Category: Covid-19

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Is Your Hospital Overwhelmed With COVID-19 Patients? Find Out With This Tool : Shots – Health News – NPR

December 10, 2020

Health care workers at United Memorial Medical Center in Houston face another full-throttle workday last week. Mark Felix/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Health care workers at United Memorial Medical Center in Houston face another full-throttle workday last week.

The federal government on Monday released detailed hospital-level data showing the toll COVID-19 is taking on health care facilities, including how many inpatient and ICU beds are available on a weekly basis.

Using an analysis from the University of Minnesota's COVID-19 Hospitalization Tracking Project, NPR has created a tool that allows you to see how your local hospital and your county overall are faring. (Jump to look-up tool.)

It focuses on one important metric how many beds are filled with COVID-19 patients and shows this for each hospital and on average for each county.

The ratio of COVID-19 hospitalizations to total beds gives a picture of how much strain a hospital is under. Though there's not a clear threshold, it's concerning when that rate rises above 10%, hospital capacity experts told NPR.

Anything above 20% represents "extreme stress" for the hospital, according to a framework developed by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington.

If that figure gets to near 50% or above, the stress on staff is immense. "It means the hospital is overloaded. It means other services in that hospital are being delayed. The hospital becomes a nightmare," IHME's Ali Mokdad told NPR.

The University of Minnesota's analysis shows that there are 55 counties where the hospital average has reached that rate.

Use the look-up tool below the map to find details about hospitals in your county.

Thomas Wilburn contributed to this report.

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Is Your Hospital Overwhelmed With COVID-19 Patients? Find Out With This Tool : Shots - Health News - NPR

Small Town, No Hospital: Covid-19 Is Overwhelming Rural West Texas – The New York Times

December 10, 2020

ALPINE, Texas It is one of the fastest-growing coronavirus hot spots in the nation, but there are no long lines of cars piled up for drive-through testing and no rush of appointments to get swabbed at CVS.

Thats because in the rugged, rural expanse of far West Texas, there is no county health department to conduct daily testing, and no CVS store for more than 100 miles. A handful of clinics offer testing to those who are able to make an appointment.

Out past the seesawing oil pumpjacks of Midland and Odessa, where roadrunners flit across two-lane roads and desert shrubs freckle the long, beige horizon, the Big Bend region of Texas is one of the most remote parts of the mainland United States and one of the least equipped to handle an infectious disease outbreak. There is just one hospital for 12,000 square miles and no heart or lung specialists to treat serious cases of Covid-19.

But in a sign that the virus is surging nearly everywhere, the counties that include Big Bend ranked among the top 20 in the nation last week for the most new cases per capita.

Big Bend, best known for its sprawling national park and the artist town of Marfa, offers an extreme example of the danger playing out across the country, as the virus blazes more widely and furiously than ever before, driving deaths to levels not seen since the spring and thrusting many places into crisis at the same time. From California to Texas to Mississippi, hospitals are filling up and health officials in rural communities increasingly fear that they are on their own.

There is no neurologist, there is no long-term care specialist, said Dr. J.P. Schwartz, the health authority in Big Bends Presidio County and a physician at a local clinic. We have no care to help them whatsoever. There is not even a nursing home out here.

Even as hospitalizations and deaths in Texas near their summer peaks, local officials fear they have little power to intervene beyond the measures that Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, has put in place.

My hands are tied, said Eleazar R. Cano, the judge in Brewster County, who said he had been advised against imposing a stay-at-home order or other stricter measures that could violate the governors order. Mr. Cano, a Democrat, compared governing through the pandemic to driving his truck through the desert on an empty gas tank, with no cellphone service to call for help.

Its helpless, frustrating, close to panic mode, he said.

Driving the long miles between Big Bends sparsely populated towns, it is hard to fathom how a virus that thrives on human contact could flare in a place with so much wide-open space. Hawks reign in the big blue skies. Cellphone service is spotty. Christmas decorations along the road are not on peoples homes, but on their ranch gates.

Yet somehow, new cases have exploded in recent weeks.

In Brewster County, a sprawling behemoth with 9,200 people spread across 6,000 square miles, more than half of the 700-plus known cases have been identified in the last month. In neighboring Presidio County, with 6,700 people near the border with Mexico, cases have quadrupled in the last two months, from less than 100 to more than 470. Both communities skew older, with people 65 and older making up about a quarter of the population.

The numbers are going straight up at this point, said Malynda Richardson, the emergency medical services director for the city of Presidio, who coughed sporadically as she herself recovered from the icy chills and knockout fatigue of Covid-19.

There are a number of reasons for the spike.

The area is so remote that local residents have to travel to El Paso or Odessa for doctors appointments and to buy necessities at Walmart. With cases soaring across West Texas, the virus may have traveled back with them. Officials also cited everyday movement to and from Mexico, cases among young people at Sul Ross State University and a surge of tourists undeterred by the pandemic.

Visitation was up 20 percent at Big Bend National Park in October, park officials said, and on Thanksgiving weekend so many cars clogged the park it caused a traffic jam. In the liberal artist outpost of Marfa, young people from Austin and Dallas roam the town, sipping almond milk lattes and photographing murals that ask existential questions like, Is austerity an illusion? A recent art installation caused a stir with a blatant message against tourism during the pandemic: Everyone here hates you.

But tourism, it turns out, is not the biggest part of the problem.

The areas limited contact tracing shows more localized spread in bars, in multigenerational homes and through people who ignore positive test results and continue to work and socialize as normal.

In Alpine, the largest city, with a population of 5,900, residents wear masks with their cowboy hats to shop at Porters grocery store, but take them off to eat indoors at restaurants in town. There is far from universal agreement about whether masks are necessary and effective. In a sign of the dispute that has played out on and off social media, the county was left without a local health authority when the doctor in the position, a pediatrician working on a volunteer basis, quit this fall after facing pushback from residents who opposed mask orders and other restrictions.

Brewster County, which includes Alpine, has already instructed bars to close and reduced indoor dining at restaurants from 75 percent capacity to 50 percent, as required by the governors order for counties with a high proportion of Covid-19 hospitalizations. But enforcement is spotty, and the governor has barred local officials from imposing rules that are stricter than his own.

With resources scarce, local health clinics are a primary option for testing, but even then, the swabs have to be driven three hours to El Paso and flown for processing in Arlington, outside Dallas. The National Guard also offers periodic testing, and in response to the growing crisis, new mobile testing vans were scheduled to arrive this week.

For those who do get seriously sick, the hospital, Big Bend Regional Medical Center in Alpine, has just 25 beds and a makeshift Covid-19 ward where patients have been sequestered at the end of the lone, L-shaped hallway.

Dr. John Ray, a family practitioner who works shifts at the hospital, said the hospital on one recent day got back-to-back calls about incoming coronavirus patients. One of them had to be transferred to a bigger hospital in Odessa to receive specialized care.

Not long afterward, Dr. Ray said, he saw the patients obituary in the paper.

I dont want to see Alpine like the pictures you see in New York, just people dying in hallways waiting for a bed, said Dr. Ray, 44, who grew up in the small East Texas town of Troup, moved to Wisconsin for his residency and returned to Texas afterward, settling in the Big Bend region in 2013 for the beauty and the people. He and his wife, also a doctor, usually treat a caseload of strep throat, urinary tract infections and pregnancy visits. Now, he said, its Covid, Covid, Covid.

Across West Texas, higher-level care hospitals are also full. El Paso, which was recently so overrun with infection that it brought in mobile morgues, is still recovering from its own virus surge. In Lubbock, as many as 50 percent of beds were recently filled with Covid-19 patients, and on a particularly bad day last week, the city reported that it had run out of hospital capacity altogether.

Dr. Ray fears there may come a day when more seriously ill patients who would normally be transferred elsewhere will run out of options. To put it bluntly, he said, if you cant go somewhere else, you are going to die here.

A spokeswoman for the Big Bend Regional Medical Center said that the hospital has had enough room so far, and has added ventilators, oxygen tanks and nurses to prepare for a surge. Of nine patients in the hospital on Wednesday, four had Covid-19.

Still, many remain worried. Simone Rubi, 46, a graphic designer and musician who owns a coffee shop in Marfa, about a 30-minute drive from the hospital in Alpine, hung a poster outside her to-go window summing up the precarious situation in four words: Small town, no hospital.

There will be no place for us to go if we get sick thats the bottom line, she said, sitting on a picnic bench outside her shop on a recent Saturday morning.

Wed have to drive to Dallas, said her husband, Rob Gungor, who said he had asthma and had resigned himself to making the nearly eight-hour drive to stay at an Airbnb close to a major hospital if he contracted the virus, to be nearby in case he took a turn for the worse. Like most people in Marfa, which has accepted masks more readily than some other Big Bend towns, he wore a mask even while outdoors.

Maybe Phoenix, he added, because its only a nine-hour drive.

For those who live in even more rural parts of West Texas, navigating the coronavirus spike has come with consequences far beyond the virus itself.

In the border community of Terlingua, there is just one full-service ambulance for 3,000 square miles. Paramedics have on a few occasions had to drive coronavirus patients three hours round-trip to the hospital in Alpine, leaving the region uncovered for other serious emergencies.

That has always been our draw its an isolated, beautiful, unadulterated landscape, said Sara Allen Colando, the county commissioner in Terlingua. But with cases rising, the wilderness is also its own kind of peril.

If they have to take someone with Covid to God knows where, how long is it before that ambulance is back in service? she said. Who is going to be there to answer the call?

Mitch Smith contributed reporting from Chicago.

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Small Town, No Hospital: Covid-19 Is Overwhelming Rural West Texas - The New York Times

A Covid-19 survivor spent months tracking down the 116 health care workers who saved his life – CNN

December 10, 2020

Gerson, a 45-year-old from Manhattan, arrived at NYU Langone Tisch Hospital on March 18 with shortness of breath, an uncontrollable cough, and a 103-degree fever. A day later, he was diagnosed with Covid-19 and put on a ventilator.

"I just feel tremendously grateful and lucky," Gerson told CNN this week. "The story, if there is one, is not necessarily that I survived, but that these people saved my life. I really felt the need to find them, get their names, and thank them."

He penned a letter in November to thank the doctors, nurses, respiratory therapists and others. Gerson emailed it to a hospital administrator, who passed it along to the staff.

"If you are receiving this letter, it is because I have become aware that you had a part in saving my life," Gerson wrote. "It is only after much effort on my part to find your names that I would realize just how many of you there were on my care team."

It took months to find all the healthcare workers

He sleuthed for the names in three ways. He started with the MyChart app, which tracks a patient's tests and care. Gerson saw who ordered the more than 750 tests, from blood work to EKGs, he underwent while at the hospital.

A nurse helped him get 60 names in a spreadsheet a month after he was discharged in late April. And he scoured insurance reports to see names tied to his insurance claims.

He had to find a way to thank them, he said. Saying thank you when he awoke from the coma was difficult, as the hospital limited the number of staff coming in and out of his ICU room.

"Except for the nurses that I was directly interacting with, there really wasn't an opportunity to say thank you to anybody. It left a void in my emotional recovery," Gerson said. "Here I am having survived, I'm crying with joy every morning and I feel a huge debt of gratitude to these people who I can't even talk to because they're not coming into my room."

A kind nurse excitedly welcomed him back and quickly offered to help him call friends and family who were so concerned about him. No one had been allowed to visit.

Gerson awoke on April 17. "I woke up just in time to call my son on his sixth birthday," he said.

A week later, an "emotional parade through the hallway of the hospital" greeted him when he was discharged, he said.

"It was really a party and a celebration for the people in the hospital," Gerson said. "They were just ecstatic and so happy to be sending someone to rehab alive and with a good prognosis."

The finance professional said he wanted to throw a huge party for everyone who helped him. That was until he realized the world had changed in the time he was sedated.

"I looked out the window and this is when it slowly started occurring to me: The world was not the same world that I left when I went to sleep," he said.

Doctors tried everything they could

The medical team caring for Gerson kept the otherwise healthy, then 44-year-old alive with two types of mechanical intervention.

"Soon after he was admitted to our hospital, he developed respiratory failure and pneumonia with Covid," Angel told CNN. "It was clear that we weren't able to support him initially with the oxygen and then with the mechanical ventilation. Then it became important for him to use the system that is called the ECMO."

"He was very, very sick and we had to keep him under really deep sedation in a way that he couldn't remember anything for at least two or three weeks until his lungs started recuperating with time," Angel said.

Using ECMO and tracheostomies, which were both done for Gerson, were two "controversial" treatments at that point, Angel said. The thought was that these patients were so sick that they would not survive the treatment.

"Jeff was one of almost 50 patients that we placed on ECMO here at NYU during the pandemic," he said.

If not for the ECMO and tracheostomy, Angel said Gerson would have died.

When Angel saw the letter Gerson wrote to those who cared for him, he said it felt "nice" but that the team was just doing their job.

"In the end, we are not looking for anyone to particularly say thank you or anything like that," Angel said.

After working long shifts and not taking time off for weeks and weeks, Angel said that the letter was meaningful.

"You see the significant amount of work that he did and somebody that very likely was going to die in the hospital, makes a full recovery and then he's able to say thank you is very meaningful for us," Angel said.

He couldn't reach one doctor

Gerson was unable to reach one person: Dr. Sydney Mehl, who was treating patients with Covid-19 when he too fell ill and died of the virus, a hospital spokeswoman confirmed.

Mehl, a cardiologist, tested positive for Covid-19 and was admitted to the hospital on March 20.

While Gerson was reading through the last of his insurance claims, he got to the earliest. The doctor on it was S. Mehl, he said.

"It occurs to me that this doctor who gave his life fighting Covid, that I was one of the last patients, if not the last patient he treated," Gerson said.

Since Gerson sent the letter to hospital workers, he said he's heard from even more people who helped care from him.

The number is up to 151.

"Continue doing what you do," Gerson wrote in the letter. "Continue being the heroes you are and know you will forever have my gratitude."

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A Covid-19 survivor spent months tracking down the 116 health care workers who saved his life - CNN

So are we going to get a Covid-19 stimulus deal, or not? – CNN

December 10, 2020

Raju: Right now, we're in a state of uncertainty. It's clear both sides recognize something NEEDS to happen before lawmakers head back for the holidays and wrap up the work of the 116th Congress. But it's still uncertain what negotiators will agree to, whether the leaders on both sides of the aisle will sign off on it, and perhaps the biggest question of them all: Whether President Donald Trump will sign it.

That means there's a ton of work to do to reach an agreement, get buy-in from all sides and get this to the President's desk before the new deadline: December 18.

Cillizza: Which plan has a better chance of actually passing: The bipartisan $908 billion one or the new $916 billion one from the White House?

Raju: It's going to be a combination of both -- with input from the leadership and the White House. And both plans are light on details. The focus is on the bipartisan plan at the moment, but at some point, the leadership will have to step in and it will have to be a negotiated settlement between the White House and the so-called four corners of Congress: Pelosi, Schumer, McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

Cillizza: What's the timeline for getting something done? End of next week? Later? Sooner?

Raju: Next week is the drop-dead date at this point.

Congress is going to pass a one-week stop-gap resolution to extend the government funding deadline until December 18. They want to attach Covid-19 relief to a massive, omnibus spending bill to keep the government open until October 1, 2021.

But that omnibus bill has its own problems, too -- the two sides are at odds on thorny issues that they are trying to resolve. Really, if they want to meet the December 18 deadline, they need to have the outlines of a deal that the Hill leadership and the White House have agreed to by the end of this week because it will take several days to finalize bill language, then they will need to ram it through Congress in just a few days. But doing so will require cooperation from all members in the Senate since any senator can slow down legislation, and that is always a possibility.

Cillizza: Who matters most right now? McConnell? Manchin? Someone else?

Raju: McConnell and Pelosi are the most important players. Even when McConnell isn't directly involved in the talks, his buy-in is essential to getting a deal done. And Pelosi needs to sell her caucus to accept a deal that is far smaller in size and scope than what she has been demanding for months. Typically, there's a center of the universe in negotiations -- Pelosi and Mnuchin for example in recent talks; at the moment, it's this bipartisan group. But that will shift eventually to the leadership.

Cillizza: Finish this sentence: "When Congress leaves for the holidays, the most likely thing they have passed on Covid relief is __________." Now, explain.

Raju: "When Congress leaves for the holidays, the most likely thing they have passed on Covid relief is vaccine distribution."

Even with so much needed right now, from small business loans to extending expiring jobless benefits, vaccine distribution is the one that is least controversial and most urgent. Neither side wants to be blamed for not providing the resources to ensure the American public is vaccinated from Covid-19. The bipartisan group proposes $3.4 billion for grants for states and localities and another $2.6 billion for vaccine distribution and infrastructure. We'll see how much they ultimately agree to include in the spending package.

Continued here:

So are we going to get a Covid-19 stimulus deal, or not? - CNN

Great efficacy claimed for another COVID-19 vaccine, this one from China – Science Magazine

December 10, 2020

On 6 October, people in a clinical trial of an experimental COVID-19 vaccine waited to receive one of its two doses at Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre in United Arab Emirates.

By Jon CohenDec. 9, 2020 , 1:35 PM

Sciences COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center and the Heising-Simons Foundation.

A COVID-19 vaccine made in China has outstanding efficacy data, according to a press release issued today by the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which has been testing the candidate in a study involving 31,000 people. UAE said that based on an interim analysis of data from that trial, it would formally register, or approve, the vaccine for widespread use. This is the fifth COVID-19 vaccine to show signs of working, and this one uses an entirely different technology from the others.

UAEs Ministry of Health and Prevention said the vaccine, which contains a chemically inactivated version of the pandemic coronavirus and is given in two doses, had 86% efficacy against COVID-19 infectiona phrase that puzzled outsiders, as other vaccines have mainly been assessed for their ability to prevent symptoms. The press release further states that the vaccine completely prevented moderate and severe cases of the disease and raised no serious safety concerns.

Yet it offers no details beyond the efficacy claims. China National Biotec Group (CNBG), which makes the vaccine, did not reply to an email fromScience and has not released its own statement. The UAE ministry and a lead investigator of the trial also did not reply to emails.

The interim results for CNBGs vaccine are very positive. I just hope the results are based on rigorous analysis of the clinical trial data, and the number of infections meets the cutoff requirements as shown in the trials conducted by Western vaccinemakers, says Yanzhong Huang, aglobal health specialist at both Seton Hall University and the Council on Foreign Relations.

In contrast to CNBGs inactivated virus candidate, the four other COVID-19 vaccines that have reported efficacy data rely on the surface protein of SARS-CoV-2, the cause of the disease, to trigger immune responses. Those vaccinesnone made in Chinause messenger RNA that codes for the surface protein or stitch the gene for it into putatively harmless adenoviral vectors. Their developers have reported efficacies of 62% to 95% for protection against symptomatic disease. All four vaccines showed remarkable efficacy against severe disease.

If CNBGs vaccine indeed prevented 86% of infections and 100% of symptomatic disease, it would stand out as the best efficacy data yet. But the few details of the trials protocolavailableindicateit primarily aimed to evaluate the vaccines ability to prevent cases of disease, not infection.

CNBG, a division of state-owned Sinopharm, has two, competitive divisions that produce vaccines using inactivated SARS-CoV-2, one based in Beijing and the other in Wuhan, China. The trial in UAE is part of a 45,000-person study that includes participants from Bahrain, Jordan, and Egypt and compares both vaccines against a placebo shot. According to the UAE press release, the efficacy claim and planned approval only refer to the vaccine made by CNBGs Beijing Institute of Biological Products.

UAE began to usethe CNBG vaccines in September outside of the clinical trial under whats known as emergency use authorization for front-line health workers. Some government officials, including the prime minister, received it, too. CNBG efficacy trials are also underway in Peru, Argentina, and Morocco.

Because China has contained SARS-CoV-2 with its aggressive use of traditional public health measures, CNBG and other Chinese COVID-19 vaccinemakershad to go abroadto test the efficacy of their candidates. Sinovac, a Beijing-based company that also has an inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine in efficacy trials in several countries, may report results from its Brazilian arm soon,Science has learned. The independent board that monitors the trial met yesterday in Brazil to review the data.

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Great efficacy claimed for another COVID-19 vaccine, this one from China - Science Magazine

COVID-19 Daily Update 12-9-2020 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

December 10, 2020

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of December 9, 2020, therehave been 1,250,368 total confirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 58,462totalcases and 901 deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of an 83-year old male from WayneCounty, an 87-year old female from Berkeley County, a 76-year old male fromBerkeley County, a 70-year old male from Berkeley County, an 81-year old malefrom Wyoming County, a 79-year old female from Mineral County, a 54-year oldmale from Mineral County, a 64-year old male from Mineral County, an 83-yearold female from Mineral County, a 94-year old female from Mineral County, a 64-yearold female from Mineral County, a 76-year old male from Kanawha County, a 59-yearold female from Ohio County, an 89-year old male from Ohio County, an 85-yearold male from Ohio County, a 90-year old male from Kanawha County, a 74-yearold female from Marshall County, a 71-year old female from Berkeley County, a 49-yearold male from Mercer County, an 87-year old female from Gilmer County, an 89-yearold female from Putnam County, an 80-year old male from Putnam County, a 72-yearold male from Wood County, a 59-year old male from Wood County, an 88-year oldmale from Hancock County, a 73-year old male from Hardy County, a 90-year oldfemale from Mercer County, a 65-year old male from Mercer County, an 88-yearold male from Mercer County, a 74-year old female from Ritchie County, and a 78-yearold male from Wood County.

Aswe extend our deepest sympathies to the loved ones, we also encourage all WestVirginians to recognize the continued need to take every possible step to slowthe spread of this disease, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary.

CASESPER COUNTY: Barbour (540), Berkeley (4,122),Boone (753), Braxton (154), Brooke (891), Cabell (3,581), Calhoun (92), Clay(170), Doddridge (152), Fayette (1,284), Gilmer (228), Grant (520), Greenbrier(721), Hampshire (516), Hancock (1,085), Hardy (441), Harrison (1,794), Jackson(834), Jefferson (1,677), Kanawha (6,599), Lewis (298), Lincoln (507), Logan(1,169), Marion (1,127), Marshall (1,570), Mason (705), McDowell (700), Mercer(1,617), Mineral (1,733), Mingo (1,075), Monongalia (3,796), Monroe (438),Morgan (387), Nicholas (455), Ohio (1,873), Pendleton (147), Pleasants (139),Pocahontas (281), Preston (903), Putnam (2,353), Raleigh (1,894), Randolph(837), Ritchie (219), Roane (223), Summers (307), Taylor (447), Tucker (207),Tyler (194), Upshur (587), Wayne (1,238), Webster (94), Wetzel (489), Wirt(144), Wood (3,248), Wyoming (907).

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.

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

Upcoming free COVID-19 testing daily events:

December9, 2020

BarbourCounty

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

BerkeleyCounty

11:00 AM 3:00 PM, Hedgesville High School, 109 Ridge Road N., Hedgesville,WV

4:30 PM 8:00 PM, Dorothy McCormack Building, 2000 FoundationWay, Martinsburg, WV

BooneCounty

BrookeCounty

CabellCounty

GrantCounty

10:00 AM 2:00 PM, Union Education Complex (School at Mt. Storm),52 Tiger Drive, Mt. Storm, WV

HampshireCounty

HardyCounty

8:00 AM 12:00 PM, Moorefield Armory, 167 Freedom Way,Moorefield, WV

4:00 PM 8:00 PM, Wardensville War Memorial Building, 190 E. MainStreet, Wardensville, WV

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/)

JeffersonCounty

LoganCounty

MarshallCounty

MasonCounty

MineralCounty

MingoCounty

11:00 AM 4:00 PM, Delbarton Volunteer Fire Department, 68 FarleyAvenue, Delbarton, WV

NicholasCounty

1:00 PM 5:00 PM, Nazarene Camp, 6461 Webster Road, Summersville,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/)

TaylorCounty

WayneCounty

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

WirtCounty

10:00 AM 1:00 PM, Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department, Wirt CountyOffice, 90 Senior Circle, Elizabeth, WV (pre-registration http://www.ipsumcovidresults.com)

WyomingCounty

11:00 AM 3:00 PM, Old Magic Mart, Highway 971, Oceana, WV

Additional testing will be held on Thursday, December 10 inBarbour, Berkeley, Boone, Cabell, Grant, Hampshire, Jackson, Jefferson, Kanawha,Logan, Marshall, Mason, Mingo, Nicholas, Ohio, Pocahontas, Taylor, Wayne, Wood,and Wyoming 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 12-9-2020 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Mass. lays out COVID-19 vaccine timeline, but most will have to wait till spring – The Boston Globe

December 10, 2020

Health workers at risk of exposure to the virus and long-term-care staff and residents will be first in line for the vaccine, followed by police officers, firefighters, and emergency medical workers, residents in congregate settings such as prisons and homeless shelters, home-based caregivers, and other health workers who arent in COVID-facing jobs, according to the states distribution plan.

But a vaccination timeline released by the governors office suggests the state doesnt anticipate receiving nearly enough vaccines in the short term to inoculate all Massachusetts residents at heightened risk for COVID-19. The document identified more than 3 million people who should get early vaccines because of their health, age, jobs, or other risk factors, but, through April, enough vaccines for only about 1.1 million to get the two shots that are required.

Baker administration officials said they expect to get additional doses of vaccines after the first of the year. Those additional doses are not accounted for in the timeline released Wednesday.

People will receive one of two new vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna, both of which are expected to be approved for emergency use by federal regulators by the end of next week. Both vaccines require two shots taken several weeks apart to be fully effective.

The first group of people in Massachusetts would get two vaccine doses between mid-December and February, in what state officials are calling Phase One of their distribution plan. That includes people working in health care who deal directly with COVID patients as well as residents and staffs at long-term-care facilities, which have accounted for most of the states COVID deaths.

Theyll be followed by people in Phase Two priority groups who are slated to be vaccinated between February and April: residents with two or more chronic illnesses; critical workers such as teachers; transit employees; and, food, sanitation, public works, and public health workers. After that will come adults who are 65 and over and individuals with a single serious illness making them at higher risk for COVID-19.

But its clear the state will need a larger supply of vaccines to inoculate all the people covered by Phase One and Phase Two.

Massachusetts expects to receive 300,000 vaccine doses in December and another 1.9 million doses by spring 2021 enough for 1.1 million people to get two shots each. But Bakers office estimated there are 600,000 people who should get the shots in Phase One and more than 2.5 million people in Phase Two.

Baker administration officials expect that the vaccines that are already committed to Massachusetts will be enough to give all people in the Phase One group their full two-shot vaccination, while starting the vaccination of people in Phase Two. They believe that the state will also secure more vaccines in 2021.

A majority of residents, those deemed not at a higher risk of serious illness from COVID-19, will get the vaccine in Phase Three, which Baker said could start as early as April. But state officials took pains to emphasize that the timetable could change with the unfolding of events, such as new vaccine approvals.

The first shipment of nearly 60,000 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine was ordered from the federal government last week and will be delivered next week to 21 hospitals in eight counties across the state and to an immunization lab run by the state Department of Public Health. Those facilities have the ultracold refrigeration capacity to store the vaccines, officials said.

Some vaccine doses will be administered to front-line health workers at those sites and the rest redistributed to a broader group of mostly smaller hospitals across 14 counties, according to the state plan.

A second shipment of about 40,000 doses would go to CVS and Walgreens to vaccinate staff and residents of long-term-care facilities, the state officials said. They didnt specify when the second shipment would arrive.

Baker said the vaccine would be provided free of charge to all individuals. Officials urged people to learn more about the distribution plan by clicking on mass.gov/covidvaccine.

The governor said that the vaccines represented the light at the end of the tunnel, but that it would be months before the population was safe. Were certainly not out of the woods yet. . . . We all need to continue to wear face coverings, avoid groups, and work to stop the spread, he said.

Baker also sought to allay public concern about the safety of the vaccine and whether it would work. The vaccine will not be distributed in Massachusetts until the FDA has approved it for emergency use and it is deemed to be safe, he said.

Baker said there would also be a racial justice component to the vaccine rollout plan, with Phase One recipients including many health workers of color and a share of vaccine doses set aside in later phases for communities hard hit by the virus.

We recognize that the pandemic has disproportionately affected communities of color and low-income people, Baker said. Our vaccine advisory board has been intently focused on ensuring that these voices have been heard during the planning process, and included representatives from this community.

The Rev. Liz Walker, senior pastor of Roxbury Presbyterian Church and a member of the governors vaccine advisory group, said making the vaccine available to communities of color is vitally important. But she acknowledged that many members of her community remain skeptical of the vaccine.

My prayer is that I have earned enough trust in my community to help people make good decisions, she said.

Marylou Sudders, the state secretary for health and human services, said the first priority of state officials would be hospitals. The distribution plan focuses on hospital capacity to store and administer the Pfizer vaccine for the health care workers in COVID-facing work, she said.

Dr. Paul Biddinger, chief of the division of emergency preparedness at Massachusetts General Hospital, who chaired the state vaccine advisory group, said the landscape could look very different in nine months.

So with all the caveats that we are dependent on all of the vaccines in the research pipeline receiving an emergency use authorization, the production being uninterrupted we believe that in six to nine months, we should have reached a good chunk of the country, Biddinger said.

Biddinger downplayed the severity of side effects from the vaccine, based on data from clinical studies.

We know that people [who get vaccinated] may have fatigue, may have muscle aches, may have headaches. A small number may have fevers, he said. And those are relatively mild and relatively more common in the second dose than in the first. Only a small number of people we expect, based on what weve heard so far, will actually feel ill enough to need to stay home.

The side effects, he said, represent the bodys immune response. He said that while no one wants muscle aches for a day, theyre very transient. In some of the studies, theyve been over in less than 24 hours.

Biddinger was crystal clear about the ultimate aim of state officials and those in the medical community.

The goal is really to vaccinate every eligible person, he said.

Robert Weisman can be reached at robert.weisman@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeRobW. Martin Finucane can be reached at martin.finucane@globe.com. Travis Andersen can be reached at travis.andersen@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @TAGlobe.

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Mass. lays out COVID-19 vaccine timeline, but most will have to wait till spring - The Boston Globe

How Rhode Island will distribute the COVID-19 vaccine – The Boston Globe

December 10, 2020

Wed like to hit as many of those people as we can, because those folks are on the front line, Mihalakos said during a press conference Wednesday. With the crushing conditions were experiencing on the medical side right now with hospitals, nursing homes and assisted living, the vaccine could not possibly come at a better time. We really want to protect the protectors.

For the second phase, the state will focus on K-12 teachers, school staff, childcare workers, critical workers in high-risk jobs (such as employees of grocery stores), homeless shelters, people who are incarcerated and correctional staff, older adults, and those with moderate illnesses.

Children and young adults will fall into the third phase, although vaccines for those under 18 are still in development. The fourth phase will cover all other Rhode Island residents.

The federal Food and Drug Administration is expected to grant emergency use authorization for Pfizers vaccine on Thursday and review Modernas vaccine on Dec. 17. Pending approval, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will meet within 24 hours to determine the best practices for its usage.

Once the CDCs committee signs off, Rhode Island will convene an emergency meeting of its own task force within 24 hours and determine if the vaccine is safe to move forward, said Dr. Philip Chan, an infectious disease physician and consultant medical director of the state department of Healths Division of Preparedness, Response, Infectious Disease and Emergency Medical Services.

This is a multilevel process to really vet this vaccine, Chan said.

Rhode Island currently has the highest rate of COVID-19 infections in the nation, with an average daily case rate of 122.9 per 100,000 people, according to data published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Neighboring Massachusetts has a positive rate of 74.2 per 100,000, and Connecticut has a rate of 65.6 per 100,000.) Rhode Island added another 1,232 new positive cases Wednesday, bringing the total to 68,299, with a daily 7.6 percent positive rate. Another 14 people died from COVID-19 related illnesses, and 461 people were hospitalized Wednesday.

Rhode Island is expecting an initial 10,000 doses from Pfizer, and 19,000 from Moderna, then 8,000 or so additional doses per week over time, said Mihalakos. The amount Rhode Island receives could vary from week to week. Both vaccines require two doses, administered three weeks apart, to be effective, and those receiving the vaccine should expect side effects including fatigue, headaches, or muscle aches.

While the states distribution timeline is based on when the vaccines are approved and shipped, Mihalakos said that hospitals will vaccinate their own staff in the first week the doses are available. The vaccine will be shipped to CVS and Walgreens, which will facilitate vaccination of residents and staff of long-term care and assisted living facilities starting shortly after Christmas, she said. First responders, home health care workers and others covered in phase 1 will be vaccinated at clinics.

Rhode Island health officials are still working out how the vaccine will be administered to people in phases 2, 3 and 4.

There are a lot of unknowns and there is going to be some known and unknown challenges, said Chan. But, we really do feel confident will get this out in a timely manner.

Amanda Milkovits can be reached at amanda.milkovits@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @AmandaMilkovits.

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How Rhode Island will distribute the COVID-19 vaccine - The Boston Globe

Army sending medical help to Wisconsin facilities strained by COVID-19 – WKOW

December 10, 2020

MADISON (WKOW) Gov. Tony Evers today announced that the U.S. Department of Defense will send about 45 U.S. Army medical personnel to assist the states efforts to combat COVID-19 in Wisconsin.

The incoming medical personnel will support Marshfield Medical Center facilities in Marshfield, Eau Claire, Beaver Dam and Rice Lake.

Wisconsins health care system is strained, and our frontline health care workers are doing amazing work under extraordinary circumstances, said Evers in a news release. Many of them working back-to-back shifts in head-to-toe PPE, putting their health and safety on the line to take care of our vulnerable COVID-19 patients. This additional support is crucial and I thank the Department of Defense for providing these resources to the state.

The Marshfield Clinic system has been utilizing volunteers from the Wisconsin Emergency Assistance Volunteer Registry (WEAVR), but the need for more staff to meet patient demand remains a challenge.

We are deeply grateful for the support of the Department of Defense as we continue to deal with the spread of COVID-19 in Wisconsin, said Dr. Susan Turney, Marshfield Clinic Health System CEO. Because of the prolonged and intense nature of this crisis, many hospitals are near full capacity and medical staff is exhausted. Throughout the pandemic, weve seen the importance of partnerships in meeting this momentous challenge. We look forward to partnering with military medical personnel to provide the care our patients need.

The operation will be overseen by the U.S. Army North (ARNORTH), the Joint Force Land Component Command of U.S. Northern Command in support and coordination with federal and state efforts.

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Army sending medical help to Wisconsin facilities strained by COVID-19 - WKOW

The COVID-19 Pandemic’s Impact On The Electricity Sector – Texas A&M Today – Texas A&M University Today

December 10, 2020

Researchers in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering created a unique data hub to track the pandemics impact on the electricity sector.

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Researchers in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Texas A&M University sought to answer how energy consumption has changed during the COVID-19 pandemic through the creation of a cross-domain, open-access data hub.

Created by Professor Le Xie and collaborators, the Coronavirus Disease Electricity Market Data Aggregation+ (COVID-EMDA+) hub combines data across disciplines that showcases how human and environmental habits have impacted electricity usage.

COVID-EMDA+ incorporates seemingly extraneous information that turns out to be quite important to understand the impact of work-from-home policies and social distancing guideliens on the electricity sector.The data hub contains five major components: electricity market data, public health data, weather data, mobile device data and nighttime light satellite data.

Weather definitely affects electricity usage, Xie said. For instance, Texas had quite a hot summer. So, although everyone was quarantining inside, the month of August saw a surge in energy consumption from air conditioners.

The GPS location of mobile devices, a dataset that has never before been used in the analysis of the electricity sector, helps illustrate patterns in mobility, such as how many people are social distancing versus how many people are still visiting shopping centers.

City light at night in Manhattan was dimmed by about 40% between February and April.

Courtesy of Le Xie

Human mobility became an even greater factor in understanding electricity consumption once NASA published nighttime satellite images of large cities. When looking at images of Houston and New York City lit up at night from before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, the stark contrast is clearly visible. In Manhattan alone, the city light at night was dimmed by about 40% between February and April. This meant that as quarantine progressed, fewer people were venturing outside in the evenings. Less human mobility meant less electricity needed to keep the busy cities lit.

The research uncovered a key finding: mobility is a strong indicator of electricity consumption changes.

In New York, the strongest indicator of electricity consumption is the visits to the retail sector the shopping malls and grocery stores, Xie said. We didnt realize how much that impacts electricity consumption. When visits to the retail sector decrease, electricity consumption plummets.

Moving forward, Xie hopes to incorporate data regarding socioeconomic status to shed more light on how the pandemic has impacted economically disadvantaged communities.

Someone who works minimum wage on an hourly basis will be affected much differently than someone who does not have to worry about their next paycheck, Xie said. The hub can serve as a unique lens to examine questions related to socioeconomic disparities, and hopefully uncover areas of energy poverty, where families may have trouble accessing reliable and affordable energy.

The data hub is updated daily after careful quality control to provide the most up-to-date information to the public. Xie and his team hope the hub can serve as an open-access tool for system operators, as well as for state and federal policy makers. Not only will it help policymakers make more informed decisions when it comes to allocating resources, but it will also help society become more aware of how much energy we consume and how we consume it.

It helps everyone to be more energy conscious and cognizant, especially during this once-in-a-lifetime societal crisis, Xie said.

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The COVID-19 Pandemic's Impact On The Electricity Sector - Texas A&M Today - Texas A&M University Today

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