreach. He sees Gov. Gretchen Whitmer as extremely power hungry who is just using the pandemic as an excuse to be an authoritative leader. He especially doesnt trust government officials after a November election that Tank is convinced was stolen from Trump.

Another thing thats fueled his skepticism, he said, is the changing advisories from the federal Centers for Disease Control.

One day, a mask is great, and the next day, its not great. One day, you should be six feet apart. The next day, its three feet, he said. Theyre just all over the map. So when the people who are supposed to be the professionals are so unclear, that kind of leaves enough doubt in my mind to where Im just going do what I feel is best for me and my family.

Were strong. Were healthy. We take care of ourselves and do the proper things that I think prevents us from getting sick, he said.

That fact that more than a year after the pandemic started, the state is still under emergency orders proves to Tank that experts really dont know what theyre doing.

It started out as two weeks to flatten the curve and here we are, 13 months later, he said.

Like Tank, Heberling said that he doesnt question whether the virus is real. But he does think the pandemic has been grossly mismanaged.

Mark Heberling poses for a photo at his business, Mark's Barber Shop, in Sandusky, on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. (Mike Mulholland | MLive.com)Mike Mulholland | MLive.com

On a mirror in Heberlings barbershop is a sticker that reads MI COVID POW.

Hes scornful of lockdowns and mask use, saying keeping people indoors and masked has hurt their immune systems. You need fresh air in your lungs every day, he said. And people are constantly touching their masks, so theyre transporting bacteria to the next thing they touch.

Heberling also thinks the United States has ignored medications such as hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin as coronavirus treatments. I think there are medications out there if used early on could have greatly decreased the number of cases, he said.

Hamed is clearly frustrated by the misinformation being passed around.

Because COVID-19 is a new disease, the science is evolving and advisories have changed as experts have learned more, he said. But its clear by now that masking reduces transmission rates, as do other mitigation strategies such as a restrictions on indoor dining. Researchers have yet to come up with medications that can prevent coronavirus. The vaccines have proven to be highly safe and effective.

As for the emphasis on individual liberty, thats fine when the individual decisions affect you and only you, Hamed said. But when battling a highly contagious, lethal disease, you have to be mindful of others. When it involves decisions that impact others around you -- your employees, your colleagues, your family members -- that changes the dynamics entirely.

A sense of urgency

But even as people such as Tank and Heberling say theyre done with governmental attempts to address the pandemic, the medical professionals on the frontline in the Thumb see a deepening crisis.

A big concern is that COVID-19 variants seem to be spreading infection more rapidly and causing more serious illness.

Anecdotally, were seeing people are getting sick from teenagers to 50-year-olds in age brackets where they didnt get that sick before, Wilke said. Now theyre getting sick and were seeing more hospitalizations.

In his daily conversations with the countys communicable disease nurse, Wilke said, shes reporting that increase in contagion.

At the beginning of the pandemic, one or two people in the family may have gotten COVID, Wilke said. Now were seeing the entire family get it, because its so contagious.

His contagious disease nurse also is reporting that some people are catching COVID for the second time, Wilke said.

Current trends upend the idea that communities simply need strategies to protect the elderly and those with serious health conditions, Hamed said. The fact is, were seeing a lot of otherwise healthy people get very sick. So its no longer just about protecting the vulnerable.

Hamed said he also worries about the strain on hospital resources, for both COVID and non-COVID patients. At one point this week, he said, it took five hours for the emergency department at the small Sandusky hospital to find an inpatient bed for a patient because every one of our local hospitals that accept patients was absolutely full.

So this is a reality that we need to accept, Hamed said. Its affecting us all. It really is.

Wilke said that hes convinced the road out of this current surge is through vaccinations, and hes trying to vaccinate as many Sanilac County residents as fast as he can.

But theres resistance on that front, too: 31% of adults in Sanilac County and 33% in the five-county Thumb region have gotten at least one vaccine dose so far compared to a state average of 39%.

Heberling, the Sandusky barber, is among those suspicious of COVID-19 vaccines.

Its not a vaccine thats been proven. Its basically in test form now, he said. I know very few people who have gotten the vaccine. I bet 80% of people in this community wont get it.

Wilke acknowledges that many are hesitant to get the vaccine. But he also sees that hesitance eroding. He pointed to the Sanilac County Sheriffs Office. During the first vaccine clinic for the department, about 10 deputies come through. The next time, another 10 signed up. And then another 10 the next time, he said. So it takes a little time for people to get used to the idea.

Initially, there was quite a bit of hesitance, Hamed said. Were seeing less now. I think the reasons are twofold: I think people are seeing others getting vaccines without developing weird side effects, and people also are seeing others get very sick with this illness.

At the vaccination clinic

Its a hopeful sign, Wilke said, that he had no trouble filling up the schedule for several mass vaccination clinics being held in Sanilac County this past week.

Jennifer Gierman, a stay-at-home mother, was among those at a vaccination clinic Tuesday,.

Im pretty excited about getting her first shot of the Moderna vaccine, said Gierman, who is 49.

Gierman said shes taken the pandemic much more seriously than many others in the Thumb. I havent seen my mom or dad since Christmas, she said. My daughter calls me COVID mom because theres friends where shes very close to them and we dont allow them in the house.

Its dismaying to see the dismissive attitude that many have adopted about the pandemic, she said.

I dont feel like wearing a mask is a political thing. I think its a respect thing, she said. Yet here you get looks for wearing a mask.

And like at school, my younger daughter said that in the beginning, the school was good about enforcing the masks but kids push the limits and by the end of the day theyre wearing them as chin diapers, Gierman said. For sure, teenagers are going to push boundaries no matter what. But they also mimic what they see at home and in the community.

Even at this point, with community people getting sick and hospitalized, she said, people still dont take seriously. I dont know what it takes to convince them.

Hamed is more optimistic.

Were getting hit hard right now, and I think behaviors definitely will change, he said. Thumb residents care a lot about each other. When their neighbors are sick, when theyre hospitalized, thats a motivator right there. These are small communities and they all know each other.

What were doing right now is focusing on prevention, treatment and education. We think having reliable information from reliable sources can be key to combatting misinformation, Hamed said. I think people are going to come out of this knowing that the information they heard from the people who downplayed it was absolutely false.

People accuse us of trying to feed a narrative, trying to fix a narrative, Hamed said. Thats no narrative to fix. Lets save lives.

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Many of Michigans Thumb residents are done with COVID-19 pandemic, even as virus rages like wildfire - MLive.com

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