Category: Covid-19

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COVID-19 Adds To The Heat Of Battling Wildfires – KPBS

August 25, 2020

Above: A CalFire hand crew prepares for a midday hike in 100-degree heat near Jamul on Aug 14, 2020.

Tool! barks out a firefighter in the back of a CalFire truck.

Tool! is repeated when a hoe or chainsaw is handed out.

The gear is part of this hand crews uniform for a hike in 100-degree heat near Jamul. Firefighters are training for a fire season that is expected to be blistering. The region has already had a taste.

The Apple Fire first burned more than 33,000 acres in just a few days and heat and wind washed over the Riverside County backcountry. Less than two weeks later, the Lake Fire in the Angeles National Forest exploded in rugged country. Then, as lighting strikes hit record numbers, California wildfires charred the landscape. At one point last week, more than 350 fires were burning. Of those, 23 were considered major fires.

Aired 8/24/20 on KPBS News

Listen to this story by Erik Anderson.

RELATED: California Fires Claim 5 Lives, Threaten Thousands Of Homes

The total number of fires last year was substantially lower than the activity were experiencing this year, said Gavin Newsom at a briefing late last week.

The governor said there were more than 6,700 fires in the state so far this year, up from just over 4,000 during the same period the year before. The hottest time of the year are still ahead, and thats on the minds of fire crews in San Diego county. A small group of firefighters huddled in the shade near the Jamul Fire Station last week.

We get a fire, said Danny Ramirez, a captain leading this team. And youre tired and that fatigue sometimes makes up a little woozy or confused.

Ramirez is delivering a safety briefing before the midday hike. The big lessons today, be safe, stay hydrated, and communicate.

When it heats up in the middle of the day at two oclock, three oclock, Ramirez said in is quiet but authoritative voice. Those triggers are in the back of their minds. Hey, thats what we talked about this morning. The heat, and the probability of ignition.

And now their preparation also includes the threat of COVID-19. Everyone on the crew is wearing a face mask in an effort to keep the infection from spreading. Firefighters are taking the advice of public health officials because they cant afford to lose anyone.

Wearing our masks, taking our temperatures every morning, double-checking with everybody is probably the best thing we can do, Ramirez said.

RELATED: San Diego County Firefighters Help Battle Apple Fire

But firefighters concede that staying safe at the firehouse or during training is much easier than when a crew is battling flames in the midst of a wildfire.

That is when firefighting becomes their first priority.

Saving a structure or saving a life, Ramirez said. Sometimes COVID takes a back seat to that. When we regroup and we have to remember that COVID well use the precautions again.

The Apple Fire was the first major fire incident where CalFire also dealt with the pandemic.

Being up there in Riverside at the base camp, things were different. It was a different experience, said Thomas Shoots of CalFire.

The nearly three thousand firefighters who call in, to battle the flames, spent time at one of two base camps. Normally there is only one.

Foodservice was prepacked and crews that came together fought the fire together and stayed together. Fire officials did that to keep the virus from decimating their ranks. Fire officials met outside instead of huddling in trailers.

Daily briefings observed social distancing rules.

RELATED: San Diego Urban Corps Helps Clear Brush, Create Defensible Space

Even so, local fire crews have been touched by the pandemic.

Were really lucky down here in San Diego County, Shoots said. With CalFire and San Diego County Fire we have a lot of folks to draw on. We have 40 stations. So even these small little blips where we have folks go out, its not devastating to us. Were able to work through it.

What CalFire officials want to avoid is creating a super spreader event during a major fire incident. The agency cant afford to lose lots of firefighters just as a severe wildfire season heats up.

We all good? barked the lead firefighter in the 100-degree Jamul heat.

Getting used to physical exercise is an important way firefighters get ready for their battle against the flames. Juan Ramirez is carrying plenty of water and a heavy hand tool.

Well use it to strike vegetation and tear, Ramirez said.

The idea is to cut fuel breaks in the backcountry so a wildfire will not feed on dry vegetation. It is hot, but it will be much worse in a real firefight.

Its a little hotter, Ramirez said. A little dryer. And youve got that smoke and low visibility and everybody is on high alert with their head on a swivel and working hard.

Ramirez is also mindful that they are battling more than just flames as the global COVID-19 pandemic refused to loosen its grip.

KPBS' daily news podcast covering local politics, education, health, environment, the border and more. New episodes are ready weekday mornings so you can listen on your morning commute.

Erik Anderson Environment Reporter

I focus on the environment and all the implications that a changing or challenging environment has for life in Southern California. That includes climate change, endangered species, habitat, urbanization, pollution and many other topics.

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COVID-19 Adds To The Heat Of Battling Wildfires - KPBS

Seventh person from Crow Creek Tribe dies of COVID-19 – KELOLAND.com

August 25, 2020

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) A seventh person from the Crow Creek Tribe has died.

57-year-old Ethel Left Hand Bull was on life support for more than a month at Avera McKennan Hospital in Sioux Falls. Left Hand Bull died of complications from the virus on Saturday.

Left Hand Bull was a member of the COVID-19 Security team.

Left Hand Bull was helping to make sure families in quarantine, at Big Bend on the reservation, had food and cleaning supplies.

She was a long-time fifth grade teacher at St. Francis Indian School on the Rosebud Reservation and would have received her masters degree in education this month.

Her sister, Janice Howe, tells KELOLAND News that several of her siblings were at the hospital when she died, but they had to stay behind glass and could not be by her side.

She will be buried in her familys cemetery at Big Bend on Thursday.

Other members of the Crow Creek Tribes COVID-19 Security team who died of COVID-19: 38-year-old Wesley Fire Cloud Jr., who died on July 2nd and 34-year-old Randy His Law who died July 6th.

The father of a member of the team, 56-year-old Ken Jewitt, contracted the virus from his son and died on June 27th.

The Crow Creek tribe recently disbanded the security teams. Members were assigned to help monitor cases and see to the needs of those quarantined, as well as collect data for the tribe.

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Seventh person from Crow Creek Tribe dies of COVID-19 - KELOLAND.com

University of Alabama reports more than 500 confirmed COVID-19 cases – AL.com

August 25, 2020

The University of Alabama on Monday released the first numbers of on-campus COVID-19 test results that raised alarm bells internally.

A total of 531 confirmed cases between students, faculty and staff were reported on the Tuscaloosa campus since classes resumed Aug. 19, UA announced Monday evening. The dashboard did not include how many were tested Aug. 19 through Aug. 23 or the rate of positive tests.

The cumulative figure includes positive tests on UA System campuses identified through sentinel testing, point of care testing in campus health centers, and self-reported tests from private providers, the dashboard reads.Entry testing is not included in this calculation.

The school previously announced re-entry testing for students yielded a less-than 1 percent positivity rate. The new dashboard put the positive test rate for reentry at 1.04 percent of the 29,938 tests. The new numbers do not include those 311 positive tests from reentry.

RELATED: Tuscaloosa bars shut down 2 weeks to slow COVID spread on Alabama campus

The news came six hours after the City of Tuscaloosa announced bars would be closed for the next two weeks and bar service at restaurants must cease. UA officials did not give specifics when asked about the situation at the 11 a.m. news conference announcing the new measures.

Our challenge is not the students, UA president Stuart Bell said Monday morning. Our challenge is the virus and theres a difference, folks. What we have to do is identify where does the virus thrive and where does the virus spread and how can we work together with our students, with our faculty and with our staff to make sure that we minimize those places, those incidents. Its not student behavior, OK. Its how do we have protocols so that we make it to where our students can be successful, and we can minimize the impact of the virus.

RELATED: Auburn Universitys COVID-19 cases multiply by five

And theres multiple prongs to that from setting up isolation space to disciplining violations of COVID-19 mandates. Bell said he didnt know exactly how many students have been penalized under new rules implemented this month.

But I know a number of students are going through the student conduct process, he said.

Isolation and quarantine spaces are not at capacity, said Dr. Ricky Friend, dean of the UA College of Community Health Sciences.

But we are concerned that each day that goes by, he said, there might be more cases.

The dashboard released Monday evening stated 19.78 percent of the isolation space was currently occupied.

Friend said they were working on getting additional space on top of the 450 beds already in place to isolate and quarantine students either exposed to the virus or have tested positive.

UA vice president for Student Life Myron Pope told student leaders last Friday they were on pace to fill those spaces within the next week and a half, according to audio of the meeting acquired by AL.com.

A question we all want to know is are we at the breaking point? Alabama president Stuart Bell said Monday. Whats the lever thats going to cause us to have to change it. Basically, I think it goes back to flattening this curve, so we are able to accommodate our current operations and make sure we are able to keep the students healthy. So, there really is no single answer. I dont want to point you all to look at this graph or look at this data and know we can draw a line and say this is what were going to do because its a very dynamic situation -- very dynamic over the weekend as we saw positive cases increasing to again, today, cause us to take more steps. Were going to continue to do that.

Michael Casagrande is a reporter for the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter@ByCasagrandeor onFacebook.

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University of Alabama reports more than 500 confirmed COVID-19 cases - AL.com

Intensive wound-care treatment helps save womans COVID-19-damaged hands and feet – Norton Healthcare

August 25, 2020

Norton Wound Healing Center Brownsboros oxygen-rich hyperbaric chamber recently helped save the fingers and toes of a woman whose blood vessels were damaged by COVID-19.

The chamber typically is used to help cancer patients blood vessels heal after radiation treatment.

When the patient arrived at the Norton Brownsboro Hospital campus for an appointment with a Norton Louisville Arm & Hand surgeon, providers quickly recognized she was in pain and several fingertips already were damaged severely from lack of oxygen. She was taken to the Norton Wound Healing Center immediately.

She had a lot of places on the bottom of her feet that were as bad as her hands were, said J. Neal Sharpe, M.D., a surgeon and medical director of Norton Wound Healing Center. We were able to stop that. I think her feet would have gotten as bad as her hands were. I dont think she will need any surgery on her toes and feet.

Norton Wound Healing Center Audubon and Norton Wound Healing Center Brownsboro are among only a few hyperbaric oxygen and wound treatment programs available in the region. Our care teams diagnose and treat difficult-to-heal wounds.

The patient still will need hand surgery on some of her fingertips.

Saving her feet and preventing further damage to her hands required twice-a-day treatments of pure oxygen for 15 consecutive days at Norton Wound Healing Center Brownsboro. Nurses Anissa Rivera and Deborah Christian cared for the patient throughout the stretch, working two weekends including Mothers Day.

We did it because we want our patients to get better, Anissa said. We think of them as family.

A hyperbaric chamber increases oxygen in blood moving through the body. A patient lies down in the clear chamber and receives 100% oxygen for 2 hours under pressure. The air we breathe normally is 21% oxygen. The pressure in a hyperbaric chamber is the same as being 33 feet underwater.

The patient had been treated at Norton Audubon Hospital for COVID-19. Once she stabilized, she returned home. Then, the virus began attacking her hands and feet.

Inflammation from the bodys response to the virus often affects the airways and makes it hard for patients with COVID-19 to breathe. It also can cause heart, liver or kidney problems. In this patients case, the inflammation caused small blood vessels in her hands and feet to swell and close off, threatening to starve nearby tissue of oxygen.

According to Anissa, at the end of the two weeks, the patients spirits were better, her pain had lessened and the damage had been limited to several fingertips.

I felt good about what we did for her, Anissa said.

The patient was so grateful that she presented each of the nurses with a bouquet.

She brought us flowers, and her family gave us a little card telling us how appreciative they were and how they could tell we love what we do. That made me cry, Anissa said.

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Intensive wound-care treatment helps save womans COVID-19-damaged hands and feet - Norton Healthcare

Some People Get Covid-19 and Never Feel a Thing: Why? – Undark Magazine

August 25, 2020

One of the reasons Covid-19 has spread so swiftly around the globe is that for the first days after infection, people feel healthy. Instead of staying home in bed, they may be out and about, unknowingly passing the virus along. But in addition to these pre-symptomatic patients, the relentless silent spread of this pandemic is also facilitated by a more mysterious group of people: the so-called asymptomatics.

According to various estimates, between 20and 45 percent of the people who get Covid-19 and possibly more, according to a recent study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sail through a coronavirus infection without realizing they ever had it. No fever or chills. No loss of smell or taste. No breathing difficulties. They dont feel a thing.

Asymptomatic cases are not unique to Covid-19. They occur with the regular flu, and probably also featured in the 1918 pandemic, according to epidemiologist Neil Ferguson of Imperial College London. But scientists arent sure why certain people weather Covid-19 unscathed. That is a tremendous mystery at this point, says Donald Thea, an infectious disease expert at Boston Universitys School of Public Health.

The prevailing theory is that their immune systems fight off the virus so efficiently that they never get sick. But some scientists are confident that the immune systems aggressive response, the churning out of antibodies and other molecules to eliminate an infection, is only part of the story.

These experts are learning that the human body may not always wage an all-out war on viruses and other pathogens. It may also be capable of accommodating an infection, sometimes so seamlessly that no symptoms emerge. This phenomenon, known as disease tolerance, is well-known in plants but has only been documented in animals within the last 15 years.

Disease tolerance is the ability of an individual, due to a genetic predisposition or some aspect of behavior or lifestyle, to thrive despite being infected with an amount of pathogen that sickens others. Tolerance takes different forms, depending on the infection. For example, when infected with cholera, which causes watery diarrhea that can quickly kill through dehydration, the body might mobilize mechanisms that maintain fluid and electrolyte balance. During other infections, the body might tweak metabolism or activate gut microbes whatever internal adjustment is needed to prevent or repair tissue damage or to make a germ less vicious.

Researchers who study these processes rely on invasive experiments that cannot be done in people. Nevertheless, they view asymptomatic infections as evidence that disease tolerance occurs in humans. At least 90 percent of those infected with the tuberculosis bacterium dont get sick. The same is true for many of the 1.5 billion of people globally who live with parasitic worms called helminths in their intestines. Despite the fact that these worms are very large organisms and they basically migrate through your tissues and cause damage, many people are asymptomatic. They dont even know theyre infected, says Irah King, a professor of immunology at McGill University. And so then the question becomes, what does the body do to tolerate these types of invasive infections?

While scientists have observed the physiological processes that minimize tissue damage during infections in animals for decades, its only more recently that theyve begun to think about them in terms of disease tolerance. For example, King and colleagues have identified specific immune cells in mice that increase the resilience of blood vessels during a helminth infection, leading to less intestinal bleeding, even when the same number of worms are present.

This has been demonstrated in plants, bacteria, other mammalian species, King says.

Why would we think that humans would not have developed these types of mechanisms to promote and maintain our health in the face of infection? he adds.

In a recent Frontiers in Immunology editorial, King and his McGill colleague Maziar Divangahi describe their long-term hopes for the field: A deeper understanding of disease tolerance, they write, could lead to a new golden age of infectious disease research and discovery.

Scientists have traditionally viewed germs as the enemy, an approach that has generated invaluable antibiotics and vaccines. But more recently, researchers have come to understand that the human body is colonized by trillions of microbes that are essential to optimal health, and that the relationship between humans and germs is more nuanced.

Meddlesome viruses and bacteria have been around since life began, so it makes sense that animals evolved ways to manage as well as fight them. Attacking a pathogen can be effective, but it can also backfire. For one thing, infectious agents find ways to evade the immune system. Moreover, the immune response itself, if unchecked, can turn lethal, applying its destructive force to the bodys own organs.

With things like Covid, I think its going to be very parallel to TB, where you have this Goldilocks situation, says Andrew Olive, an immunologist at Michigan State University, where you need that perfect amount of inflammation to control the virus and not damage the lungs.

Some of the key disease tolerance mechanisms scientists have identified aim to keep inflammation within that narrow window. For example, immune cells called alveolar macrophages in the lung suppress inflammation once the threat posed by the pathogen diminishes.

A deeper understanding of disease tolerance could lead to a new golden age of infectious disease research and discovery, write King and Divangahi.

Much is still unknown about why there is such a wide range of responses to Covid-19, from asymptomatic to mildly sick to out of commission for weeks at home to full-on organ failure. Its very, very early days here, says Andrew Read, an infectious disease expert at Pennsylvania State University who helped identify disease tolerance in animals. Read believes disease tolerance may at least partially explain why some infected people have mild symptoms or none at all. This may be because theyre better at scavenging toxic byproducts, he says, or replenishing their lung tissues at faster rates, those sorts of things.

The mainstream scientific view of asymptomatics is that their immune systems are especially well-tuned. This could explain why children and young adults make up the majority of people without symptoms because the immune system naturally deteriorates with age. Its also possible that the immune systems of asymptomatics have been primed by a previous infection with a milder coronavirus, like those that cause the common cold.

Asymptomatic cases dont get much attention from medical researchers, in part because these people dont go to the doctor and thus are tough to track down. But Janelle Ayres, a physiologist and infectious disease expert at the Salk Institute For Biological Studies who has been a leader in disease tolerance research, studies precisely the mice that dont get sick.

The staple of this research is something called the lethal dose 50 test, which consists of giving a group of mice enough pathogen to kill half. By comparing the mice that live with those that die, she pinpoints the specific aspects of their physiology that enable them to survive the infection. She has performed this experiment scores of times using a variety of pathogens. The goal is to figure out how to activate health-sustaining responses in all animals.

A hallmark of these experiments and something that surprised her at first is that the half that survive the lethal dose are perky. They are completely unruffled by the same quantity of pathogen that kills their counterparts. I thought going into this that all would get sick, that half would live and half would die, but that isnt what I found, Ayres says. I found that half got sick and died, and the other half never got sick and lived.

Ayres sees something similar happening in the Covid-19 pandemic. Like her mice, asymptomatics seem to have similar amounts of the virus in their bodies as the people who fall ill, yet for some reason they stay healthy. Studies show that their lungs often display damage on CT scans, yet they are not struggling for breath (though it remains to be seen whether they will fully escape long-term impacts). Moreover, a small recent study suggests that asymptomatics mount a weaker immune response than the people who get sick suggesting that mechanisms are at work that have nothing to do with fighting infection.

Why, if they have these abnormalities, are they healthy? asks Ayres. Potentially because they have disease tolerance mechanisms engaged. These are the people we need to study.

The goal of disease tolerance research is to decipher the mechanisms that keep infected people healthy and turn them into therapies that benefit everyone. You want to have a drought-tolerant plant, for obvious reasons, so why wouldnt we want to have a virus-tolerant person? Read asks.

A 2018 experiment in Ayres lab offered proof of concept for that goal. The team gave a diarrhea-causing infection to mice in a lethal dose 50 trial, then compared tissue from the mice that died with those that survived, looking for differences. They discovered that the asymptomatic mice had utilized their iron stores to route extra glucose to the hungry bacteria, and that the pacified germs no longer posed a threat. The team subsequently turned this observation into a treatment. In further experiments, they administered iron supplements to the mice and all the animals survived, even when the pathogen dose was upped a thousandfold.

When the pandemic hit, Ayres was already studying mice with pneumonia and the signature malady of Covid-19, acute respiratory distress syndrome, which can be triggered by various infections. Her lab has identified markers that may inform candidate pathways to target for treatment. The next step is to compare people who progressed to severe stages of Covid-19 with asymptomatics to see whether markers emerge that resemble the ones shes found in mice.

Why, if they have these abnormalities, are they healthy? asks Ayres. Potentially because they have disease tolerance mechanisms engaged. These are the people we need to study.

If a medicine is developed, it would work differently from anything thats currently on the market because it would be lung-specific, not disease-specific, and would ease respiratory distress regardless of which pathogen is responsible.

But intriguing as this prospect is, most experts caution that disease tolerance is a new field and tangible benefits are likely many years off. The work involves measuring not only symptoms but the levels of a pathogen in the body, which means killing an animal and searching all of its tissues. You cant really do controlled biological experiments in humans, Olive says.

In addition, there are countless disease tolerance pathways. Every time we figure one out, we find we have 10 more things we dont understand, King says. Things will differ with each disease, he adds, so that becomes a bit overwhelming.

Nevertheless, a growing number of experts agree that disease tolerance research could have profound implications for treating infectious disease in the future. Microbiology and infectious disease research has all been focused on the pathogen as an invader that has to be eliminated some way, says virologist Jeremy Luban of the University of Massachusetts Medical School. And as Ayres makes clear, he says, what we really should be thinking about is how do we keep the person from getting sick.

Emily Laber-Warren directs the health and science reporting program at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY.

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Some People Get Covid-19 and Never Feel a Thing: Why? - Undark Magazine

COVID-19 downward trend makes community members hope the worst is behind us – Wink News

August 25, 2020

WINK NEWS

Lee Health reports fewer new coronavirus patients by the day. It says there is plenty of personal protective equipment, ICU beds and ventilators.

Community members we spoke to Monday believe weve learned the tough lesson: Wearing masks and social distancing are a must to keep the virus down. They all hope the downward trend in the coronavirus cases reported by Florida Department of Health is a sign the worst of the pandemic is behind us all.

Costco mandated masks at its locations in May. When Gov. Ron DeSantis refused to order Floridians to wear masks, Walmart and Publix took action in July. Target completed the list of big box stores requiring masks Aug. 1.

I think people are paying attention, said Mel Reinhart in Cape Coral. Theyre wearing their masks and doing what they think is necessary, avoiding the crowds.

Reinhart and his wife are crossing their fingers the downward trend were seeing continues.

I hope we can get back to a normal life, whatever that is, Reinhart said. Going back to working out and going back to church when we want. Just doing everything we were doing.

Florida has gone nine straight days with less than 5,000 new daily cases.

Corina Tiemeyer is among community members who are holding onto hope the worst of COVID-19 is behind us.

I volunteer at Hope Hospice and at HealthPark and at my church, Tiemeyer said. I had to give all of that up.

With COPD, Tiemeyer is in a COVID-19 high-risk category. What she and so many others really long for is a change to what has become the norm.

Taking the mask off, hugging my kids, Mimi Thorne said. Getting back to being with people.

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COVID-19 downward trend makes community members hope the worst is behind us - Wink News

I have COVID-19, is it safe to breastfeed? – Monitor

August 25, 2020

By: Norma Garcia, DO DHR Health Womens Hospital

Based on what we currently know, pregnant women may be at increased risk for severe illness from COVID-19 infection, sometimes requiring ICU admission. Additionally, pregnant women infected with COVID-19 may have an increased risk for all pregnancy related complications, including preterm labor. It is important to protect yourself and take increased precautions if you think you might be pregnant or are already pregnant.

Research is currently being performed so that doctors can learn if COVID-19 can pass through the breast milk and cause infection to a newborn baby. Most information we have has shown that it is safe to breastfeed your baby if you have COVID-19. Mothers have to remember that breast milk is the best source of nutrition for most babies. Breast milk helps protect babies from illnesses, including infections of the ears, lungs, and digestive system for at least the first 6 months of the infants life. For the above reasons, having COVID-19 should not stop you from giving your baby breast milk. Some moms with COVID-19 choose to use a breast pump and express breast milk so that a non-infected family member or nursing staff can feed the newborn. Always make sure to thoroughly clean the breast pump and all necessary supplies in between feeds. If you do choose to breastfeed your child, remember to always wear a facemask and wash your hands for at least 20 seconds before each feeding.

If you plan to breastfeed after delivery and are found to have COVID-19, talk with your OBGYN, pediatrician or other qualified health care provider. Together, you can come up with a plan to allow safe and appropriate breastfeeding for your newborn infant.

Sources: CDC and ACOG

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I have COVID-19, is it safe to breastfeed? - Monitor

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