Category: Covid-19

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COVID-19 Daily Update 1-6-2021 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

January 7, 2021

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of January 6, 2021, there have been 1,570,248 total confirmatory laboratory results received for COVID-19, with 94,678 total cases and 1,481 deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of an 88-year old female from Kanawha County, a 43-year old female from Raleigh County, an 80-year old female from Mercer County, an 81-year old male from Kanawha County, a 75-year old male from Barbour County, a 59-year old female from Wood County, a 74-year old female from Mineral County, an 85-year old male from Kanawha County, a 95-year old female from Mineral County, a 64-year old male from Putnam County, a 77-year old female from Monongalia County, a 66-year old male from Monongalia County, an 82-year old female from Harrison County, a 62-year old male from Wayne County, a 97-year old male from Wood County, a 67-year old female from Cabell County, a 97-year old female from Mineral County, an 89-year old female from Hancock County, an 89-year old female from Mineral County, an 81-year old female from Cabell County, a 78-year old male from Cabell County, a 61-year old female from Upshur County, a 73-year old male from Hancock County, a 90-year old female from Morgan County, an 82-year old female from Mercer County, a 93-year old female from Mercer County, a 49-year old male from Cabell County, an 82-year old male from Kanawha County, a 75-year old male from Hancock County, a 73-year old female from Fayette County, a 79-year old male from Kanawha County, an 89-year old female from Cabell County, an 80-year old male from Wood County, a 67-year old female from Wood County, a 96-year old female from Hardy County, a 79-year old male from Kanawha County, a 78-year old male from Kanawha County, a 65-year old male from Tucker County, and a 63-year old female from Brooke County.

Too many families are experiencing the pain of loss due to COVID-19, said Bill J. Crouch, Cabinet Secretary. We must each do all that we can to stop the pandemic.

CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (899), Berkeley (6,920), Boone (1,137), Braxton (594), Brooke (1,565), Cabell (5,721), Calhoun (154), Clay (269), Doddridge (284), Fayette (1,913), Gilmer (444), Grant (826), Greenbrier (1,677), Hampshire (1,084), Hancock (2,060), Hardy (875), Harrison (3,348), Jackson (1,290), Jefferson (2,596), Kanawha (9,230), Lewis (602), Lincoln (855), Logan (1,840), Marion (2,194), Marshall (2,273), Mason (1,120), McDowell (1,040), Mercer (3,209), Mineral (2,194), Mingo (1,562), Monongalia (5,754), Monroe (699), Morgan (709), Nicholas (774), Ohio (2,687), Pendleton (351), Pleasants (607), Pocahontas (385), Preston (1,870), Putnam (3,190), Raleigh (3,003), Randolph (1,313), Ritchie (389), Roane (337), Summers (503), Taylor (777), Tucker (364), Tyler (407), Upshur (1,080), Wayne (1,846), Webster (177), Wetzel (775), Wirt (248), Wood (5,405), Wyoming (1,253).

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.

Excerpt from:

COVID-19 Daily Update 1-6-2021 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Worker at hospital with inflatable costume dies of COVID-19 – Los Angeles Times

January 5, 2021

An employee working the Christmas shift at Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center has died after falling ill with COVID-19. The person was one of at least 43 staff members who tested positive for the coronavirus in recent days, an outbreak possibly linked to an employee who wore an inflatable holiday costume to lift spirits.

The staff member who appeared briefly in the emergency department on Christmas Day wore an air-powered, holiday-themed costume, according to a hospital executive. KNTV-TV, the San Jose NBC station that first reported the outbreak, reported that the costume was an inflatable Christmas tree.

Inflatable costumes are typically battery-powered and use a fan to keep the costume puffed up. Such a fan can propel virus particles in a room.

The person who wore the costume subsequently tested positive for the coronavirus, the hospital confirmed Monday.

KNTV-TV reported that the person who died was a woman who worked as a registration clerk in the emergency department.

Our thoughts and prayers are with those affected by this terrible loss. We are providing support to our employees during this difficult time, said a statement issued by the hospital late Sunday.

In a statement Saturday, Irene Chavez, senior vice president and area manager of Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center, said officials were investigating whether the costume contributed to the outbreak.

Any exposure, if it occurred, would have been completely innocent and quite accidental, as the individual [wearing the costume] had no COVID symptoms and only sought to lift the spirits of those around them during what is a very stressful time, Chavez said. If anything, this should serve as a very real reminder that the virus is widespread, and often without symptoms, and we must all be vigilant.

Chavez said the hospital would no longer allow air-powered costumes at its facilities and was taking steps to reinforce safety precautions among staff, including no gatherings in break rooms, no sharing of food and beverages and the wearing of masks at all times.

The highly contagious coronavirus usually spreads through droplets sprayed from a persons mouth and nose, such as through breathing, talking, coughing or sneezing, and usually land six feet or so from a person before falling to the ground. People can be highly contagious with the virus without showing signs of illness.

Strong drafts of air can help the coronavirus infect others. In one such case in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, a pre-symptomatic person who had just returned from Wuhan the first hotbed of the global pandemic was eating lunch at a restaurant. Scientists concluded that the person infected two other families sitting at neighboring tables about three feet away; they suspect that infected droplets from the index patient hitched a ride on air flows powered by an air-conditioning system.

In the heart of Silicon Valley, San Jose is the largest city in Santa Clara County, Northern Californias most populous county, which has hospitals dealing with severe overcrowding in its worst surge of the pandemic. On New Years Day, 97% of Santa Clara Countys available ICU beds were occupied.

Santa Clara, home to nearly 2 million people, had the worst rate of coronavirus cases and COVID-19 deaths in the last week of any county in the Bay Area, according to a Times analysis. It recorded more than 74,000 cases and 740 deaths.

Last week, county officials said hospitals were stretched to the limit, with 50 to 60 patients each day stuck in emergency rooms waiting for beds.

Often, the only time a patient can be moved into an ICU bed is after a COVID-19 patient has died, said Dr. Marco Randazzo, an emergency room physician at OConnor Hospital in San Jose and St. Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy.

Every ICU bed at St. Louise Regional Hospital was full, and patients were in so-called surge beds, Chief Operating Officer Gloria de la Merced said last week. This level of hospitalizations has never happened during my career, she said. If we go beyond the surge capacity, everyone will be affected more people in our community will know someone who died.

Across Santa Clara County, the daily coronavirus case rate is more than 10 times what it was Oct. 30. What we are seeing now is not normal, Dr. Ahmad Kamal, director of health preparedness for Santa Clara County, said last week.

This has been the state of the pandemic for the last several weeks, he added, and it is showing no signs of letting up.

Kamal pleaded with the public to continue to wear masks, stay socially distant and cancel gatherings.

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Worker at hospital with inflatable costume dies of COVID-19 - Los Angeles Times

The state lawmaker who died of an aneurysm had COVID-19, but were the two conditions related? – The Philadelphia Inquirer

January 5, 2021

The number of people with silent, undiagnosed brain aneurysms is unknown, though the rate has been estimated to be as high as 1 in 50, Albani said. Heredity seems to increase the risk both of having an aneurysm and an eventual rupture, so physicians recommend a brain scan for patients with a history of the condition in more than one close relative. Heavy drinking, cigarette smoking, and high blood pressure also can increase the risk of rupture.

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The state lawmaker who died of an aneurysm had COVID-19, but were the two conditions related? - The Philadelphia Inquirer

COVID-19 Surge Forces Ambulances to Have Wait Outside South Bay Hospitals – NBC Bay Area

January 5, 2021

Santa Clara County hospitals have been hit so hard with so many COVID-19 cases, ambulances have had to wait outside -- with patients -- for hours in some cases before those patients can be admitted. And those hospitals say they're expecting another, post New Year's surge.

If we have another surge on top of that, it's going to be devastating, said James Williams from Santa Clara County Council. "Sometimes that has occurred sporadically in the past, but this is happening at an increasing frequency, across the board, across all the hospitals."

The Regional Medical Center of San Jose has been especially busy.

"We make sure that everyone who is critical is seen and seen right away, but there are waits for some, said Sarah Sherwood, Regional Medical Center spokesperson. Fearing that the post Christmas and New Year's rush is days away.

"We're bracing for a huge onslaught of patients, said Sherwood. We're prepared for this, and we know how to deal with this, we're trained for this, but it is very difficult, our staff is tired."

Meanwhile, there is a triage system in place to do its best to divert an ambulance on its way to a hospital that's too crowded. Instead, sending that ambulance to a different hospital nearby that has a bed open.

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COVID-19 Surge Forces Ambulances to Have Wait Outside South Bay Hospitals - NBC Bay Area

I-Team: McCarran ranks among top airports for TSA COVID-19 infections – KLAS – 8 News Now

January 5, 2021

Airport takes step to address passenger spread; TSA installs barriers

by: David Charns

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) Las Vegas McCarran International Airport ranks among the top in the United States where Transportation Security Administration screeners and employees have been infected with COVID-19, new data the I-Team obtained shows.

Out of nearly 300 airports in the country with confirmed COVID-19 cases, McCarran ranks tenth for the number of TSA employees and screening contractors who have gotten sick with the virus.

As of Monday, there were 117 recorded cases of COVID-19 in TSA at McCarran since the agency began tracking the number. Four employees who do not screen passengers had also been infected, data said.

McCarran is among the nations busiest airports, ranking No. 9 for passenger volume in 2018, according to FAA data.

The nations busiest airport, Atlantas Hartsfield-Jackson International, reported 151 cases. The airport with the most recorded cases as of Monday was Los Angeles International, with 310 confirmed cases.

TSA screeners are required to wear masks and gloves, as well as some sort of eye protectant.

More than 850 TSA employees across the country were actively infected with COVID-19 as of Monday, the TSA reported. Thirteen TSA employees across the country and one screening contractor have died from the virus.

All passengers are required to wear a mask in the airport. Officials at McCarran have also taken steps to disinfect high-traffic areas, provide hand sanitizer and limit capacity on shuttle buses.

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I-Team: McCarran ranks among top airports for TSA COVID-19 infections - KLAS - 8 News Now

NBA team health officials find balance tough with new COVID-19 protocols – ESPN

January 5, 2021

Across the NBA, team officials tasked with enforcing and managing the league's day-to-day health and safety protocols say they're exhausted and struggling to balance those roles along with their typical team duties, many of which are focused on player health.

Further, several of these officials say they have found themselves so busy with protocols that their ability to work with individual players on a hands-on basis -- in areas that include treatment, recovery, training -- has been sacrificed, leading to concerns about reduced care for players.

"I've actually told my peers on these trips that we've been on -- it's very, very difficult for me to get my hands on [players]," said one Western Conference head athletic trainer, who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity because they aren't authorized to speak publicly. One Eastern Conference head athletic trainer independently echoed this point and said it's shared league-wide among peers.

One league health official who is close to the matter added, "What scares me -- and I know it's happening -- is that their normal job of doing health care on players [is impaired]. I've had some trainers tell me, 'I haven't touched a player in two weeks because I've been so busy doing all this logistics and testing and all that.' That's concerning. That's definitely what I don't want to happen."

A second Western Conference head athletic trainer agreed with the above sentiment.

"There will be some decline in player health care," that head athletic trainer said. "But I think the larger part will be the overload of the care providers."

As the NBA tries to hold a season outside a bubble during the coronavirus pandemic, team health officials and others filling protocol roles are essentially the NBA's front-line workers. Roles that have been largely delegated to team health officials, as outlined in the NBA's 158-page protocols, include testing officer, contact tracing officer, facemask enforcement officer, facility hygiene officer, health education and awareness officer and travel safety officer, among others. Some team health officials hold more than one of those roles, along with their original roles.

"We're responsible for the logistics of all of the staff, PCR testing, and all of the player rapid testing, and the compliance with the timelines that go into that every day, whether it's an off day, whether it's a game day," said the second Western Conference head athletic trainer. "So the workload has increased dramatically. [And] there's not been a decrease in any of the other workload."

Said one Eastern Conference basketball operations official who is working to handle their team's contract tracing program, "It's just frustrating because with all these things they are making us do it's been hard to find time to do our actual jobs. People are going to be exhausted and sick after this year with everything we are forced to do."

For all their duties, no team official who spoke with ESPN blamed the NBA or its protocols. Rather, there was an understanding that this is an extraordinary situation with understandably high demands. There is hope that staffers can find a rhythm as the season goes on, but several team health officials also noted that the situation continually evolves, with more memos and conference calls from the league in which new protocols are introduced or changes are made. There are also continually evolving city and state restrictions that affect team markets differently.

"Emails are coming fast and furious at all times," said the Eastern Conference head athletic trainer. "And they're not a one-page memo; these are 15 pages, sometimes. They come through daily almost. And so, yeah, we have an obligation to stay current on stuff and it's time-consuming."

A Western Conference GM added, "There's just not enough hours in the day to read the memos, the nuances, compliance, testing, the things that quickly change." The Western Conference GM continued, "You have constant scenarios happening where the memos don't cover that particular situation...That's no one's fault. It's just where we're at."

If their own physical and mental health is failing under the weight of added duties, as several team officials independently say is already happening, then what about the health of players? Several of these officials voiced concerns about not only a decline in players' health care but in the fragility of a non-bubble season, given the constant potential for outbreaks if there's slippage in protocols, vigilance, diligence or compliance.

"Normally, if you can get a 90% compliance rate in a lot of things, that's really good," said the second Western Conference head athletic trainer. "In some ways, a 90% compliance rate here might as well be zero."

Some team health officials reported weeks ago, as training camp was gearing up in early December, that they were already far busier than they had ever been in their careers, with the Western Conference head athletic trainer saying that the workload was at least double if not three times what it was before. For some, looking ahead to the coming months is daunting.

"Every waking hour seems to be committed to [the protocols]," said the Eastern Conference head athletic training official. "But you look down the pike here, and... you wonder, 'God, I barely got through today, how am I going to do this another 100-something times?'"

Said one Eastern Conference general manager, "There's a lot of people that are exhausted. I think their mental weight is as heavy as the physical weight. It wears on you, especially when you're traveling, especially on the road. There's so many moving parts."

Sleep loss is another factor in a league that has struggled with that very issue for years.

"It's extremely difficult," said the first Western Conference head athletic trainer. "The days become longer when you thought they were as long as they could be. If you get a phone call at 2 or 3 in the morning about a possible positive [test] that ends up being a false positive, you're trying to deal with that up until the team is starting to come in the facility at 8 or 9 just to make sure you're complying with everything and then go through your shootaround and then you have a game [and if you] get to bed at midnight, you're lucky to get three or four hours."

The Western Conference GM said his team's health and athletic training staff is robust but still struggling.

"The reality is, these people are really working hard to keep us all safe," said the Western Conference GM. "And like the front-line health care workers, we probably haven't put enough time and thought into their physical and emotional state."

That GM added, "I can't say thank you enough to my guys because you can feel it on them. It's really emotionally exhausting the health performance staff."

Read more here:

NBA team health officials find balance tough with new COVID-19 protocols - ESPN

SC nears 300000 confirmed COVID-19 cases, with high percentage of positive tests – Charleston Post Courier

January 5, 2021

South Carolina approached 300,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus on Monday.

The S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control reported Saturday's data on Monday, a recurring delay caused by the holiday.

Over the past few weeks, the state has continued to log high numbers of new COVID-19 cases each day, now regularly surpassing 3,000.

The percentage of tests returning a positive result for the virus has also increased, indicating widespread community transmission of COVID-19. For Saturday's numbers, out of 10,481 tests, 33.3 percent were positive for the coronavirus.

The increasing case numbers have spurred some branches of the Charleston County Public Library to suspend in-person services and return to curbside only.

Library staff said on Monday the Main Library at 68 Calhoun St., the Mount Pleasant Regional branch at 1133 Mathis Ferry Road and the Wando Mount Pleasant branch at 1400 Carolina Park Blvd. are open only for curbside services.

The change comes due to the recent rise in COVID-19 numbers and the related closures those three branches have experienced due to exposure, executive director Angela Craig said in a news release.

New cases reported:3,492, which is 2,110 percent higher than the 158 tallied on March 31, the day Gov. Henry McMaster ordered nonessential businesses to close.

Total cases in S.C.:299,685, plus 25,787 probable cases

New deaths reported:15

Total deaths in S.C.:5,056 confirmed, 428 probable

Total tests in S.C.:3,797,802

Hospitalized patients:2,155

Percent of positive tests, seven-day average:31 percent. Five percent of tests or fewer returning positive results is a good sign the virus spread is slowing, researchers say.

The top South Carolina counties for new coronavirus cases as of Saturday were Greenville, 555; Spartanburg, 370; and Richland, 289.

For Saturday's report, Charleston County had 140 new cases; Berkeley, 74; and Dorchester, 42.

Of the 15 new deaths reported as of Saturday, one was a patient aged 18 to 34, three were patients aged 35 to 64, and the rest were aged 65 and older.

They lived in Aiken, Barnwell, Beaufort, Chesterfield, Greenville, Lancaster, Lexington, Orangeburg and Spartanburg counties.

Of the 2,155 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 as of Monday, 419 were in intensive care and 215 were on ventilators.

Authorities continue to urge South Carolinians to take precautions, such as wearing masks or other face coverings, social distancing and frequently washing hands.

They also urge anyone who believes theyve been exposed to the virus or who is developing symptoms to get tested. Those out in the community or not able to socially distance should get tested monthly, DHEC advised.

Go toscdhec.gov/findatestto find a testing site in your area.

Reach Fleming Smith at 843-937-5591. Follow her on Twitter at @MFlemingSmith.

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SC nears 300000 confirmed COVID-19 cases, with high percentage of positive tests - Charleston Post Courier

Infusion center for COVID-19 recovery treatment opening in Austin – KLTV

January 5, 2021

AUSTIN - Governor Greg Abbott today announced that the Texas Division Of Emergency Management (TDEM) has established a COVID-19 therapeutic infusion center in Austin to treat outpatient cases of COVID-19. The infusion center, which will begin accepting patients on Wednesday, has been provided with Regeneron to treat patients, who meet certain criteria, with a referral from a hospital or doctor. This infusion center has been established through a partnership between TDEM, Travis County, the City of Austin, and the Capital Area Trauma Regional Advisory Council.

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Infusion center for COVID-19 recovery treatment opening in Austin - KLTV

Family warns young people after 19-year-old dies from COVID-19 within week – WWBT NBC12 News

January 5, 2021

It doesnt discriminate on age. It just happens, and we should all be careful. We shouldnt think, Oh yeah, because Im young, its not going to happen to me, Portilla said. We just have to be careful. We have to take our precautions, and we have to take this seriously.

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Family warns young people after 19-year-old dies from COVID-19 within week - WWBT NBC12 News

Virginia Jan. 4 COVID-19 update: Cases and hospitalizations at record averages for Va., COVID-19 deaths near record – WAVY.com

January 5, 2021

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) Virginia reported 3,771 new coronavirus cases, 8 new COVID-19 deaths and 57 new current COVID-19 hospitalizations on Monday.

Cases and hospitalization averages are both at record levels and continue to trend up, with 4,480 cases per day and 2,727 COVID-19 patients at one time in Virginias hospitals on a given day on average. COVID-19 deaths, which lag cases and hospitalizations, are also nearing new records. Virginias deaths per day is now at 39, just below the previous record of 42 per day in September.

Current levels are expected to trend up into February. By then health officials are hoping vaccinations could help knock the overall virus levels down.

Statewide numbers

Testing levels dipped slightly due to the holidays, which contributed to higher test positivity percentages, but tests coming back positive are still at high levels around 16% statewide and 18% in Hampton Roads.

Vaccines are slowly rolling out, with just 87,618 doses administered so far. VDH had not updated data for Monday as of 9:30 a.m., so that figure is from Sunday.

Virginia is still in the process of vaccinating health care workers, and just started vaccinating long-term care staff and residents last week. A long-term care operator who spoke to 10 On Your Side said he was frustrated with the slow rollout. The state health department said that it could take until the end of January for all nursing homes to get their vaccines through a partnership with CVS and Walgreens.

VDH hasnt said when the general public should expect to get the vaccine.

Curently 563 of the 2,765 COVID-19 patients are in the ICU. ICU capacity statewide is at 82%, the Virginia Hospital and Healthcare Association says.

COVID-19 hospitalizations nationwide are at a record high with 124,390 on average. Cases and deaths reporting dipped due to the holiday.

Our daily update is published. States reported 1.4 million tests, 205k cases, 125,544 people hospitalized, and 1,431 COVID-19 deaths. Holiday data reporting effects are almost certainly still in play. pic.twitter.com/4lECF5PbFq

Key local metrics

Test positivity

For more information from the Virginia Department of Health,click here.

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Virginia Jan. 4 COVID-19 update: Cases and hospitalizations at record averages for Va., COVID-19 deaths near record - WAVY.com

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