Category: Covid-19

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Clinic offers sessions on coping with stress and anxiety from COVID-19 – Ohio University

December 18, 2020

The Psychology and Social Work Clinic at Ohio University will offer low-cost sessions on coping with stress and anxiety from COVID-19 to both campus and community members starting in January.

These virtual sessions with trained professionals in the Psychology and Social Work Clinic can be teen-focused and or adult-focused and are open to residents of Ohio.

As we transition from 2020 and a life-altering global pandemic to a hopeful but uncertain future, fear and anxiety are expected, said Dr. Nicholas Allan, assistant professor of clinical psychology. However, if anxiety is too overwhelming or uncertainty too distressing, the return to normal can be unnecessarily unpleasant. At the PSWC, we are offering individual and group virtual interventions designed to give you the tools to navigate this future more successfully using empirically supported research tools.

These interventions are available via telehealth (virtual) for convenience and include use of a mobile app to provide increased support. Fee waivers are available.

Allan noted that the center offers different types of sessions for various needs.

These services are offered by trained professionals at the Psychology and Social Work Clinic, a supportive, affirming outpatient mental health clinic that is primarily staffed by doctoral student therapists of the Ohio University clinical psychology program.

The PSWC offers evidence-based therapy and comprehensive assessment services for children, adolescents, and adults. Individual therapy services are available for a broad range of behavioral health concerns including: depression, anxiety and phobias, disordered eating, trauma, OCD, personality disorders, self-harm, school refusal, poor sleep/insomnia, bereavement, adjustment issues, ADHD, conduct problems, and more.

Affordable rates apply, and fee waivers are available.

For more information or to enroll, call 740-593-0902 or email PSWC@ohio.edu.

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Clinic offers sessions on coping with stress and anxiety from COVID-19 - Ohio University

Devices Used In COVID-19 Treatment Can Give Errors For Patients With Dark Skin – NPR

December 18, 2020

A paramedic uses a pulse oximeter to check a patient's vital signs during an August home visit in the Bronx borough of New York. Angus Mordant/Bloomberg via Getty Images hide caption

A paramedic uses a pulse oximeter to check a patient's vital signs during an August home visit in the Bronx borough of New York.

The common fingertip devices that measures oxygen in the blood can sometimes give misleading readings in people with dark skin, according to a report Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

These devices, called pulse oximeters, are increasingly finding their way into people's homes, because of the COVID-19 pandemic. So, this is not just a concern for medical personnel using professional-grade devices.

Dr. Michael Sjoding and colleagues at the University of Michigan hospital in Ann Arbor came across this issue this year when they received an influx of COVID-19 patients from Detroit's overflowing hospitals. Many of these patients are Black. Sjoding noticed something odd about results from the fingertip device used throughout hospitals.

"It spits out this number called an oxygen saturation value, which gives us an understanding of how much oxygen is in the blood," Sjoding says.

But he noticed that oxygen reading was sometimes off when compared with a more sophisticated test that samples blood from a person's artery. So Sjoding and his colleagues started gathering data, comparing these readings in light-skinned people versus dark-skinned people. They measured how often a pulse oximeter reading apparently in the normal range actually came from someone with low oxygen as measured in an artery.

"We found this happened much more often in patients who were Black. Basically, about three times as often," he says.

His initial study was based on more than 10,000 measurements taken at his hospital instances in which doctors had nearly simultaneous oxygen readings from a pulse oximeter and blood in a person's artery.

To validate that finding, he and his colleagues looked at another 37,000 measurements taken from 178 intensive care units.

About 12% of the time, apparently normal readings were actually misleading, the report says.

"It's not happening a lot, but if you think of how often these measurements are taken, if it's wrong 12% of the time, I worry that could be really impactful," Sjoding says.

And, though previous studies have flagged this issue, Sjoding says he doesn't think it's widely appreciated by physicians in ICUs. "When I ran these analyses, I was just really surprised." It's all the more important now that many people are buying pulse oximeters to monitor their own health at home.

He suspects the reason behind this is that the color of light used in the pulse oximeter can be absorbed by skin pigment.

Dr. Jewel Mullen, associate dean for health equity at the University of Texas Dell Medical School in Austin, agrees that this discrepancy is about skin color, not race. She's concerned about the impact the finding could have on people who may rely on consumer-grade pulse oximeter devices at home, sometimes in lieu of medical care. The devices are still a valuable tool, she says, but it's important to look at the results in context.

"If somebody has coronavirus and they're feeling really short of breath, but they're getting [an acceptable reading] say an oxygen saturation of 92% to 96% or more they should pay more attention to their shortness of breath, more than that oxygen that's being measured," Mullen says.

People should also keep an eye on trends, rather than absolute readings, she says. If a person's oxygen level drops significantly, that should prompt a call to a medical provider, even if the number is still in the "normal" zone.

Sjoding says pulse oximeters will remain important for hospitals as well, but he now thinks more carefully about how to interpret the readings.

You can contact NPR science correspondent Richard Harris at rharris@npr.org.

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Devices Used In COVID-19 Treatment Can Give Errors For Patients With Dark Skin - NPR

Another day, another record: 590 new COVID-19 cases in Maine – Press Herald

December 18, 2020

State health officials reported a daily high of 590 new cases of COVID-19 on Thursday, breaking the record that stood for just 24 hours.

There were nine additional deaths as well, adding to what has been by far the deadliest period of the pandemic in Maine.

Since March, there have been 17,901 confirmed or probable cases in the state, according to data from the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. The seven-day average stands at 436 cases, more than double what it was this time last month. Just two months ago, the average number of daily cases was only 30.

In yet another sign of how rapidly the virus has spread in recent weeks, the number of active cases (individuals who have not yet recovered or died with the virus) rose to 6,937 almost three times the total from one month ago. Put another way, about four out of 10 Maine people who have had COVID-19 have it right now, although it is possible that some of those people have indeed recovered and that news hasnt reached the CDC yet. The state has scaled back its contact tracing efforts.

A recent state-by-state review of cases conducted by Johns Hopkins University found that from Dec. 3-14 the period immediately following Thanksgiving Maine had the highest percent increase in cases nationwide at 99 percent. That was higher than California, Virginia and Georgia, among others.

Asked about the Johns Hopkins data, Maine CDC Director Dr. Nirav Shah said he has no basis to doubt it, but he also said Maine tends to look worse when it comes to percentages because the state began the current surge with far fewer total cases than most states. Nevertheless, Vermont, which like Maine has seen low case numbers compared with other states, saw its cases increase by 8 percent over the same time period.

Im not minimizing, Shah said in a phone interview. What were seeing is deeply concerning.

Shah acknowledged at media briefing Wednesday that the state is squarely seeing the impact of gatherings over the Thanksgiving holiday, and he worried things could get much worse with Christmas a week away.

If staying home, staying in your pod or in your bubble is something thats available to you, thats definitely the most helpful thing you can do this winter, he said.

New cases were reported Thursday in every Maine county, led by Cumberland County with 152 cases and York County with 111. Even less populated counties, such as Aroostook and Washington, are seeing unprecedented daily increases.

While some counties are seeing transmission rates go up dramatically, others have seen them level off slightly. Androscoggin County, which had been among the biggest hotspots for weeks, has reported comparatively modest case numbers so far this week and just 18 cases on Thursday.

A lot of what was going on in Androscoggin County was driven by a couple of really large outbreaks, Shah said, referring to two long-term care facilities, Clover Health Care in Auburn and Russell Park Rehabilitation & Living Center in Lewiston. What were seeing now is more of that community-level baseline transmission.

There have now been 276 deaths overall and 100 just in the past 30 days. So far in December, 59 people in Maine have died from COVID-19, which puts this month on pace to be the states deadliest. November saw the most COVID-19 deaths so far at 67 more than the previous five months combined.

Of the nine deaths reported Thursday, five were in Oxford County: a man in his 50s, a man in his 80s, two women in their 70s and a woman in her 80s. The other deaths were a man in his 60s from Aroostook County, a woman in her 70s from Cumberland County, a man in his 50s from Kennebec County and a woman in her 70s from York County. Among all deaths so far, 235 people, or 85 percent, have been 70 or older.

Current COVID-19 hospitalizations increased by four to 191 on Thursday, including 46 patients in critical care and 17 on ventilators. In all, 958 people have been hospitalized at some point with the virus.

Because hospitalizations and deaths often lag case spikes by one to two weeks, many more of both could be coming.

Last week, Gov. Janet Mills once again tightened the states mask requirement for public places, urging businesses to deny entry to anyone not wearing a face covering and to call police if necessary. Business owners who fail to enforce mask compliance could be charged with a Class E crime and fined up to $10,000.

But Mills also said shes running out of available public health tools to reduce the spread of COVID-19, and hinted that more restrictions could be needed.

If (these) targeted steps dont work, more severe restrictions might be necessary, including reducing gathering limits as other states have done, or even business closures as some have done, Mills said. Those options are a last resort, and they are a last resort because they have such a devastating effect on people, their income and making them feel isolated.

Asked Thursday if Mills is close to announcing additional restrictions, spokeswoman Lindsay Crete said, the governor is focused on measures that protect public health while also preserving the economic health of our state, and mentioned measures that already have been taken.

While there are still other available tools, the governor believes right now everyone must assume a shared responsibility to protect public health that means curtailing normal social events, modifying behaviors, and taking the steps necessary to reduce exposure to this deadly virus, Crete said in an email. Everyone must be mindful of the effect of their behavior on the lives of others, including those close to them, and of the crushing burden the pandemic is placing on hospitals, nursing homes and medical professionals across Maine.

There hasnt been any serious talk of closing schools to in-person learning like in the spring. Many schools have adopted a hybrid model where students go to school two days a week to limit the number in buildings and classes at any one time. According to the most recent data from the Maine Department of Education, there have been 531 COVID-19 cases in the past 30 days associated with schools. That includes 42 schools with active outbreaks, although only 13 of them have more than five cases.

Maine is far from alone in the recent surge. Many other states are seeing their highest levels of cases, hospitalizations and deaths during the current, sustained surge. In fact, Wednesday was the deadliest day of the pandemic in the United States thus far, with more than 3,600 deaths nationwide attributed to COVID-19, according to Johns Hopkins University. The total number is now over 300,000.

The number of new cases Wednesday, more than 247,000, and total hospitalizations, more than 113,000, also broke previous records set only days earlier.

Other states have imposed restrictions in response to the latest spike, including shutting down restaurants for in-person dining, instituting curfews and reducing the allowable limit for indoor gatherings. But some states, including California and Minnesota, are seeing businesses and patrons openly defy those orders.

The worst numbers of the pandemic come at the same time vaccines are slowly starting to be administered. Asked about the disconnect between the positive news about vaccines and the distressing news about cases, hospitalizations and deaths, Shah agreed that its cognitively jarring.

But what I tell people is: The human mind can simultaneously have good thoughts and bad thoughts, he said. We shouldnt shy away from good news. We can be saddened by what were seeing with cases and deaths and enheartened by the vaccine at the same time.

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Another day, another record: 590 new COVID-19 cases in Maine - Press Herald

Investigational COVID-19 therapeutics to be evaluated in large clinical trials – National Institutes of Health

December 18, 2020

News Release

Thursday, December 17, 2020

NIH trial enrolling people hospitalized with COVID-19.

Two randomized, controlled Phase 3 clinical trials have begun evaluating investigational monoclonal antibodies for their safety and efficacy in treating people hospitalized with moderate COVID-19. The trials are part of the ACTIV-3 master protocol, which has an adaptive design allowing investigators to add new sub-studies of additional investigational agents. ACTIV-3is sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health.

One sub-study is evaluating VIR-7831, a monoclonal antibody developed through a partnership between GlaxoSmithKline plc (Brentford, United Kingdom) and Vir Biotechnology, Inc. (San Francisco). The other sub-study is evaluating the combination of BRII-196 and BRII-198, two neutralizing monoclonal antibodies manufactured by Brii Biosciences (Durham, North Carolina and Beijing). Antibodies are infection-fighting proteins naturally made by the immune system. Antibodies can prevent viruses from infecting cells, sometimes by binding to the surface of the viruses. Synthetic versions of these antibodies, prepared in a laboratory, are known as monoclonal antibodies.

Participants in the new ACTIV 3 sub-studies will be randomized 1:1:1 to receive either a saline placebo, VIR-7831 or the Brii combination. The ACTIV-3 design allows researchers to evaluate each antibody in a small group of volunteers, and then to enroll a larger group of volunteers if the antibody appears safe and effective. Initially, researchers will enroll approximately 450 volunteers who have been hospitalized with mild to moderate COVID-19 with fewer than 13 days of symptoms. After five days, the participants symptoms will be assessed on a seven-point ordinal scale ranging from being able to undertake usual personal activities with minimal or no symptoms, to death.

If an antibody appears to be safe and effective, each sub-study will enroll an additional 700 people. Three-hundred-fifty of those people will be assigned to receive the intervention, and 350 will receive the placebo. The new group of volunteers may include those with more severe illness. The primary endpoint of the trial is the participants sustained recovery for 14 days after release from the hospital.

Prior to the addition of these therapeutics to the trial, ACTIV-3 previously tested a different monoclonal antibody known as LY-CoV555, developed by Eli Lilly and Company (Indianapolis). Following a recommendation from the Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) for this trial, ACTIV-3 investigators recently closed the sub-study, based on the low likelihood that the intervention would be of clinical value to the hospitalized patients in the study.

ACTIV-3 is part of the NIH Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines (ACTIV) public-private partnership to develop a coordinated research strategy for prioritizing and speeding development of the most promising treatments and vaccines.

The VIR/GSK sub-study also is receiving funding support through Operation Warp Speed, the U.S. governments multi-agency effort to develop, manufacture and distribute medical countermeasures for COVID-19. The Brii sub-study is supported by funding from NIAID.

People interested in learning more about the trial can visit [promote HHS treatment portal site should be live soon] or visit clinicaltrials.gov and search identifier NCT04501978.

NIAID conducts and supports research at NIH, throughout the United States, and worldwide to study the causes of infectious and immune-mediated diseases, and to develop better means of preventing, diagnosing and treating these illnesses. News releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related materials are available on the NIAID website.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

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Link:

Investigational COVID-19 therapeutics to be evaluated in large clinical trials - National Institutes of Health

COVID-19 Daily Update 12-16-2020 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

December 18, 2020

The West VirginiaDepartment of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of December 16, 2020, there have been 1,339,101total confirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 66,849 total cases and 1,039deaths.

DHHRhas confirmed the deaths of a 53-year old female from Cabell County, a 92-year old female fromWyoming County, a 76-year old male from Brooke County, a 76-year old femalefrom Lewis County, a 79-year old male from Hardy County, an 82-year old malefrom Greenbrier County, a 76-year old male from Brooke County, an 81-year old femalefrom Ohio County, a 69-year old male from Ohio County, an 83-year old male fromHancock County, a 75-year old male from Mercer County, a 62-year old male fromMarshall County, a 79-year old male from Wetzel County, a 73-year old male fromWetzel County, an 87-year old male from Morgan County, a 92-year old femalefrom Marion County, a 66-year old female from Greenbrier County, an 85-year oldfemale from Wood County, a 90-year old male from Pocahontas County, a 73-yearold female from Marshall County, an 88-year old female from Marshall County, an84-year old female from Cabell County, a 73-year old male from Kanawha County,an 82-year old male from Putnam County, a 64-year old male from Kanawha County,an 83-year old female from Berkeley County, and a 68-year old male from KanawhaCounty.

It never gets easier to announce the amountof COVID-19 cases or all the people we have lost, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHRCabinet Secretary. This pandemic has affected all West Virginians. Our heartsgo out to those who have lost loved ones and to every person who has beenaffected by COVID-19.

CASESPER COUNTY: Barbour (575), Berkeley (4,745),Boone (841), Braxton (187), Brooke (1,069), Cabell (4,134), Calhoun (112), Clay(211), Doddridge (178), Fayette (1,407), Gilmer (258), Grant (606), Greenbrier(963), Hampshire (682), Hancock (1,378), Hardy (553), Harrison (2,123), Jackson(941), Jefferson (1,914), Kanawha (7,282), Lewis (359), Lincoln (578), Logan(1,261), Marion (1,310), Marshall (1,711), Mason (836), McDowell (755), Mercer(1,935), Mineral (1,900), Mingo (1,151), Monongalia (4,319), Monroe (491),Morgan (482), Nicholas (521), Ohio (2,067), Pendleton (193), Pleasants (219),Pocahontas (303), Preston (1,147), Putnam (2,528), Raleigh (2,166), Randolph(947), Ritchie (265), Roane (244), Summers (334), Taylor (516), Tucker (244),Tyler (250), Upshur (661), Wayne (1,391), Webster (111), Wetzel (541), Wirt(164), Wood (3,813), Wyoming (977).

Please note that delaysmay be experienced with the reporting of information from the local healthdepartment to DHHR. As case surveillance continues at the local healthdepartment level, it may reveal that those tested in a certain county may notbe a resident of that county, or even the state as an individual in questionmay have crossed the state border to be tested. Such is the case of Webster County in this report.

Please visit the dashboard located at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more information.

Free COVID-19 testing daily events scheduled fortoday, Wednesday, December 16, 2020:

BerkeleyCounty

10:00 AM 6:00 PM, 891 AutoParts Place, Martinsburg, WV

HardyCounty

HarrisonCounty

9:00 AM 12:00 PM,Harrison-Clarksburg Health Department, 330 West Main Street, Clarksburg, WV (by appointment; 304-623-9308 and pre-registration:https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

LoganCounty

Marshall County

Mason County

Mingo County

10:00 AM 1:30 PM, Hurley Drug Company, 210 Logan Street, Williamson, WV

OhioCounty

11:00 AM 4:00 PM, Valley Grove Volunteer Fire Department, 355Fire House Lane, Valley Grove, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

11:00 AM 4:00 PM, Warwood Fire Station #9, 1301 Richland Avenue,Wheeling, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

11:00 AM 4:00 PM, Wheeling Island Fire Station #5, 11 NorthWabash Street, Wheeling, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Taylor County

Wayne County

10:00 AM 2:00 PM, Wayne County Health Department, 217 Kenova Avenue,Wayne, WV

Wirt County

Additional testing will beheld on Thursday, December 17, 2020 in Berkeley, Boone, Hampshire, Hardy,Jackson, Mingo, Ohio, Putnam, Taylor, and Wayne counties.

There are many ways to obtain free COVID-19 testing in WestVirginia. Please visit https://dhhr.wv.gov/COVID-19/pages/testing.aspx.

Read more here:

COVID-19 Daily Update 12-16-2020 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

8 inmates test positive for COVID-19 at Charlotte County Jail, CCSO says they are the first – Wink News

December 18, 2020

PUNTA GORDA

At least eight inmates have tested positive for COVID-19 at Charlotte County Jail.

The Charlotte County Sheriffs Office, which operates the jail, said these were the first positive cases for the facility, according to a news release.

The agency said since the start of the pandemic there has been extensive cleaning and sanitizing procedures in place to avoid a spread. Temperatures and taken daily and inmates are placed into a 14-day quarantine upon entering the jail.

The number is low, with eight inmates experiencing minor symptoms who are being treated by on-site medical professionals, according to the sheriffs office.

The eight cases are within two housing units which have since been locked down. The inmates are in isolation.

The jail is monitoring the rest of the population, the agency said.

We want to acknowledge concerns the public may have with loved ones within our facility. We assure you we are taking every precaution necessary provided by the CDC to ensure the safety and health of your loved ones, the agency said.

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8 inmates test positive for COVID-19 at Charlotte County Jail, CCSO says they are the first - Wink News

Muskegon not out of the woods as COVID-19 cases, deaths continue to climb – mlive.com

December 18, 2020

MUSKEGON, MI As COVID-19 vaccinations are poised to begin in Muskegon, the public health director urged residents who are not out of the woods to keep their guard up against the disease that claimed another 24 lives in the past week.

Mercy Health Muskegon received 1,950 doses of the Pfizer vaccine earlier this week, said Muskegon County Public Health Director Kathy Moore. The vaccine first will go to hospital workers who are caring for COVID patients, Moore said.

She predicted the vaccine will be available for anyone who wants it by March or April of 2021.

The arrival of the vaccine comes at a time when cases in the county are still very high far higher than the prior peak in the spring.

Were not below our initial peak in April and May, Moore told MLive. We are down from the mountain peak that was in mid-November.

The health department on Wednesday, Dec. 16, reported 8,691 total cases, which is an increase of 510 cases since Dec. 9. Deaths stood at 227, up 24 from the 203 deaths the state reported for the county on Dec. 9.

Moore said the county did not experience a surge in cases that was feared after Thanksgiving. She encouraged citizens to continue keeping their distance, wearing masks and following exceptional hygiene through the Christmas and New Year holidays and beyond.

I wont be ready to say were out of the woods or were definitely moving downward until mid-January, Moore said.

Of the 227 deaths recorded in the county since March, two-thirds 141 -- occurred since the beginning of November, county statistics show. During November, an average of more than three people died of COVID-19 a day in Muskegon County. The average so far this month is 2 per day.

There were 78 people hospitalized with COVID-19 at Mercy Health on Dec. 17, the health department reported. Of those, 15 were in intensive care 10 of them on ventilators, according to the health department.

That compares with a high of 152 inpatients recorded in November, said Dr. Justin Grill, chief medical officer for Mercy Health Muskegon. The peak in the spring was 32 inpatients, he said.

Mercy Health has brought in health care workers to help care for COVID-19 patients, and they will remain at least until any spikes from the Christmas and New Year holidays occur, he said.

Were not really anxious to send our travelers home until were very confident were not going to have another spike, Grill said.

The new cases in the county are not attributable to any particular school or industry, but rather are in the general community, Moore said. The most severe and critical cases are in older age groups, Moore said.

Among the groups who will be prioritized for vaccinations are those who live in communal living situations, including nursing homes, Moore said. She is making determinations regarding essential workers, saying she moved jail corrections officers into a high priority group and moved teachers of those with special needs ahead of other teachers because of the close proximity with which they need to work with their students, who often have trouble following masking and social distancing directives.

The biggest challenge is prioritizing essential workers, Moore said. Everybody wants to be moved up the list Im really trying to base it on risk exposure.

The plan for vaccinations is evolving and involves the use of CVS and Walgreens pharmacies for help administering them, she said. Large health clinics, including Hackley Community Care and Mercy Family Care in addition to large group practices, likely will vaccinate their own patients while patients of smaller practices probably will get invitations to community vaccination events, she said.

The health department is working with communications officials from various community organizations, such as Rotary, United Way and the Chamber of Commerce, to share messaging about the importance and safety of the vaccine, Moore said.

I feel like the political atmosphere this year did not encourage or promote trust in government, she said. Were asking our community partners to get the message out.

The Michigan Department of Corrections on Wednesday reported a total of 1,108 cases, 54 of them active, among prisoners and 83 among staff at Muskegon Correctional Facility, where nine inmates have died of COVID-19. Brooks Correctional Facility has had 825 cases among inmates, 316 of them active, and 77 among staff, with one inmate death, according to the department.

Ottawa County reported a total of 17,129 cases and 217 deaths as of Wednesday, up 1,124 cases and 23 deaths from Dec. 9.

Oceana County reported on Wednesday 1,457 total cases and 32 deaths.

Also on MLive:

Dont visit your grandparents quite yet, even if they get the vaccine

Healthcare workers demand safer conditions during COVID-19 at Muskegon hospital

Spring Lake woman dies in head-on crash in Ottawa County

Originally posted here:

Muskegon not out of the woods as COVID-19 cases, deaths continue to climb - mlive.com

COVID-19 vaccinations begin at Brookings Health System – KELOLAND.com

December 18, 2020

BROOKINGS, S.D. (KELO) TheBrookingsHealth System began administering Pfizers heCOVID-19 vaccine today to local frontline health care workers.

If the FDA grants emergency authorization use toModernasvaccine, BrookingsHealth may continue vaccinations for frontline health care workers next week and even start vaccinating local long-term care residents.

As more doses become available, additional Phase 1 subgroups will be given the opportunity to receive the vaccine, including other health care workers, first responders, people with underlying medical conditions, teachers and critical infrastructure workers.

You can find more information from the Brookings Health System here.

Read the original here:

COVID-19 vaccinations begin at Brookings Health System - KELOLAND.com

COVID-19 Latest: Gov. Larry Hogan Limits Travel Out Of State, Gatherings To 10 People Within Your Household – CBS Baltimore

December 18, 2020

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (WJZ) Gov. Larry Hogan is urging Marylanders not to travel for Christmas and other holidays this year.

This comes as the number of coronavirus deaths continue to increase across the state. Maryland surpassed 5,000 coronavirus-related deaths total earlier this week.

>>WJZ has a new news app! Download it now!<<

This holiday season could present perhaps our toughest challenge yet, Hogan said during a press conference Thursday. It is during this time of year that so many of us typically make plans to travel to visit family and loved ones.

Yet, community transmission continues to have an impact.

And we all look forward to hosting or attending family gatherings and holiday parties, he continued. Unfortunately, these are the very things that contact tracing consistently shows are the most dangerous things we can do.

There have been a total of 243,984 coronavirus cases since the pandemic began. Forty-nine more Marylanders have died Thursday from the virus with a total of 5,152 deaths reported.

Hospitalizations went down by 60 and are now at 1,702. The number of ICU patients are slightly down again to 394 and there are 1,308 in acute care.

The statewide positivity rate went up slightly and is now at 7.73%. Its the 8th lowest in the country, Hogan said.

After doing so well for so long, we simply cannot afford to let our guard down over the holidays during this very critical time, Hogan said. So our message today is simple you are safer at home for the holidays this year.

CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES:

Making difficult sacrifices during these next few weeks will absolutely help to keep your family, loved ones and your fellow Marylanders safe, he added. It will help our hospitals keep up with the demand and it will save a lot.

We do want families to celebrate and enjoy the holidays in ways that keep them safe, Hogan said, urging Marylanders to stay home for the holidays.

Today, I am issuing an emergency order, which requires limiting travel to essential purposes only, Hogan said. Marylanders who do travel outside of Maryland or individuals who do travel to our state will be required to obtain a negative COVID-19 test result or to self quarantine for 10 days. With testing so widely available to anyone throughout Maryland this is easier than ever before.

This however doesnt include the states that border Maryland like Pennsylvania, Delaware and Virginia as well as the District of Columbia.

[This] doesnt impact people that are driving to and from the states in the region, Hogan said. Were talking about flying out of state or traveling to places that are outside of our region.

He said thousands of Marylanders leave the state daily to work in nearby states.

The Maryland Department of Health also issued a public health advisory, which lowers the gathering limit from 25 to 10. The health department is also advising Marylanders against all non-essential activities and holiday gatherings with people outside of your immediate household.

Several hospitals have administered the first dose of the Pfizer vaccine to frontline workers. Hogan said earlier this week that nursing home workers and residents would begin to be vaccinated next week.

WJZ will carry the governors press conference live on-air and on WJZ.com.

For the latest information on coronavirus go to the Maryland Health Departments website or call 211. You can find all of WJZs coverage on coronavirus in Maryland here.

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COVID-19 Latest: Gov. Larry Hogan Limits Travel Out Of State, Gatherings To 10 People Within Your Household - CBS Baltimore

St. Christophers doctors treat Phillys youngest COVID-19 patients and jump at the chance to get vaccinated – The Philadelphia Inquirer

December 18, 2020

Menkiti and Mammen said their lives wont change overnight because of the vaccine: Until more people get it, they must still wear masks and practice social distancing. But some of their own anxiety working during a pandemic, weighing the risks of contracting COVID-19, or passing it on to family members, will ease, they said.

Read more from the original source:

St. Christophers doctors treat Phillys youngest COVID-19 patients and jump at the chance to get vaccinated - The Philadelphia Inquirer

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