Category: Covid-19

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COVID-19 Daily Update 12-6-2020 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

December 8, 2020

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of December 6, 2020, therehave been 1,214,692 total confirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 54,997totalcases and 838 deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of a 67-yearold female from Wood County, an 82-yearold male from Wood County, a 91-year old male from Mineral County, an 80-yearold male from Fayette County, a 94-year old male from Preston County, an 83-yearold male from Mineral County, a 71-year old male from Berkeley County, a 95-yearold male from Hancock County, and an 81-year old male from Ohio County.

Itis with great sadness that we announce more lives lost to this pandemic, saidBill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. Our sympathies and thoughts go out tothese families.

CASESPER COUNTY: Barbour (507), Berkeley (3,847),Boone (715), Braxton (149), Brooke (799), Cabell (3,366), Calhoun (90), Clay(149), Doddridge (138), Fayette (1,257), Gilmer (222), Grant (485), Greenbrier(659), Hampshire (443), Hancock (966), Hardy (388), Harrison (1,682), Jackson(779), Jefferson (1,584), Kanawha (6,264), Lewis (278), Lincoln (479), Logan(1,141), Marion (1,057), Marshall (1,508), Mason (649), McDowell (677), Mercer(1,495), Mineral (1,568), Mingo (1,040), Monongalia (3,626), Monroe (414),Morgan (342), Nicholas (412), Ohio (1,791), Pendleton (130), Pleasants (123),Pocahontas (270), Preston (823), Putnam (2,237), Raleigh (1,781), Randolph(785), Ritchie (209), Roane (218), Summers (297), Taylor (425), Tucker (190),Tyler (182), Upshur (567), Wayne (1,177), Webster (80), Wetzel (473), Wirt(134), Wood (3,066), Wyoming (864).

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:

December6, 2020

Hancock County

JacksonCounty

1:00 PM 5:00 PM, Jackson County Health Department, 504 SouthChurch Street, Ripley, WV

Nicholas County

1:00 PM 5:00 PM, Richwood City Hall, 6 White Avenue, Richwood, WV

December7, 2020

BarbourCounty

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

BerkeleyCounty

CabellCounty

GrantCounty

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

Hancock County

HarrisonCounty

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

JeffersonCounty

MarshallCounty

MasonCounty

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

MineralCounty

MingoCounty

11:00 AM 4:00 PM, Chattaroy Volunteer Fire Department, 1412Firefighter Lane, Chattaroy, WV

NicholasCounty

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

TaylorCounty

WayneCounty

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

WirtCounty

Wood County

11:00 AM 3:00 PM, New Hope Baptist Church, 1777 Rosemar Road,Parkersburg, WV (pre-registration http://www.ipsumcovidresults.com)

WyomingCounty

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

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 12-6-2020 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Fairgrounds In Falmouth Named As Upper Cape’s COVID-19 Testing Site – CapeNews.net

December 8, 2020

The Cape Cod Fairgrounds in East Falmouth will become a testing site for COVID-19 this week.

The site will be opened using the $300,000 in funding that was secured by state Representative Dylan A. Fernandes (D-Falmouth) and will allow for drive-through access to symptomatic and asymptomatic testing.

A dry run of the site is scheduled for Tuesday, December 8. The site is expected to be open for at least six months.

A COVID-19 testing site is also going to be opened in Hyannis in the Cape Cod Melody Tent parking lot. Hyannis Fire Chief Peter Burke told the Barnstable Town Council at its meeting Thursday last week, December 3, that the site could be open as early as Friday, December 11.

This site will also be by appointment only, although the out-of-pocket cost for people without insurance will be lower than the typical $160 cost. The chief said it could cost under $50 and potentially much lower than that.

The test being offered at this site will be a self-administered nasal swab under the observation of medical personnel. The swab will then be sent to the Brodt Institute in Cambridge for processing.

Turnaround time is expected to be between 24 and 48 hours.

Chief Burke said the size of the parking lot will mean cars will not be spilling onto the roadway while awaiting testing.

Residents with insurance will have their insurance billed for the testing.

The site will be open to all people, not just to residents of Barnstable, and will not require that a person prove exposure or be symptomatic, Chief Burke said, who added that the site is still in the planning stage, but more information about how people will be able to be tested there will be available soon.

This site is being funded with money secured by state Senator Susan L. Moran (D-Falmouth).

In addition to the Falmouth and Hyannis testing sites, a third testing site is expected to be available for outer Cape residents soon as well. No further information has been announced about the outer Cape site at this time.

None of these sites is a Stop the Spread sitelocations where residents can drop in without an appointment and be tested at no cost. Cape Cod does not have a Stop the Spread site, and the nearest location of that type is in New Bedford.

The state is starting to see the impact of people not following the guidance surrounding Thanksgiving, with cases surging statewide.

On Monday afternoon, December 7, Sandwich Assistant Town Manager Heather B. Harper, who is a member of the town's COVID-19 Response Team, sent out a press release indicating that the town now has 38 active cases. This is up from just 10 last Thursday.

"This is the highest total number of positive cases that the Town of Sandwich has had at any time during this pandemic," she said. "This rise in cases appears to be reflective of the gatherings held over the Thanksgiving holiday and contacts people make in public and at work."

She said this number is expected to rise even further.

Ms. Harper said if the town starts to see evidence of community spread, officials will evaluate the possibility of partial or full closure of schools and town offices.

Between Friday, December 4, and Sunday, December 6, 188 new cases of COVID-19 were reported on Cape Cod.

This brings the Barnstable County total to 3,702 confirmed and probable cases since the outbreak began in March.

Two deaths from the virus were reported on Friday for a total of 197 deaths related to the disease.

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Fairgrounds In Falmouth Named As Upper Cape's COVID-19 Testing Site - CapeNews.net

Already had COVID-19? What to look out for and why you should still wear a mask – TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

December 6, 2020

Since the pandemic began in March, roughly 350,000 Minnesotans have tested positive for COVID-19 and more than 300,000 have recovered enough from the coronavirus they likely wont pass it to others.

But that doesnt mean theyre done with COVID-19.

Its been less than a year since scientists first identified SARS-CoV-2 that has shaken the globe, infecting at least 64 million and killing more than 1.4 million people.

There are so many things that we are still learning about, that are still unknown, said Dr. Nick Lehnertz, a Minnesota Department of Health medical specialist in the infectious disease division who is studying COVID-19 and its long-term effects.

In Minnesota, the coronavirus has killed more than 3,800 people and sent another 17,600 to hospitals, including nearly 4,000 who required critical care.

Vaccines are expected to soon become available to a very limited number of medical workers and long-term care residents. In the meantime, its important for everyone else to understand what scientists now know about coronavirus transmission, recovery, immunity and reinfection. Here are the answers to some common questions:

SARS-CoV-2 typically has an incubation period of between two and 14 days after a person contracts the coronavirus. Many people never experience symptoms and most are contagious before they know they are infected.

Thats why it is important to understand that a negative test one day doesnt mean there isnt an infection a few days later.

Lehnertz says there is also a distinction between quarantine and isolation.

Someone who is exposed to COVID-19 or suspects they are infected should quarantine themselves at home for 14 days, regardless if they have symptoms or test negative.

On the other hand, someone who tests positive for COVID-19 should isolate themselves, including from others in their household, for at least 10 days from the onset of symptoms or a positive test, preferably whichever is longer.

Generally speaking, you are contagious up to nine days from the onset of symptoms, Lehnertz said.

Most people who get COVID-19 are feeling better a week or two after the onset of symptoms. Yet, the virus has been known to have dramatically different effects on different people.

A small minority of people who catch the coronavirus experience symptoms, such as fatigue and body aches, for weeks or months after first getting sick. Not a lot is known about these so-called long-haulers, but Lehnertz says a number of clinics around the country are studying patients whose symptoms persist.

There are also a number of other health concerns that can arise in people whove contracted SARS-CoV-2 and recovered.

One of the best known is multi-system inflammatory syndrome, which typically appears in children, and causes different organs to become inflamed. To date, there have been 42 cases diagnosed in Minnesota and no fatalities.

There have also been shorter-term complications, including difficulty concentrating, depression, muscle pains and heart palpitations. More serious long-term impacts that have been recorded include inflammation of the heart, breathing problems and kidney injury.

Little is known about why these conditions occur and the lasting impact of contracting COVID-19. Health officials say anyone recovering from the disease should monitor other symptoms and health concerns and contact their physician.

Everyone knows themselves, Lehnertz said. People will know when something is not right.

The simple answer is yes, but it is probably highly unlikely. The science is complicated and theres a lot thats still unknown.

Lehnertz says there have only been a handful of proven examples of reinfection out of 64 million known COVID-19 cases worldwide. In order to prove a reinfection, scientists need to compare both strains of the SARS-CoV-2 that infected an individual to be sure.

Viruses are constantly mutating over time and there are several identifiably different strains of COVID-19. Sequencing the DNA of two samples collected from the same person at different times is the only real way to know for sure if someone was infected twice.

Thats the gold standard, Lehnertz said. Thats when we can see, yep, this is completely different.

Whats more common, but still unlikely, is people who test positive for the same strain of the coronavirus repeatedly over a long period of time. These people shed virus fragments for weeks or months and may test positive repeatedly, but are not suspected to be transmitters after the initial contagion period.

This is a question that will take more time to answer.

There is some evidence that people whove recovered from COVID-19 have virus-fighting antibodies for months. In others, the presence of antibodies begins to dwindle after a while.

Just because antibodies cannot be detected doesnt mean the immune system will not remember COVID-19 and how to fight it.

It will likely take a number of years before scientists have a clear picture of SARS-CoV-2 immunity and how often people need to be vaccinated against it.

When push comes to shove, we just dont know enough about the duration of immunity and how it would affect a second infection, Lehnertz said.

In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say people who have recovered from a coronavirus infection may still benefit from getting vaccinated. Guidance released in late November cites all the current unknown factors about the coronavirus.

What remains unclear is when previously-infected individuals will be eligible to get vaccinated.

For the foreseeable future, health officials say everyone should wear masks, social distance, avoid crowds and stay home when they are sick because there are so many unanswered questions about COVID-19.

The biggest reason for those mitigation efforts is to protect people who havent gotten sick yet especially those who are medically vulnerable.

But theres also good reason to shield those who believe theyve recovered from COVID-19 since theres so much unknown about the long-term impacts.

Its not a huge ask to wear a mask, Lehnertz said. We are all in this together, right? Just wear the mask and stay 6 feet away. Its not hard.

Originally posted here:

Already had COVID-19? What to look out for and why you should still wear a mask - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

More Than 5,000 COVID-19 Cases Reported in Mass. for 3rd Day in a Row – NBC10 Boston

December 6, 2020

Saturday marked a third consecutive day where more than 5,000 new COVID-19 cases were reported in Massachusetts.

There were 5,356 new confirmed cases of the coronavirus Saturday, up from Friday's figure, the Department of Public Health announced. Massachusetts also reported 41 more deaths from COVID-19.

This number of cases still comes in under the high mark of the week, when the state reported 6,477 new cases Thursday though 680 of those cases came from a delay in reporting, according to that day's report.

There have now been 10,715 confirmed deaths and 242,812 cases, according to the DPH. Another 263 deaths are considered probably linked to COVID-19 at this time.

The average rate of COVID-19 tests stayed relatively level at 5.4%, according to the report just a small change from Friday's 5.44%.

With COVID-19 deaths and infections hitting record highs and discouraging economic numbers, Washington is under pressure to break deadlock on a new relief bill.

The number of patients hospitalized for COVID-19 increased again Saturday to 1,428. Of that total, 283 are listed as being in intensive care units and 138 are intubated, according to DPH.

In Nantucket, officials are concerned about a rising trend in cases in recent days.

Saturday morning, 64 new cases of COVID-19 were reported from tests conducted at Nantucket Cottage Hospital over the past couple days.

The seven-day positivity rate in the town, meanwhile, has risen to 10.9% - a mark nearly double that of the average statewide, and the highest level seen there since the start of the pandemic, Nantucket officials said.

Most of the infected patients have been in their 20s and 30s, but in all has ranged from 9 months to 60 years old.

"We are grateful, and lucky, that none of these recent active cases of COVID-19 have required hospitalization yet, but the sheer number of people we have diagnosed over the past week is very troubling," the Nantucket Department of Health said in a statement Saturday.

Gov. Charlie Baker on Friday evening said the Commonwealth had submitted its order for a first round of vaccines to the CDC. The federal government allocated Massachusetts nearly 60,000 doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in a first shipment.

The first doses will likely be reserved for frontline health care workers, people over the age of 65 or with underlying health conditions and other essential workers.

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More Than 5,000 COVID-19 Cases Reported in Mass. for 3rd Day in a Row - NBC10 Boston

What should we say to people and families dealing with COVID-19? Terrys Plutos Faith & You – cleveland.com

December 6, 2020

CLEVELAND, Ohio When COVID-19 first hit, I didnt know anyone who had the virus.

Several months into the pandemic, I knew some. A few were very seriously ill, most were not. But in the last month, I know several people who have become ill from it or at least tested positive.

In the recent surge, if you dont know someone who has the virus ... just wait, you probably will.

Some people who have come down with the virus have been made to feel like a leper.

Thats what Bishop Joey Johnson of Akrons House of the Lord mentioned to me. We are talking about those who have tested positive feeling as if they did something wrong.

Yes, some were hitting the bars, not wearing masks and symbolically spitting in the face of the virus.

But most of the people we know have been careful when they go out, wearing masks and trying to stay safe.

When I called Father Bob Stec, the pastor of Brunswicks St. Ambrose Catholic Church, he said he had just finished talking to a person who had tested positive.

Some of us can wear a masks 1,000 hours a day, wash our hands all the time and almost never leave the house and still get it, said Stec. Its out there. We cant condemn these people.

FEELING GUILTY

Ive talked to some people who have tested positive. They had to call the people who were recently around them so they can be tested.

As one person told me, I feel like I messed up everyones life. We waited almost a week for results. They all came back negative.

This person was the type Stec described: Not doing stupid stuff. Wearing a mask. Caught the virus anyway. Some people have stronger immune systems.

We cant keep pointing fingers at people like they did something wrong when they get sick, said Johnson.

Those people have to quarantine for at least 14 days. In some cases, it becomes a serious situation with trips to the doctor. It can be very lonely and frightening.

SAYING DUMB THINGS

Karen (not her real name) said her daughter tested positive and some people said, Dont worry, shes young.

Karen added: I know those words were meant to comfort, but they didnt ease my fears...age doesnt matter and the severity of the symptoms were nothing like Ive ever seen.

Her daughter recovered, but it was an ordeal.

Mary (not her real name) said after her mother died of complications from COVID-19, some people told her, Well, your mother had underlying conditions.

That doesnt change the fact Marys mother died and she is grieving.

We need to think before we speak, said Stec.

Confession time: When I heard someone had died from the virus, I wondered if they had high blood pressure, or dealt with cancer or other pre-existing conditions. Its a natural tendency to mentally search for a unique reason the other person got sick and died so we think it wont happen to us.

But dont bring it up when talking to the person who suffered the loss.

We should ask ourselves, What would I need to hear in her position? " said Stec. When people are hurting, we forget about how our words can negatively impact them.

Many people living in the land of COVID-19 say they appreciate a simple, Were praying for you. We care about you.

Offer to go to the store and run errands while the person is home recovering. You can leave stuff on the doorstep. You can leave cards, send texts and emails of prayers.

As Stec said, Put yourselves in their position and figure out what they need.

THE FEAR FACTOR

Fear is everywhere right now, from politics to the virus.

Johnson and Stec both said its really hard to go through these times without God.

The battle isnt just medical, its also spiritual. Thats why depression, drug use and frustration levels have skyrocketed. The days seem to drag by as the COVID-19 numbers rise.

One of my favorite verses is 1 Peter 5:7-9: Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you. Be alert and of sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, standing firm in the faith, because you know that the family of believers throughout the world is undergoing the same kind of sufferings.

During these times, those with COVID-19 and their families feel all alone. They need to know you care about them, even if you cant see them in person for a while.

Dont be afraid to make a call or send an uplifting email or text. But dont play doctor or pandemic expert. Pray first, then connect.

As Stec stressed, Just think before you do it.

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More:

What should we say to people and families dealing with COVID-19? Terrys Plutos Faith & You - cleveland.com

One way to grasp 1000 COVID-19 deaths: This entire North Dakota town would be gone – Grand Forks Herald

December 6, 2020

New Salem is in many ways exemplary of North Dakotas small town ideals. It has three bars, a grocery store, premium farmland, a 1986 9-man football championship and a communal spirit passed down for generations.

Its like Pleasantville, said Bill Kramer, who owns The Field bar with his wife Jacey, describing a community just large enough to have amenities, but still small enough that everyone has to pitch in sometimes working several jobs to keep the place running.

The size of New Salem, home to some 1,000 people, has acquired a new kind of significance in the latest chapter of the COVID-19 pandemic in North Dakota: A 2019 census estimate puts the town at 989 residents, the same number of North Dakotans who have died with COVID-19 as of Friday, Dec. 4.

As the state has passed its 1,000th COVID-19 death, one way to grasp the incomprehensible may be to picture North Dakota without New Salem. It's like losing the cow town completely.

Its pretty devastating to everything. To even think that a town like that would be off the map with how many people have died in nine months is pretty disturbing, Kramer said. You cant replace that generation of people the experience, the knowledge.

As in many North Dakota towns, life from the outside looks pretty close to normal in New Salem. The grind of grain elevators still lays the soundtrack for downtown streets. Right now, the telephone poles along Main Avenue are lit with electric snowflakes, and many of the nearby houses are rimmed in Christmas lights.

A closer look reveals the subtle differences. During Sunday Masses at St. Pius V Catholic Church, the nave is sparsely populated with parishioners sitting pews apart. School children sport colorful masks that sometimes slip beneath their noses as they run to the buses. The owner of the local grocery, Deb Tellmann, hasnt seen her uncle since March even though he lives just a few blocks from her store, in the town nursing home.

The mayor, Lynette Fitterer, the first woman elected to that office in the towns history (in a 2010 election that she recalled as a frickin landslide), said that, for the most part, New Salem has taken these adjustments in stride. In her day job, Fitterer is the retail manager at Dakota Frontier Cooperative, a fuel station and co-op on the road into town, and she said most people who stop into the store wear masks now. She'll remind friends if they don't.

Lynette Fitterer, mayor of New Salem, N.D., is the retail manager at Dakota Frontier Cooperative, a fuel station and co-op on the road into town. Michael Vosburg / Forum Photo Editor

Even though Fitterer has received her share of calls and complaints about pandemic precautions, she said folks have mostly managed to keep their heads on straight. I really believe people in town here have just gone with it, she said. It is what it is.

Still, New Salem has some stubborn ways. Fitterer said the hardest part of her decade as mayor has been getting people on board with needed changes. For her, that means things like repaving old roads, fixing water mains and bumping up the town sales tax. COVID-19 brought change of a different order.

There was a time, probably two months ago, where I honestly considered doing a mask mandate in New Salem, Fitterer said, recalling a stretch when a local outbreak forced high school classes to go virtual and when many of her friends tested positive. But she joked, I dont know I think looking back now, I probably would have been crucified on Main Street.

But masks have been slowly adopted over the last two months in New Salem, with the town gradually acknowledging the seriousness of the virus as family and neighbors got sick.

The town of New Salem, N.D., is seen Monday, Nov. 30, 30 miles west of Bismarck. Michael Vosburg / Forum Photo Editor

High school students warm up for basketball practice Monday, Nov. 30, in New Salem, N.D. Michael Vosburg / Forum Photo Editor

For some of the youngest residents in town, reality dawned almost with the flip of a switch.

In mid-October, the New Salem Holsteins football team (now 11-man) had to forfeit its last game of the season because of a virus outbreak that knocked out some of its star players. A win would have delivered them to the state playoffs. In-person high school classes went on hiatus the next week, and on the following Monday holdouts slowly donned masks, a response to what Superintendent Brian Christopherson described as positive peer pressure. It was just like that, he recounted. Slow at first, but as the day went on, some of the popular kids had a mask on, and then some of the other kids. I had hundreds of masks to give out.

At the same time, the handful of bars and restaurants in town have gotten quieter.

The Field so named years ago, according to its owners, so that farmers could always say that they were "in the field" has been a vital watering hole in New Salem for generations. A favorite spot of nearby farmers, its barstools have their own place in the area's long history of big money land deals. Theres been millions of dollars of business done on napkins in that place, Kramer said.

In the pandemic, The Field has lost this central position. A bar that the Kramers said used to regularly pack in more than 100 people at a time, even drawing patrons from the nursing home on some pre-pandemic days, now sees about 30 different faces on a good day.

Employees of the Elm Crest Rehabilitation Center gather at the main entrance Monday, Nov. 30, in New Salem, N.D. Michael Vosburg / Forum Photo Editor

Bill Kramer, who owns The Field bar with his wife Jacey in New Salem, N.D., talks Monday, Nov. 30, about how his business has struggled during the pandemic. Michael Vosburg / Forum Photo Editor

But even with pandemic anxiety on the rise in New Salem, many residents snubbed warnings for months. The Kramers said some of their patrons can be especially stubborn, so much so that its difficult to pin down just how widespread COVID-19 has been in the surrounding community because so many people dont want to admit that they came down with the virus.

Youre not getting those farmers and ranchers and those old cowboys to go in. Theyre sitting at home with their cold, Jacey Kramer said.

I know hundreds of people that definitely had it, and they refused to go get it tested, Bill Kramer added. He suggested that some New Salem farmers seemed readier to contend with death than check themselves into a hospital. Ive heard about them going and just keep combining when they couldnt breathe, and they just went right through it.

Main Avenue is seen Monday, Nov. 30, in New Salem, N.D. Michael Vosburg / Forum Photo Editor

For June Doll, the pandemic has upended life, despite the care she and her family took to follow precautions.

A lifelong New Salemite, June recalled that her friends set her up on a blind date in 1963, just before her freshman year of high school. She and her date, a senior named Ron Doll, soon fell in love. Four years later, after June graduated, the two got married and bought a dairy farm south of town, where they lived and worked for more than 50 years.

When COVID-19 hit the Doll family in October, June, Ron and their son all got sick. Ron, who already had a depleted immune system, got it worst of all, coming down with the virus a few weeks before his 74th birthday. The family rushed him 30 miles east to Bismarck, where he was airlifted to a Fargo hospital the same day.

June, her son and two daughters couldnt visit Ron and had to talk to him through FaceTime. He didnt know that he was in Fargo, June said. In the weeks after Rons airlift, he was unconscious almost the entire time. The virus just took over his lungs and pretty much destroyed him," she said.

After three weeks, doctors told June that she would have to make a decision about keeping her husband alive. She and her children drove to Fargo and stayed overnight in a motel, prepared to take Ron off his ventilator the next day. "We thought we knew what we were doing that day," June said. "But I couldn't do it when we got there."

The Dolls had their priest, the Rev. John Guthrie, administer a final prayer service, bringing him in over a video call from New Salem. June and her son, who had already gotten COVID-19, were in the hospital room with Ron. Her two daughters said goodbye through the window.

Its not something that I want anybody else to go through, June said. Its pretty heartbreaking to make those decisions about someone elses life.

Rev. John Guthrie of St. Pius V Catholic Church in New Salem, N.D., said the COVID-19 pandemic is proof of the ties between this small community out in central North Dakota and the rest of the world. Michael Vosburg / Forum Photo Editor

For Guthrie, who ministers at St. Pius, the alienation of the pandemic and losses like the Dolls make him question why this is happening, and how it could all figure into God's plans.

But for all of the sickness and doubt, he said he hopes for a different New Salem when the pandemic is over. Everyone is eager to get back to their old lives, he said, but maybe 'get back' is not the right word.

COVID-19, Guthrie explained, is tragic proof of the ties between this small community out in central North Dakota and the rest of the world. He said he hopes that, if any good comes out of the virus, it will be to prompt reflection on the responsibilities owed between neighbors, communities and countries.

This is a call to something much deeper than where weve been, he said, a challenge posed to his neighbors as much as to himself. Am I willing to change? Am I willing to grow?

Readers can reach Forum reporter Adam Willis, a Report for America corps member, at awillis@forumcomm.com.

The rest is here:

One way to grasp 1000 COVID-19 deaths: This entire North Dakota town would be gone - Grand Forks Herald

Hit by Covid-19, Colleges Do the Unthinkable and Cut Tenure – The Wall Street Journal

December 6, 2020

When Kenneth Macur became president at Medaille College in 2015, the small, private school in Buffalo, N.Y., was surviving paycheck to paycheck, he said. Enrollment was declining and the small endowment was flat.

Then came the coronavirus pandemic. The campus shut down and revenue plummeted 15%. Dr. Macur saw what he considered an opportunity: With the approval of the board of trustees, he suspended the faculty handbook by invoking an act of god clause embedded in it. He laid off several professors, cut the homeland security and health information management programs, rescinded the lifelong job security of tenure and rewrote the faculty handbook, rules that had governed the school for decades.

I believe that this is an opportunity to do more than just tinker around the edges. We need to be bold and decisive, he wrote in a letter to faculty on April 15. A new model is the future of higher education.

Dr. Macur and presidents of struggling colleges around the country are reacting to the pandemic by unilaterally cutting programs, firing professors and gutting tenure, all once-unthinkable changes. Schools employed about 150,000 fewer workers in September than they did a year earlier, before the pandemic, according to the Labor Department. Thats a decline of nearly 10%. Along the way, they are changing the centuries-old higher education power structure.

The changes upset the shared governance model for running universities that has roots in Medieval Europe. It holds that a board of trustees has final say on how a school is run but largely delegates academic issues to administrators and faculty who share power.

Excerpt from:

Hit by Covid-19, Colleges Do the Unthinkable and Cut Tenure - The Wall Street Journal

What will 2021 bring? Promising vaccines and ‘the darkest days of our war on COVID-19’ – USA TODAY

December 6, 2020

Experts say side effects from the COVID-19 vaccine range from soreness to fatigue. USA TODAY

A trio of promising coronavirus vaccines promises to plunge a stake through the dark pandemic-riddled heart of 2020.

Thats the good news. Less encouraging is the reality that our national resolve will continue to be tested well into 2021 as a comprehensive inoculation rollout is likely only by summer.

In the meantime, winter is coming.

COVID-19 cases and deaths are skyrocketing nationwide, taxing hospital staff and facilities. More school disruptions seem inevitable, vexing students and frustrating parents. The recession has plunged millions into unemployment, challenging the incoming administration of President-elect Joe Biden to provide relief.

And partisan politics linger, undermining the kind of united front necessary to stem the tide of death and economic disruption.

The only way to face this is one day at a time, said Nina Lewellen, 30, of Detroit, whose birthday present last June was five days in intensive care with COVID-19. She is upset many of her Michigan peers continue to take the virus lightly as she continues to deal with repercussions including headaches and hair loss.

Nina Lewellen, 30, center, with her two children, Grace Lewellen, 10, left, and Grady Riney, 4. Lewellen was in the hospital for five days last June with COVID-19, and has been vocal about tell friends and neighbors in Detroit that the virus is not only real, but it is important to stay safe this winter as the case numbers climb.(Photo: Courtesy of Nina Lewellen)

The next few months promise to bring the worst of this pandemic to our door, so I can only hope that by sharing my own serious experience maybe I can get even one person to be careful, said Lewellen. The vaccines will help. But were a long way away.

Conversations with historians, futurists, doctors and business leaders around the country paint the coming year as both a challenge and opportunity, one that sees us all shouldering continued disruptions to the way we live and work but also, one day next year, newly appreciating the joys of attending a wedding or a throwing a Little League post-game barbecue.

The journey from here to there is a simple one, experts say. The more resolute we are in collectively facing the hardships 2021 brings us, the faster will we reap the freedom-filled rewards promised by the vaccines. And vice versa.

We are heading into the darkest days of our war on COVID-19, said Douglas Brinkley, historian at Rice University in Houston whose books have chronicled everything from the space race to World War II.

Our efforts to beat back the COVID-19 siege has revealed both the best and worst of American character.

On the one hand, this pandemic has shown we have short attention spans, dont trust science and believe in the survival of the fittest, Brinkley said. On the other, you see the tireless compassion of doctors and nurses working overtime to save lives. That deep community spirit is what we need now.

Or else that phrase seems to hang off the end of every observation made about 2021. The stakes, officials warn, are that high.

Plenty of people are sounding the alarm. Robert Redfield, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, recently warned that the next three months will be the most difficult time in the public health history of this nation, with upwards of 450,000 deaths possible by February, up from around 280,000 currently.

World Food Program executive director David Beasley said Friday that2021 is literally going to be catastrophic," and the various humanitarian crises could be exacerbated as poorer nations waitlonger for the COVID-19 vaccine.

Philanthropist Melinda Gates, who along with her husband Bill has been working for decades to curb infectious diseases, said in a recent interview that vaccine skepticism in the United States threatens not only to undermine a COVID-19recovery but also extend the "stretch of very dark months ahead of us."

In Michigan, where increased testing has resulted in a 13% jump in positivity rates and rising 7-day death toll figures, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer pleaded for a rethinking of travel and holiday plans.

Medical staff members check on a patient in the COVID-19 intensive care unit at the United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Texas. Healthcare leaders are warning that this winter could push hospitals and their staff to the breaking point as virus cases surge nationally.(Photo: Go Nakamura, Getty Images)

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said Wednesday the areas mushrooming COVID-19 cases means residents should hunker down cancel everything." Sunday a stay-at-home order went into effect for 33 million Californians, including those in Southern California, the Bay Area and Central California to help stop the spread of a virus that is filling the state's ICUs.

Those warnings are powerful and even dire, and theyfallon fatigued ears.

Everyone is tired but unfortunately viruses dont care, they just replicate, said Timothy Brewer, professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of California, Los Angeles. As long as its circulating, we need to be vigilant.

With a majority the nations hospitals at stretched capacity, the tipping point is here.

We are far from out of the woods just because there are vaccines that have good results, he said of products from Moderna and Pfizer that promise 95% effectiveness. Trial results from a third vaccine, from AstraZeneca, remain under review.

The vaccines themselves come with their own issues. Some require sub-Arctic temperatures up until the moment of injection, which presents a transportation and storage challenge. And then theres the fact that most require two shots, which in a nation of 330 million will be some undertaking.

Joel Zivot, an Emory University professor and ICU doctor, speaks with Hailey Wetta, a critical care physician. Both work with COVID-19 patients at Atlanta's Emory Decatur Hospital.(Photo: Courtesy of Joel Zivot)

People need to brace themselves from the cold reality of whats in front of us, and not stop any of the preventive measures meant to keep COVID-19 in check, said Joel Zivot, associate professor of anesthesiology and surgery at Emory University in Atlanta. He also works at Emory Decatur Hospitals intensive care unit, where he treats COVID-19 patients. He had the virus last summer.

In a recent article, Zivot posited that basic math which takes into account an 80% uptake of the vaccine that is 95% effective could yield between 500,000 and 2 million American deaths in 2021. Thatcalculation, whose wide death margin reflects whether the nation heeds heath community recommendations, excludes both how long it will take to make and distribute doses for all Americans,and how many will say yes.

The vaccine is not a panacea, he said. Itll take a year or more before some real material changes appear to the way we live. But, as I like to remind people, a year in a long life is a short time. We just have to be patient and think of the collective.

Health officials say they will continue to use media campaigns to influence often skeptical public opinions about both masks and the vaccine.

Liz Sharlot, director of communications at the Mississippi State Department of Health, said she aims to raise money to create a series of ads and public service announcements featuring testimonials from the first healthcare workers to receive the vaccine. Recent polls show that around 60% of Americans say they will take the vaccine when it becomes available.

"At first, health care workers will get these vaccines, soI want to use them in ads saying, 'I got it, it had few effects,'" says Sharlot. "If you hear it from people, it means something."

A Michigan group of business and health leaders spent $5 million on a coronavirus awareness campaigned aimed at younger Michiganders. A cartoon virus figure with dark sunglasses, dubbed "Rona," is seen here, on this digital outdoor ad, being pushed backwards as the words roll out: "Not here Rona." The campaign, leaders say, was successful in making some more aware of the need to social distance and wear masks, actions that have become politicized in Michigan and other states.(Photo: Courtesy of DTE Energy)

Last summer, Sharlot helped lead the departments ItIs Real campaign, featuring video interviewsof COVID-19 survivors.

In Detroit, a $5 million Rona 4 Real campaignis credited with changing the habits of younger Michiganders, who this summer were among those responsible for spreading the virus as they sought to mingle as cases fell. That campaign may get a twistas local leaders grow concerned that the existence of a vaccine may lead to a winter case spike.

"With the vaccine here, there's that same risk of younger people getting euphoric and reviving bad behavior," saidGerry Anderson, executive director of DTE Energy and co-chair of the Michigan Economic Recovery Council, which advised Whitmer on COVID-19 and spearheaded the Rona 4 Real campaign. "But well need discipline to hang in there.

Skepticism about COVID-19 may have contributed to prolonging the nations suffering well beyond what the United States had to endure during the last big viral conflagration, the 1918 Spanish Flu outbreak, said John Barry, author of The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History.

A handout picture provided by National Guard Bureau shows soldiers in quarantine while recovering from the Spanish flu, at Camp Funston, Kansas, in 1918. That pandemic killed more than 600,000 Americans, back when the nation only have around 100 million citizens. But the Spanish Flu didn't last nearly as long, and the wearing nature of this COVID-19 pandemic is trying the patience of citizens as officials urge caution going into a possibly deadly winter.(Photo: US NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU HANDOUT, EPA-EFE)

While that event killed 675,000 Americans, or 0.5% of the 103 million population, and some 50 million worldwide, it took its biggest toll in only a 15-week period and passed through any given community in six to 10 weeks.

Theres really no comparison to the last plague, this one is much longer period of stress and were not done yet, Barry said. Wed all be better off if early on leaders had said what should have been said, This is going to a be long fight and we need to be prepared to fight it for the extended duration.

Economists looking ahead to 2021 see a mixed bag.

On the one hand, many spy the promise of a surge in discretionary spending as the vaccine gets widely distributed globally, bringing back everything from leisure travel to concerts and other group gatherings. Recently, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development projected global gross domestic product would rise next year by 4.2% after falling by the same percentage in 2020.

A Thanksgiving holiday traveler is directed as they pass through Los Angeles international Airport. State officials nationally worry such journeys may soon lead to a spike in COVID-19 cases and deaths, leading some, such as California Gov. Gavin Newsom, to warn that severe lockdowns could be imminent.(Photo: David McNew, Getty Images)

However, there will be no simple reset to the fall of 2019 as the virus batters the economy in the first quarter of 2021 JPMorgan economists have forecast a 1% contraction for the period and countless industries endure permanent change.

We wont return to pre-pandemic levels until the end of 2021, so in a way weve lost two years, said Andrew Butters, assistant professor at the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University in Bloomington.

In a recent report, Butters and his colleagues at the Kelley School predicted that employment is not likely to hit a pre-shut down peak until well into 2022, and while consumer spending ultimately may recover, it will be aimed at goods and not services as people remain wary of interaction for the foreseeable future.

After all of these changes weve seen in the economy in terms of businesses that have closed and jobs that no longer are viable, it would be nave to think none of these are going to stick, he said. Post-vaccine, there will be winners and losers in the new economy. Some sectors, firms and households will say, The economys back. And others will say, Not for me.

Other lasting changes despite the prevalence of a vaccine are likely to be behavioral, experts say.

These include a growing awareness of contagion and a corresponding aversion to big crowds, which in turn can, very sadly, dampen the natural curiosity we humans have about one another, said Maria Bothwell, CEO of Toffler Associates, a future-focused strategic advisory firm founded by Future Shock authors Alvin and Adelaide Toffler.

A waiter wears a mask and face covering at a restaurant with outdoor seating in Pasadena, California. The U.S. services sector, where most Americans work, has been hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic as restaurant has been limited in an effort to curve the spread of the virus.(Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez, AP)

But, Bothwell adds, it would be inaccurate to say that the pandemic has not brought positive changes to American society.

In her plus column: the ability of entrepreneurs to help society create new ways of doing business (the recent sale of messaging site Slack to Salesforce for $27 billion is bet on the permanent shift to remote working); a renewed appreciation for science and data-driven decision making (77% of Americans have at least some trust in scientists, according to a Pew Research Center poll); and a growing spotlight on healthcare inequity (the result of the poor and people of color suffering disproportionately from COVID-19).

On top of all that, youve also got a sense of elation, optimism and freedom that will surge over us as the vaccine helps us beat back the virus, Bothwell said. There will be more hugging and laughter. Thats something to look forward to.

Until then, its a matter of staying alive. Detroit resident Lewellen continues to tell anyone who will listen, whether on social media or in socially distanced meet-ups, about how serious this moment of national reckoning is.

I mean, what will it take for people to listen, losing someone? she said.

Lewellen, who caught the virus last summer from her asymptomatic 3-year-old, had a hellish experience at the hospital. Her breathing was so shallow doctors worriedthey would have to restart her heart. Once home, she was out of work for two months suffering from brain fog and insomnia.

Sal Lando, left, holds up signs during a protest against mandatory flu vaccinations, outside the Massachusetts State House, in Boston, last summer. Spurred by the pandemic, vaccine opponents have worked to reinvent their image around a rallying cry of civil liberties and medical freedom. Such a stance, health officials worry, could lead to a large percentage of Americans opting out of promising COVID-19 vaccines.(Photo: Nancy Lane, AP)

And that paled when compared to her mothers 10-day stay for COVID-19, which Lewellen says left her with cataracts in her eyes that only recently were removed.

While Lewellen is hopeful the vaccines will bring welcome relief at some point in 2021, for the moment she is girding for a battle to keep those around her safe.

Ill just keep doing everything I can to get the word out that people need to be very careful, said Lewellen. I know people are really fatigued by the masks and the restrictions, but this is not over.

Follow USA TODAY national correspondent Marco della Cava: @marcodellacava

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What will 2021 bring? Promising vaccines and 'the darkest days of our war on COVID-19' - USA TODAY

COVID-19 relief: What’s on the table as Congress seeks deal – Fox Business

December 6, 2020

Fox Business Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on FoxBusiness.com.

WASHINGTON After numerous fits and starts and months of inaction, optimism is finally building in Washington for a COVID-19 aid bill that would offer relief for businesses, the unemployed, schools, and health care providers, among others struggling as caseloads are spiking.

Under pressure from moderates in both parties, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have initiated late-game negotiations in hopes of combining a relief package of, in all likelihood, less than $1 trillion with a separate $1.4 trillion governmentwide omnibus spending bill. The duo were the architects of the $1.8 trillion CARES Act, the landmark relief bill passed in March.

Success is not certain and considerable differences remain over items such as aid to states and local governments, liability protections for businesses and universities reopening during the pandemic, and whether to issue a second round of $1,200 direct payments to most Americans.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, of Calif., speaks during her weekly briefing, Friday, Dec. 4, 2020, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

But renewing soon-to-expire jobless benefits, providing a second round of paycheck protection subsidies, and funding to distribute vaccines are sure bets to be included in any deal.

Here are the top issues for the end-stage COVID-19 relief talks.

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The CARES Act created a $600 per-week bonus COVID-19 unemployment benefit that sustained household incomes and consumer demand during the springtime shutdowns. It expired at the end of July and Republicans are against its renewal. The CARES Act also allowed for additional weeks of emergency pandemic unemployment payments at regular benefit levels which are themselves about to expire, on Dec. 31. Any deal is sure to extend the emergency benefits, and a bipartisan compromise framework thats helping guide the talks calls for restoring half of the bonus benefit, or $300 per week more.

NOVEMBER JOBS REPORT PROVES MORE CORONAVIRUS RELIEF IS NEEDED, DEM LEADERS ARGUE

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Another sure thing is a reauthorization of the Paycheck Protection Program, also established by the CARES Act, to give a second round of subsidies to businesses struggling through the pandemic and make other changes to the program, which enjoys bipartisan support but is particularly revered by Republicans. Leftover PPP funds from two springtime infusions into the program would cover almost half of the $300 billion or so cost.

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President Trump has long supported another $1,200 round of direct payments to most Americans, subject to income limits that make upper-bracket taxpayers ineligible. House Democrats support the idea, but it is unpopular with many Senate Republicans and was left out of a scaled-back Senate GOP plan. A bipartisan bill by Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and others, leaves out the direct payments as well, and their up to $300 billion cost could render them too expensive for inclusion in the year-end package, though lawmakers ranging from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., to Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., are pushing to retain them.

Republican Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, speaks to reporters in Bangor, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

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This is one of the trickiest issues in the talks another round of aid to states and local governments to follow a $150 billion installment this spring. Its a top priority of Pelosi and other Democrats but is opposed by many Republicans, who warn it would bail out states run by Democrats like California and New York. Trump doesnt like the idea as well, but Pelosis demands for the money have been slashed from earlier amounts approaching $1 trillion. Revenue losses due to COVID-19 havent been as large as feared. But smaller localities left out of the first tranche of payments are eager for funding. A plan endorsed by moderates would provide $160 billion.

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Businesses reopening during the pandemic have for months been seeking a shield against lawsuits claiming negligence for COVID-19 outbreaks. McConnell is the most potent backer of the idea and hes drafted sweeping protections against lawsuits for businesses, universities, and other organizations. The powerful trial lawyers lobby which still holds great influence with Democrats is opposed, and McConnells fears of a wave of COVID-related lawsuits havent materialized. Veteran Senate Judiciary Committee members Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and John Cornyn, R-Texas, have been deputized to negotiate the issue, a sign the talks are at a serious stage.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McMcConnell of Ky., speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 1, 2020. (Chip Somodevilla/Pool via AP)

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Numerous smaller items are ripe for inclusion, including $10 billion for the Postal Service, a $20 billion-plus deal adding food aid sought by Democrats and farm subsidies favored by Republicans, more than $100 billion in funding for schools seeking to reopen, along with funding for child care, Amtrak, transit systems, and health care providers.

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COVID-19 relief: What's on the table as Congress seeks deal - Fox Business

Opinion: Embracing technology will propel Colorado’s economic recovery from COVID-19 – The Colorado Sun

December 6, 2020

The year 2020 began with a global pandemic that crippled the economy, upended daily routines, and saw heightened political and cultural tensions. But all this has made clear that, second to the coronavirus, Colorados economic recovery is the top of mind for voters across the state.

With the election behind us, we need political leaders to prioritize safe economic recovery and champion technological adaptation and innovation.

Fortunately, were starting from a strong position.

Long before COVID-19 forced us to change the way we do business, Colorado was charting a new course for the states economic future by embracing technology and cutting-edge digital tools. Our state has attracted a bigger footprint from tech leaders like Netflix, Google, IBM and Apple in recent years.

Companies such as Dish Network and Ping Identity are finding success as they meet technological needs. Homegrown tech startups have significantly grown their footprint. Meanwhile, small and medium-sized businesses across the state have been increasingly modernizing their operations with the help of digital technologies.

Considering the pioneering spirit of our state and our growing tech footprint, it should come as no surprise that when the pandemic hit this spring, Colorado businesses didnt shy away from using leading digital platforms to pivot their operation models.

READ:Colorado Sun opinion columnists.

According to a study by the Connected Commerce Council (3C), small businesses in our state were better prepared to handle a crisis like COVID-19 because of their early adoption of and investment in digital tools. The study also found businesses across Colorado had lower-than-national-average revenue reduction and a higher comfort level with using digital tools before the pandemic.

Technology has enabled resiliency in the Colorado small-business community. A key factor in Colorado businesses being able to shift and adapt quickly has been, without question, the access to and implementation of digital platforms.

Whether a business is using online platforms to connect with customers, process online orders, keep in touch with employees, or adhere to safety standards, businesses across our state have embraced digital tools.

Digital adaptation was crucial to ensure they had a fighting chance at surviving the economic challenges brought on by COVID-19. Heroic efforts from IT professionals ensured their organizations were able to produce business results while working efficiently and securely in remote locations.

In some cases, this agility has translated into additional revenue opportunities. Remote work is already looking to be a permanent fixture for many.

Its hard to think of a tougher business climate in recent memory than the one were facing now for specific industries and regions. And as much as wed like to see the pandemic in our rearview mirror, cases in our state continue to rise, which means we must all continue exercising caution and implementing safe operating practices.

Because of this, businesses will continue to rely on digital platforms to safely operate until the pandemic ends, and many will continue to use them long after it is over. This new reality will require policy makers to recognize how critical the role of technology will be in building back the state economy at all levels, from the small business community to the states economy at large.

Our organizations work closely to amplify the voice of business and advocate for smart policy that fosters and protects a thriving, innovative technology climate. It is essential that we have smart legislation that is streamlined, efficient and future-focused for our economy to thrive.

Debbie Brown is the president of Colorado Business Roundtable. Frannie Matthews is the president and CEO of the Colorado Technology Association.

The Colorado Sun is a nonpartisan news organization, and the opinions of columnists and editorial writers do not reflect the opinions of the newsroom. Read our ethics policy for more on The Suns opinion policy and submit columns, suggested writers and more to opinion@coloradosun.com.

Support local journalism around the state.Become a member of The Colorado Sun today!

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Opinion: Embracing technology will propel Colorado's economic recovery from COVID-19 - The Colorado Sun

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