It is been two several years considering the fact that the Planet Wellness Corporation sounded the alarm on the coronavirus, declaring that a virus Americans experienced apprehensively watched from afar as it emerged from China, surfaced in Europe and struck decisively on the West Coast was, in reality, a world wide pandemic.
“We have rung the alarm bell loud and very clear,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director basic, reported at a news meeting in March 2020.
At that time, couple could have imagined how the planet would adjust. Now, right after a transformative period that noticed business, instruction, overall economy and journey occur to an unthinkable halt as authorities enforced curfews, limits and criteria of hygiene, the globe is struggling to force ahead from the pandemic – the ramifications of which are proving to be long lasting and can probably be most effective measured in decline: decline of daily life, loss of cash flow and loss of have confidence in.
“This Friday marks two many years because we stated that the world-wide spread of COVID-19 could be characterized as a pandemic,” Tedros explained at a press meeting this week, adding a sobering assessment of how significantly the planet has occur. “As a reminder, we manufactured that evaluation six months after we declared COVID-19 a international wellbeing emergency – when there ended up much less than 100 cases and no fatalities outside the house China. Two several years afterwards, extra than 6 million persons have died.”
In the U.S., the dying toll is approaching 1 million. But analysis demonstrates that the true world demise toll could be extra than 3 instances better than the formal figures owing to questions about details and constrained testing.
President Joe Biden made an effort to sketch out a submit-pandemic America, not long ago urging Americans to return to their places of work in a thinly veiled work to enable the financial state, which was roiled by the pandemic and is now shaken by war in Ukraine.
“It’s time for The usa to get again to work and fill our excellent downtowns again with folks,” Biden claimed in the course of his Point out of the Union handle. “People working from property can experience harmless and start to return to their workplaces.”
He also known as for an conclusion to college shutdowns, which sent mother and father scrambling to put into action remote studying at quite a few details during the pandemic.
“Our faculties are open up,” Biden claimed. “Let’s maintain it that way.”
The optimism was effectively-gained in the U.S., which not only bore the brunt of documented conditions and deaths but also watched as the virus lease its lifestyle involving all those who adhered to (occasionally shifting) scientific advice and these who have been skeptical of the virus’ ravaging consequences. People today came to search at states, businesses, superstars, politicians, athletes and even neighbors otherwise, based on their acceptance or rejection of issues like lockdowns, masks and vaccines.
Cartoons on the Coronavirus
Now, coronavirus bacterial infections and deaths are on the decrease both in the U.S. and all over the world after waves in which the fatal delta variant overwhelmed the wellness care technique and the highly transmissible omicron variant despatched caseloads higher than ever recorded. And Many governments are eager to relax mitigation actions. In the U.S., far more than 90{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of the inhabitants lives in parts where by they can quit sporting a mask indoors, in accordance to direction from the Centers for Disorder Management and Prevention.
In spite of populations keen to contemplate a future outside of the coronavirus, some say it’s too before long for the environment to fall mitigation steps – and to seem past a virus that carries on to kill an average of extra than 7,000 folks in a specified day.
“Although reported circumstances and deaths are declining globally, and a number of nations around the world have lifted limits, the pandemic is significantly from about – and it will not be around everywhere until finally it is above just about everywhere,” Tedros mentioned.
Though U.S. officials cited “widespread inhabitants immunity” amid the relaxing of mitigation measures, industry experts are rapid to point out that immunity from each vaccination and infection fade, and measures may well need to be reimplemented in the upcoming. And there’s normally the lingering anxiety that the more time the virus spreads the bigger the probability of a new and even far more lethal variant.
Keri Althoff, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg University of Public Well being, suggests that Individuals ought to be conscious that there could be a time when popular masking is required once again – even in just the upcoming 12 months, possibly.
“We are definitely not out of the woods nevertheless. And I believe we have to keep on to be vigilant in excess of the program of the subsequent number of yrs and keep on to be versatile, so that we can develop this population immunity ample to control the virus and get to a spot exactly where modern society agrees that we are taking care of it with fewer daily disruption to our life,” Althoff states.
Althoff states that a person lesson to be uncovered from the past two several years is the job that misinformation performs in shaping peoples’ beliefs. The enhancement critically undermines rely on in public health and fitness officials, she provides.
“Misinformation is so potent, and it spreads so quickly,” says Althoff. “To say that there has been a decrease in the have confidence in of experts and public overall health – destruction done by a ton of misinformation – is probably an understatement. I imagine rebuilding that believe in and serving to individuals to recognize and feel critically when confronted with all this facts is seriously likely to be crucial as we proceed to move forward.”
As coronavirus vaccines had been made and rolled out in document time, many scientists have been caught off guard by the level of hesitancy observed. Even now, just 65{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of the complete U.S. populace is absolutely vaccinated and appreciably fewer have gotten their booster pictures irrespective of popular vaccine availability.
According to the most recent Kaiser Family Foundation details, roughly 16{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of Individuals say they “definitely” won’t get the shot – a variety that has held primarily continuous in excess of the past many months.
“We’ve bought to figure out how to address this hesitancy and how to extra correctly converse,” Althoff suggests.
And it is critical to try to remember that not everybody has access to the pictures but. In the U.S., shots for kids beneath 5 have confronted multiple setbacks, delaying an authorization a lot of mothers and fathers hoped would have come months ago.
“Those young children and their family members have borne a substantial burden in this pandemic,” Althoff claims. “It’s been a whole lot, and individuals folks are however ready for a vaccine.”
Vaccination prices and obtain also fluctuate extensively worldwide.
As minimal as 14{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of people in lower-income countries have gained their first shot, in accordance to just one estimate.
“We have to don’t forget our entire world is not but vaccinated,” Althoff claims, introducing that transmission of the virus offers it a possibility to mutate and produce new variants.
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the coronavirus situation in B.C.
Publishing date:
Mar 09, 2022 • 12 hours ago • 7 minute read • 55 Comments
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the coronavirus situation in B.C.Photo by iStock/Getty Images Plus /PNG
Article content
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the coronavirus situation in B.C. for March 9, 2022.
Advertisement 2
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
We’ll provide summaries of what’s going on in B.C. right here so you can get the latest news at a glance. This page will be updated regularly throughout the day, with developments added as they happen.
Check back here for more updates throughout the day. You can also get the latest COVID-19 news delivered to your inbox weeknights at 7 p.m. by subscribing to our newsletter here.
B.C.’S COVID-19 CASE NUMBERS
Here are the latest figures given on March 9:
• Total number of confirmed cases: 351,415 • New cases: 274 • Total deaths: 2,929 (14 reported in past 24 hours) • Hospitalized cases: 405 • Intensive care: 58 • Total vaccinations: 4,521,087 received first dose (90.7{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of eligible pop. 5+); 4,315,064 second doses (86.6{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}); 2,519,018 third doses (58.2{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of those 12+) • Long-term care and assisted-living homes, and acute care facilities currently affected: 15
Advertisement 3
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
IN-DEPTH: Here are all the B.C. cases of the novel coronavirus in 2021 | in 2020
B.C. GUIDES AND LINKS
• COVID-19: B.C.’s vaccine passport is here and this is how it works
• COVID-19: Afraid of needles? Here’s how to overcome your fear and get vaccinated
• COVID-19: Here’s where to get tested in Metro Vancouver
Fewer than 900 first doses of COVID-19 vaccine administered over past day
There were 891 first doses of COVID-19 vaccine administered in B.C. over the past day, as the percentage of people aged five and over in the province who have had a first dose remained steady at 90.7 per cent.
In total there were 6,043 doses administered either as first, second or third doses.
Advertisement 4
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
The B.C. Ministry of Health reported 14 deaths in the past 24 hours, with that total now at 2,929. The number of people in hospital either because of COVID-19 or with the disease continues to fall – with 405 cases in hospital on Tuesday, including 58 in intensive care.
On Tuesday there were 5,604 PCR tests performed – about a quarter of B.C.’s testing capacity – with just over seven per cent of those tests coming back positive.
Due to limited testing the government does not know how many active cases there are in the community, instead relying on hospitalization numbers and wastewater data to give guidance on where the pandemic is headed.
Given hospital numbers and wastewater metrics are falling, the pandemic is considered to be improving.
Advertisement 5
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
There are 15 active outbreaks in health-care facilities, two fewer than yesterday.
Ontario to eliminate most mask mandates on March 21
Ontario students won’t have to wear masks when they return to school after March break, the province announced Wednesday.
Most mask requirements will be dropped as of March 21, with remaining mandates for higher risk settings such as long-term care, hospitals and transit, to be dropped on April 27.
Provincial officials said the move — as case counts and other key indicators are improving — are part of learning to live with and manage COVID-19. During a technical briefing, officials acknowledged that COVID-19 is likely to return next fall and winter or even sooner if a new evasive variant emerges.
Advertisement 6
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“Removing the mask mandate does not mean the risk is gone. COVID transmission is still occurring and masks can protect you and others from becoming infected,” the Dr. Kieran Moore, the province’s chief medical officer of health.
Moore said the province is “now learning to live with and manage COVID for the long term.”
Read full story here.
— Postmedia News
Winnipeg zoo giving COVID-19 vaccine to 55 animals including tigers, snow leopards
The Winnipeg zoo is giving a COVID-19 vaccine to some of its animals that are considered to be at greater risk of contracting the virus.
The Assiniboine Park Zoo says it has begun using a vaccine made uniquely for animals to protect them against the novel coronavirus.
Chris Enright, the zoo’s director of veterinary services, says vaccination is a common and safe way of protecting animals in human care from a variety of illnesses.
Advertisement 7
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
The zoo says certain animals are more vulnerable to COVID-19, including primates, big cats such as tigers and snow leopards and those that have closer interaction with human caregivers.
Fifty-five animals are expected to get the shots.
The vaccine is to be administered to the animals in two doses about three weeks apart. It is made by Zoetis, an American company which specializes in animal health. The vaccine’s use is authorized on a case-by-case basis by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, the zoo said.
Read full story here.
— The Canadian Press
One COVID-19 death reported Tuesday
One COVID-19 death was reported Tuesday, bringing that total to 2,915 since the pandemic began over two years ago. The average age of people who have died from the disease in B.C. is 82 – that is also the province’s life expectancy.
Advertisement 8
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
The B.C. Ministry of Health reported 254 new cases over the past day and performed 4,038 laboratory tests on Monday – with a test positive rate of 7.8 per cent.
This is less than a quarter of the the province’s testing capacity. The government is no longer tracking active cases of the disease and is relying on people to use free rapid tests rather than PCR tests – that are more accurate and more expensive.
The number of people in hospital either because of COVID-19 or with the disease continues to fall. There are now 419 people in hospital including 63 in intensive care.
Order in place forcing B.C. health care professionals to disclose COVID-19 vaccination status
The provincial health officer has posted a new provincial health order ordering health care professionals to report their vaccination status to their colleges and for that information to be provided to the Health Ministry by month’s end.
Advertisement 9
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Dr. Bonnie Henry had previously made an announcement in early 2022 that all health care professionals would need to be vaccinated to work, but the latest order stops short of setting a deadline for that requirement.
The latest order requires all health care professionals from across a range of fields to report their vaccination status to their respective colleges. Those colleges will then be required to share the information with the ministry, which will verify the information against their vaccination registry.
The order applies to nurses and midwives, chiropractors, dental hygienists, dental technicians, dental surgeons, denturists, dieticians, massage therapists, naturopaths, occupational therapists, optometrists, pharmacists, physical therapists, physicians and surgeons, psychologists, speech and hearing professionals and traditional Chinese medicine practitioners.
Advertisement 10
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Austria is suspending its COVID-19 vaccine mandate, its ministers for health and constitutional affairs said on Wednesday, six days before fines for breaches were due to start being handed out.
The measure has been in effect since Feb. 5, but enforcement was only due to begin on March 15.
The decision to introduce it was announced in November, before the wider emergence of the highly contagious but less severe Omicron variant in Austria. The strain on intensive-care units has since eased.
The measure has been in effect since Feb. 5, but enforcement was only due to begin on March 15.
The decision to introduce it was announced in November, before the wider emergence of the highly contagious but less severe Omicron variant in Austria. The strain on intensive-care units has since eased.
Advertisement 11
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
As Canada reopens amid loosening pandemic restrictions, some people are finding it hard to recall words or names or compute things in their heads. Maybe you don’t remember all the steps to your morning routine anymore or your child’s teacher’s name.
Approximately 600 million people worldwide experience cognitive impairment in the form of “brain fog”. This “fog” is a common symptom of what is dubbed “long COVID,” the long-term effects of having contracted the COVID-19 virus.
Why is this happening and what can be done to combat it?
“I don’t think we exactly know the answer…these are all, neuroscientifically, not very well-defined things,” said Dr. Adrian Owen, a professor of cognitive neuroscience at Western University in London, Ontario.
Advertisement 12
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Even though “brain fog” lacks a specific scientific definition, he said they are starting to understand how it impacts the brains of people who have had COVID.
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Sign up to receive daily headline news from the Vancouver Sun, a division of Postmedia Network Inc.
By clicking on the sign up button you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. You may unsubscribe any time by clicking on the unsubscribe link at the bottom of our emails. Postmedia Network Inc. | 365 Bloor Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4W 3L4 | 416-383-2300
Thanks for signing up!
A welcome email is on its way. If you don’t see it, please check your junk folder.
The next issue of Vancouver Sun Headline News will soon be in your inbox.
We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the novel coronavirus situation in B.C.
Publishing date:
Mar 03, 2022 • 1 day ago • 6 minute read • 28 Comments
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the novel coronavirus situation in B.C.Photo by iStock/Getty Images Plus /PNG
Article content
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the novel coronavirus situation in B.C. for March 3, 2022.
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
We’ll provide summaries of what’s going on in B.C. right here so you can get the latest news at a glance. This page will be updated regularly throughout the day, with developments added as they happen.
Check back here for more updates throughout the day. You can also get the latest COVID-19 news delivered to your inbox weeknights at 7 p.m. by subscribing to our newsletter here.
B.C.’S COVID-19 CASE NUMBERS
Here are the latest figures given on March 3:
• Total number of confirmed cases: 349,604 • New cases: 391 • Total deaths: 2,896 (13 reported in past 24 hours) • Hospitalized cases: 511 • Intensive care: 79 • Total vaccinations: 4,517,958 received first dose (90.6{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of eligible pop. 5+); 4,303,614 second doses (86.3{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}); 2,590,923 third doses (55.9{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of those 12+) • Long-term care and assisted-living homes, and acute care facilities currently affected: 21
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
IN-DEPTH: Here are all the B.C. cases of the novel coronavirus in 2021 | in 2020
B.C. GUIDES AND LINKS
• COVID-19: B.C.’s vaccine passport is here and this is how it works
• COVID-19: Afraid of needles? Here’s how to overcome your fear and get vaccinated
• COVID-19: Here’s where to get tested in Metro Vancouver
B.C. health officials reported 13 more deaths from COVID-19 on Thursday, bringing the total death toll in the province to 2,896 since the start of the pandemic.
Another 391 confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus were also reported, though that number reflects selective PCR testing that prioritizes those who are vulnerable or experiencing severe symptoms.
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
More than 90 per cent of the eligible population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, and more than 86 per cent have had two doses.
Those numbers have seen only marginal gains in recent weeks as the vaccination campaign focuses on booster doses. Third shots have now been administered to 55.9 per cent of those who are eligible (age 12 and over).
One new outbreak in care has been declared, at Parkwood Court in Island Health, while another at Rest Haven Lodge, also in Island Health, is over. That leaves 21 health-care facilities still managing an outbreak across the province.
— Joseph Ruttle
Fraser Health Authority closing down some large vaccine clinics
Fraser Health officials are scaling back the large COVID-19 vaccine clinics and will shift the focus to child immunizations.
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
The health authority said more than 90 per cent of eligible people 12 years and older in the region have received at least two doses of vaccine, so they are ramping down to meet demand.
Sarah Siebert, director of clinical operations for Fraser Health’s Pandemic Response COVID-19 Testing and Immunization Centres, said they are consolidating resources in each community. So for example, the Cloverdale Recreation Centre the Poirier Forum testing sites have closed and the one at the Anvil Community Centre in New Westminster will close in the coming weeks.
The South Surrey Recreation Centre testing site closed last month to vaccines but will reopen on March 17 for kids’ vaccinations. The last day for the vaccines at Kwantlen Polytechnic University will be March 18, while the Langley Event Centre will continue offering vaccines for now.
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
—Tiffany Crawford
Ontario likely to end mask mandate by end of month
Ontario is poised to remove masking mandates by the end of March if current positive COVID-19 trends continue, chief medical health officer Dr. Kieran Moore says.
In what’s expected to be his second-last regular weekly COVID-19 update, the province’s top public health doctor said he’ll make recommendations shortly on an appropriate time to lift compulsory face-covering requirement for schools and the general public.
“But I ask all Ontarians, if you’re vulnerable to this virus, if you haven’t received your full dose of vaccine — first, second, third or fourth dose — that you remain prudent, that we remain kind and considerate to those that decide to wear masks,” Moore said Thursday. “I do believe they are protective, they do decrease your personal risk, but … we can only mandate masking for so long.”
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Read the full story here.
— Toronto Sun
CBSA resumes airport service as federal travel restrictions ease
The Canadian Border Services Agency is resuming regular service at two B.C. airports after federal travel guidelines eased earlier this week.
The CBSA will now operate from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday to Friday, at Penticton and Pringe George airports, after earlier suspending service due to COVID-19 in March 2020.
Following the federal government’s travel restriction update on Feb. 28, international flights are now also permitted to land at three B.C. airports, where they had previously been halted due to the pandemic.
Those airports include Kamloops and Nanaimo airports, as well as the Vancouver International Airport’s small aircraft station. The CBSA will resume regular clearance services at these three points of entry.
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
– Stephanie Ip
10 deaths reported Tuesday, outbreaks in care drop despite five new ones
B.C. reported 10 more deaths from COVID-19 on Tuesday after a rare report a day earlier with none.
That raises the death toll to 2,883 since the start of the pandemic.
Some 442 new cases of the viral disease were confirmed in the past 24 hours, though that number only reflects testing of those who are symptomatic or clinically vulnerable.
Those who suspect they have COVID-19 but are experiencing only mild symptoms and have no other risk factors are advised to isolate but not to get a test.
Five new outbreaks have been reported in long-term and acute care, including Mission Memorial Hospital in Fraser Health, Gillis House in Interior Health, and Berwick House Gordon Head, The Heights at Mt. View and Greenwoods, all in Island Health.
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
However, the B.C. Health Ministry said 11 other outbreaks across the province were declared over, dropping the number that are active to 21.
— Joseph Ruttle
Interior Health moving to pharmacy and clinic-based vaccination
With vaccination rates reaching new heights, Interior Health is winding down its mass immunization clinics and moving the campaign to pharmacies and IH-operated health centres.
COVID-19 vaccine appointments in the coming weeks will gradually move out of the large clinics into the pharmacies and health centres in Interior Health.
Anyone who hasn’t received a vaccine, booster or pediatric vaccine (for children age five to 11) can continue to book appointments as before. Pediatric vaccines will be administered in IH clinics while those 12 and older can go to a pharmacy in their community. More than 90 pharmacies are part of the program in the health region
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Regular and pop-up clinics will continue in some rural and remote communities where access to pharmacies is limited.
—Joseph Ruttle
Nerve damage may explain some cases of long COVID: U.S. study
A small study of patients suffering from persistent symptoms long after a bout of COVID-19 found that nearly 60{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} had nerve damage possibly caused by a defective immune response, a finding that could point to new treatments, U.S. researchers reported on Tuesday.
The study involved in depth exams of 17 people with so-called long COVID, a condition that arises within three months of a COVID-19 infection and lasts at least two months.
— Reuters
DEATHS BY HEALTH AUTHORITY
LOCAL RESOURCES for COVID-19 information
Here are a number of information and landing pages for COVID-19 from various health and government agencies.
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Sign up to receive daily headline news from the Vancouver Sun, a division of Postmedia Network Inc.
By clicking on the sign up button you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. You may unsubscribe any time by clicking on the unsubscribe link at the bottom of our emails. Postmedia Network Inc. | 365 Bloor Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4W 3L4 | 416-383-2300
Thanks for signing up!
A welcome email is on its way. If you don’t see it, please check your junk folder.
The next issue of Vancouver Sun Headline News will soon be in your inbox.
We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again
Several bulletins coming from the Facilities for Disease Management and Prevention (CDC) and the Colorado Division of Community Overall health and Environment (CDPHE) around the earlier many days are pointing the community towards a really promising and optimistic chapter of the COVID-19 pandemic, with a concentration on discovering to dwell with COVID-19 in our life for the unforeseeable long run.
Chaffee County General public Wellbeing (CCPH) has been planning its employees and functions for this a lot more “normalized” strategy, managing COVID-19 via program sickness regulate, for the past couple of months as far more was learned about the Omicron variant. Though also speaking this inescapable phase with county leaders and the typical general public, the modern bulletins allow CCPH, the Chaffee County Board of Wellness, and its companions to go ahead from what has been a pretty dynamic and strenuous two many years.
“While it is uncertain how extended this hopeful chapter of our COVID-19 response will last and what the long run has in shop for us in regard to long term community wellness emergencies, it is essential that we appreciate a period of time of respite and restoration from the pandemic as we proceed to create healthcare and public wellbeing workforce and surge potential at the identical time,” claimed Director of CCPH and Incident Commander for the Chaffee County COVID-19 pandemic Andrea Carlstrom. “I am proud of our county for building the sacrifices and difficult choices required to get us to this vital milestone in the pandemic. Arrive to locate out, discovering to reside with a new sickness is not black and white but instead gradients of grey.”
The adhering to are the announcements made and what they mean for Chaffee County:
CDPHE Roadmapproduced final Friday, February 25
The roadmap acknowledges the sizeable milestones that Colorado and local community wellbeing businesses have accomplished more than the earlier two yrs while also ensuring healthcare techniques are organized for future reaction initiatives and normalizing COVID-19 treatment method and prevention. The announcement contains transferring back into regular well being treatment settings, constructing on lessons learned so the general public wellness and crisis management fields can expand and deal for ailment control and other crisis demands. The purpose is for stabilizing the existing workforce and building and preserving sustainable health and fitness treatment workforce for the potential, striving for a countrywide prepare for pandemic readiness and response, and investing in the community wellbeing method. These investments consist of an up to date and interoperable countrywide surveillance procedure, and versatile, non-categorical funding to allow adaptability and supply an increase in the general public well being workforce.
People today who are absolutely up to day with their COVID-19 vaccine are urged to live their life as usual. Those who continue to be unvaccinated or are immunosuppressed/substantial-possibility of serious illness should make a screening and remedy approach with their professional medical supplier. Locally, healthcare stakeholders will be meeting to take a look at embedding screening, vaccinations, and therapy into the common styles and going away from receiving individuals expert services in mobile clinic buses, auto drive-throughs, and many others. In several means, this is already being carried out in the county.
CDC Neighborhood-Level Tips unveiled past Friday, February 25
CDC will be searching at a mixture of 3 metrics to decide the COVID-19 neighborhood level:
New COVID-19 admissions for each 100,000 inhabitants in the past seven days
The p.c of staffed inpatient beds occupied by COVID-19 people, and
Full new COVID-19 situations for every 100,000 populace in the previous 7 days
New COVID-19 admissions and the percent of staffed inpatient beds occupied signify the present possible for pressure on the overall health technique.
Info on new situations acts as an early warning indicator of possible raises in health and fitness program strain in the party of a COVID-19 surge. Applying these information sets, the COVID-19 community degree is categorised as low, medium, or significant. At present, Chaffee County is at a very low stage. This suggests that most people and homes get totally vaccinated and boosted, enhance ventilation throughout indoor public areas when possible, continue to observe isolation and quarantine if exposed to COVID-19 or have signs of COVID-19, and all those that are immunosuppressed or substantial-possibility of severe sickness have a program for screening and remedy.
Common masking in indoor community destinations is only suggested at the highest stage, though at all levels, people today can wear a mask based on individual preference, informed by individual stage of hazard. Folks with signs or symptoms, a favourable exam, or exposure to an individual with COVID-19 ought to wear a mask per isolation and quarantine protocols. CCPH, with Board of Wellness assist, will use area surveillance knowledge, alongside with CDC and CDPHE information, to make an educated conclusion in advance of any improvements are created to more recommendations or necessities. More information can be identified at: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/group-ranges.html#anchor_82254.
CDC No For a longer time Recommends Call Tracing and Scenario Investigation – produced Monday, February 28
CDC is no lengthier recommending common scenario investigation and make contact with tracing. It is recommending prioritizing case investigation and call tracing (CI/CT) for precise settings and populations/groups at improved hazard for adverse results, together with continued vaccination attempts, and training efforts about isolation, quarantine, tests, cure, and mitigation measures. In accordance to CDC, these adjustments are a final result of large ranges of infection or vaccine-induced immunity, availability of vaccines and solutions, diminished participation by the public, amplified use of self-assessments, and improvements in the scientific presentation and severity of situations (milder illness or far more asymptomatic instances with the Omicron variant).
As a result, CCPH options on scaling back on its CI/CT staffing setting up the week of March 6th and will maintain some staffing capacity to meet up with recent and likely desire. Similarly, the Chaffee County knowledge dashboard will also be steadily up to date to replicate the details that is captured locally, fatalities and hospitalizations, whilst delivering back links to the related data collected by the CDC and CDPHE.
Details on tests, vaccine, therapy, and what to do if anyone tests optimistic for COVID-19 (or is a near make contact with to an individual who has) will continue on to be observed on the dashboard and Chaffee County COVID-19 site.
CCPH, together with the Chaffee County Board of Overall health, made the decision on Tuesday, March 1st to enable the area public well being order expire with the comprehending that if foreseeable future variants or another communicable disorder current a substantial menace to the public, this measure will be revisited. In the same way, universal masking in county-owned buildings is no longer essential. CCPH will proceed to assist firms or employers that nonetheless need masking, and the public is suggested to continue to keep a mask obtainable in the party that they are questioned to have on just one.
“I hope that absolutely everyone can strike a harmony in their have lives to continue on to observe isolation and quarantine protocols, adopt the greatest practices that we have been marketing, these as vaccination, diligent hand washing, and staying residence when unwell, and most importantly, normalizing COVID-19,” stated Carlstrom.
‘It’s sensible for you to quit putting on masks in indoor environments,’ wellness specialist states amid COVID-19 drop
PHOENIX (AP) – Arizona’s public health company on Saturday offered its past planned every day update of the state’s coronavirus dashboard of pandemic facts these types of as added COVID-19 instances, new deaths and hospitalization concentrations.
The condition Division of Wellbeing Expert services declared Feb. 18 that it would swap to weekly dashboard updates starting off next Wednesday for the reason that the outbreak is slowing and to be steady with other infectious illness that are noted.
“It also will provide a clearer see of COVID-19 developments by smoothing the variability in daily reporting by labs and other resources,” the department’s announcement claimed.
In the dashboard’s closing every day update unveiled Saturday, virus-similar inpatient hospitalizations dropped for the 29th straight day, slipping to 1,313 as of Friday. Which is down from 3,559 on Jan. 27, which was the peak of the now-ebbing coronavirus an infection wave associated with the omicron variant.
The added 1,638 newly confirmed an infection circumstances and 15 further fatalities claimed by the dashboard on Saturday boosted the state’s pandemic totals to 1,976,890 an infection circumstances and 27,946 deaths.
According to Johns Hopkins College info, Arizona’s seven-day rolling ordinary of new an infection cases dropped from 5,239.6 on Feb. 9 to 1,944.7 on Wednesday when the rolling ordinary of daily fatalities rose from 60.9 to 68.3 over the very same period.
“It is distinct from what persons have gotten utilised to with COVID info but not various from how we do it with other infectious disorder data,” claimed Jessica Rigler, Arizona Department of Well being Solutions assistant director.
She extra: “You are getting a additional comprehensive picture of what happened in that week rather of facts just trickling in.”
‘It’s affordable for you to end carrying masks in indoor environments’
Executive Director of the Arizona Public Overall health Affiliation, Will Humble, says there is some very good information on the horizon with the place transitioning from a pandemic to an endemic.
“Every new case is possibly a breakthrough situation from a vaccinated person, omicron observed all individuals people today who did not want to get vaccinated and that mixed with the truth that omicron is less deadly than delta alterations the way you need to make conclusions away from scenarios and shifting toward hospitalizations,” Humble said.
Humble states AZDHS will also be supplying far more data on hospitalizations, and those people quantities are also going down. “As that share of men and women in the medical center with COVID begins to drop additional and even further, you can find a lot more area to preserve up on these non-crisis procedures that have been delayed for so quite a few months.”
In accordance to that exact data, four counties in Arizona, Maricopa, Yavapai Coconino and Santa Cruz, are in the “reasonable” range in terms of COVID-19 situations and hospitalizations. This implies, he suggests, they could stop wearing masks in these places, besides for configurations like assisted residing, proficient nursing, or homeless shelters.
“It is really realistic for you to halt donning masks in indoor environments. That could apply for illustration to K-12, universities, private businesses …” Humble reported.
He suggests this most recent assistance is a turning point in the ideal direction.
“You have this increased amount of immunity, antibodies and t-cells all over the place in Arizona now and which is why you see new infections not ensuing in new bacterial infections, typically. So, I assume the new standards, the new steering is really really fantastic.”
Continued coverage
MAP: Arizona Coronavirus circumstances by zip code
Pennsylvania’s acting health secretary gives COVID-19 update
Updated: 5:53 PM EST Feb 25, 2022
well, good afternoon everyone. My name is Kiera Cline Peter. I’m the current acting secretary for health in the commonwealth of pennsylvania. It’s great to be here with you today for those of you in person and of course those online as well As you’ve seen in our weekly COVID-19 updates. Pennsylvania is moving in the right direction. Case counts are at their lowest since last August and continuing to fall hospitalization admissions due to COVID-19 are following and thank goodness mortality rates are declining. These trends are due in part to the millions of pennsylvanians who have stepped up and got vaccinated and boosted Pennsylvanians are doing their part while the Department of Health continued to address the evolving pandemic created by the Global COVID-19 pandemic. I also have to pause for a moment and just thank sincerely and deeply our frontline healthcare workers who have continued to do amazing things to protect patients and pennsylvanians Over the course of the pandemic along with our first responders who have valiantly protected us during this. This time. Despite this progress, COVID-19 is not going away. But pennsylvania is well positioned with the tools, knowledge and resources that we have to prioritize prevention in everyday life and manage future outbreaks when they occur, Vaccines are widely available for everyone ages five and older. In fact this week, Pennsylvania vaccine providers have administered more than 22 million COVID-19 vaccines across all 67 counties. More than 76{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of adults are fully vaccinated and 95{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of adults have received at least one vaccination vaccinations remain our best defense against the virus and it’s great to see thousands of residents stepping forward each day to get vaccinated. That’s why we’re prepared to move beyond the current phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Aside from continued vaccinations, we know that the key to our transition will be a strong public health infrastructure that can support our needs as we move into the next phase of our response and recovery. During the recent oMA concert, the Wolf administration acted swiftly to support pennsylvanians and healthcare workforce by deploying both state and federal support systems to hospitals and long term care facilities while simultaneously expanding the testing network along with vaccine and booster outreach. For example, just a few weeks ago, the Wolf administration led the bipartisan effort to identify immediate investments to support frontline healthcare workers in Pennsylvania, which led to the quick appropriation of $250 million dollars in federal funding. We’ve all learned valuable lessons from this pandemic. That’s why pennsylvania has built a strategic stockpile of PPE supported a robust testing infrastructure that includes testing for our schools and long term care facilities, made critical investments in our hospitals and healthcare workforce and executed a successful vaccine. Rollout today, vaccines and therapeutic treatments are widely available across the state businesses, schools and residents are open and have the tools and knowledge they need to move beyond the current phase of the pandemic. However, moving forward does not mean ignoring COVID-19, we can make smart decisions guided by public health research to keep ourselves our loved ones and our communities safer At the Department of Health. Our strategy includes a continued focus on prevention while being nimble enough to quickly respond to any changes in the COVID-19 landscape. Moving forward, the department will continue to prioritize the safety of all residents and public health initiatives. That increase opportunities for all pennsylvanians. Again I appreciate you being here and I’m happy to answer any questions that you have. Okay. Our first question comes from Samantha York from CBS 21. Right so as we move beyond this current phase of the pandemic are we getting any closer to endemic phase? So a lot of doctors have been saying we’re not seeing those overcrowding and emergency departments we were seeing just a month ago so we’re getting to a point where they’re not as over. Yeah so we’re really keying off of what the world health organization is doing. Um They are the ones who declared a pandemic. Um They haven’t deviated from that yet and so we’re waiting to see what they do but like others were very happy to see cases decreasing hospitalizations and mortality decreasing too. Okay our next question comes from Sinica Margo from W. H. T. M. T. V. 27. The CDC is expected to left less than it’s it’s masking guidance. Um I’m curious about so pennsylvania follows the C. D. C. I. I don’t have a heads up on what the CDC is going to announce later today. Um But we will be following CDC guidance and encourage pennsylvanians to do the same. Next up tom Lehman from W. G. A. L. Secretary. You talked a little bit about sort of the infrastructure for making sure that there’s increasing cases you get the state can support your healthcare providers as needed. But my question is as far as like the actual sort of next phase here. I mean what what changes as far as what we’ve seen from the state at this point beyond you know mitigation efforts because that’s not been part of the plan. I mean what you know going forward I mean what what really changes here? Yeah so I think we really want to focus on maintaining a state of readiness and that our activities are commensurate with the risk to pennsylvanians. So we’re going to be focused on three main things empowering individuals um which we want to do by encouraging them to stay up to date on their vaccinations and making sure they’re educated about the level of community spread in their community so that they can make good personal decisions about um things like mask wearing testing that type of thing. We want to continuously evaluate the virus. And so that means um testing as well as good surveillance because we know those at home tests are becoming increasingly popular um as well as disease investigation in high risk settings such as long term care facilities or um prisons and jails. And then lastly enabling care and that’s really where supporting the healthcare continuum comes into play as well as ensuring that their therapeutic options. And so I think we’re going to continue to do a lot of the same good public health things we’ve been doing, but I think it will look different depending on the level of community spread hospitalizations and deaths that the commonwealth is experiencing at any point in time, pediatric vaccinations. And are you satisfied with the progress? Yeah. So we have a little over 76{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of pennsylvanians uh 18 and older, fully vaccinated. Uh 41{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of pennsylvanians have received their booster dose uh and 80 excuse me, 70{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of those between five and 12 are fully vaccinated. And so, um I would love to see those booster numbers come up. Um, and I think this is actually a really great time for folks who maybe haven’t been vaccinated or haven’t been boosted before. Um to do so because that way if and when there is another surge in cases or a different variant, you’ll be prepared and protected. Um, so getting you’re getting your shots when we’re in this lower case count phases is actually a really good choice from a public health perspective. Our next question comes from Priscilla allegory from WFM Zee tv. Thank you for taking questions today. So we obviously got returning a corner when the vaccine came out in about a month and a half ago. It was all hands on deck with omicron. What makes us sure that we’re entering a new phase of the pandemic now? Yeah, I think we do see a significant trend to lower case counts, hospitalizations and deaths. Um but I think to your point that’s why we’re really focused on maintaining readiness for what could come next. And so um you know there there is a new variant out there um It has a low prevalence so far in pennsylvania internationally. We’re not seeing it drive up um severe illness or hospitalizations yet but we don’t know how that’s all going to go. And so that’s really why we’re saying right now absolutely we’re in a new phase of the pandemic. Um but depending on what happens, we may need to move into yet another phase and we’re really prioritizing readiness to protect all pennsylvanians And just a follow up the pennsylvania’s most vulnerable senior citizens those battling severe to diseases. Is this new face of the pandemic? Is it safe for them to go out? Is it you know, it’s lifting these guidelines endangering them or is it um you know, is it now an okay time, head out back into society. Yeah, I think it’s important that um folks really assess that risk for themselves. That’s why we’re very focused on making sure that the data um about the community transmission in everyone’s community is accessible to them and is presented in a way that they can really understand it and make good choices for themselves. And then I think it’s also about continuing to keep those protections in place if you are at risk. And so um for people who are immuno compromised, maybe they will choose to continue wearing a mask when they go to the grocery store. Um, and I would just offer, you don’t always know why someone is wearing a mask, right? Um, they might wear a mask because they work in a nursing home or I wear my mask because I’m pregnant right now. Um, and so I think it’s important that as we enter this next phase, we continue to grant grace to other people who are making, you know, the best decisions they can and who everybody is, you know, trying to adjust to what this next period of time looks like. And I would just encourage us to all have Patience & Grace for one another during it. Our next question comes from David winner from Penn Live. Thank you. There was a reference to, there was a reference to, I think it was 22 million vaccine vaccine doses given in pennsylvania. Um, I want to make sure that that does that include all of the doses given in the state. Um, you know, including the ones given in philadelphia and one of the reasons I want to clarify is a a news release From the Health Department earlier this week. I think it’s stated 28 million doses. But I could be wrong on that. I haven’t double checked that. But my main point is I’d like to get an accurate number for all of the vaccine doses that have been given in pennsylvania. Thank you, Yep. I don’t have that total number readily available in front of me, David. But if you go on our website, um we do keep our vaccine data up to date for those 66 counties um that we service and I would encourage you to take a look there. Our next question comes from Karen man field from the Observer reporter. Karen, are you there? We’ll move on to john Finnerty from capitol wire. Oh I passed. Thank you. I will, I will pass. Thank you john’s here. Thanks for Thanks for taking questions. Yeah. Earlier this week your weekly report made mention of the CDC data on excess deaths. And I wonder if you can kind of help me understand sort of how that number relates to to the D. O. H. Data on deaths. Because when you go to the CDC Page looks like their estimate for the for the excess deaths in Pennsylvania’s pandemic hit is about 40,000, which is fewer than the number of deaths you have reported as being tied to see to to covid. So can you explain that discrepancy. Sure. So I will do my best to do it off the top of my head. But I’ll ask our comms team to follow up with you guys if I get some of the ranking numbers uh wrong. So big picture. There’s three different primary death calculations that are used. There is how um the state of pennsylvania uh reports and calculates deaths. There is the way that the CDC reports and calculates deaths. And then there’s this excess deaths Calculation. Now every state counts deaths from COVID-19 differently. So that results in a variety of methodologies that are used. But then when they all get rolled up to the CDC result in different numbers that mean different things. And so the CDC has strongly advised against comparing states against one another when it comes to deaths. Um because the way that the calculation is done is quite Then the third piece that I mentioned. The excess death calculation that’s looking at not just excess deaths from COVID-19 but from other health epidemics such as opioids. And so the excess death number Is inclusive of more than just COVID-19 deaths. It is also inclusive of other types of excess deaths, which is why it doesn’t match those numbers perfectly. Um in the excess death ranking Is 27th, um which is significantly uh lower or better than several of our surrounding states or other large states in the in the country. Um and so we’re uh pleased with how uh that has gone but sincerely every death is tragic. And at this point um preventable with vaccinations. Um if those deaths were caused by COVID-19. And so um strongly encouraged folks to get vaccinated. But again, our comms team would be happy to follow up with you with greater detail if I haven’t completely answered that for you. Our next question comes from Christy Walton from Fox 29. Last chance for you Christie. All right, we’ll move on. And next we have Nicole Brambilla from L. N. P. News. Thanks so much for taking our questions today. I’m really kind of curious about why you seem reticent to talk about what um um what an endemic phase of the pandemic might look like. I realize we’re following who guidance. But can you speak a little bit towards that when we do finally move um, into an endemic phase. Thank you. Yeah. So let me be clear what we are doing significantly better than we were a month and a half or two months ago. And that is absolutely something to be celebrated and something that every Pennsylvanian who’s gotten vaccinated, who’s gotten boosted, who stayed at home if they weren’t feeling good. Everybody has contributed to that. And so um that is about um what has led us to that place though are a variety of really good public health actions that people have taken. And so I think we are of course following who guidance. But we are also trying to remind folks that it’s those good behaviors that got us than where we were before. And so um regardless of kind of what we call the phase that we’re in, I think this is a moment to pause and reflect on the great work that has been done to get us to this place and to encourage people to continue doing um those good public health actions as federal and international guidance continues to evolve. Such as um you know, mass guidance that we might hear about from the CDC as soon as later today. Um you know, we’ll continue to follow that guidance and called um you know, as we receive that data driven and scientifically driven information. Our next call comes from matt Petrillo from radio hitting about 50 Kibler from the Altoona mirror. Hi, thank you for taking this. Could you explain something that you said why there would be 76{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of adults fully vaccinated? But 95{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of adults with at least one shot, it seems like a big difference. A surprisingly big difference. Sure. So there’s a variety of reasons why some folks may not have gotten um fully vaccinated for some individuals, uh they could have received their first dose and and covid um which then can change or delay their vaccine timeline. There’s other individuals who perhaps could have received monoclonal antibodies um and again, that could have delayed uh their vaccination timetable or for others, it just wasn’t lenient. Um you know, everybody lives such busy lives. Um and that’s why we’re really encouraging folks that if you aren’t fully up to date on your shots, which is two vaccines of the primary series and then a booster um for most people that you use this time when we’re in a lower state of disease spread uh to get vaccinated. Um And if you have any other questions on that delta uh barry and our team is happy to follow up with you. Our next question comes from Christine lee from the republican herald. Hi pass. Thank you. Thank you. Next up we have jim melt work from K. Y. W. Newsradio. You’ve kind of touched on this a bit or or given a little bit of an explanation on this. But um there’s been a lot of talk recently of CDCs primary job being to remove all risk and their guidance is very broad because that’s to cover the entire country. And so then it kind of falls to local health officials to kind of use that information to best fit their situation? How does your office kind of balance that and as we hopefully move towards these next phases. Is there a time when you don’t, for lack of a better way to put it follow CDC guidance to to a T. So to date the department really has followed CDC guidance very closely. Um And I think we uh certainly are awaiting additional guidance. There’s actually a call later today with all of the state health officials and the CDC to kind of talk about what this next phase really looks like. Um that’s where we anticipate, probably getting some guidance from them around masking as well as other topics. Um and so certainly we received that guidance from the CDC, um and then we look at what’s happening on the ground in pennsylvania to determine if that is a good fit for us. But ultimately, um, CDC has extraordinary scientists who are making data driven and scientifically driven recommendations, uh and that’s what we want to follow. Um and so we do have a track record of following them and I anticipate will continue to do. So, our next question comes from bob mayo from wt a tv in Pittsburgh two elements. To my question 1st, I understand that you’re sort of uh limited in what you can say until the CDC says, whatever they are anticipated to say later in the day, but you’re framing this in terms of uh, you know, preparing the public to move into a new phase at this point, what can you share with pennsylvanians in simple terms about how their lives will be different in this next phase and what they should do or not do as they enter into that next phase. That’s one part and the other part would be if has anticipated the CDC guidance leads to uh relaxation on mask and you loop back to what you were saying before about, uh, how people who may individually have need to or choose to continue to mask, be treated by fellow pennsylvanians, but also by their employers. Yeah, absolutely. Um, so I, I don’t mean to be dodgy, but um, without having heard what the CDC is going to say later today, I am quite limited. Um, but what I would say, big picture is, you know, if the CDC comes out later today and and starts to relax, relax masking, for example. Um, you know, I, I do think that that will make a difference for pennsylvanians, but I also think when we are in this time of lower case counts, um, that’s something that I really hope People tap into and try to understand for themselves, the level of risk that they believe is really out there and posed by getting COVID. And so we’ve had an average in the last seven days across the state of about 2600 cases a day. Um, as you recall, there was an all time high of around 33,000 cases a day. And so these are orders of magnitude lower levels of community transmission happening across the Commonwealth and therefore a very different level of risk. And so lots of people, you may feel more comfortable going to a restaurant for dinner or going to a museum. Um, and maybe even doing those things without a mask or without the stress and anxiety associated with that where, um, you know, I think some people will still feel some of that anxiousness is if you’re immuno compromised or if perhaps um you interact with somebody who is immunocompromised um and you want to continue to take those precautions because any risk is too much risk for you. And I think that’s where we have to recognize that this has been an extraordinarily challenging uh two years for everybody, regardless of whether you’re a frontline healthcare worker, um or or a teacher or whatever your profession, just for us as people, this has been really hard and some people will feel more ready to move out of. Um you know, some of the precautions that they may have been taking and other people may not, and I think it’s important that we be patient with one another as everybody um starts to make those calculations and assessments for themselves and um does the best they can and I think that’s truly what everybody has been doing in the last couple of years. Um but I think as we move into this next phase, really having patience for people and understanding everybody has a different situation um and they’re going to make the decisions that they believe are best for them, I think that’s important. Our next question comes from erin McCarthy from the philadelphia Inquirer As Secretary Klein Peter, thanks for taking the time today um as cases hospitalizations and deaths keep declining as you mentioned. How low do you anticipate them going based on the modeling that your team is looking at what might residents expect for spring and summer in terms of the pandemic. And is there any concern about the lifting, relaxing of measures leading to cases rising again at any point in the near future? Yeah. So unfortunately that crystal ball that we’ve ordered is still on backorder. Um, so I can’t say with any definitive uh, sense exactly what is going to be coming. Um, but what I can tell you is that as a result of people, uh, being up to date with their vaccinations, staying home when they’re not feeling well. Um, you know, wearing that mask when you’re in a crowded indoor space, when case counts are high. Um, that’s really gotten us to the place that we’re in now. And so that’s why to help us all have a good spring and summer. I would just really encourage folks um, to stay up to date with those vaccinations um, to stay home if you’re not feeling good and um, otherwise to continue to watch case counts in your community. And if they uh start to rise that we take some additional precautions. Our next question comes from the K D. K. A news desk or maybe they went for coffee. Let’s go to Mark sims from radio pennsylvania. Anyone from radio pennsylvania. Okay, we’ll move on to Leif Greiss from the morning call? Yeah. Thank you for taking our questions. Um, I wanted to ask if the department has any plans for how it shares its data on on the website related to Covid or anything like that. Will there be any changes to the dashboard as we move into this new phase? Yeah. So, um, that’s a great question. And I think we’ve strived to be as transparent as we can between what’s on the dashboard and what we put on open data. Um, I think at this point we’re going to continue uh, publishing data uh, in the way and at the cadence that we have. Um, but depending on if there are different data sources uh, that we come to rely upon as we move into this next phase, we may change, but we don’t have plans to do so at this time. Our next question comes from paul go from the Pittsburgh Business Times. Hi, secretary. Thanks for taking the time. I appreciate it. And I’m not gonna I’m gonna wait for coffee after until after this. Um, I wanted to talk to you mentioned the therapeutics and vaccines. Can you? Um, and and the availability of them. Can you talk to me a little bit more about the supplies of the the new anti virals and the one monoclonal antibody that works against Macron, where because they were in short supply. I know the state sort of handling the the distribution of, of the supplies from the federal government, what’s that situation like now. And is it going to improve because obviously if you get, oh Macron and you need something that that had been in ration in many areas of the state. Yeah. So I’m really proud to say that um as of today, every county in pennsylvania has at least one site that provides monoclonal antibodies and one site that provides um oral antivirals in many counties. It’s more than one. Um But we have achieved really good geographic distribution to ensure that patients have access and don’t have to travel um incredibly far to receive. What at times is that truly lifesaving treatment that said uh nationally, there has not been sufficient monoclonal antibodies um in particular relative to the number of cases that there were. Um So we’ve seen a rather stable supply of monoclonal antibodies but again as cases have come down um the need to have so many of them hasn’t been there. And so um I don’t uh have any good information but we can certainly follow up with you if the team does on when we expect that supply to increase. Um But I think the good news is that with fewer people getting covid in general, that is really lessening the tight supply constraints um that a lot of pennsylvanians were feeling um just a month or so ago around getting those therapeutic options. Our next question comes from the Butler Eagles. Eddie Trevino. Okay. Appears that Eddie is not there. How about Sophia Schmidt from W. H. Y. Y. I’ll pass. Thank you. Right. Dylan Furin from Fox 56. All right. We’ll move down the list. Sarah Bowden from W E S A. All right. Chris foolery. Yes. Yes. Thank you. Yes. Yes. I, uh, thanks for taking our questions here. Um, I did want to ask if, you know, we saw with the coronavirus cases in patients ramping up hospitalizations. We had a strike team that came out two grand view, health and play january. And then after that, another 12, some health care facilities throughout southeastern pennsylvania. Are those strike teams still active? And also, is that part of the outbreak response moving forward in this, in this next phase as you described? Yeah, that’s a great question. So, um, we have seen across the state, the requests for these strike teams decline um, pretty significantly in the last week or so. Um, we had our every two week meeting with all of the hospitals and health systems on Wednesday. Um, and we solicited feedback from them about whether that was still, you know, really necessary component to the response that we provide. Um, pardon me, and starting to get feedback that the facilities are really feeling like it’s not going to be necessary much longer. And so I think in general, um, the sniff decompression cites the strike teams and the hospital decompression sites that we’ve had stood up. You know, as we really see seeing cases and hospitalizations. Wayne. We’re also really seeing the need for those resources to, uh, wayne. And so we are looking to stand down those capabilities in the coming weeks. Um, I think the one that will take the longest to stand down are the skilled nursing facility decompression sites because we need to ensure that residents are placed um, in a facility that will meet their unique needs. Um, but we will be working to do that over the coming weeks in partnership with the healthcare facilities. Um, and we’ll we’ll go from there if if something changes, um, will continue to be agile. But our plan is to really wrap that up in its entirety by the end of March, um, with a beginning of wrapping it up? Starting this week. Our next question comes from Sarah cassie from Lehigh Valley Express Times. Okay, Okay, we’re gonna move on after. Next up. We have Hayden Minutemen from PBS 39. Hi, thank you for your time. I’ve got a kind of a specific question, but I kind of hope it can be generalized. Um, here in Allentown, our Government Lehigh County’s Government Center, Excuse me. My daughter’s crying. I apologize, uh, is going to be go and its mask mandate on monday considering cases are down, Is that a good idea? Are we at a place in the state where we can end mask mandates at government buildings and I’ll go quiet so you guys want to do. Okay, No worries. I hope she settles for you soon. Um So I think again, I’m really waiting to see what the CDC says later today as of right now, you know, we do still recommend uh masking indoors regardless of your vaccination status. Um But I think it’s been pretty well leaked that the CDC is going to soften their guidance later today. And I expect then our Department of health recommendations will follow the C. D. C. S. Um so more to come on that one. Our next question comes from keith Meyer from the Reading Eagle. Sorry, how about keith are you there? All right. We’re gonna move on to Peyton Kennedy from Wt AJ. No question. Thank you. All right. Do we have paul? Must check from the morning call. Alright, appears one more person on the list. Shaquille Omari from Fox 43 and yes, Samantha york Go ahead. We are also coming up to this two year anniversary of the pandemic. When you look back on just how the state has responded to the pandemic throughout inspiration. How do you feel on a great scale? Maybe that you have done? Yeah, it’s tough to say to be honest, I think um there are many aspects of this response that I am incredibly proud of. Um I think we have done a tremendous job with the vaccine. Rollout providing testing. Um the response that we provided to the hospitals, particularly during the omicron surge. Working with the legislature to pass historic uh dollars for frontline healthcare workers. But of course we’ve always been learning throughout it too. And The science that we had back in March and April of 2020, the lack of vaccine, the lack of therapeutics, um, you know, certainly made it a challenging um situation. Uh, I’m proud of the fact and I think we’ve done a good job of continuously learning and evolving our response um, to the latest science and data that we have. Um, and that’s what I continue to look forward to doing now is waiting to see what the CDC says and then be agile and respond. Okay, we have one more question inside from Priscilla. Allegory. Thanks so much. Um, how confident are you in this latest data given that so many people are utilizing at hometown kits and that so many may also mean, uh, not sure. Yeah. So um, the Department of Health still receives I think on average around 50,000 test results a day, um, which does have good geographic coverage across the Commonwealth um, and is quite statistically significant. And so we do feel confident that we have enough data to make good public health decisions and recommendations. Um, and then really the role of the at home test is so that individuals can take the appropriate public health action such as isolating if they do come back positive. And so um, you know, for now we’ve got good population level data um, through the pcr and antigen tests and then we’re glad people are using the at home tests to take the appropriate action for themselves. And our final question from Dylan Huberman from W. J. C. Good afternoon. So just to be clear because for the moment we can’t say that we’re entering the endemic phase. Can we clarify that even though we are still in pandemic, how far we’ve come And is there another step another echelon to climb before we hit endemic? Yeah and I tried to share that. I mean I I really do think that there is a lot to celebrate right now. Um By way of vaccinations, the tests that have been made available to to pennsylvanians. Um The decrease in case counts, hospitalizations um And mortality. That is all something to celebrate. Um We’re excited about it. Uh And I think we’re definitely moving in the right direction. Again we’re trying to key off of the World Health Organization and the CDC um They still have this declared as a pandemic. Um But certainly we are moving into a new phase. Uh We’re excited about that um But still encouraging people to be cautious and use good judgment. Um So that we can stay in the good place that we’re in now. Um And and all continue to hopefully move back to more of a sense of normal um For now
Pennsylvania’s acting health secretary gives COVID-19 update
Updated: 5:53 PM EST Feb 25, 2022
Pennsylvania’s acting health secretary gave an update Friday on the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and preparation to move beyond the current phase, the Department of Health said.Watch the news conference with Acting Health Secretary Keara Klinepeter: Click the video player above.The state’s announcement comes on a day when the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released updated masking guidance with less of a focus on positive test results and more on what’s happening at hospitals.Counties are now designated as having low, medium or high COVID-19 “community levels,” according to the new CDC metrics.
HARRISBURG, Pa. —
Pennsylvania’s acting health secretary gave an update Friday on the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and preparation to move beyond the current phase, the Department of Health said.
Watch the news conference with Acting Health Secretary Keara Klinepeter: Click the video player above.
The state’s announcement comes on a day when the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released updated masking guidance with less of a focus on positive test results and more on what’s happening at hospitals.
Counties are now designated as having low, medium or high COVID-19 “community levels,” according to the new CDC metrics.