Category: Covid-19

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FAA: Anyone returning to US must show negative COVID-19 test or proof of recovery – KCTV Kansas City

March 12, 2021

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FAA: Anyone returning to US must show negative COVID-19 test or proof of recovery - KCTV Kansas City

How Washington’s COVID-19 vaccination numbers compare to other states – KING5.com

March 12, 2021

The CDC data puts Washington at 27th out of 50 states with 19.3% of the population receiving at least one shot of vaccine. Health officials say that's not bad.

SEATTLE Washingtons percentage of the population thats been vaccinated against COVID-19 is higher than the national average.

And that number is only expected to grow as the largest civilian-led vaccination site in the country opens here at Lumen Field this weekend.

We are continuing to make incredible progress on vaccines, said Dr. Umair Shah, State Secretary of Health.

Over 2 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been given and the goal of 45,000 doses in a day has been met in Washington. The progress is evident.

Really were trying to everything we can to get vaccines into the arms of Washingtonians as quickly as possible, Shah said.

So, heres how Washington compares to the rest of the country. According to data from the CDC, were ranked 27th out of all 50 states with 19.3% of the population receiving at least one dose of the vaccine.

The top state is New Mexico at 26.1%. The bottom state is Georgia with 13.4%

And what about our neighbors to the south and east? Oregon ranks 32nd with 18.6%. And closer to the bottom, ranking 44th, is Idaho, with 17.3%.

But what do all these numbers say about our state?

Dr. Ali Mokdad, with UWs Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, said Washington is doing well.

If you look at the West Coast for example, Washington is doing much better than California and then when you compare to other states and in the country, some states in the south, southeast are not going a great job getting the vaccines out as soon as they receive them, Mokdad said.

This actually puts us ahead of the average numbers across the country, Shah said.

While Washington is below half of the other states, we beat the national average for percentage of the population vaccinated by .5%.

While it is going well in Washington state, Mokdad says theres still a lot to be done.

Washington state could do better simply if people in Washington state remain vigilant until we reach herd immunity. Right now, were not vaccinating children because the vaccines are not authorized for children and we need to be very careful. And also, we need to address in Washington, some vaccine hesitancy, he said.

The site at Lumen Field is starting with 5,000 vaccinations a week but it has the capacity to 150,000 a week as soon as supply meets demand.

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How Washington's COVID-19 vaccination numbers compare to other states - KING5.com

Gov. Wolf and COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force Announce Targeted Vaccination Strategies – pa.gov

March 12, 2021

Commitment to Appointments for Seniors, Support of Frontline Workers, A Plan for a Path Forward

Governor Tom Wolf and members of the COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force announced another bi-partisan effort to complete COVID phase 1A vaccinations first, set up mass vaccination clinics with regionally supplied plans to inform allocations, and vaccinate frontline workers.

The efforts of the COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force are making significant headway in getting more people vaccinated, Gov. Wolf said. The special initiative the Task Force agreed on last week to vaccinate educators, school staff, and early childhood educators is well underway, and we are making incredible progress vaccinating Pennsylvanians eligible in Phase 1A. These new initiatives will move us even further in the states vaccinate rollout.

Last night, President JoeBiden laid out a bold plan for our country with a goal of making every American adult eligible to receive a vaccine by May 1. My administration is taking aggressive steps to meet that timeline, and we are fortunate to have the leadership and partnership of President Biden and his administration as we work to protect the people of Pennsylvania.

Gov. Wolf outlined the key, significant progress the state is making in rolling out vaccine. Last month, the Acting Secretary of Health issued anorderdirecting vaccine providers administration of COVID-19 vaccines to ensure that Pennsylvanians are vaccinated as quickly and efficiently as possible.

Since that order, the states hospital systems now have enough vaccine to partner with counties to create county vaccination sites, and the state has seen impressive improvements in its vaccine infrastructure and administration rates. Over the past month county vaccination rates are climbing, and many, including Westmoreland County and all collar counties in the Southeast, are at or above the statewide rate of 15 percent. Montgomery County is 5 percentage points above the statewide average for vaccination rates.

Nearly 1 million Pennsylvanians over 65 have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, and more than 72,000 people are being vaccinated every single day in Pennsylvania.

And, as President Biden mentioned last night, the state has been working with the federal government to set up 27 federal vaccine program sites in the commonwealth. Four of those sites are already participating in that program: three in Philadelphia and one in Lycoming County.

Todays announcement of plans by the task force focus include three key areas that augment the significant progress already made:

Our 1A population contains some of the most vulnerable Pennsylvanians, and it is crucial that these individuals get vaccinated as quickly as possible, Wolf said. The Secretary of Health will also be issuing an Order that will require vaccine providers to make best efforts to schedule all 1A appointments by the end of the month. To assist them in achieving this goal, we will be providing greater visibility into their future allocations. This will allow them to schedule appointments with confidence in having sufficient supply to keep those appointments.

Counties will be encouraged to work within their region to submit a proposal for a mass vaccination clinic, community vaccination clinics, mobile clinics or other strategy to vaccinate their regions currently eligible individuals. The Task Force will review proposals and determine those that best demonstrate an ability to support a mass vaccination clinic.

We know that county leaders and emergency management organizations have been working hard to put plans in place and make preparations for vaccination sites in their communities, Gov. Wolf said. We will be working closely with the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania to create plans for these regional vaccine clinics.

Our goal in establishing special vaccination initiatives is to help protect frontline, essential workers and their communities, Gov. Wolf said. These are the Pennsylvanians who have had no choice but to continue serving our commonwealth during this pandemic. These workers, their families, and entire communities will be safer if they are vaccinated as quickly as possible.

Using the J&J supply to support regionally planned and facilitated mass vaccination sites, as well as quickly completing vaccine missions for critical frontline workers means more shots in arms while helping our seniors secure appointments and receive their vaccine before more broadly opening up to additional populations.

This commitment today from the Administration will allow Pennsylvania to quickly achieve herd immunity, reopen our economy, and return to regular life, said Sen. Ryan Aument.

We are committed to vaccinating our neighbors who are seniors in the next few weeks, Sen. Art Haywood said.Plus, we are taking a big step to vaccinate black, brown and white people in frontline jobs. The end is in sight.

Last week, we as a taskforce announced a special initiative that prioritized the health and safety of our teachers and our students across the commonwealth, said Rep. Bridget Malloy Kosierowski. By securing and allocating the 94,600 doses of Johnson & Johnson Vaccines, educators, school staff, and early childhood educators across Pennsylvania are currently being vaccinated-paving a way to get our children safely back into the classrooms.

With 200,000 J&J weekly doses coming to Pennsylvania starting the week of March 28 and our supply of Moderna and Pfizer continuing to increase weekly, todays announcement is another special initiative that again is a step in the right direction to not only protect our most vulnerable population but also speed up our vaccine rollout. Through the regional vaccination clinics, we will achieve greater access for seniors who have been struggling to find available doses and a more equitable distribution by allowing communities to direct doses to their most vulnerable residents and in Aprilwe will also be able to target our frontline, essential workers who have had no choice but to continue serving our commonwealth amidst this pandemic.

While it has been a bumpy road for the Commonwealth with its vaccine administration rollout, Im confident we are now on the right path, said Rep. Tim ONeal. I know concerns still exist surrounding vaccine supply and distribution, but todays announcement is another important step forward. Im pleased we have made enough substantial progress with getting those in Group 1A vaccinated that our essential workers and first responders will soon be able to get the vaccine.

Gov. Wolf explained that the Task Force is still working through the details of these next special initiatives and will announce more information before additional Johnson & Johnson allocations become available on March 28.

We have work to do to get the infrastructure in place to vaccinate these populations, which is why were starting the process now, Gov. Wolf said. We should all be excited about the fact that our vaccine allocations are increasing.

Thanks to the COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force legislative members for their partnership in addressing the challenges of the vaccine rollout and thanks to the many vaccine providers across the commonwealth. Without the efforts of on-the-ground vaccine providers, none of this would be possible.

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Gov. Wolf and COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force Announce Targeted Vaccination Strategies - pa.gov

One year of COVID-19 on the South Shore: What weve learned; doctors reflect – The Patriot Ledger

March 12, 2021

First of five parts.

More than a year ago, on March 2, the state announced that a woman from Norfolk County had the second presumptive case of COVID-19 in Massachusetts. In her 20s, she had just come back from traveling to Italy, state officials said. Health officials at the time said the risk for the general population was low.

Nine days later, on March 11,the World Health Organization declaredCOVID-19 a global pandemic. Two days after that,Gov. Charlie Baker closed local schoolsand banned indoor dining. By March 23, the state had a stay-at-home order in place andbusinesses that were not consideredessential were told to close.

Since then, more than 525,000 people in the United States have died because of COVID-19, and no one's life looks like it did one year ago. Favorite restaurants have shuttered, kids have missed out on a year of being in classrooms full time, jobs were lost, weddings and high school proms were canceledand grandparents and loved onesdied alone.

A nurse helps a nursing home resident have a virtual visit with a family member during the COVID-19 pandemic.AARP Photo

MORE:Timeline: Looking back at one year of COVID in Massachusetts

Many people are working from home, but others dont have the luxury. People are more isolated, families have missed important milestonesand birthdays, anniversaries and holidays have been celebrated alone.

A year of COVID-19 haswrought unprecedented upheaval on the South Shore and around the world, and experts say the ramifications will be felt for years.

For Joyce Babineau, the hardest part of her day now is driving home to New Bedfordfrom her jobat Stop & Shop to an empty house. Her husband, Paul Babineau, is not there to greet her, ask about her day or make her coffee.

Paul Babineau, 76, died from COVID-19 in October, one of more than 16,000 peoplekilled by the virus in Massachusetts.

He was admitted into the hospital. I was quarantined at home. So of course we couldn't see each other, Joyce Babineau said. My husband ended up dying alone.

MORE:In Kingston, a community candle lighting honors COVID-19 victims

Babineau is a scanning coordinator at the Stop & Shop in Dartmouth, and a union steward for United Food and Commercial Workers Local 328, which represents Stop & Shop workers from Quincy to Rhode Island.

She said when the pandemic started, she was afraid because of her husbands health.

I was afraid that I would bring it home to my husband. My husband's 76 years old and he's retired and he hadhealth issues, Babineau said. So my fear was always that I would end up bringing it home, which I did. It's something that I have a very hard time living with because I know I gave it to my husband.

Babineau said she believes she got sick from a co-worker who came to work with the virus.

Babineau said she first met her husband decades ago, when he was playing guitar in a band. She fell for the guitar player.

They were married for nearly 40 years.

I was going to retire at the end of the year, so we could spend time and travel together. But now I have nothing, she said.

Studies have shown that life in lockdown and thefear and nervousness that come with it have taken a toll on the nations mental health. A study from Boston University showed that symptoms of depression were three times more prevalent during the pandemic in a group of more than 1,400 participants. Lower income andhaving less than $5,000 in savings were associated with a greater riskfor depression, the study found.

The U.S. Census Bureau, in collaboration with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, hasalso been monitoring depression and anxiety in U.S. households amid the pandemic. The federal bureaus estimatethat about 11 percent of American adults had symptoms of anxiety disorder or depressive disorder before the pandemic. The number of people expressing symptoms of those mental health issues rose above 42 percent in December.

Brenda Burke of Holbrook and husband Mike Flagg wave to her mom Mary, 91, through her window at the Queen Anne Nursing Home in Hingham.Greg Derr

What we're seeing is a significant increase in depression and anxiety, said Luana Marques, a clinical psychologist at Massachusetts General Hospital and a professor at Harvard Medical School. We're also seeing reports of first responders having symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and acute stress disorder.

Marques said the length of the pandemic, something people may not have prepared for mentally, may be a factor in the stress.

MORE:Curry College students, staff take part in COVID-19 research study

I think people sort of adjusted as quickly as they possibly could, but it's become a marathon with no end in sight, Marques said. The chronic stress that the brain is facing is certainly leading to feeling emotionally exhausted, feeling like it's hard to keep going, and some of the protective factors like social support, of course, they're not there to the extent that they had been before. I am seeing a decrease in resilience for the majority of people.

Dr. NassirGhaemi,a professor of psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine, said social isolation is a chief factor in rising levels of depression.

When COVID isolates Duxbury seniors, a new Pea Pods group creates a family

Duxbury seniors left isolated and lonely by the pandemic form new Pea Pods group 'like family'

Sue Scheible, The Patriot Ledger

"Social distancing means social isolation,"Ghaemi said. "There's a huge literature in medical research for decades that social isolation is associated with medical and psychiatric illnesses. It increases the risk of diabetes, heart disease, obesity among medical illnesses."

Ghaemi said that increased harm,like the side effects of depression, could have a major impact spread over such a wide swath of people.

"The thing about public health is it only takes a small, negative harm, when applied to the large population, to give you real, noticeable, social harms," Ghaemi said. "When half the population is a little depressed, that means that the people who are already a little depressed at the extremes are going to get more non-functional, whereas before maybe they might've handled it. That's the issue."

MORE:A GOOD AGE: Duxbury's COVID-alone seniors become peas in a pod

Marques said right now she is focusing on prevention and building resilience.

Will there be long-term effects? Absolutely. What do they look like? I don't think we can predict, Marques said.

CynthiaSierra, the chief executive officer of Manet Health Community Health Center, said the beginning of the pandemicgalvanized the state and its health systems' emergency preparedness to deal with a threat that they had spent years getting ready for.

The best-laid plans, however, don't always turn out as expected, she said.

We realized very, very early on, in January into early February, that we need to make greater investments in personal protective equipment and disinfection supplies, Sierra said. "We are a very fiscally disciplined charitable community health center, so we didn't have a lot of surplus.

Manet Community Health Center is a nonprofit health and social services provider based in Quincy, Hull and Taunton. It has served the South Shore for more than 40years. Sierra said her team faced supply shortages andhad to bolster its telehealth offerings and communication effortsquickly to help address the pandemic.

Mayor Thomas Koch and Cynthia Sierra at the Manet Community Health Center's Houghs Neck location in Quincy.Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger

MORE:New Best Buy Health services for Apple Watch aim to keep older adults safe and independent

We learned early on that it was going to be (phone) calls. It was going to be person-to-person outreach. It was going to be video conference meetings, Sierra said. It was a lesson learned for us in a very positive way to be a little bit less electronic because that's how you're really going to be able to communicate the most pressing priorities and then also leave room for engagement and questions.

She said the role of a community health center that treats people regardless of their ability to paywas vital during the pandemic. Sierra said it was especially important in the early days of last March to ramp up testing.

"We had to find those pathways to do the testing because our principal role was to be a shock absorber for the hospitals, Sierra said. If we could screen and test and educate and isolate or quarantine, if necessary, patients and (other people), we're contributing to the broader health of the community by stopping the spread, but also keeping those hospitals and those hospital emergency departments, in particular, available and open."

Manet Community Health Center's Dr. Lily Yung, talks with 102-year-old Quincy resident Dorothea Neal as she gets her first COVID vaccine.Lisa Aimola, City of Quincy in partnership with Manet

Dr. Richard Nesto, chief medical officer of Beth Israel Lahey Health, said that a lesson he took away from the pandemic was the need for a more centralized response.

I never, a year ago got up in the morning and said to myself, what if we have a pandemic? ... And yet it's not like this hasn't happened before in recent memory to a lesser degree, like with H1N1, for instance," Nesto said. There needs to be a more centralized, dedicated effort for us to get ahead of these things. Because I think the hallmark of the spring was the lack of preparedness for something that everyone said is a once in a lifetime that actually may not be anymore.

MORE:BID-Plymouth hospital to start giving staff COVID-19 vaccine

Nesto said that his health system, which includes hospitals in Boston, Needham, Milton and Plymouth, essentially turned into one large hospital to deal with the pandemic.

We made all of the beds from Plymouth to Newburyport available to any patient in our geography that needed a hospital bed, Nest said. We actually broke down traditional referral patterns that patients and providers were used to.

He said each hospital also had to adjust to accepting many more emergency patients than usual.

Emergency room nurse Megan Cataldo of Marshfield gets a computer ready in the treatment area of South Shore Hospital's mobile integrated health unit on Tuesday, March 17, 2020.Greg Derr

We had to learn how to expand our hospitals to accommodate a huge influx of sick patients through our emergency rooms, Nesto said. Ordinarily, hospitals have many more patients because of elective surgeries and other procedures that are planned. That was a huge, huge hill to climb.

He said the pandemic also showcased the importance of community hospitals, which helped absorb many sick patients.

Dr. Jason Tracy,chief of emergency medicine at South Shore Hospital, said that besides the influx of patients and the need for personal protective gear, another big hurdle was the mysteries surrounding COVID-19.

I think the biggest issue that we grappled with was the unknown, and quite frankly, the very deep fear of our own personal safety and the safety of the staff taking care of our patients, Tracy said. It was coming and seeing patients and what that meant for me and others in terms of going home and seeing our families. Do we shower before we get into the house? Do we sleep in the basement away from our family members? All of the stuff that, again, fortunately, has become less of a concern, primarily through vaccination, but alsolearning more about the disease. But it was a very scary time in those early days."

Emergency Room Chief Dr. Jason Tracy stands in South Shore Health's auxiliary outdoor emergency room on Tuesday, March 17, 2020.Greg Derr

The hospital and South Shore Health's network faced the coronavirus crisis head-on byrelying on incident training done over the years in coordination with the federal government. The hospital set up an auxiliary outdoor emergency room in a tent and pivoted its mobile health unit to help with the pandemic.

The mobile unit, with trained paramedics, was set up before the pandemic for people who might not be able to make it to a hospital or doctors office. Administrators said the unit was a huge help because many patients were avoiding care because of the pandemic.

MORE:South Shore Healths mobile health care program takes off during COVID-19

You have a bunch of patients that have chronic diseases that typically we would manage pretty actively, whether that's in the primary care world or in a specialist's office, or there are patients that are here in the hospital frequently, and suddenly we weren't seeing any of them, said Dr. Kelly Lannutti, South Shore Healths chief of urgent care. I think we all recognized that we needed to do things differently for those patients, and I think for us, having mobile integrated health ready to go was obviously a huge blessing.

William Tollefsen, South Shore Healths vice chair of emergency medicine and urgent care, said they had one patient, a 95-year-old woman, who had been discharged from a nursing home with a wound that needed to be evaluated. She wouldnt come to see a doctor because of the pandemic, but did allow a paramedic to visit her and help assess the wound. He said she hadnt been enrolled in mobile health before the pandemic andserves as an example of how the service adapted.

MORE:Mental health care without an appointment? Hospitals are pushed to improve access

Tollefsen said one thing the pandemic reinforced was the importance of preventive care. He said that many of the non-COVIDpatients who came in would be in worse shape than they would be before the pandemic because they delayed seeking help.

While we had almost 50 percent of the number of patients in the emergency department, the acuity of the patients that we had with non-COVID illness was palpable, Tollefsen said. We had a significant increase in sudden cardiac death. We had increases in patients with sepsis. We had increases in other types of illnesses.

The first COVID-19 vaccine arrived at South Shore Hospital on Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020.Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger

Tracy said despite all the planning and success in fightingthe pandemic, COVID-19 has still taken an immense toll on the staff.

One of the roles that I have here is going and rounding on the floors and interacting with the staff on these COVID-dedicated areas, and the tears that come from people's eyes as they start to talk about their day, their week, their month, their year, is heartbreaking because people are sad. They have been really hurt by this. We've never had to manage a patient dying with a family member on Zoom, Tracy said. That's heartbreaking. And you could do that multiple times a day.

The state's vaccination efforts continue with 703,676 fully inoculated as of March 8. That's positive news. However, Tracy said there is still a lot to learn.

I still remain worried about what's to come. Until we can get to the point that our population is vaccinated, we're always going to be learning more about this. That's the one thing we've learned about this virus, is there's more to learn, Tracy said. As a system and as health care providers, we have to be nimble and understand that things are changing and going to continue to change. We are in this for the long haul. This is going to be our new normal. I think as we anticipate going into the future, there'll be some element of masking and a vaccination program and patients with COVID-19 in our system for a while to come. It will be here for a while.

MORE:Tracking COVID-19 vaccine distribution by state: How many people have been vaccinated in theUS?

On Monday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it was safe forfully vaccinated Americans to gather without masks or to visit a small group of unvaccinated family members so long as they weren't in a high-risk category.The agency said that fully vaccinated people should still use social distancing measures and masks in crowds and in public, however.

Tollefsen said going forward, people will have a lot more insight into their risk tolerance in terms of going to a packed restaurant or attendinga concert. He said people who live with a sick family member might continue to avoid crowds. Tollefsen said his own behavior as a physician will change.

Maryann Salvatore kisses her husband Mario through the protective plastic at the Dwyer Home in South Weymouth.Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger

I can't see walking into a room with a patient with respiratory distress or having some respiratory symptoms, now until forever, not wearing (personal protective equipment), Tollefsen said.

Lannutti said some elements of health care will also change. Telehealth, for example, will likely be a larger part of how people interact with doctors.

Sierra, from Manet Health, said the resiliency people have shown over the past year is a sign of hope.

It's definitely been a challenging year but it's also demonstrated the strength in the community and truly our ability to be tested and I think to rise to that call, Sierra said. I think in the end, honest to goodness, it's about the purity and the goodness of the community."

Joe Difazio can be reached at jdifazio@patriotledger.com. Follow him on Twitter @jldifazio.

Thanks to our subscribers, who help make this coverage possible.If you are not a subscriber, please consider supporting quality local journalism with a Patriot Ledger subscription.

The coronavirus pandemic upended the lives of everyone on the South Shore one year ago. From those in day care to those in nursing homes, no life looks the same today as it did in March2020. Dozens of local businesses have closed, hundreds of South Shore residents have died, thousands of students remain out of school and tens of thousands face unemployment. March 10 markedthe one-year anniversary of Gov. Charlie Baker's state of emergency order in response to the coronavirus pandemic, and we arelooking back on a year of chaos and confusion with this five-part series.

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One year of COVID-19 on the South Shore: What weve learned; doctors reflect - The Patriot Ledger

COVID-19 (coronavirus): Long-term effects – Mayo Clinic

March 11, 2021

COVID-19 (coronavirus): Long-term effects

COVID-19 symptoms can sometimes persist for months. The virus can damage the lungs, heart and brain, which increases the risk of long-term health problems.

Most people who have coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) recover completely within a few weeks. But some people even those who had mild versions of the disease continue to experience symptoms after their initial recovery.

These people sometimes describe themselves as "long haulers" and the condition has been called post-COVID-19 syndrome or "long COVID-19."

Older people and people with many serious medical conditions are the most likely to experience lingering COVID-19 symptoms, but even young, otherwise healthy people can feel unwell for weeks to months after infection. The most common signs and symptoms that linger over time include:

Other long-term signs and symptoms may include:

Although COVID-19 is seen as a disease that primarily affects the lungs, it can damage many other organs as well. This organ damage may increase the risk of long-term health problems. Organs that may be affected by COVID-19 include:

COVID-19 can make blood cells more likely to clump up and form clots. While large clots can cause heart attacks and strokes, much of the heart damage caused by COVID-19 is believed to stem from very small clots that block tiny blood vessels (capillaries) in the heart muscle.

Other parts of the body affected by blood clots include the lungs, legs, liver and kidneys. COVID-19 can also weaken blood vessels and cause them to leak, which contributes to potentially long-lasting problems with the liver and kidneys.

People who have severe symptoms of COVID-19 often have to be treated in a hospital's intensive care unit, with mechanical assistance such as ventilators to breathe. Simply surviving this experience can make a person more likely to later develop post-traumatic stress syndrome, depression and anxiety.

Because it's difficult to predict long-term outcomes from the new COVID-19 virus, scientists are looking at the long-term effects seen in related viruses, such as the virus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).

Many people who have recovered from SARS have gone on to develop chronic fatigue syndrome, a complex disorder characterized by extreme fatigue that worsens with physical or mental activity, but doesn't improve with rest. The same may be true for people who have had COVID-19.

Much is still unknown about how COVID-19 will affect people over time. However, researchers recommend that doctors closely monitor people who have had COVID-19 to see how their organs are functioning after recovery.

Many large medical centers are opening specialized clinics to provide care for people who have persistent symptoms or related illnesses after they recover from COVID-19.

It's important to remember that most people who have COVID-19 recover quickly. But the potentially long-lasting problems from COVID-19 make it even more important to reduce the spread of the disease by following precautions such as wearing masks, avoiding crowds and keeping hands clean.

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COVID-19 (coronavirus): Long-term effects - Mayo Clinic

COVID-19 Vaccine – Miami-Dade County

March 11, 2021

Miami-Dade County is coordinating closely with hospital and healthcare partners, the State of Florida, cities, and private partners to vaccinate members of our community against the coronavirus (COVID-19) as quickly, safely, and equitably as possible.

Vaccine UpdatesMiami-Dade Countys first federal vaccination site at Miami Dade College North Campus is now open 7 days a week from 7 a.m. 7 p.m. Walk-ins are accepted, appointments are not required. This site will vaccinate eligible individuals and CAN vaccinate individuals deemed extremely vulnerable to COVID-19 by a physician. Individuals will need to present a signed physicians certification form.

To learn more, visit the State of Florida's vaccine information website.

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COVID-19 Vaccine - Miami-Dade County

community marks the one-year anniversary of COVID-19 – COVID-19 Resource Center – University of Rochester

March 11, 2021

The University of Rochester community joined together in a moment of silence at noon Tuesday, March 9, to acknowledge the one-year mark of COVID-19. Faculty, staff, and students across the University paused to reflect on the ways the COVID-19 pandemic has touched the lives of members of the University and Rochester communities.

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community marks the one-year anniversary of COVID-19 - COVID-19 Resource Center - University of Rochester

Could Pollen Be Driving COVID-19 Infections? – WebMD

March 11, 2021

March 10, 2021 -- Scientists trying to understand the recurring waves of coronavirus infections around the globe say they've noticed a pattern: As pollen levels increased in outdoor air in 31 countries, COVID-19 cases accelerated.

Yet other recent studies point in the opposite direction, suggesting that peaks in pollen seasons coincide with a fall-off in the spread of some respiratory viruses, like COVID-19 and influenza. There's even some evidence that pollen may compete with the virus that causes COVID-19 and may help prevent infection.

So which is it? The answer may still be up in the air.

Doctors don't fully understand what makes some viruses like the ones that cause the flu to circulate in seasonal patterns.

There are, of course, many theories. These revolve around things like temperature and humidity viruses tend to prefer colder, drier air something that's thought to help them spread more easily in the winter months. People are exposed to less sunlight during the winter, as they spend more time indoors, and the earth points away from the sun, providing some natural shielding. That may play a role because ultraviolet light from the sun acts like a natural disinfectant and may help keep circulating viral levels down,and sunlight helps the body make vitamin D, which may help keep our immune responses strong.

Extreme temperatures both cold and hot also change our behavior, so that we spend more time cloistered indoors, where we can more easily cough and sneeze on each other and generally swap more germs.

The new study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, adds a new variable to this mix pollen. It relies on data from 248 airborne-pollen-monitoring sites in 31 countries. The study also took into account other effects, such as population density, temperature, humidity, and lockdown orders. The study authors found that when pollen in an area spiked, so did infections, after an average lag of about 4 days. The study authors say pollen seemed to account for, on average, 44% of the infection rate difference between countries.

They say pollen could be a culprit in respiratory infections, not because the viruses hitch a ride on pollen grains and travel into our mouth, eyes, and nose, but because pollen seems to perturb our immune system, even if a person isn't allergic to it.

"When we inhale pollen, they end up on our nasal mucosa and here, they diminish the expression of genes that are important for the defense against airborne viruses," study author Stefanie Gilles, PhD, chair of environmental medicine at the Technical University of Munich in Germany, said in a press conference.

In a study published last year, Gilles found that mice exposed to pollen made less interferon and other protective chemical signals to the immune system. Those then infected with a respiratory virus had more virus in their bodies compared with mice not exposed to pollen. She seemed to see the same effect in human volunteers.

The study authors think pollen may cause the body to drop its defenses against the airborne virus that causes COVID-19, too.

"If you're in a crowded room and other people are there that are asymptomatic, and you've just been breathing in pollen all day long, chances are that you're going to be more susceptible to the virus," says study author Lewis Ziska, PhD, a plant physiologist who studies pollen, climate change, and health at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health in New York City. "Having a mask is obviously really critical in that regard."

Masks do a great job of blocking pollen, so wearing one is even more important when pollen and viruses are floating around, he says.

Other researchers, however, say that, while the study raises some interesting questions, it can't prove that pollen is increasing COVID-19 infections.

"Just because two things happen at the same time doesn't mean that one causes the other," says Martijn Hoogeveen, PhD, a professor of technical sciences and environment at The Open University in the Netherlands.

Hoogeveen's recent study, published in Science of the Total Environment, found that the arrival of pollen season in the Netherlands coincides with the end of flu season, and that COVID-19 infection peaks tend to follow a similar pattern exactly the opposite of the PNAS study.

Another preprint study, which focused on the Chicago area, found the same thing as pollen climbs, flu cases drop. The researchers behind that study think pollen may actually compete with viruses in our airways, helping to block them from infecting our cells.

Why did these studies reach such different conclusions?

Hoogeveen's paper focused on a single country and looked at the incidence of flu infections over 4 seasons, from 2016 to 2020, while the PNAS study collected data on pollen from January through the first week of April 2020.

He thinks that a single season, or really part of a season, may not be long enough to see meaningful patterns, especially considering that this new-to-humans virus was spreading quickly at nearly the same time. He says it will be interesting to follow what happens with COVID-19 infections and pollen in the coming months and years.

Hoogeveen says that in a large study spanning so many countries it would have been nearly impossible to account for differences in pandemic control strategies. Some countries embraced the use of masks, stay-at-home orders, and social distancing, for example, while others took less-stringent measures in order to let the virus run its course in pursuit of herd immunity.

Limiting the study area to a single country or city, he says, helps researchers better understand all the variables that might have been in play along with pollen.

"There is no scientific consensus yet, about what it is driving, and that's what makes it such an interesting field," he says.

WebMD Health News

Lewis Ziska, a plant physiologist who studies pollen, climate change and health at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health, New York, New York

Martijn Hoogeveen, PhD, professor, Technical Sciences & Environment, Open University, Heerlen, Netherlands

Stefanie Gilles, PhD, chair of environmental medicine, Technical University of Munich, in Germany

PNAS, March 23, 2021

MedRxiv, Feb. 16, 2021

MedRxiv, March 2, 2021

Science of the Total Environment, Feb. 10, 20201

News briefing, Technical University of Munich, March 9, 2021

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Could Pollen Be Driving COVID-19 Infections? - WebMD

One Year Later: Michigan Medicine’s First COVID-19 Patient | University of Michigan – Michigan Medicine

March 11, 2021

DeWyses nurse, Weber, remembers those first few days in the isolation room vividly.

I could tell he was nervous, but he wouldnt try to show that when we went into his room, Weber recalls. I remember him asking about his dog, Jazz, and if she could get sick from COVID-19. I knew he was a really good person after that.

Weber remembers people looking through DeWyses door at him, like he was an experiment in a cage. Before one of her shifts, she ran to a convenience store to get some snacks, Gatorade, deodorant and magazines.

I wanted to help him feel more human when the world wasnt treating him like one, she says. He really was the best patient a nurse could have to be the first patient.

After three different intravenous antibiotics, around-the-clock pain meds and a lot of sleep, DeWyse was discharged to finish recovering at home after 11 days in the hospital. He never needed a ventilator.

When he first arrived at the hospital less than two weeks ago, he was the only patient with COVID-19 there. As he was leaving his room to go home, he says hell never forget seeing the Regional Infectious Containment Unit, which wasnt open when he was admitted, full with sick patients now.

With no significant lingering side effects, DeWyse felt fully recovered after a month. He went on to have a great summer with his wife and three daughters, biking, kayaking and playing racquetball.

Its crazy to think about how before my transplant, I struggled to walk or even talk, DeWyse recalls.

But soon after those hot summer months passed, another health scare struck.

After a major gallbladder attack, DeWyse was brought back to Michigan Medicine to have the small organ removed.

His recurrent abdominal issues over the past year, including in the colon and gallbladder, are likely exacerbated by his immunosuppressive medications, says Kevin Chan, M.D., DeWyses pulmonologist. Despite these setbacks, he continues to remain positive and is forever paying it forward to the community by increasing organ donation awareness.

Although the removal of his gallbladder called for another lengthy in-patient stay for DeWyse, he says its the price you pay for having a transplant.

Its a small price to pay for the gift of life, he adds.

Paul is a unique individual who has an outstandingly optimistic attitude, which is imperative for patients who have received a solid organ transplant, says Chan.

After being discharged, DeWyse faced a long, painful recovery journey ahead. According to him, though, thats just another obstacle for him to overcome.

Life is full of challenges, but you need to remain resilient, he says. Follow doctors orders, do things that make you happy, stay active and be willing to adapt to change.

Paul is the epitome of living life to the fullest, says Weber. He felt lucky to get his new lungs and hell live for every moment, even more so now after fighting off COVID-19.

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One Year Later: Michigan Medicine's First COVID-19 Patient | University of Michigan - Michigan Medicine

As COVID-19 spreads fast in Florida prisons, no vaccines have been given to its inmates – Tampa Bay Times

March 11, 2021

TALLAHASSEE Three months into Floridas vaccination efforts, Gov. Ron DeSantis has yet to make vaccines available to state prisons, even as corrections officials have requested doses and identified thousands of elderly inmates who meet the states eligibility requirements.

The department is ready and willing to administer, but they have not received any supply, Senate Criminal Justice Chairman Jason Pizzo said on Tuesday, after having a conversation with state prison officials.

Inmates who meet the states age group criteria could be waiting for the foreseeable future.

The governors office wont say when supplies will be made available to the state Department of Corrections, only saying DeSantis has made it clear he will not prioritize inmates ahead of the other vulnerable populations and front-line workers.

DeSantis, for the most part, has taken a senior-centric approach to vaccinations. In January, Florida Corrections Secretary Mark Inch made a request for the state agencys share of doses and identified 4,169 inmates who are 65 and older and met the states age group criteria.

The Florida Department of Corrections is ready to vaccinate as soon as supplies become available to our agency. We will ensure community level care is given to anyone under our care and custody who chooses to be vaccinated, Inch said in a statement.

The number of state inmates who will meet the states age criteria will expand next week, when any Floridian who is 60 and older will become eligible for a coronavirus vaccine under a new state order.

Prison officials say they are doing outreach and providing information to inmates about the vaccines benefits and potential side effects, and the process of scheduling a shot when supplies become available.

By comparison, nearly 1,200 inmates housed in federal detention facilities in Florida have been fully inoculated, meaning they have received both doses of either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, according to Federal Bureau of Prisons data.

Five of the seven privately-run prisons in Florida, operated by The GEO Group, are following state guidelines for the timing of vaccine distribution to staff, inmates and detainees.

GEO is a service provider and the facilities we manage are Florida state correctional facilities (they are not GEO facilities) and are required to follow strict contractual requirements as well as state policies, procedures, standards and guidelines, a GEO Group spokesperson said in a statement. As such, the Florida state correctional facilities we manage are required to follow the same vaccination guidelines as all Florida state correctional facilities.

Spokesperson Meredith Beatrice would not provide an estimate for when inmates could expect to gain access to the vaccine. When asked if the state would make shots available to them when Floridians of all ages get access, she would not specify. Instead, she said DeSantis will evaluate data to determine next steps.

Pizzo, D-Miami, says he believes the data is already there.

In Florida, nearly 18,000 inmates or roughly 22% of the prison population have contracted the virus. And 210 prisoners have died from COVID-19 complications while as of Wednesday, state data shows.

Compared to Floridas general population, state inmates are 81% more likely to die from COVID-19, according to data from the state Department of Health.

COVID death rate in our prisons is about 80% higher than outside, Pizzo posted on Twitter on Tuesday night. Not one single vaccine has been offered to Florida inmates. No 65 year olds. No 70 year olds. Or 75 year olds. No one.

Public health experts have also found incarcerated people are among those who are most vulnerable to contract the virus. A study from Johns Hopkins University, for example, found inmates are three times more likely to die and five times more likely to become infected than the general population.

Inmates are not the only one who are vulnerable inside prisons. Prison staff are at risk, too.

Over the past year, more than 5,600 corrections workers including nurses, correctional officers, custodians and other prison staff have contracted COVID-19. At least six of them have died from complications of the disease. The union that represents prison staff, however, says it believes coronavirus-related deaths among staff is higher than reported by the state.

Florida Department of Health officials have asked some corrections workers, including nurses and doctors who have direct contact with patients, to seek appointments for the vaccines regardless of age. They ask them to contact their local hospital or county health department. The number of prison workers who have been vaccinated to date is not known.

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As COVID-19 spreads fast in Florida prisons, no vaccines have been given to its inmates - Tampa Bay Times

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