Category: Covid-19

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Haverhill, MA Coronavirus Information – Safety Updates …

January 30, 2021

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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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Haverhill, MA Coronavirus Information - Safety Updates ...

How the Search for Covid-19 Treatments Faltered While Vaccines Sped Ahead – The New York Times

January 30, 2021

Nearly a year into the coronavirus pandemic, as thousands of patients are dying every day in the United States and widespread vaccination is still months away, doctors have precious few drugs to fight the virus.

A handful of therapies remdesivir, monoclonal antibodies and the steroid dexamethasone have improved the care of Covid patients, putting doctors in a better position than they were when the virus surged last spring. But these drugs are not cure-alls and theyre not for everyone, and efforts to repurpose other drugs, or discover new ones, have not had much success.

The government poured $18.5 billion into vaccines, a strategy that resulted in at least five effective products at record-shattering speed. But its investment in drugs was far smaller, about $8.2 billion, most of which went to just a few candidates, such as monoclonal antibodies. Studies of other drugs were poorly organized.

The result was that many promising drugs that could stop the disease early, called antivirals, were neglected. Their trials have stalled, either because researchers couldnt find enough funding or enough patients to participate.

At the same time, a few drugs have received sustained investment despite disappointing results. Theres now a wealth of evidence that the malaria drugs hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine did not work against Covid. And yet there are still 179 clinical trials with 169,370 patients in which at least some are receiving the drugs, according to the Covid Registry of Off-label & New Agents at the University of Pennsylvania. And the federal government funneled tens of millions of dollars into an expanded access program for convalescent plasma, infusing almost 100,000 Covid patients before there was any robust evidence that it worked. In January, those trials revealed that, at least for hospitalized patients, it doesnt.

The lack of centralized coordination meant that many trials for Covid antivirals were doomed from the start too small and poorly designed to provide useful data, according to Dr. Janet Woodcock, the acting commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. If the government had instead set up an organized network of hospitals to carry out large trials and quickly share data, researchers would have many more answers now.

I blame myself to some extent, said Dr. Woodcock, who has overseen the federal governments efforts to develop Covid drugs.

She hopes to tame the chaos with a new effort from the Biden administration. In the next couple of months, she said, the government plans to start large and well-organized trials for existing drugs that could be repurposed to fight Covid-19. We are actively working on that, Dr. Woodcock said.

Brand-new antiviral drugs might also help, but only now is the National Institutes of Health putting together a major initiative to develop them, meaning they wont be ready in time to fight the current pandemic.

This effort will be unlikely to provide therapeutics in 2021, Dr. Francis Collins, the head of the N.I.H., said in a statement. If there is a Covid-24 or Covid-30 coming, we want to be prepared.

Even as the number of cases and deaths have surged around the country, the survival rate of those who are infected has improved significantly. A recent study found that by June, the mortality rates of those hospitalized had dropped to 9 percent from 17 percent at the start of the pandemic, a trend that has been echoed in other studies. Researchers say the improvement is partly because of the steroid dexamethasone, which boosts survival rates of severely ill patients by tamping down the immune system rather than blocking the virus. Patients may also be seeking care earlier in the course of the illness. And masks and social distancing may reduce viral exposure.

When the new coronavirus emerged as a global threat in early 2020, doctors frantically tried an assortment of existing drugs. But the only way to know if they actually worked was to set up large clinical trials in which some people received placebos, and others took the drug in question.

Getting hundreds or thousands of people into such trials was a tremendous logistical challenge. In early 2020, the N.I.H. narrowed its focus to just a few promising drugs. That support led to the swift authorization of remdesivir and monoclonal antibodies. Remdesivir, which stops viruses from replicating inside cells, can modestly shorten the time patients need to recover, but has no effect on mortality. Monoclonal antibodies, which stop the virus from entering cells, can be very potent, but only when given before people are sick enough to be hospitalized.

Hundreds of hospitals and universities began their own trials of existing drugs already deemed safe and widely manufactured that might also work against the coronavirus. But most of these trials were small and disorganized.

In many cases, researchers have been left on their own to set up trials without the backing of the federal government or pharmaceutical companies. In April, as New York City was in the throes of a Covid surge, Charles Mobbs, a neuroscientist at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, heard about some intriguing work in France hinting at the effectiveness of an antipsychotic drug.

Doctors at French psychiatric hospitals had noticed that relatively few patients became ill with Covid-19 compared with the staff members who cared for them. The researchers speculated that the drugs the patients were taking could be protecting them. One of those drugs, the antipsychotic chlorpromazine, had been shown in laboratory experiments to prevent the coronavirus from multiplying.

Jan. 30, 2021, 3:17 a.m. ET

The doctors tried to start a trial of chlorpromazine, but the pandemic ebbed temporarily, it turned out in France by the time they were ready. Dr. Mobbs then spent weeks making arrangements for a trial of his own on patients hospitalized at Mount Sinai, only to hit the same wall. We ran out of patients, he said.

If doctors like Dr. Mobbs could tap into nationwide networks of hospitals, they would be able to find enough patients to run their trials quickly. Those networks exist, but they were not opened up for drug-repurposing efforts.

Many scientists suspect that the best time to fight the coronavirus is early in an infection, when the virus is multiplying quickly. But its particularly hard to recruit trial volunteers who are not in a hospital. Researchers have to track down people right after theyve tested positive and find a way to deliver the trial drugs to them.

At the University of Kentucky, researchers began such a trial in May to test a drug called camostat, which is normally used to treat inflammation of the pancreas. The scientists thought it might also work as a Covid-19 antiviral because it destroys a protein that the virus depends on to infect human cells. Because camostat comes in pill form, rather than an infusion, it would be especially useful for people like the trial volunteers, many of whom lived in remote rural areas.

But the researchers have spent the past eight months trying to recruit enough participants. They have had trouble finding patients who have recently received a Covid diagnosis, especially with the unpredictable rise and fall of cases.

This has been the source of the delays for essentially all of the trials around the world, said Dr. James Porterfield, an infectious disease clinician at the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, who is leading the trial.

While doctors like Dr. Porterfield have struggled to carry out studies on their own, a few drugs have become sensations, praised as cure-alls despite a lack of evidence.

The first supposed panacea was hydroxychloroquine, a drug developed for malaria. Television pundits claimed it had healing powers, as did President Trump. Rather than start one large, well-designed trial across many hospitals, doctors began a swarm of small trials.

There was no coordination, and no centralized leadership, said Ilan Schwartz, an infectious disease expert at the University of Alberta.

Nevertheless, the F.D.A. gave the drug an emergency clearance as a treatment for people hospitalized with Covid. When large clinical trials finally did begin delivering results, it turned out that the drug provided no benefit and might even do harm. The agency withdrew its authorization in June.

Many scientists were left embittered, considering all that work a waste of precious time and resources.

The clear, unambiguous and compelling lesson from the hydroxychloroquine story for the medical community and the public is that science and politics do not mix, Dr. Michael Saag of University of Alabama at Birmingham wrote in November in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Now another drug is becoming popular before theres strong evidence that it works: the parasite-killing compound ivermectin. Senator Ron Johnson, Republican of Wisconsin, who extolled hydroxychloroquine in April, held a hearing in December where Dr. Pierre Kory testified about ivermectin. Dr. Kory, a pulmonary and critical care specialist at Aurora St. Lukes Medical Center in Milwaukee at the time, called it effectively a miracle drug against Covid-19. Yet there are no published results from large-scale clinical trials to support such claims, only small, suggestive ones.

Even if the federal government had set up a centralized trial network, as it is trying to do now, scientists would have still faced some unavoidable hurdles. It takes time to do careful experiments to discover promising drugs and then to confirm that theyre really worth investigating further.

In drug development, were used to 10-to-15-year runways, said Sumit K. Chanda, a virologist at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute in La Jolla, Calif.

In February, Dr. Chanda and his colleagues began a different kind of search for a Covid-19 antiviral. They screened a library of 13,000 drugs, mixing each drug with cells and coronaviruses to see if they stopped infections.

A few drugs proved promising. The researchers tested one of them a cheap leprosy pill called clofazimine over several months, doing experiments in human lung tissue and hamsters. Clofazimine fought off the virus in the animals if they received it soon after being infected.

Now, nearly a year after he started his research, Dr. Chanda is hoping he can get funding for the most difficult part of drug testing: large and randomized clinical trials that can cost millions of dollars. To complete this stage efficiently, researchers almost always need the backing of a large company or the federal government, or both as happened with the large clinical trials for the new coronavirus vaccines.

Its unclear how the Biden administrations new drug-testing effort will choose which drug candidates to support. But if trials begin in the next few months, its possible they could reveal useful data by the end of the year.

Pharmaceutical companies are also beginning to fund some trials of repurposed drugs. A study published this week in Science found that a 24-year-old cancer drug called plitidepsin is 27 times more potent than remdesivir at halting the coronavirus in lab experiments. In October, a Spanish drug company called PharmaMar reported promising results from a small safety trial of plitidepsin. Now the company is preparing to start a late-stage trial in Spain to see if the drug works compared with a placebo.

The pharma giant Merck is running a large, late-stage trial on a pill called molnupiravir, originally developed by Ridgeback Biotherapeutics for influenza, which has been shown to cure ferrets of Covid-19. The trials first results could emerge as early as March.

Experts are particularly eager to see this data because molnupiravir may be effective in treating more than just Covid-19. In April, scientists found that the drug could also treat mice infected with other coronaviruses that cause SARS and MERS.

Any antivirals that may emerge in 2021 wont save the lives already lost to Covid-19. But its possible that one of those drugs may work against coronavirus pandemics to come.

Noah Weiland and Katie Thomas contributed reporting.

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How the Search for Covid-19 Treatments Faltered While Vaccines Sped Ahead - The New York Times

Fauci, Other Biden COVID-19 Advisers Tout ‘Really Encouraging’ Vaccine News – NPR

January 30, 2021

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and chief medical adviser to the president, speaks earlier this week during a White House briefing on the COVID-19 pandemic. White House via AP hide caption

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and chief medical adviser to the president, speaks earlier this week during a White House briefing on the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dr. Anthony Fauci said Friday he welcomes the positive news about an additional COVID-19 vaccine announced in the past 24 hours, calling the results "really encouraging." And he added that the Biden administration hoped to be able to start vaccinating children by late spring or summer.

At a briefing with other federal health officials, Fauci said while the overall efficacy of the vaccine made by Janssen, a pharmaceutical company owned by Johnson & Johnson, is lower (72%) than the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, the findings that it prevented all hospitalizations for serious disease make it a valuable tool in fighting the pandemic.

Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and an adviser to President Biden on COVID-19, spoke at the second of what the White House says will be briefings three times a week. Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, stressed that the CDC continues to recommend that K-12 schools "be the last settings to close after all other mitigation measures have been employed and the first to reopen when they can do so safely."

Walensky said that accumulating data suggest "school settings do not result in rapid spread of COVID-19 when mitigation measures are followed." These include "masking, decreasing density and proper ventilation," she said, noting that many communities currently lack sufficient resources to make this happen.

Both Fauci and Walensky expressed concern about the spread of coronavirus variants in the U.S., with the latest example being a mutation first seen in South Africa that has now been reported in two people in South Carolina.

Fauci said this finding makes the case even stronger for as many people to get vaccinated as quickly as possible to prevent the spread of this and other variants from other countries as well as new variants arising in the U.S., which he said are occurring in high-prevalence areas such as Los Angeles and the state of California.

Fauci said he was optimistic that scientists could counter these variants with new vaccine formulations, as is done with the flu vaccine each year.

"We will have to be nimble to adjust and make vaccine against whatever mutant is prevalent at the present time," he told reporters.

Andy Slavitt, the White House senior adviser to the White House COVID-19 response team, said that the rise of the variants further pointed to the need for masking and social distancing.

"Let's not be quite such polite hosts to this virus; let's turn the tide and do like other countries who do everything possible to shut out the growth of this virus and make sure it is not welcome," Slavitt said.

In the past week, Walensky said, an average of 1.2 million shots per day were given out. Also, all packages of the Pfizer vaccine now getting shipped out contain low dead-volume syringes to maximize the number of doses that can be obtained from each vial, Slavitt said. Each vial now officially contains six doses, he said.

Fauci said that studies are underway on vaccines in children, and said the administration hoped to be able to start vaccinating children by late spring or summer. Biden has said he wants to reopen most schools in his first 100 days in office or late April.

Slavitt also said the Department of Health and Human Services on Thursday released a new rule that allows recently retired nurses and doctors to give out the vaccine, and that vaccinators can now work across state lines. He encouraged people to sign up as volunteer vaccinators if they're qualified.

Also, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has issued stronger COVID-19 safety measures for workers this week, Slavitt said.

NPR's Joe Neel contributed to this report.

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Fauci, Other Biden COVID-19 Advisers Tout 'Really Encouraging' Vaccine News - NPR

Information for employees about COVID-19 vaccinations – Ohio University

January 30, 2021

As the availability of COVID-19 vaccines expands in our region and nationally, the University encourages faculty, staff, and their family members to seriously consider obtaining a vaccine as soon as they are eligible.

While the University is currently not able to provide vaccines directly to employees, there are several options available for obtaining a vaccine if you meet state eligibility requirements, including your local health department and some pharmacies and health care systems.

In Ohio, vaccines are being made available in phases by priority groups. It is important to schedule a vaccine when first made available for a group in which you qualify. If you fail to schedule a vaccine during that time period, you may end up waiting longer to be eligible for a vaccine. Priority groups can be found here: https://coronavirus.ohio.gov/static/vaccine/general_fact_sheet.pdf.

The Ohio Department of Health has published a vaccine provider locator map https://vaccine.coronavirus.ohio.gov/ to assist Ohioans in locating vaccine providers in their region. Vaccine providers can be found by clicking on each county of the map. To schedule a vaccine, locate and call the appropriate provider in your area.

For those located outside Ohio, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) COVID-19 resource web page https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/index.html includes a How Do I Get A Vaccine? resource that provides links to resources by state.

Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shields COVID-19 Resource Center site https://www.anthem.com/coronavirus/ provides additional information regarding COVID-19 vaccines, symptoms, and care and resource tools.

There is no cost for any eligible individual to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, whether or not they have insurance.

COVID-19 vaccines provide excellent personal protection against the virus, but the importance of vaccination is bigger than that, said Dr. Gillian Ice, special assistant to the president for public health operations at Ohio University. Beyond personal protection, vaccines are a critical tool to halting the transmission of the virus within the community, which is what will eventually get our lives back to normal. When we have enough people vaccinated, COVID-19 simply wont have a means of spreading. Until then, we will need to continue the basic public health measures of masks, social distancing, testing and isolation of infected individuals. Vaccination offers a path to moving past this pandemic.

If you have additional questions, contact your local health department.

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Information for employees about COVID-19 vaccinations - Ohio University

Student Update: Preventing the Spread of COVID-19 Together – DrexelNow – Drexel Now

January 30, 2021

The following message was sent to Drexel students on Jan. 29:

Dear Drexel Dragon,

At Drexel University, the safety of the entire Drexel community is our top priority, including students living both on and off campus. In order to protect you and those around you, wherever you are it is your responsibility to take the proper precautions and help prevent the spread of COVID-19. It is particularly critical that you avoid social gatherings, especially parties, in order to mitigate the transmission of the virus.

We have learned that most COVID-19 infections occur in situations of prolonged exposure where social distancing measures are not practiced. One easy step that all members of the community can take is to wear masks when spending any amount of time with those outside your immediate household. Some of you may have also formed a pod with others in which everyone agrees to a particular set of standards. Maintaining a pod in this way can help limit your risk to COVID-19, as long as all members commit to following standard preventative public health measures these include wearing face masks, washing your hands, monitoring your health via theDrexel Health Checker app, maintaining physical distance, and especially avoiding gatherings with people outside of your pod or household. While the pandemic is ongoing, it is particularly vital that you refrain from hosting or attending indoor social gatherings. Together, we can take the necessary steps to ensure the health and safety of both ourselves and our local communities.

COVID-19 testing also plays an important role in both mitigation and risk reduction. That is why at Drexel,COVID-19 testingis required for all on-campus activity. If you are living on campus or taking face-to-face courses, you must schedule a COVID-19 test via the Drexel Health Checker app. If you haven't downloaded it yet, you can find the Drexel Health Checker in your app store.

If you feel ill or think you may have been exposed to COVID-19, you should contact theStudent Health Centerright away by phone (215.220.4700) and through theDrexel Health Checker app. As always, you can learn more about the steps the University is taking to ensure our community's safety atDrexel's Response to Coronavirus page. This site is constantly updated with the latest health and safety protocols, and we encourage you to visit it often to make sure you remain up to date. Stay safe, and remember that your actions don't just affect you but they also impact the community around you. Continue to take care of each other and always wear your mask. Because at Drexel,Dragons wear masks.

Sincerely,

Subir Sahu, PhDSenior Vice President for Student Success

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Student Update: Preventing the Spread of COVID-19 Together - DrexelNow - Drexel Now

Inslee issues proclamation related to COVID-19 and foster care age limits – Access Washington

January 30, 2021

Story

Gov. Jay Inslee today issued a proclamation to ensure, as required by federal law, that persons receiving extended foster care services don't "age out" at 21 years old during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the recently enacted federal Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, Congress prohibited states from refusing extended foster care services to persons who either have or will become "too old" to be eligible for services during the COVID-19 pandemic. Proclamation 21-02 aligns state law with this requirement by removing the age limits on receiving extended foster care services, and by eliminating certain eligibility requirements as required under the federal act.

The proclamation goes into effect immediately, and will require legislative approval to be extended.

The full proclamation is available here.

Public and constituent inquiries | 360.902.4111Press inquiries | 360.902.4136

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Inslee issues proclamation related to COVID-19 and foster care age limits - Access Washington

Early Data Shows Striking Racial Disparities In Who’s Getting The COVID-19 Vaccine – NPR

January 30, 2021

Registered Nurse Shyun Lin, left, administers Alda Maxis, 70, the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at a pop-up vaccination site in the William Reid Apartments in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Jan. 23. Mary Altaffer/AP hide caption

Registered Nurse Shyun Lin, left, administers Alda Maxis, 70, the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at a pop-up vaccination site in the William Reid Apartments in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Jan. 23.

Slightly more than 6% of American adults have received at least the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine but a disproportionately small number of them are Black and Hispanic people.

"What we're seeing from the states that are currently reporting data on vaccination distribution by race and ethnicity is a consistent pattern that is really showing a mismatch between who's receiving the vaccine and who has been hardest hit by the pandemic," says Samantha Artiga, the director of the Racial Equity and Health Policy Program at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The group has been tracking data from the 17 states that are publicly reporting vaccination patterns by race and ethnicity, and significant disparities are emerging.

In Mississippi, 15% of vaccinations have been received by Black people, while they account for 38% of coronavirus cases and 42% of deaths in the state. In Texas, Hispanic people make up 15% of those who have been vaccinated, compared to 44% of cases and nearly half of the deaths.

Artiga notes that the data so far is both early and limited: for instance, only a small number of states are reporting race and ethnicity data right now, and the vaccine currently is available only to high-priority groups.

Nonetheless, the current patterns are "early warning flags about potential racial disparities in access to and uptake of the vaccine," according to the Kaiser Family Foundation report.

Vaccine appointments often require things like Internet access, reliable transportation and flexible work schedules. That troubles Artiga.

"How many people may be left behind if those are the resources that are required to access the vaccine?" she says.

In an interview with All Things Considered, Artiga discusses what can be done to help improve access to the vaccine. Here are excerpts.

In Washington, D.C., the health department has been narrowing vaccines sign-ups by zip code, to try to target less affluent, less white neighborhoods. Have you heard of similar efforts around the country?

We are increasingly hearing that areas are adding new vaccination sites and adopting new sign-up processes to help make the vaccine more available for people. So as you noted, D.C. is prioritizing certain wards for appointments based on some of the early data that were showing disparities and who was able to access the vaccine.

I believe there are some health systems and areas that are planning to provide appointments, based on lottery systems when vaccines become available. I'm hearing now of some mobile vaccine clinics that are going into operation to go directly into communities. And there are other areas that are also beginning to adopt this approach of targeting specific geographic areas that we know have been hardest hit by the pandemic and may have more limited resources to be able to navigate sign-up processes for vaccines.

I'm thinking about the challenge of setting up a national vaccination campaign that has to administer hundreds of millions of doses, and layering on top of that a need to make it accessible to people who might not have a vehicle, who might not have easy access to the Internet. How important is it to front load those accessibility issues if you're going to make this campaign work?

I really think the early data, and what we know about people's willingness and concerns related to the vaccine, point to the importance of having a multipronged approach that is seeking to address access barriers and provide information and education to help address people's questions and concerns.

And I think that we also can learn a lot by listening directly to communities about how and where they want to access the vaccine, where they will feel comfortable accessing the vaccine, and who they want information from about the safety of the vaccine.

Andrea Hsu and Courtney Dorning produced and edited the audio interview. Farah Eltohamy adapted it for the Web.

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Early Data Shows Striking Racial Disparities In Who's Getting The COVID-19 Vaccine - NPR

DHEC Confirms First Death from COVID-19-related Condition That Affects Teens and Children – SCDHEC

January 30, 2021

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:January 29, 2021

COLUMBIA, S.C.A teenager died this week from Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C) associated with COVID-19. This is the first death in the state related to MIS-C reported to the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC).

A 17-year-old in the Upstate region died from MIS-C on Jan. 27. To protect the privacy of the child and the family, no other information will be disclosed.

Its heartbreaking to have to report the death of such a young person. Our condolences go out to the family and to the many families that have suffered loss related to COVID-19, said Dr. Linda Bell, State Epidemiologist.

At least 42 cases of MIS-C have been reported among children in South Carolina. MIS-C is a rare health condition that occurs in some children and teenagers who have contracted COVID-19 or been in contact with someone infected with the virus.

A surge in coronavirus cases across the state has led to record numbers of infections, hospitalizations and deaths. While health experts havent fully identified the connection between the virus and MIS-C, a surge in COVID-19 cases could lead to more MIS-C cases.

With the number of cases of COVID-19 were seeing in our state, we must be prepared for the unfortunate possibility of more children being affected by MIS-C, said Dr. Brannon Traxler, DHEC Interim Public Health Director. We continue to remind South Carolinians that COVID-19 is spreading in our communities at a high rate and it is vital that we all take the steps we know to protect us all from this deadly disease: wear a mask, stay six feet away from others, wash your hands frequently, and avoid crowds. And when your time comes, get vaccinated.

These simple actions are how we protect ourselves and others, including our children, Traxler said.

On July 12, 2020, South Carolina announced its first confirmed cases of MIS-C associated with COVID-19. MIS-C is a reportable condition to DHEC. Symptoms of MIS-C include fever, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, neck pain, rash, bloodshot eyes, and feeling tired. The vast majority of children with MIS-C recover.

Important Information for Parents and Caregivers

DHEC recommends parents and caregivers learn and watch for the signs for MIS-C in their children. Emergency warning signs of MIS-C include trouble breathing, chest pain or pressure that does not go away, confusion, inability to wake or stay awake, bluish lips or face, and severe stomach pain. For more information about MIS-C, click here.

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DHEC Confirms First Death from COVID-19-related Condition That Affects Teens and Children - SCDHEC

Louisiana Department of Health announces COVID-19 testing for week of February 1-6 | Department of Health | State of Louisiana – Louisiana Department…

January 30, 2021

The COVID-19 testing schedule for sites operated by the Louisiana Army National Guard (LANG) for the week of February 1-6 is listed below. No LANG-operated sites will be open in Region 7 (Northwest Louisiana). Sites are closed during state holidays and inclement weather.

The more contagious U.K. variant of COVID-19 has been identified in Louisiana, and all Louisianans need to take precautions to protect themselves and their loved ones. Avoid gatherings of individuals not part of your households, work from home remotely when possible, wear a mask, practice social distancing and good hand hygiene, and stay home if sick. If you have been exposed or have symptoms of COVID-19, get tested. And, when it is your turn, consider getting the COVID-19 vaccine.

Pre-registration for COVID-19 testing is encouraged by going toHealth.QuestDiagnostics.com/STLOU. Testing is for ages 3 and older. There is no cost, and no identification is needed. Test results are available by calling1-866-MYQUEST (1-866-697-8378), but note that wait times can be lengthy. Test results are also available through the Quest online portal or app.

If you are unable to make it to a LANG testing location, no-cost testing is available by appointment atselect Walgreens locationsthrough a partnership between Walgreens and the Department of Health. These locations offer testing 7 days a week to people ages 3 and older. Appointments are required; make yours atwalgreens.com/covid19testing.

Region 1: New Orleans

Region 2: Baton Rouge

Region 3: Houma-Thibodaux

Region 4: Acadiana

Region 5: Southwest

Region 6: Cenla

Region 8: Northeast

Region 9: River Parishes

Symptoms of COVID-19 include:

Test site details

COVID Defense

COVID Defense, Louisianas exposure notification mobile application to slow the spread of COVID-19, is now available on theiPhone App Storeand theAndroid Google Play Store. The app notifies you if there is a risk you were exposed to someone who has tested positive for the virus. Use is completely free, voluntary, private and secure.

Save the number 877-766-2130 in your phone

Anyone who receives a call from 877-766-2130 is urged to answer, as the call is from a contact tracer who will keep an individual's information private. Personal information is used to quickly identify anyone a COVID-positive individual may have been in close contact with to help contain the spread of the coronavirus. Everyone called by a contact tracer is advised to monitor themselves for signs of illness for 14 days from when they first came in contact with the COVID-19 person.

If a resource need is identified through the contact tracing interview, the case is flagged for follow-up from a resource coordinator social worker who can connect individuals with resources including medication, masks, food assistance and even help locating alternative housing.

If someone calls from a number other than 877-766-2130, claims to be a contact tracer and asks for personal information, hang up immediately.If you have a positive lab result and have not yet heard from a contact tracer, you can call our team directly at 877-766-2130.

For information from the Louisiana Department of Health on COVID-19, clickhere.

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Louisiana Department of Health announces COVID-19 testing for week of February 1-6 | Department of Health | State of Louisiana - Louisiana Department...

Alaska’s rate of COVID-19 hospitalization and death in 2020 was far below national averages – Anchorage Daily News

January 30, 2021

Alaskas rates of death and hospitalization among people with COVID-19 in 2020 fell far below national averages, statistics that reflect the states younger overall population and lower number of nursing homes.

The states death rate was less than one-third the national rate, or 34 per 100,000 residents compared to 104 nationally, according to a bulletin from the epidemiology section of the state Division of Public Health released Friday summarizing COVID-19 deaths from January through December.

But the overall death rate nearly quadrupled after mid-October, state epidemiologists found, and rates increased in all geographic areas, all age ranges, and all racial and ethnic categories.

The disparity between national and state rates for hospitalizations last year also was striking: Alaskas rate was less than half the national rate, at 140.6 per 100,000 residents compared to 343.4 nationally, according to a bulletin summarizing COVID-19 hospitalizations last year.

Preliminary state data shows that possibly up to 20% of the 245 Alaskans who died with the virus last year were not hospitalized, state epidemiologists say.

Theres a chance that information could change, especially for those who died in late December and whose hospital status still needs to be confirmed, according to Dr. Louisa Castrodale, an epidemiologist with the states infectious disease program. Its also possible some died at the hospital but they had been receiving care for something else, so COVID-19 was noted later as a contributing factor on their death certificate.

Those who did die at home may have been in hospice care and chosen not to go to the hospital, Castrodale said.

Some people in rural Alaska have also described loved ones dying at home because of medevac flights grounded by bad weather or reluctance to leave family behind to fly to larger communities with hospitals.

Generally, about two-thirds of the Alaskans who died with COVID-19 were men and death rates were highest in people over 80, the bulletin says. Of 200 people with known medical histories, only 10 people had no pre-existing conditions associated with increased risk for more severe infection, including two people in their 30s and one in their 50s.

Two-thirds of Alaska adults have one or more of these underlying conditions including include cancer, smoking, diabetes, obesity, chronic kidney disease and chronic heart disease.

Of the nearly 200 people who died after being hospitalized at some point during their illness, almost half were admitted to an intensive care unit, according to the bulletin. Most deaths occurred in November and December, when the states monthly counts of new confirmed cases also peaked.

Mortality rates were highest among Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islands people as well as American Indian and Alaska Native people, with notable increases in rural Alaska Native people late in the year, according to the bulletin.

Public health officials have said the high numbers of younger people contracting COVID-19 in Alaska could be a factor in the states relatively low numbers of hospitalizations and deaths compared to others. Alaska ranks second among all states in terms of lowest median age.

National data shows that the rate of people hospitalized with the illness per 100,000 population is lower for younger people.

Alaska also has fewer nursing home beds per capita than any other state.

The state bulletin on hospitalizations attributed the relatively low numbers to several factors including successful community mitigation, Alaskas younger population age distribution, and successful preservation of hospital capacity.

Dr. Joe McLaughlin, an epidemiologist with the state, said by email Friday that Alaskas hospitals were largely kept from being overwhelmed and noted that in other communities, when hospitals become overwhelmed, death rates rise considerably. He also said that Alaskas aggressive virus mitigation efforts early on in the pandemic helped delay a rise in case counts, which bought us time to glean from others experience on how best to care for COVID-19 patients in the hospital setting.

Regional rates are further influenced by factors including local adherence to mitigation measures like masks, testing rates, localized outbreaks, hospital referral patterns, health care availability and population density.

The hospital statistics referenced in the state bulletin only include patients where COVID-19 either contributed to or caused their hospitalization; people who tested positive while getting care for something else, like injuries from a car accident, werent included.

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Alaska's rate of COVID-19 hospitalization and death in 2020 was far below national averages - Anchorage Daily News

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