Regional health officials wrapping up coronavirus response | Serving Minden-Gardnerville and Carson Valley – The Record-Courier

A National Guardsman conducts helps conduct community coronavirus testing at East Fork Station 12 in Sunridge on Dec. 8, 2020. Official said 440 people were tested during the event.Photo by Kurt Hildebrand.

Today marks the last day Douglas residents may call the Quad-County COVID-19 hotline.

While information will still be posted to gethealthycarsoncity.org, the hotline at (775) 283-4789 has been open since at least March 12, 2020, when the first case of coronavirus was reported by Carson City Health and Human Services.

Five days after the first case in Carson City was announced, Nevada was ordered into a statewide lockdown.

Friday also marked two years to the day that it was announced that the Nevada National Guard would aid in the states response to the coronavirus.

Guard members served at testing events across the four counties, providing assistance to regional health authorities.

The Guards mission officially wraps up today. At the peak of the Guards involvement in April 2020, there were 1,139 members assisting the state, the largest domestic emergency response in its history. With Guard members on orders for more than 700 days, it was also the longest deployment in state history.

A total of 1,400 Nevada Guard members directly administered 821,227 coronavirus tests and 818,661 vaccinations across the state.

They also conducted traffic control and wrangled paperwork for the testing and vaccination clinics.

Vaccination clinics are expected to continue through April, though after that residents will have to obtain vaccinations through pharmacies.

Carson City Health and Human Services will conduct clinics 2:30-4 p.m. April 14 and April 28 at the Douglas County Community & Senior Center, 1329 Waterloo Lane, Gardnerville.

While the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines will be available, Janssen vaccines will stop being offered on April 11.

According to the Nevada Health Response homepage, Douglas County was seeing one new daily confirmed case of the virus after a total of 6,597 cases over the last two years. That figure is likely to be low, as residents self-testing isnt reported to the state.

Douglas County Emergency Management reported distributing 9,000 free self-test kits in the state.

No new hospitalizations have been reported and 91 deaths have been attributed to the virus since the first in August 2020. Nine of those deaths have occurred since Feb. 7, according to Nevada Health Response.

Read the original post:

Regional health officials wrapping up coronavirus response | Serving Minden-Gardnerville and Carson Valley - The Record-Courier

Related Posts
Tags: