Category: Covid-19

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COVID-19 Daily Update 12-10-2020 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

December 12, 2020

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of December 10, 2020, therehave been 1,265,329 total confirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 59,695totalcases and 921 deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of a 71-year old female fromGreenbrier County, a 75-year old male from Putnam County, a 92-year old femalefrom Greenbrier County, a 90-year old female from Preston County, a 77-year oldmale from Wood County, an 80-year old male from Mineral County, a 77-year oldmale from Mineral County, a 78-year old male from Brooke County, an 86-year oldmale from Wood County, a 75-year old male from Kanawha County, an 80-year oldmale from Kanawha County, a 72-year old female from Boone County, an 83-yearold male from Kanawha County, an 86-year old female from Putnam County, a 42-yearold male from Raleigh County, an 87-year old female from Jackson County, a 64-yearold male from Cabell County, a 70-year old male from Cabell County, a 38-yearold female from Cabell County, and a 59-year old male from Hancock County.

As this pandemiccontinues, it doesnt get any easier to report the deaths of our residents,said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. Our sincere condolences areextended to these families.

CASESPER COUNTY: Barbour (543), Berkeley (4,224),Boone (767), Braxton (159), Brooke (918), Cabell (3,661), Calhoun (95), Clay(183), Doddridge (154), Fayette (1,303), Gilmer (231), Grant (537), Greenbrier(772), Hampshire (547), Hancock (1,139), Hardy (456), Harrison (1,835), Jackson(842), Jefferson (1,724), Kanawha (6,705), Lewis (301), Lincoln (514), Logan(1,180), Marion (1,141), Marshall (1,600), Mason (721), McDowell (708), Mercer(1,652), Mineral (1,748), Mingo (1,082), Monongalia (3,851), Monroe (444),Morgan (409), Nicholas (463), Ohio (1,901), Pendleton (153), Pleasants (141),Pocahontas (289), Preston (940), Putnam (2,379), Raleigh (1,946), Randolph(852), Ritchie (227), Roane (227), Summers (311), Taylor (454), Tucker (211),Tyler (197), Upshur (591), Wayne (1,259), Webster (99), Wetzel (493), Wirt(152), Wood (3,340), Wyoming (924).

Please note that delaysmay be experienced with the reporting of information from the local healthdepartment to DHHR. As case surveillance continues at the local health departmentlevel, it may reveal that those tested in a certain county may not be aresident of that county, or even the state as an individual in question mayhave crossed the state border to be tested.

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

Free COVID-19 testing daily events scheduled fortoday:

Barbour County

1:00 PM 5:00 PM, Junior Volunteer Fire Department, 331 Row Avenue, Junior, WV

Berkeley County

11:00AM 3:00 PM, Hedgesville High School, 109 Ridge Road N., Hedgesville, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

1:00 5:00 PM, Shenandoah Community Health, 99 Tavern Road, Martinsburg, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

4:30PM 8:00 PM, Dorothy McCormack Building, 2000 Foundation Way, Martinsburg, WV(pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Boone County

Cabell County

Grant County

10:00AM 2:00 PM, Petersburg Elementary School, 333 Rig Street, Petersburg, WV

Hampshire County

Jackson County

9:00AM 1:00 PM, Jackson County Health Department, 504 South Church Street,Ripley, WV

Jefferson County

Kanawha County

11:00AM 3:00 PM, Kanawha-Charleston Health Department, 108 Lee Street, Charleston,WV Use Reynolds Street Entrance (pre-registration:https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Logan County

Marshall County

Mason County

5:00PM 7:00 PM, Mason County Health Department, Annex Parking Lot, 5thStreet and Viand Street, Point Pleasant, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Mingo County

11:00AM 4:00 PM, Kermit Volunteer Fire Department, 49 Main Street, Kermit, WV

Nicholas County

1:00PM 5:00 PM, St. Lukes United Methodist Church, 18001 W. Webster Road,Craigsville, WV

Ohio County

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

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

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

Pocahontas County

8:00AM 12:00 PM, FRN Food Pantry Building, 503 Third Avenue, Marlinton, WV

Taylor County

Wayne County

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

Wood County

11:00AM 2:00 PM, Jackson Recreational Center, 570 Jackson Park Drive, Vienna, WV (pre-registration http://www.ipsumcovidresults.com)

Wyoming County

11:00AM 3:00 PM, Old Board of Education, 19 Park Street, Pineville, WV

Additional testing will be held on Friday, December 11 in Barbour,Berkeley, Boone, Cabell, Fayette, Grant, Hampshire, Harrison, Jefferson, Logan,Marshall, Mason, Mercer, Mingo, Nicholas, Ohio, Putnam, Taylor, Wayne, andWyoming counties.

There are many ways to obtain free testing in West Virginia. Pleasevisit https://dhhr.wv.gov/COVID-19/pages/testing.aspx for more testing options.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 12-10-2020 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

A small town dragged its feet on COVID-19 mask mandates. Now residents are paying the price. – USA TODAY

December 12, 2020

DODGE CITY -- In the midst of a worsening pandemic, as coronavirus cases climbed, elected leaders in a former frontier town famous for its gunfights faced a choice.

They could pass a mask mandate at the urging of health experts, or reject the measure blasted by some as a violation of their personal freedoms.

The five commissioners of Dodge City, Kansas, a politically red cattle community of some 27,000 people, had resisted such measures all summer and into fall. Like other parts of rural and small-city America, Dodge City had mostly returned to normal after shaking off the pandemics first wave.

But then a second wave hit Dodge City. People started getting sick again.

By the time commissioners passed the mask mandate on Nov. 16, more than 1 out of every 10 county residents had contracted the virus. At least a dozen of them had died.

COVID-19 has spread fast and deadly in Dodge City and other small towns where residents ignored public health guidelines and refused to wear masks. Many people lived as they always had: going to work, shopping and visiting friends without worry.

In communities where mask-wearing has become a political inflection point, the toll of the virus has surpassed even the most terrifying early days seen in America's big cities.

A USA TODAY analysis found that in recent months, the weekly rates of newly reported cases are highest in rural counties and only slightly lower in other non-metropolitan communities.

The trend started on Aug. 7, and within two months, people in rural counties were almost twice as likely to have contracted COVID-19 within the last week compared to people who live in urban areas. Counties with city populations that total 20,000 to 250,000 people like Dodge Citys home of Ford County show a similar gap, reporting 54% more cases in the previous week than metropolitan areas on average.

Since mid-November, the weekly rate of COVID-19 deaths in rural America has been higher than it has ever been in urban counties.

The rural communities were kind of lulled into complacency, feeling they were naturally blessed with open spaces and big sky and that COVID-19s a metropolitan problem, said Dr. Lee Norman, Secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. But the chickens have come home to roost.

Dodge City officials knew COVID-19 was serious from the start, said Mayor Joyce Warshaw. But it wasnt until the threat of flu season and the rise in national cases that the city commission felt compelled to pass a mask mandate, she said.

By then, Warshaw had been personally affected, as her daughter had contracted COVID-19. Warshaws aunt also recently died from the virus.

"We just felt like we had to do something so everybody was aware of how important it was for everybody to be responsible for each others health and well-being," she said.

But weeks later, residents openly defy the mandate. And, as of early December, police had done nothing to enforce it.

At Red Beard Coffee on Gunsmoke Street earlier this month, there were no signs reminding people to put on masks. Neither the staff nor most customers wore them.

At Tacos Jalisco on Wyatt Earp Boulevard, signs in English and Spanish alerted customers to the mask protocol, but neither staff nor most customers wore them inside during a recent visit by USA TODAY.

Business owners who try to enforce the mask mandate often face resistance.

At the Ensueno Boutique on 2nd Avenue, owner Andres Lima, 61, said hes been requiring customers and staff to wear masks since the summer, regardless of what the government required. His store has bilingual mask rules posted on the front doors, and store clerk Esthela Cisneros is pregnant.

Its for the safety of the people who work here and for the people who come in, he said, speaking amidst wedding gowns and sparkling quinceaera dresses. Some people say Im not sick, but we tell them, 'thats not the problem. For your safety, you need to wear one.'

As of Dec. 4, local police had issued no tickets for violations of the mask ordinance. The police department had received only a few complaints about people flouting the rule, said Dodge City Police Chief Drew Francis.

Other complaints, he said, have come from opponents of the mandate.

We have taken several complaints from community members speaking directly to officers about their position that this is unconstitutional government overreach and wanting to know if the police department is going to allow itself to be used to oppress the people, Francis said.

Steeped in Wild West lore, Dodge City prides itself on the independent cowboy ethos.

In the 1800s, it served as a destination for cattle headed for the railroad, attracting cowboys, gamblers, buffalo hunters and soldiers. The city became famous for its saloons, outlaws and legendary lawmen like Wyatt Earp. It cemented its place in modern history when it served as the backdrop for the television show Gunsmoke for 20 years.

A steel cutout of cowboy's riding toward the sunset welcomes visitors to Dodge City, Kansas.Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY NETWORK

Dodge City is the most populous town in Ford County and one of the largest cities in western Kansas.

Almost a third of residents are foreign-born, 62% are Hispanic. The median household income is $52,000, about 10% lower than state and national averages, according to recent U.S. Census Bureau estimates.

The community is surrounded by cattle feedlots that supply Dodge Citys two meat packing plants, which employ thousands of people. Along the main street, Wyatt Earp Boulevard, car-parts stores sit alongside heavy-equipment dealerships and fertilizer depots. Large gas stations sell diesel fuel to power the steady stream of trucks delivering cattle to the processing plants and hauling beef products to stores nationwide.

Show captionHide captionWorkers wear protective masks as they walk outside the National Beef meatpacking plant, Tuesday, May 19, 2020, in Dodge City, Kan. Ford County, home to...Workers wear protective masks as they walk outside the National Beef meatpacking plant, Tuesday, May 19, 2020, in Dodge City, Kan. Ford County, home to Dodge City, has the most positive COVID-19 tests per capita in the state in large part due to outbreaks in the county's two meatpacking plants.Charlie Riedel, AP

COVID-19 was first discovered in Kansas in early March and, as the disease picked up steam, Gov. Laura Kelly, a Democrat, ordered a temporary, statewide stay-at-home order. Schools closed. Businesses shuttered. People stayed home.

Still, the disease spread furiously through Ford County. On March 17, officials announced the first case of COVID-19 in the community. Soon, viral clusters that started in the packing plants led to a rise in cases that, at one point, made Ford County one of the worst hotspots in Kansas.

In Kansas like most of the U.S. the virus has disproportionately harmed non-white and Hispanic families. Statewide, the rate of reported cases is twice as high among Hispanic residents and the rate of deaths is 27% higher. (Kansas does not publish race or ethnicity COVID-19 data at a county level.) Especially in the spring and summer, numerous outbreaks were identified at meat packing plants that hire many Hispanic workers, including the two beef processing plants in Dodge City.

Vehicles drive down Wyatt Earp Boulevard in Dodge City, Kansas.Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY NETWORK

City commissioners began holding their meetings online in April and received regular updates from local health officials. Dodge City leaders promoted good hygiene, social distancing and wearing masks, though they stopped short of a mandate.

The city commission resumed its in-person meetings off and on over the next few months. When they met in person, they sat at tables with more space between the elected officials, who regularly wore masks.

Lets look at wearing a face covering as our statement that we are working to make Dodge City the best place to be, the city wrote on its Facebook page on July 3. Lets lead on this response to overcome this fast-spreading danger to our community.

But many people refused. And when the lockdowns of the spring expired, mobility tracking data shows many rural and small city residents quickly resumed their normal lives.

In June, people in rural communities across the country, on average, visited retail and recreation establishments at rates similar to before the pandemic, according to Google cell phone data. By early July, counties with small cities also were back to normal levels. Urban residents were slower to return, with visits to retail and recreation sites averaging about 15% below pre-pandemic levels.

And the week of Independence Day, 75% of rural residents and 73% of small city residents left home compared to 68% of people in metropolitan areas, according to the analysis.

While Dodge City officials continued to stave off a mask mandate, residents on both sides of the issue were battling each other on a community Facebook page.

I live in a free country, one person wrote in July. I will not wear a mask. Quit being a stupid crybaby liberal.

The arrogance and ignorance is just comical, another person responded. Like I said, no one is asking you to give up a kidney. If you define freedom by wearing a mask, youre the stupid crybaby.

Wearing a mask, Esthela Cisneros works at Ensueno Boutique in downtown Dodge City, Kansas. Her boss, Andres Lima, said he's been requiring both staff and customers to wear masks inside the store for months.Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY NETWORK

The lower infection rates earlier in the year made it easy for officials, particularly those in redcommunities like Dodge City that supported President Trump, to brush aside the advice of doctors, scientists and other health officials. By early August, 77% of 105 counties in Kansas did not have a mask mandate, according to a CDC analysis of data from the Kansas Health Institute.

Reduced case counts over the early summer months created a false sense of security, Norman said.

Its not unique to the rural areas, but the rural areas were less likely to stick with masks, social distancing, limits on restaurant patronage and the like, Norman said.

A recent study by the University of Kansas Institute for Policy and Social Research found a 50% drop in the spread of COVID-19 in Kansas counties that had a mask mandate compared to those without. Last month, the CDC published an updated version of the analysis, reaching the same conclusion: Mandates worked to reduce infection rates and places without them saw faster case growth.

The political battle over masks has frustrated medical professionals in already stretched-thin rural hospitals, who are seeing sick people flooding into ill-equipped facilities. Leaders of metropolitan care centers also are worried as smaller facilities ask to send their patients.

"People are suffering and dying, said Dr. Angela Hewlett, medical director of the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. People are continuing to gather in groups and go out to restaurants and bars. I would ask people to stop politicizing the virus, stop politicizing the masks. This is not a political issue. This is life and death.

Like many others nationwide, Dodge City schools reopened in August, offering both in-person and virtual classes. About 95% of the 7,000-plus students returned for in-person learning, said Dodge City Public Schools spokeswoman Kerri Baker.

The schools implemented numerous safety measures, such as requiring students and staff to wear masks, placing hand sanitizer in high-traffic areas, spreading seats at least six feet apart and disinfecting routinely.

But while face coverings were required at schools, local leaders still hadnt approved a mask mandate, so face coverings were optional in other public areas. That meant more chances for the disease to spread from outside the schools to inside.

And it did.

A picture of Comanche Middle School in Dodge City, Kansas.TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY NETWORK

Between Sept. 1 and Dec. 1, more than 370 school district students and staff tested positive for COVID-19, Baker said. The football team cancelled its last game of the season after three players tested positive and six others were in quarantine.

Sabrina Frerichs an elementary school teacher for the district was among the many victims of the second wave to hit Dodge City.

Frerichs awoke in the middle of the night on Oct. 29, freezing cold and with a fever. It came out of nowhere, she said, as had the pain in her stomach that had been bothering her for days.

Within a week of testing positive, Frerichs said, she could barely eat or drink. She grew weaker, and her blood oxygen levels were falling.

The 39-year-old was admitted to the hospital, where she stayed on oxygen for four days. When she came home still exhausted and aching badly she needed to use an oxygen machine.

Frerichs'husband and three daughters also came down with less serious cases of COVID-19. Only Frerichs'14-year-old son has avoided the illness so far.

"I worry about the burden financially this is going to take on my family, she said, adding she has been planning school lessons while recovering at home. Insurance won't cover everything. I worry about the long-term effects on my health."

When it comes to the mask mandate, Frerichs keeps her opinions to herself because of the divisiveness in the community over the issue.

But since being diagnosed, Frerichs has continued to battle after-effects of the disease, including tremors in her hands, intermittent tingling in her hands and feet, rapid heart rate, palpitations and shortness of breath.

Even brushing her hair or getting dressed has been exhausting.

I never thought covid did all of this, she posted on Facebook on Nov. 27. Stay healthy and safe please.

The first symptom for Karyn Garcia, a 29-year-old teacher's aide in the school district, wasblinding migraines. She thought it was stress, so she took Tylenol and continued working and caring for her two kids.

Two weeks later exhaustion set in, along with shortness of breath, body aches and fever.A test at the local expo center confirmed she had COVID-19.

Garcia immediately went into quarantine with her children, neither of whom got the virus.

This isn't like just any other virus, she said. The bone-crushing weariness, the up and down fever it just feels different, she said.

"It's scary, to be honest," Garcia said.

While Frerich has a doctor nearby, many rural communities and small towns suffering the most during the current COVID-19 surge don't have hospitals or even medical clinics, forcing people to drive longdistances to get care or discouraging them from even trying.

Hewlett, with the University of Nebraska Medical Center, said tests can be hard to come by in rural areas and the turnaround time for results can take a week. By then, if people arent quarantining, the disease may have spread.

Our social bubbles are bigger than we think, Hewlett said.

Wellhealth is the new organization testing for COVID-19 at the Western State Bank Expo Center, sent to Ford County by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.JUDD WEIL/DODGE CITY DAILY GLOBE

Medical professionals in rural America are exhausted, she said. Theyre working multiple shifts and are worn down from wearing gowns, gloves and N-95 masks for hours on end. Meanwhile, doctors in private practice are helping carry the load by picking up shifts at the hospital, Hewlett said.

Dodge Citys Western Plains Medical Complex has only 10 ICU beds and six ventilators, but officials say they have not been at capacity yet.

Show captionHide captionKansas National Guard member Roy Manns, from Topeka, Kan., writes down results as he runs samples through an Abbott COVID-19 testing machine at a drive-thru...Kansas National Guard member Roy Manns, from Topeka, Kan., writes down results as he runs samples through an Abbott COVID-19 testing machine at a drive-thru testing site Wednesday, May 20, 2020 in Dodge City, Kan. Kansas Army and Air Force medical guard units have tested 100-200 people daily since setting up the testing site nearly a month ago in an attempt to stem the spread of the new coronavirus.Charlie Riedel, AP

Southwest Kansas counties have a total ICU capacity of 22 beds at 18 hospitals for the region's roughly 143,000 residents, state officials report.

On Sept. 1, those hospitals reported 17 ICU patients, including nine hospitalized with COVID-19. By Dec. 7, 18 of the 21 ICU patients were being treated for COVID-19 and only one staffed bed remained open. Another 63 people with COVID-19 filled other in-patient beds.

The state is sending ventilators to hospitals throughout Southwest Kansas because they are seeing so many COVID patients, Norman said. Thanks to that effort, state figures show the region has not yet been close to running out of ventilators this fall.

Some hospitals have run out of beds and are transferring people to Denver or other cities in Kansas, though the state doesnt publicly track those numbers. The ability of those larger hospitals to accept new patients could run out as case numbers rise locally and in surrounding communities that rely on metropolitan facilities for critical care.

I dont know how you can be a COVID-19 denier all the while the hospital in your own community is filling up and case volumes are going up dramatically, Norman said. It doesnt make any intellectual sense. I dont understand it.

On Nov. 16, Dodge City residents filed into city hall, where officials were set to vote on the mask mandate.

Among them was Ford County physician adviser Dr. R.C. Trotter, who in April urged residents to wear masks on a Kansas radio program. This time, he was urging commissioners to take action.

Just one infected person affects everyone around them, he said. And there can be long-term effects from the disease, such as damage to the brain, lungs, heart and circulatory system.

Dr. R.C. Trotter is the Ford County physician's adviser for Ford County, Kans. who is one of three doctors practicing at Family Practice Associates of Western Kansas in Dodge City.JUDD WEIL/DODGE CITY DAILY GLOBE

Its not an invasion of your rights, no more so than you cant drive as fast as you want on the road, and you cant drive without your seatbelt and you cant smoke in this room, he said.

Outside the commissioners room, about a dozen protesters decried the proposed mandate.

Most residents who testified said that the mandate would be an infringement on their rights, that it would be hard to enforce or that children were being psychologically traumatized by having to wear masks.

Casey Fitzgerald told commissioners the pandemic had been overblown.

Ive been in the community for 12 years, served in the military 21 years, still serving, Fitzgerald said. You all know this is the land of the free. So Im asking you to allow everyone here to remain free and make the choice whether to wear a mask or not

Dodge City residents wait outside of Dodge City City Hall to speak before the Dodge City Commission regarding the mask mandate for the city on Nov. 16.JUDD WEIL/DODGE CITY DAILY GLOBE

A few residents encouraged commissioners to follow the advice of medical professionals.

Laura Williams who has multiple sclerosis and has quarantined herself three times after possible exposures to the virus encouraged commissioners to impose the mandate. Nobody wants a mask mandate or a shutdown, she said. But the virus needs to be controlled.

If you dont know somebody who has been tested positive, whos been hospitalized, whos been ill, or, God forbid, died, youre lucky, Williams said.

Dodge City commissioner Joseph Nuci, who was the sole vote against the mandate, agreed that masks, handwashing and other safety measures help slow the disease. But the mandate was a step too far.

"If we do this, then what's next? Nuci said. Not allowing people to travel? Forcing people to wash their hands as soon as they enter a restaurant?"

On Nov. 18, Gov. Kelly again ordered a statewide mask mandate. Counties across Kansas were allowed to opt out of it, though, because the Republican-led state legislature granted them the power to do so in their summer session as part of a compromise negotiated with Kelly.

Some, including Ford County, opted out. The three Ford County commissioners, all Republican, walked into their meeting on Nov. 24 and unanimously rejected the mandate.

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A small town dragged its feet on COVID-19 mask mandates. Now residents are paying the price. - USA TODAY

Five things to know about COVID-19 in the Chattanooga region for the week ending Dec. 11 – Chattanooga Times Free Press

December 12, 2020

Every week, the Times Free Press will publish five essential things to know about the coronavirus pandemic in the Chattanooga region. For more updated case count numbers and other data related to Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama, visit timesfreepress.com/virus.

Five things to know about COVID-19 in the Chattanooga region for the week ending Dec. 11.

1. Hospitalizations across region near capacity, showing the strain on local health systems: Providers in Southeast Tennessee and Northwest Georgia pushed to the brink.

Why it matters: In the past week ICU beds in the city of Athens in McMinn County, Tennessee, hit 100% occupancy and the city of Cleveland in Bradley County reached 99% occupancy. Similarly, the 10-county North Georgia Health District reported being at 97% capacity. Under normal circumstances, staff can be called in to help care for an influx of patients, but that is more of a challenge as staffing shortages due to the COVID-19 surge plague most of the nation.

Read more about the worrying hospitalization statistics in Tennessee and how the same trend is playing out in Georgia.

2. Dizzying Hamilton County Schools developments leave schedule for spring semester uncertain: Schools go fully online this coming week as COVID-19 cases continue to climb.

Why it matters: On Thursday, Hamilton County Schools announced students would go to online-only school next week as the number of active cases in the county remains high. The quick shift also resulted in the suspension of winter sports until January. What the changes mean for the spring semester, starting Jan. 6, remains unknown. The school system reported this week that nearly 8,000 more students plan to return to the classroom after trying virtual learning in the fall.

Read more about the online-only announcement, what the suspension of winter sports means for their seasons and the logistical challenges schools could face with more in-person students in the spring.

3. COVID-19 vaccines set to arrive in Tennessee after months of uncertainty: Vaccine likely to receive emergency use authorization in Washington D.C. soon.

Why it matters: Arrival of the vaccine in Tennessee in the coming days is a welcome development. But public health experts know that injecting two doses of vaccine into the bodies of 4.8 million Tennesseans how many people it is estimated need to be vaccinated in order to ultimately control COVID-19 will not be easy. Health leaders face not only logistical challenges but high levels of skepticism in communities.

Read more about how state leaders plan to navigate complicated logistics, unexpected challenges and inevitable supply shortages.

4. Hamilton County reports 12 new COVID-19 deaths, marking the deadliest day for the virus in Chattanooga: Opening days of December nearly break record death total for an entire month.

Why it matters: Hamilton County is beginning to see the effects of Thanksgiving gatherings as cases rise, hospitalization totals are breaking records and deaths are spiking. On Tuesday, the Hamilton County Health Department reported 12 new coronavirus deaths, the deadliest day for the virus to date. There are few indications that this trend will slow as case totals and positivity rates of new tests remain at record highs.

Read more about what the spike in deaths could mean for the virus during the winter months.

5. From acrylic shields to plastic bubbles, how Santa is staying safe in the Chattanooga area: Christmas season brings new challenges to old traditions.

Why it matters: With Christmas two weeks away, area families are trying to make the season special but having to navigate a dangerous reality with cases at an all-time high and many of the seasonal staples unavailable. But in Collegedale, Santa still found a festive way to meet children situated in a giant plastic snow globe. Similarly, staff at Rock City are working to ensure safety in their winter wonderland.

Read more about the changes to local holiday traditions in the age of COVID-19.

What are your experiences with the coronavirus? Are you or someone you love affected by it? What questions do you have? We would like to hear from you, so please contact efite@timesfreepress.com or wmassey@timesfreepress.com.

Excerpt from:

Five things to know about COVID-19 in the Chattanooga region for the week ending Dec. 11 - Chattanooga Times Free Press

Baby born to Sacramento mother in ICU, on ventilator with COVID-19 – ABC10.com KXTV

December 12, 2020

I just told them to tell my babies I love them a lot because, again, I didnt know if I was going to wake up, Diana Estrada-Arauza said.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. Diana Estrada-Arauza has had both COVID-19 and a baby during the pandemic -- both at the same time.

Estrada-Arauza explained what it was like when she found out she was COVID positive while seven months pregnant.

It was scary, Estrada-Arauza admitted. Because Im a nurse myself, so I kind of heard stories and seen people with COVID.

She was admitted to UC Davis on Sept. 6 and then was transferred to the intensive care unit (ICU) in a matter of hours. Ten days later, the hospital staff told her she would need to be put on a ventilator.

I asked if I could call my family just to give them an update, she recalled. And when I did, I told them that they tried their best, but the next step was the intubation.

Estrada-Arauza teared up as she remembered the moment, thinking of her 9-year-old son and 2-year-old daughter she still had at home.

I just told them to tell my babies I love them a lot because, again, I didnt know if I was going to wake up, she said.

Estrada-Arauza recalled how much it meant as a nurse at UC Davis held her hand as they put her on the ventilator.

She gave me comfort, Estrada-Arauza said. It was probably one of the weakest moments I had because I didnt know what was going to happen. She was very supportive and I looked into her eyes and I held her hand very tight.

Shortly after Estrada-Arauza was intubated, the babys heart rate dropped.

They had the whole team come down to the ICU and transfer me to the nearest OR, Estrada-Arauza explained.

Baby Sergio was born on Sept. 16, two months earlier than planned, but COVID free. After a short time in intensive care, he was able to go home, even before his mother.

Fortunately, Estrada-Arauza was able to beat the virus and was taken off the ventilator. Still, the battle wasnt over.

When I came home I was in a wheelchair, and using a walker, and I also had oxygen, she said. Because just from getting off my couch to go to the restroom or somewhere, I couldnt breathe.

Now, she has a message for everyone.

I want people to know its real, Estrada-Arauza implored. If it doesnt affect you, it might affect a friend, a family member or eventually it might in some way intertwine and affect you.

Now, mother and baby are home, together with her whole family, in time for the holidays.

Hes very special, he is a fighter, Estrada-Arauza said, holding Sergio, as tears ran down her cheeks. He fought so hard to be here as well. Hes my miracle baby.

Continue the conversation with Mike on Facebook.

Read more from ABC10

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Baby born to Sacramento mother in ICU, on ventilator with COVID-19 - ABC10.com KXTV

The Friend COVID-19 Took From Me – The Atlantic

December 12, 2020

She met Freddy in her third year of high school. Her parents were not for it, because Freddy was older, and they thought she was too young to attach herself. So when she graduated from high school, they made her travel for several months. Freddy was quite despondent; I felt like I was babysitting him. But it made for an even deeper friendship with Baby, because I became good friends with her eventual husband.

Beck: When did your friendship shift to being long distance?

Mary-Ann: I left the Philippines in 1984, when I was 25.

Beck: How did you keep in touch?

Mary-Ann: Email, letters, cards. When the cell phone came about, calling became easier. We used to buy phone cards. When she had a baby, shed bring her baby to see my mom. Then, of course, my mother will call me: I just saw Babys newborn. When are you going to have a kid?

Also, by the time [my husband and I] moved to California, we were going to Manila at least once a year, maybe more. Over about the last 15 years, they would also come through the U.S. at least once a year, because Freddy developed lymphoma. He went into remission, but most years he would go for his big checkup at Sloan Kettering [in New York]. [On the way,] they would fly to San Francisco and spend a few days with us.

Beck: I know that Baby got sick pretty early on in the pandemic, but did you ever have a conversation with her about the pandemic and how it was changing our lives in those early days?

Mary-Ann: There was a conversation before Baby got sick, because one of our other high-school classmates husband got sick and died early in March. Then our classmate died a week later. I was thinking, Holy cow, this thing thats coming upon us.

Beck: You mentioned some texts, but were you able to talk with Baby at all while she was sick?

Mary-Ann: No. I tried calling her, but she wasnt answering. But she was still sending text messages. The last conversation we had was about [our classmate] who had COVID-19 and was dying.

She likes to dress me; I dont know why. Back in February [before I canceled my trip to Manila] she started sending photos over text: These are the dresses that I asked some friend who owns a boutique [to put on hold] that I think you should try on because I think theyd look good on you. I feel bad because I said, Baby, Im trying not to buy clothes. I dont want to have more than I need. But I think she takes such pleasure from dressing me. Maybe because she cant dress her daughters anymore. Sometimes I still cant believe shes gone.

Read: Notes from a videochat memorial

Beck: Were you able to have a funeral? A digital one at least?

Mary-Ann: Yeah; it was a Zoom attended by hundreds of people. They had a picture of the urn with her photo beside it and flowers. The other people who paid tribute to her talked more about [her professional life]. My eulogy was about my memories of her. Once, she told me, I can be my old self, like when we were kids, when we were together.

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The Friend COVID-19 Took From Me - The Atlantic

Human rights and COVID-19 – World – ReliefWeb

December 12, 2020

Countries around the world are taking all steps possible to prevent, contain and respond to COVID-19. This is necessary to flatten the curve and stem this global pandemic which has implications for all of us: for our health and our human rights. UNDP is committed to rights-based solutions to COVID-19.

The COVID-19 pandemic is a public health emergency but it is far more. It is an economic crisis. A social crisis. And a human crisis that is fast becoming a human rights crisis. United Nations Secretary-General, Antnio Guterres

In many societies, exclusion and marginalization mean people live in the shadows either because they do not have the means, or the power to participate fully in public life and claim their rights, or because rights-holders cannot effectively discharge their obligations.As governments try to respond effectively to COVID-19 and its implications, we must ensure that human rights standards and approaches remain at the forefront. In times of crisis, assistance is provided in a way that supports everybody and reinforces efforts to leave no one behind or it can perpetuate the divisions in our communities and reinforce barriers and inequality. The difference between these outcomes is in our approach and whether it is rights-based.

What are the lessons from the socio-economic response so far?

To support socio-economic response and recovery to COVID-19 the UN issued a framework for immediate socio-economic response to COVID-19 (SERF) in April 2020 which sets out the strategy and blueprint for the UNs urgent socio-economic response to countries and societies in the face of COVID-19.

A recent review of over 100 socio-economic response plans (SERPs) has managed to give us some key lessons and indicators of how human rights-based approaches and perspectives can support recovery, responses and resilience and what more can be done. Here are some of the key lessons learned:

Where the UN is already investing and working together on human rights before COVID-19 pandemic we are better off: equipped to build on existing knowledge, work, analysis, partnerships and capacities. Making human rights a central priority of COVID-19 responses means guiding the response. A large number (over 70 percent of SERPs reviewed) aim to do this but only a smaller number offer evidence of this consistently.

Recognizing people left behind is not enough, we need to translate that analysis into action. Over 50 percent of SERP analyses of populations left behind were used for targeted action but more needs to be done. A human rights-based approach to data and how to identify groups who face intersecting forms of disadvantage or discrimination is needed.

We can more effectively use recommendations and outputs from the human rights mechanisms:

Only a small margin of SERPs reviewed use recommendations from the UN human rights mechanisms as guideposts for their human rights analysis or consider the guidance they have issued for COVID-19. Thematic advice on the human rights dimensions of the COVID-19 crisis has been swiftly put forward by many special procedure mandate holders and mechanisms of the Human Rights Council bringing practical advice and recommendations on how to support disadvantaged or marginalized groups as well as inclusive policies on many areas including: social protection, inequality and macro-economic policy. Lets make better use of these important resources.

Civil society and National Human Rights Institutions are active partners and we need to support them and leverage their expertise at country and regional level: in many countries civil society and NHRIs have played critical roles on the frontlines of the COVID-19 response and providing essential advice to influence emergency and long-term policy making. Importantly they also can represent or play a bridging role to those who are disproportionately impacted.

Rights-based analysis and approaches to the macro-economic response and to protecting fundamental freedoms can help rethink inclusive economies and build a new social contract.Protecting fundamental freedoms such as protecting civic space and public participation, promoting police accountability and advising on emergency measures supports human rights and social cohesion.

Ls we recover forward better, we need to include strong measures to address structural drivers of exclusion, inequality and discrimination in laws, institutions, policy, programmes, attitudes and practices. The root causes of marginalization and inequalities have to be tackled. Most plans intend to eliminate structural drivers of exclusion with more consideration needed on the root causes.

How can human rights help COVID-19 recovery and response?

To help ensure that human rights are at the centre of our efforts, UNDP worked with our partners in the UN Human Rights Office and the UN Development Cooperation Office and issued a programmatic Checklist for a Human Rights-Based Approach to Socio-Economic Country Responses to COVID-19. This tool provides a list of potential actions, tools and resources to ensure a people-centred and human rights-based approach to leave no one behind in COVID-19 response.

We need to act quickly and together to support all in our societies grapple with this pandemic. A human rights-based approach is the best tool we have.

For more information on UNDPs human rights work, please contact: Sarah Rattray (sarah.rattray@undp.org)

Written by Sarah Rattray, Policy Specialist for Human Rights, Crisis Bureau, UNDP

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Human rights and COVID-19 - World - ReliefWeb

Who’s dying of COVID-19 in DeKalb County? Here’s a timeline of COVID-19 related deaths, most at long-term care facilities – DeKalb Daily Chronicle

December 12, 2020

On April 6, the first death linked to COVID-19 in DeKalb County was reported. At that time, 248 days ago and only 17 days into the pandemic locally, there were just 22 reported cases of COVID-19 in the county.

Now, 5,831 people living in DeKalb County have contracted the disease, and as of Thursday, 55 people have lost their lives.

The first case of COVID-19, a DeKalb County resident in their 40s, was reported on March 21, 264 days ago. The first case of the disease in Illinois was detected Jan. 24 in a woman who'd just traveled from Wuhan, China, to Chicago.

As 2020 comes to a close, the Daily Chronicle put together a timeline of COVID-19 deaths to date amid the county marking its deadliest week of the pandemic on record Thursday, with seven residents dead in six days, all but two of them elderly people who lived in long-term care facilities.

What story do the numbers tell?

More than half (or 60%) of all reported deaths in the county are linked to long-term care facilities, according to the DeKalb County Health Department, which reports all cases linked to long-term care facilities per state requirements, and age brackets, such as a person "in their 70s," rather than a specific age. The Illinois Department of Public Health reports genders of deaths daily, but does not link them to a long-term care facility or zip code.

The correlation between deaths and long-term care facilities then, is determined based on the local health department's daily COVID-19 tracker, which shows changes in case counts and death totals every week day.

Daily Chronicle reporters throughout the pandemic have been able to track down family members of residents at some facilities, including Pine Acres Rehab and Living Center in DeKalb, which was the epicenter for the county's first lethal outbreak. At the end of its months-long ordeal from May 28 to Aug. 17, the facility reported 12 deaths in residents and 82 total cases in both employees and residents. One death at Pine Acres was in a resident who was later determined to live outside the county, so was taken off the local death toll, according to the health department.

The second, more deadly outbreak came in the summer at Willow Crest Nursing Pavilion in Sandwich June 24 through mid-October. By the time the first outbreak was complete, 15 residents were dead and 68 cases were reported.

Both Pine Acres and Willow Crest have reentered outbreak mode in the months since, but with no new reported deaths to date.

Since Monday, however, five more long-term care facility deaths were reported: three at Lincolnshire Place in Sycamore, one at Prairie Crossing Living and Rehab Center in Shabbona and one at Bethany Rehabilitation and Health Care Center in DeKalb. It's the first fatal cases for all three facilities to date.

Out of the 55 total deaths in DeKalb County to date, 33 of them occurred in residents at long-term care facilities. To date, there have been no reported deaths of employees who work at these facilities, according to the county health department.

Deaths in DeKalb County match up with trends seen statewide and across the world: many in elderly populations at nursing homes or long-term care facilities. The state health department requires local health departments to track all cases and deaths linked to such facilities, although some in DeKalb County seem not to fall under that umbrella: such as Barb City Manor in DeKalb or Opportunity House in Sycamore, the latter of which is listed on the IDPH long-term care outbreak list however.

Local deaths have been reported in younger populations, too: 14.5% occurred in those in their 50s or younger. On Sept. 18, a baby less than one year old died from the disease.

Of the total deaths, 56% of them are in residents in their 80s, 90s or older. There have been 31 deaths in that age bracket, followed by eight in their 70s, seven in their 60s, four in their 50s, three in their 40s, one in their 30s and an infant.

Only one age bracket in the county people in their 20s has yet to report a COVID-19 related death.

Timeline of COVID-19 related deaths in DeKalb County

April 6: 1 man in his 50s

April 19: 1 resident in their 70s, gender unknown

May 9: 1 man in his 60s

May 19: 1 man in his 50s*, 1 woman in her 50s (*the man in his 50s was subsequently determined to live outside the county so was taken off the local death list, according to the DeKalb County Health Department)

May 28: 1 woman in her 70s who lived at Pine Acres Rehab and Living Center in DeKalb

June 1: 96-year-old Virginia Hennecke, who also lived at Pine Acres (the DeKalb County Health Department reported this death June 2, but the Daily Chronicle received confirmation that Hennecke died from the virus June 1)

June 3: 1 woman in her 90s who lived at Pine Acres

June 4: 1 woman in her 60s, 1 woman in her 90s, both residents of Pine Acres

June 8: 1 resident in their 80s, gender unknown

June 9: 1 woman in her 90s, 1 woman over 100, both residents of Pine Acres (1 additional death was reported in a Pine Acres resident this day but the resident was determined to live outside the county, according to the health department. The death was still reported attached to the long-term care facility per IDPH requirements.)

June 10: 1 woman in her 40s

June 12: 1 man in his 80s; 1 man in his 90s who lived at Pine Acres

June 17: 1 man in his 90s who lived at Pine Acres

June 19: 1 man in his 50s; 1 woman in her 70s who lived in Pine Acres

July 2: 1 woman in her 80s

July 6: 1 woman in her 90s who lived at Willow Crest Nursing Pavilion in Sandwich

July 14: 1 woman in her 90s, 1 woman in her 80s, both were residents of Willow Crest

July 17: 1 woman in her 80s who lived at Willow Crest

July 22: 1 woman in her 90s who lived at Willow Crest

July 28: 1 man in his 80s who lived at Willow Crest

July 29: 1 woman in her 70s who lived at Willow Crest

July 30: 1 woman in her 80s, 1 woman in her 90s, both lived at Willow Crest

July 31: 1 woman in her 80s who lived at Willow Crest

Aug. 6: 1 woman in her 60s

Aug. 12: 1 woman in her 70s who lived at Willow Crest

Aug. 14: 1 woman in her 60s

Aug. 19: 1 woman in her 80s who lived at Willow Crest

Aug. 28: 1 man in his 70s, 1 man in his 80s

Sept. 1: 1 woman in her 90s who lived at Willow Crest

Sept. 17: 1 man in his 30s becomes the youngest person to die locally

Sept. 18: A baby dies from COVID-19, becomes the new youngest person to die

Sept. 30: 1 man in his 90s who lived at Oak Crest-DeKalb Area Retirement Center

Oct. 5: 1 Willow Crest resident in their 70s, gender unknown

Oct. 6: 1 man in his 80s

Oct. 14: 1 woman in her 60s who lived at Willow Crest

Oct. 29: 1 resident in their 80s, gender unknown

Nov. 12: 1 man in his 50s

Nov. 20: 1 woman in her 40s

Nov. 25: 1 woman in her 60s

Nov. 30: 1 man in his 60s

Dec. 3: 1 woman in her 70s

Dec. 7: 1 woman in her 80s who lived at Lincolnshire Place in Sycamore; 1 man in his 40s

Dec. 8: 1 woman in her 90s

Dec. 9: 1 man in his 80s, 1 woman who lived at Prairie Crossing Living and Rehab Center in Shabbona

Dec. 10: 1 man in his 70s, 1 man in his 90s; both were residents of either Lincolnshire or Bethany Rehabilitation and Health Care Center. Local and state health departments did not specify.

Editor's Note: This article is the most up-to-date timeline of COVID-19 related deaths in DeKalb County, and has been updated beyond what appeared in the print version of the Daily Chronicle Dec. 11.

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Who's dying of COVID-19 in DeKalb County? Here's a timeline of COVID-19 related deaths, most at long-term care facilities - DeKalb Daily Chronicle

Gov. Little increases Idaho National Guard response to battle COVID-19 | Office of the Governor – coronavirus.idaho.gov

December 12, 2020

Boise, Idaho Governor Brad Little authorized an increase in Idaho National Guard support from 100 to up to 250 personnel serving on active duty in an effort to enhance medical capacity and COVID-19 response throughout Idaho.

The authorization comes nearly a month after his executive order mobilizing 100 personnel for 30 days, coinciding with the public health order rolling Idaho back to a modified Stage 2 of the Idaho Rebounds plan.

The new authorization also allows Guard personnel to continue performing their mission through March of 2021.

For nearly a month, Guard personnel have been assisting at facilities across the state, from multiple hospital and medical clinic locations to food banks and public health district facilities.

Guard personnel are performing tasks that include COVID-19 testing and screening, patient data entry, traffic control, and facility decontamination and sanitization.

As medical providers across the state continue to call on the Guard for assistance, this additional authorization enables our guardsmen to continue helping in the fight, Governor Little said. With members of the Guard performing these missions, it frees up healthcare workers to focus on providing critical patient care. We are deeply grateful for their service.

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Gov. Little increases Idaho National Guard response to battle COVID-19 | Office of the Governor - coronavirus.idaho.gov

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