Tag: March

  • March 24 update from Health Department on COVID-19 cases

    March 24 update from Health Department on COVID-19 cases

    The Tompkins County Wellness Office says there have now been 18,445 total positive cases in Tompkins County, 87 a lot more than on Wednesday, and a total of 1,851,106 exams executed. The Health and fitness Office is also now reporting optimistic self-test success that have been submitted via their on line portal. They say there are 10 new beneficial self-test effects for a overall of 1,874 submitted.

    Linked: TCHD: If you examination constructive on an at-household test

    As of Thursday at 8:10am, the Wellbeing Division states 1,330 tests had been performed in the past working day. The Tompkins County Health and fitness Division publishes NYS vaccine monitoring data, displaying 84,162 Tompkins County inhabitants have a first dose and 76,765 have completed vaccination (which could be a single or two doses, based on vaccine), Business Law.

    Connected: Cornell returns its COVID-19 notify stage to Yellow

    The Well being Office claims no a person is at the moment hospitalized for COVID-19, a person less than in Wednesday’s update. As of a change in facts past wintertime, “TCHD is reporting only energetic conditions who are hospitalized,” fairly than including individuals recovered from COVID who remain hospitalized for other reasons.

    There have been 59 deaths from COVID-19 recorded amongst Tompkins County residents, such as the dying of two location people reported very last month.

    On March 23, Cornell College documented 151 new optimistic instances for March 22, 163 energetic university student conditions, and 36 energetic staff circumstances. Cornell only updates its dashboard on weekdays, and the timing of their updates does not allow for a immediate comparison to the county’s figures.

    As of March 17, Ithaca University noted 4 energetic college student circumstances, with 456 recovered, and one energetic employee case and 163 recovered personnel, Business Law.

    The Wellbeing Section says its figures involve testing that Cornell College began conducting on July 16, 2020. Cornell introduced its very own COVID-19 facts dashboard on August 25, 2020.

    Related: New Cornell COVID-19 dashboard displays take a look at success and notify amount

    The Overall health Office states the general public wants to prevent the spread of COVID-19 not just to shield by themselves, but other individuals in our neighborhood who are most susceptible to receiving extremely unwell – older older people, all those who are immune-compromised, and individuals with fundamental continual well being circumstances.

    TCHD’s Frank Kruppa states, “There is a quite substantial vaccination fee for our group, primarily with the successes that have been noted by our nearby colleges. In addition to the arrival and surveillance tests, numerous of our new situations are arising from sustained near contact with a good unique, this means extra than 10 minutes in just 6 ft of a good case. These shut contacts are occurring much more commonly in large indoor gatherings that combine various groups of men and women, Business Law.”

    Related: As Tompkins County drops to “low” COVID stage, Health Office suspends mask advisory

    “According to the metrics just lately introduced by the CDC concerning ‘community stages,’ Tompkins County has fallen into the “Low” group based on the subsequent data: less than 200 new conditions per 100,000 people today about the previous 7 days, considerably less than ten new COVID-19 admissions per 100,000 persons at Cayuga Health care Middle, and decreased than 10 percent of staffed inpatient beds at the hospital occupied by COVID-19 clients,” the Overall health Department states.

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    Relevant: Coronavirus coverage in 14850 These days

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  • March 21 update from Health Department on COVID-19 cases

    March 21 update from Health Department on COVID-19 cases

    The Tompkins County Health Department states there have now been 18,254 complete constructive instances in Tompkins County, 44 a lot more than on Friday, and a total of 1,847,554 exams performed. The Overall health Section is also now reporting good self-take a look at results that have been submitted by way of their on the net portal. They say there are 32 new positive self-examination benefits for a full of 1,833 submitted.

    Linked: TCHD: If you check beneficial on an at-residence check

    As of Monday at 8am, the Wellness Office says 284 tests were being executed in the preceding day. The Tompkins County Wellness Section publishes NYS vaccine monitoring facts, exhibiting 84,132 Tompkins County residents have a to start with dose and 76,747 have done vaccination (which could be a single or two doses, relying on vaccine).

    The Health Office says no one particular is now hospitalized for COVID-19, one particular less than in Friday’s update. As of a shift in info last wintertime, “TCHD is reporting only lively situations who are hospitalized,” rather than including clients recovered from COVID who continue being hospitalized for other reasons.

    There have been 59 deaths from COVID-19 recorded amongst Tompkins County residents, which includes the dying of two space inhabitants reported past month.

    On March 18, Cornell University reported 33 new optimistic conditions for March 17, 103 energetic college student situations, and 19 energetic worker circumstances. Cornell only updates its dashboard on weekdays, and the timing of their updates does not enable a immediate comparison to the county’s studies.

    As of March 17, Ithaca School documented 4 energetic scholar circumstances, with 456 recovered, and just one lively staff circumstance and 163 recovered staff.

    The Well being Department suggests its studies consist of screening that Cornell University started conducting on July 16, 2020. Cornell introduced its personal COVID-19 info dashboard on August 25, 2020.

    Linked: New Cornell COVID-19 dashboard demonstrates examination success and warn degree

    The Health and fitness Department claims the public wants to avert the spread of COVID-19 not just to safeguard them selves, but some others in our local community who are most vulnerable to receiving quite sick – older grownups, these who are immune-compromised, and all those with fundamental serious health situations.

    TCHD’s Frank Kruppa claims, “There is a very superior vaccination level for our community, in particular with the successes that have been described by our area schools. In addition to the arrival and surveillance screening, a lot of of our new instances are arising from sustained shut make contact with with a constructive particular person, which means extra than 10 minutes within six toes of a optimistic case. These near contacts are transpiring more regularly in big indoor gatherings that combine various groups of persons.”

    Similar: As Tompkins County drops to “low” COVID stage, Wellbeing Office suspends mask advisory

    “According to the metrics recently produced by the CDC with regards to ‘community degrees,’ Tompkins County has fallen into the “Low” class based on the pursuing info: much less than 200 new circumstances for every 100,000 people about the previous seven times, less than 10 new COVID-19 admissions for every 100,000 people today at Cayuga Professional medical Centre, and lessen than 10 {fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of staffed inpatient beds at the healthcare facility occupied by COVID-19 sufferers,” the Well being Section claims.

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  • First Edition: March 18, 2022

    First Edition: March 18, 2022

    Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.

    KHN:
    It Was Already Hard To Find Evusheld, A Covid Prevention Therapy. Now It’s Even Harder 

    As immunocompromised people across the country work to get Evusheld, a potentially lifesaving covid therapy, several hundred providers of the injections were removed from a federal dataset on Wednesday night, making the therapy even harder to locate. White House officials had announced March 15 that a planned purchase of more doses would have to be scaled back without new federal funding. (Recht, 3/17)

    KHN:
    Sharing Covid Vax Facts Inside ICE Detention, One Detainee At A Time 

    The sounds of wailing ambulances, car horns, and bustling traffic filtered into the high-rise home office of Dr. Daniel Turner-Lloveras in downtown Los Angeles as he settled into a brown leather couch to take a call. On the other end of the line, staring at a mint-green wall inside a plexiglass phone booth with little privacy, sat Pedro Figueroa, 33, a detainee at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Mesa Verde detention facility in Bakersfield, California. “Is it mandatory to get the booster?” Figueroa asked in Spanish. “And why do I need it?” (de Marco, 3/18)

    KHN:
    KHN’s ‘What The Health?’: We May Be Done With Covid, But Covid’s Not Done With Us 

    Logistics expert Jeff Zients, who has headed the White House covid-19 response team since the start of the Biden administration, is stepping down and will be replaced by popular public health expert Dr. Ashish Jha, who will take a leave from his post as dean of the School of Public Health at Brown University. Meanwhile, White House officials are scrambling to figure out how to get the funding they need to continue their covid control efforts now that the president has signed the big spending bill for the remainder of the federal fiscal year. (3/17)


    The Washington Post:
    Moderna Seeks FDA Authorization For A Second Booster Dose Of Its Coronavirus Vaccine For All Adults 


    Biotechnology company Moderna on Thursday asked the Food and Drug Administration to allow adults 18 and older to receive a second booster shot of the company’s mRNA vaccine amid concerns that immune protection from the vaccines wanes over time. Moderna’s application is substantially broader than what Pfizer and its German partner, BioNTech, sought earlier in the week — FDA authorization for a second booster shot for adults 65 and older. (Shepherd, 3/17)


    USA Today:
    Moderna Seeks FDA Authorization For A 4th COVID Vaccine Shot For All Adults


    Moderna said its request for emergency use authorization is based partly on recently published data from the U.S. and Israel following the emergence of the omicron variant. The company did not specify what the U.S. and Israeli data showed, but Israel approved a fourth COVID vaccine shot for vulnerable people over the age of 18 in January 2022. Additionally, a study of more than 1 million Israelis over 60 showed that those who got a fourth dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine were half as likely to become infected and four-times less likely to fall severely ill than those who had only three shots. That study has not been peer-reviewed. (Tebor, 3/17)


    CIDRAP:
    Israeli Study Points To Modest 4-Dose Vaccine Protection Against Omicron


    Four-dose efficacy of mRNA vaccines against symptomatic Omicron COVID-19 infection is modest, according to a research letter yesterday in the New England Journal of Medicine that described a small study in Israel. Of 1,050 eligible Israeli healthcare workers, 154 received a fourth dose of Pfizer and 120 received a fourth dose of Moderna. The researchers selected two age-matched controls from the remaining eligible participants for each person vaccinated. (3/17)


    AP:
    The AP Interview: Health Chief Warns Of COVID Funds Shortage


    With the nation yearning for a new normal after its long struggle with the coronavirus, U.S. Health Secretary Xavier Becerra warned Thursday that vaccines, tests and treatments will be “stuck on the ground” unless Congress provides the additional funds the White House has demanded. “We have reached a pivot point,” Becerra said in an interview with The Associated Press. “How well we pivot is on us.” (Alonso-Zaldivar, 3/18)


    The Hill:
    Pelosi Says White House Should Request $45B In New COVID Aid 


    Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Thursday said she’s advised the Biden administration to seek tens of billions of dollars more in emergency COVID-19 relief, suggesting it will take more than $40 billion to meet the testing, vaccine and therapeutic needs of the U.S. and the larger global community. President Biden had initially asked Congress for $22.5 billion in new funding to fight the ongoing pandemic — a figure that was whittled down to $15.6 billion in the face of Republican opposition on Capitol Hill. (Lillis, 3/17)


    Politico:
    Dems Search For Next Steps On Covid Aid As Headaches Pile Up


    After two top Biden administration health officials pleaded with Democrats on Thursday to approve more coronavirus aid funding, Speaker Nancy Pelosi apologized to them in front of her caucus for having to ask at all. Pelosi told Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra and top infectious disease adviser Anthony Fauci she was sorry they needed to come before House members from the president’s own party to call for $15 billion to continue the U.S. fight against Covid, domestically and abroad. (Ferris, Levine and Cancryn, 3/17)


    The Hill:
    Fauci Says Officials Need More Than $22.5B For COVID-19 Response 


    President Biden’s chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci said in an interview aired on Thursday that officials need more than the $22.5 billion that the White House originally requested from Congress for the COVID-19 response. In an interview aired on “NBC Nightly News,” NBC’s Miguel Almaguer noted to Fauci that the billions of dollars requested by the White House was a “hefty price tag,” asking if all the money was needed. “I have to tell you, we need more than that,” Fauci answered. Biden’s chief medical adviser said that officials needed adequate funding in order to study possible future variants. (Vakil, 3/17)


    Bloomberg:
    Fauci Says U.S. Covid Cases Could Rise As Congress Stalls On Pandemic Funding


    The U.S. could soon see Covid-19 cases rise again and vulnerable people are likely to need a fourth vaccine dose, one of President Joe Biden’s top health advisers warned as the White House calls for more money to fight the pandemic. Anthony Fauci, the longtime head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a Biden adviser, said U.K. officials are already warning him of an increase there driven by the BA.2 sub-variant, easing restrictions and waning protection from vaccines, and that the U.S. tends to be a few weeks behind case curves in the U.K. “We have all three of those factors right now in this country,” Fauci said in an interview Thursday. “I would predict that we are going to see a bit of an increase, or at least a flattening out and plateauing of the diminution of cases. And the question is how do we deal with that.” (Wingrove, 3/17)


    Stat:
    Is Ashish Jha What The U.S. Covid Response Needs Right Now?


    When it comes to discussing the White House’s pandemic response on TV, there’s nobody as qualified as Ashish Jha. Whether he’s on “Sesame Street” or Fox News, the Brown University public health school dean is a pitch-perfect pandemic adviser: clear, affable, and panic-averse. But the scope of his next job — steering the sprawling federal pandemic response — has some experts wondering whether someone with so little experience in government, policy, or logistics can rise to the task. (Facher and Garde, 3/18)


    Los Angeles Times:
    Study Reveals Likely Reason For ‘Stealth’ Omicron’s Recent Success


    The ability to spread more easily from person to person appears to be the superpower that is driving an upstart sibling of the Omicron variant into wide circulation, a group of scientists has surmised. That conclusion about the virus known as “stealth Omicron” is explained in a brief report published this week by the New England Journal of Medicine. It’s based on the team’s finding that the virus, whose official name is BA.2, is only slightly better than the dominant BA.1 at evading the protective effects of COVID-19 vaccines. Both of the Omicron “subvariants” have a common core of genetic mutations. But each has a few that the other doesn’t. For instance, BA.2 lacks a mutation belonging to other versions of Omicron that makes it easy to differentiate them from the Delta variant. (Hence the “stealth” moniker.) (Healy, 3/17)


    The New York Times:
    With A Flurry Of High-Profile Coronavirus Cases, Washington Is Again On Edge


    A flurry of high-profile coronavirus cases in the nation’s capital — including in people who have been around President Biden — has raised new questions about the trajectory of the two-year-old pandemic, even as the White House has signaled confidence in the country’s ability to resume normal activities. On Thursday, Mr. Biden canceled face-to-face meetings with Prime Minister Micheal Martin of Ireland after the prime minister received a positive result from a coronavirus test during a gala event on Wednesday night that both men attended. (Shear, 3/17)


    Fox News:
    More COVID Deaths Reported In US Counties With Lower Internet Access: Study


    U.S. communities with limited internet access had higher COVID-19 mortality rates during the first full year of the pandemic, according to researchers. In a study published earlier this month in the journal JAMA Network Open, University of Chicago authors wrote that for places with more limited access between 2.4 and six deaths per 100,000 people could be prevented, depending on whether they were rural, suburban or urban. “Adopting an asset-based approach, we believe this finding suggests that more awareness is needed about the essential asset of technological access to reliable information, remote work, schooling opportunities, resource purchasing and/or social community. Populations with limited internet access remain understudied and are often excluded in pandemic research,” they noted. (Musto, 3/17)


    ABC News:
    Why Some Americans Haven’t Gotten COVID Yet And Why It’s Not Inevitable They Ever Will: Experts


    Because omicron has shown the ability to cause breakthrough infections despite vaccination status, this has led to fears that everyone will catch the virus at some point. However, it is important to clarify that the COVID vaccines continue to be highly effective in its primary purpose in preventing hospitalization and death. However, public health experts said it’s not inevitable Americans who have not gotten COVID yet eventually will, and that there are several reasons people have been able to avoid infection so far, including certain behaviors such as being serious about masking and social distancing, vaccination rates and maybe even genetics. (Kekatos, 3/18)


    CIDRAP:
    Moms Spread COVID-19 To Newborns Less Than 2{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} Of Time, Data Show


    SARS-CoV-2 is transmitted from mother to baby before, during, and after childbirth about 1.8{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of the time, and vaginal births and breastfeeding do not raise the risk, finds a meta-analysis today in BMJ. … Of the 800 COVID-positive fetuses or babies with outcome data, 20 were stillbirths, 23 died during the first 28 days of life, and 8 were early pregnancy losses; 749 babies (93.6{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}) were alive at the end of follow-up. (3/17)


    NPR:
    How To Tell If You Have Long COVID


    Waves of fatigue. The inability to smell milk that has gone bad. A racing heartbeat. These are just a few COVID-19 symptoms that can linger after an initial coronavirus infection. Though they may not always amount to the debilitating cases of long COVID-19 that can leave people bedridden or unable to perform daily functions, it’s very common to take weeks to fully recover — a condition I’ve been thinking of as “medium COVID.” I’ve been reporting on COVID-19 since the coronavirus pandemic started, and I thought I knew what an infection would be like for a young, otherwise healthy person like me. I knew there was a risk for long COVID-19, even with mild cases, but in my mind, there were two types of COVID-19: run-of-the-mill cases that didn’t last much longer than their isolation periods required, and long COVID-19, which was relatively rare. Instead, like so many Americans, I found myself caught somewhere in between. (Feldman, 3/17)


    Houston Chronicle:
    Appeals Court Sides With Texas Schools Over Abbott On Mask Mandate


    An appellate court on Thursday sided with Texas school districts in their dispute with state officials over mask mandates, which numerous school systems already have lifted as pandemic conditions have eased. The state’s the 3rd Court of Appeals affirmed a trial court’s orders that granted school districts temporary injunctive relief from the enforcement of an executive order from Gov. Greg Abbott prohibiting mask mandates. (Serrano, 3/17)


    The Washington Post:
    Local Health Officials Report Threats, Vandalism And Harassment During The Pandemic, Study Finds 


    Local health officials handling the day-to-day response to the coronavirus crisis have faced hostility like never before, according to a new study of 1,499 episodes of harassment during the first year of the pandemic. Of 583 local health departments surveyed by Johns Hopkins University researchers, 57 percent reported episodes of staff being targeted with personal threats, doxing, vandalism and other forms of harassment from 2020 to 2021. (Rizzo, 3/17)


    Fox News:
    Caregiver Fatigue In America Rising At Unprecedented Rate: Reports


    Covid-19 has added to caregiver fatigue according to health experts. Caregiver fatigue occurs when the caregiver of an individual feels physically and emotionally exhausted, often leading to a change in attitude, negative feelings toward the role and the care recipient and sometimes feelings of resentment, according to health experts. “We encourage families to try to plan ahead. It can be difficult to face an older loved one’s changing needs, but if you have plans in place for how your family/network will support the primary caregiver in both big and everyday ways you’ll be ahead of the curve,” Seniorly Vice President of Partnerships and gerontologist Marlena Del Hierro said in a statement to Fox News. (McGorry, 3/17)


    Las Vegas Review-Journal:
    Las Vegas Nurses: Don’t Blame Us For Staffing Shortages


    For critical care nurse Emily Johnson, working long hours during the pandemic has meant delaying plans to get a master’s degree and missing time at home with three children under the age of 3, two of them foster kids. “My kids are growing up without me,” said Johnson, 33, who works in the burn center at University Medical Center in central Las Vegas. Despite plummeting COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, Johnson and other UMC nurses say they aren’t getting a reprieve. After eliminating incentive pay for overtime last month, the hospital is now reimposing a requirement that nurses work mandatory overtime. (Hynes, 3/17)


    Stateline:
    As Nurses Quit, States Seek To Train More


    Under pressure from short-staffed hospitals and burned-out nurses, lawmakers in several states recently passed bills designed to expand nursing schools. For more than two years, the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed both the importance of nurses and strain on the workforce. Hospitals, long-term care centers and even K-12 schools have been so short-staffed in recent months that they’ve had to cancel procedures, delay moving patients into inpatient beds or reduce other services. This legislative season, that sense of crisis has powered bipartisan efforts to increase nurse training and licensure. The proposals have split somewhat along party lines, with Republican lawmakers in red states emphasizing reduced education regulations and Democrats in blue states emphasizing funding increases. Still, leaders in both parties agree on the need to get more nurses educated and helping patients. (Quinton, 3/17)


    Modern Healthcare:
    Providers Push For Continued Hospital-At-Home Waiver After Pandemic


    Hospital systems are making the case to Congress that Medicare should continue covering hospital-at-home care after the public health emergency, arguing it could improve health outcomes, lower costs and alleviate capacity and staffing issues. More than 200 hospitals have received a waiver from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to participate in the program, but Medicare’s hospital-at-home coverage expires at the end of the public health emergency, which could come as soon as July. Some federal lawmakers are working to extend the waiver for at least two more years, but they’re unlikely to pass legislation before coverage lapses. Meanwhile, some health systems are trying out risk-based home hospital payment models with private payers. Some say they are seeking a more permanent solution via the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation that could allow them to better tailor the program to their patient mix and organization. (Hellmann and Kacik, 3/17)


    Modern Healthcare:
    Remaining In The Workforce A Challenge For Women In Healthcare


    During the COVID-19 pandemic, many women have had to put their careers on hold to look after children who are remote learning, to care for elderly or ill loved ones or to relocate to be closer to family. They’ve left their positions temporarily or permanently as they juggle priorities. Since February 2020, more than 1 million fewer women are in the U.S. workforce, whereas men have regained all of the jobs they lost during the pandemic, according to a National Women’s Law Center analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data. In healthcare, where the workforce is 75{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} women, the sector was down 2.8{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of women’s jobs in November 2021 from January 2020, compared to 0.32{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of men’s jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Yet, healthcare, like many other sectors, continues to have a high demand for workers. (Christ, 3/17)


    Modern Healthcare:
    Becerra Eyes Work On Physician Pay, Medicare Advantage Reform


    Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said Thursday that the department may readjust Medicare Part B premiums next month while it looks to work with Congress on other healthcare reforms in his second year on the job. As Becerra approaches his one-year anniversary in the position, he’s also fighting an uphill battle for more funding from Congress to keep COVID-19 relief and health coverage initiatives alive. HHS is interested in talking to Congress about Medicare Advantage overpayment issues and physician payment reform, Becerra told reporters Thursday. “We can’t let this go over the cliff. Not when we’re on the verge of turning the page,” he said. (Goldman, 3/17)


    Crain’s New York Business:
    After New York Nursing-Home Audit, Data Practices Under Cuomo Scrutinized


    Stakeholders are advocating improvements in the New York State Department of Health’s data practices after an audit released Tuesday found that it understated the number of COVID-related nursing home deaths by at least 4,100 and did not make effective use of data to address nursing-home outbreaks. State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, whose office conducted the audit, said the Health Department should improve the quality of nursing homes’ self-reported data by collaborating more closely with the industry.“ Too often regulatory entities are just seen as being hostile to the industry,” DiNapoli said in an interview. (Kaufman, 3/17)


    Cincinnati Enquirer:
    17 Cincinnati Area Hospitals Docked For Readmission, Infection Rates


    The federal government will reduce Medicare payments to 17 Cincinnati area hospitals with high rates of readmission or inpatient-developed infections and injuries in 2022. The penalties, which are a part of two separate pay-for-performance programs under the Affordable Care Act, include a 1{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} reduction of Medicare payments to hospitals with a high volume of in-house infections, or hospital-acquired injuries, and a separate reduction of up to 3{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} for high readmission. Most penalties don’t reach the full 3{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} reduction, however. Five local hospitals – the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, TriHealth’s McCullough-Hyde Memorial Hospital, and St. Elizabeth Healthcare’s Edgewood, Florence, and Fort Thomas hospitals – were penalized for having high rates of complications classified under the Hospital-Acquired Condition Reduction program, according to data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (Sutherland, 3/17)


    Roll Call:
    Texas Lags Nation In Health Insurance Coverage Rate In Census Data 


    While health insurance coverage has broadly expanded across the country since implementation of the Affordable Care Act of 2010, many impoverished communities continue to lag behind, according to census data released Thursday. Overall, the nation’s uninsured population fell to 8.7 percent in 2020, from 15 percent in 2013. In Texas, however, American Community Survey results released Thursday show the uninsured rate was twice the national average — 17.3 percent, which was 3 percentage points more than the state with the next-highest uninsured rate, Oklahoma. (Macagnone, 3/17)


    AP:
    California Lawmakers Vote To Make Abortions Cheaper 


    California lawmakers on Thursday voted to make abortions much cheaper for people on private health insurance plans, bringing California closer to becoming the fourth state in the country to ban insurance fees for the procedure. Thursday’s vote is part of lawmakers’ strategy to make reproductive care more accessible in preparation for a potential U.S. Supreme Court decision this summer that could overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 case that banned states from outlawing abortions. … The Assembly approved a bill that would eliminate out-of-pocket costs for abortions on private health plans. While the bill would reduce the cost of abortions, it would also slightly increase monthly premiums for patients and their employers. (Beam, 3/17)


    San Francisco Chronicle:
    New California Bill Would Create A Fund To Aid Women Traveling To California For Abortion Care


    As other states move to limit or ban abortion, a Bay Area lawmaker proposed Thursday to establish a state fund to assist women traveling to California to obtain abortions. The legislation, SB1142, “sends a clear message to the rest of the nation,” said state Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley. “We are fully committed to ensuring that California women and those who may seek refuge here have access to all reproductive services, including abortion.” (Egelko, 3/17)


    AP:
    Washington State Prohibits Texas-Style Abortion Lawsuits


    A Washington state measure that prohibits legal action against people seeking an abortion and those who aid them was signed into law Thursday by the governor, in a move designed to rebut recent actions by conservative states. “We know this bill is necessary because this is a perilous time for the ability of people to have the freedom of choice that they have enjoyed for decades,” said Gov. Jay Inslee, a Democrat. (La Corte, 3/17)


    AP:
    Tenn. Senate Leader Won’t Support Texas-Style Abortion Bill 


    Tennessee’s Senate Speaker Randy McNally on Thursday said he does not support legislation that would ban abortions and allow almost anyone to file civil lawsuits against violators and collect damages. Earlier this week, Tennessee became the latest GOP-led state to introduce legislation mimicking a law currently enacted in Texas law and its novel citizen-enforcement provision. (Kruesi, 3/17)


    NBC News:
    Biden Administration Meets With Florida LGBTQ Students Over ‘Don’t Say Gay’ Bill


    Biden administration officials held a closed-door meeting Thursday with several Florida LGBTQ students and their families about the state’s so-called Don’t Say Gay bill, the Education Department said. The legislation — officially named the Parental Rights in Education Act — would prohibit “classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity” in Florida primary schools. Its passage in Florida’s House and Senate in recent weeks sparked national debate. (Lavietes, 3/17)


    Houston Chronicle:
    ‘One Pill Can Kill’: Authorities Warn Of Fentanyl’s Dangers In Public Campaign Targeting Houston, State


    With fentanyl showing up in Harris County and the state at “an alarming rate,” authorities have launched a public awareness campaign on billboards and elsewhere to warn of the dangers of the synthetic opioid, often sold in counterfeit pills that can contain lethal doses. Representatives of government and public health agencies said at a press conference Thursday that the campaign aims to sound the alarm about the increasing illegal trade and the impact of fentanyl, along with the upward trend of the counterfeit pills. “One pill can kill” and “Fentanyl can kill: The first time could be your last time” are among some of the messages displayed on the billboards. They come as a record number of people are dying from overdoses in Texas, with the fentanyl driving what has been nationally recognized as an epidemic. (Tallet, 3/17)


    San Francisco Chronicle:
    San Francisco Issues Dire Warning After Spike In Fentanyl Overdoses Among People Using Cocaine


    San Francisco health officials issued a dire warning Thursday following what they said was a recent spike in fentanyl overdoses, specifically among people who ingested the powerful opioid when they thought they were using cocaine. Over the past two weeks, the city’s health department said it was alerted to three fatal fentanyl overdoses in San Francisco among people “who intended to use only cocaine but were unintentionally exposed to fentanyl.” The health department also reported nine similar, nonfatal overdoses in two groups of people. There were an estimated 474 deaths from fentanyl in 2021, the health department said. (Whiting, 3/17)


    San Francisco Chronicle:
    Judge Overturns Conviction Of Woman Who Gave Birth To Stillborn Child After Drug Use


    A mother who acknowledged using drugs before she gave birth to a stillborn child was sentenced to 11 years in prison by a Kings County judge in 2018 after pleading no contest to manslaughter to avoid a murder charge. Now another judge, with support from Attorney General Rob Bonta, has overturned the conviction and prison sentence, saying the crime she admitted committing is not recognized by law.“ There is no crime in California of manslaughter of a fetus,” Superior Court Judge Valerie Chrissakis said Wednesday. She ordered Adora Perez released from prison, where she has been held for nearly four years, and returned to Kings County Jail for a new hearing before her original judge on whether she should be tried for murder, which under state law can include the intentional or reckless killing of a fetus. But Bonta and women’s-rights advocates dispute that charge as well. (Egelko, 3/17)


    AP:
    Kentucky House Passes Bill To Legalize Medical Marijuana 


    The Kentucky House endorsed legalizing medical marijuana, passing a bill Thursday to strictly regulate the use of cannabis for a list of eligible medical conditions. The high-profile measure cleared the Republican-dominated House on a 59-34 vote after a long, sometimes-emotional debate. The years-long debate now shifts to the GOP-led state Senate on whether Kentucky should join the majority of states allowing medical marijuana. (Schreiner, 3/17)


    AP:
    Part Of Indiana’s New Vaping Tax Cut Before Taking Effect


    Indiana’s new tax on vaping is being cut even before it takes effect despite protests from anti-smoking advocates. Gov. Eric Holcomb signed a bill this week that included provisions cutting the 25{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} tax that wholesalers were to be charged for closed-system vaping cartridges such as Juul devices to 15{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}. State lawmakers approved the higher rate last year for Indiana’s first tax on electronic cigarettes to start in July 2022. (3/17)


    Philadelphia Inquirer:
    Pennsylvania’s Sudden Move To Recall Marijuana Vapes Raised Questions. Were These Products Harmful All Along?


    For years, the Pennsylvania Department of Health allowed the state’s medical marijuana companies to sell hundreds of medicines that the agency now considers potentially unsafe. Something changed in November when regulators started a process that led last month to a massive recall and ban of 670 types of cannabis concentrates for vaping — $12 million worth — that they had previously approved for sale in Pennsylvania’s roughly 150 marijuana dispensaries. The move blindsided patients and an industry dominated by companies hyper-focused on broader legalization of marijuana. And regulators declined to explain the action beyond saying the medicines contained “added ingredients that have not been approved for inhalation” by the FDA. (Brubaker, 3/17)


    AP:
    Settlement Sets Better Treatment For Mentally Ill Inmates 


    The Montana State Prison will no longer be allowed to punish inmates with severe mental illnesses for behavior caused by their illnesses by putting them in solitary confinement or setting unreasonable behavioral expectations, under a settlement to a federal lawsuit announced this week. “This settlement represents huge gains for the humane treatment of inmates with severe mental illness,” Bernadette Franks-Ongoy, executive director of Disability Rights Montana, which filed the lawsuit against the Department of Corrections in 2015. (Hanson, 3/17)


    AP:
    NH House Votes To Repeal Paid Family Medical Leave Program 


    The New Hampshire House on Thursday voted to repeal the state’s paid family medical leave program less than a year after it was signed into law, saying that it’s no longer needed because private insurance carriers have now filed similar plans in the state. The vote to repeal passed on a vote of 172-164 in the Republican-led House. (3/17)


    Anchorage Daily News:
    Historic Split Of Alaska’s Health Department Will Become Final Within Days Unless Senate Moves Fast


    Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s sweeping proposal to divide Alaska’s massive health department into two agencies via an executive order appears poised to go into effect this summer unless the Legislature makes a last-minute decision to meet in joint session by Saturday. State Senate leaders say there are no plans for a joint session, despite pressure from House leaders to “disapprove” the split — the only way the Legislature can take action. Dunleavy in January issued Executive Order 21, a 100-plus-page document that divides the unwieldy Alaska Department of Health and Social Services into a Department of Health and a Department of Family and Community Services. The administration contends the Alaska Constitution allows the governor to make such a sweeping reorganization rather than proposing a bill that’s subject to legislative review and amendments. (Hollander and Brooks, 3/17)


    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
    3 Wisconsin Children Have Died From Influenza, First This Flu Season


    Three children in Wisconsin have died from influenza, the state health department announced Thursday. The news release reporting the first pediatric flu deaths this season did not say how old the children were or where in Wisconsin they lived. Flu seasons are typically tracked October through May in the United States. After an unusually mild 2020-21 season — which state health officials attribute to people staying at home because of the COVID-19 pandemic — flu numbers have bounced back in Wisconsin, but still are not as high as past years. (Heim, 3/17)


    AP:
    US Adult Smoking Rate Fell During First Year Of Pandemic 


    The first year of the COVID-19 pandemic saw more Americans drinking heavily or using illicit drugs — but apparently not smoking. U.S. cigarette smoking dropped to a new all-time low in 2020, with 1 in 8 adults saying they were current smokers, according to survey data released Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Adult e-cigarette use also dropped, the CDC reported. (Stobbe, 3/17)


    The Boston Globe:
    Frequent Daytime Napping By Older Adults Linked To Increased Risk Of Alzheimer’s, Study Says


    A new study from researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston links excessive daytime napping by older adults to a heightened risk of developing Alzheimer’s, the disease that causes severe cognitive decline. The study was published Thursday in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association, the hospital said in a statement. “The vicious cycle we observed between daytime sleep and Alzheimer’s disease offers a basis for better understanding the role of sleep in the development and progression of Alzheimer’s disease in older adults,” Dr. Peng Li, a lead author of the study who works in the Medical Biodynamics Program at the Brigham’s Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, said in the statement. (Andersen and Fox, 3/17)


    AP:
    More Than 30 Companies To Start Making Pfizer’s COVID Pill 


    Nearly three dozen companies worldwide will soon start making generic versions of Pfizer’s coronavirus pill, the U.N.-backed Medicines Patent Pool that negotiated the deal said Thursday. The Medicines Patent Pool said in a statement that agreements signed with 35 companies should help make Pfizer’s antiviral nirmatrelvir, or Paxlovid, available to more than half of the world’s population. (3/17)


    The Washington Post:
    At Least 43 Attacks On Health-Care Facilities And Patients In Ukraine, WHO Says 


    The World Health Organization has verified at least “43 attacks on health care” — including assaults on patients, health-care workers, facilities or infrastructure — since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the agency’s director general, told reporters Wednesday. More than 300 health-care facilities are in combat zones or areas that Russia now controls, while 600 other facilities are within about six miles of the conflict line, he said. (Simon, Timsit and Jeong, 3/17)


    The New York Times:
    An American Who Traveled To Ukraine For His Partner’s Treatment Is Killed


    A 68-year-old American man was killed in a Russian assault on the city of Chernihiv, a city northwest of Kyiv, the local authorities in the city reported on Thursday. The local police said the man, James Whitney Hill, was killed by heavy artillery attacks on unarmed civilians in the city. … Mr. Hill, who went by the name Jimmy or Jim to friends, and his partner, Ira, who is Ukrainian, had traveled to Chernihiv in December so that she could be treated for multiple sclerosis, friends of Mr. Hill told a local news broadcaster in Idaho this month. They had become trapped at a regional hospital there. (Specia and Schwirtz, 3/17)


    The Washington Post:
    Mental Health Experts Worldwide Provide Support For Ukrainians


    The crisis in Ukraine has unleashed a network of online mental health experts, some refashioning routine virtual care in response to the war; others providing psychological first aid for refugees or support for local therapists who suddenly find themselves on the front line of an evolving mental health crisis. “We all — many, many professionals around the world — have mobilized to work with what’s going on there, with extensive psychological trauma,” said Galina Itskovich, a Brooklyn-based developmental psychotherapist who has been working with parents and professionals in Ukraine for several years. “We have a grass-roots movement here, getting connected very quickly.” (Sellers, 3/18)


    The New York Times:
    Who Killed Three Aid Workers For Doctors Without Borders In Ethiopia?


    As the fight intensified in northern Ethiopia in June last year, three aid workers from Doctors Without Borders jumped into their four-wheel drive and raced across the battle-scarred landscape, searching for casualties. Hours later they vanished. The aid workers stopped answering their satellite phone. A tracking device showed their vehicle making a sudden U-turn, then stopping. Colleagues frantically tried to locate them. (Marks and Walsh, 3/17)


    This is part of the KHN Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.

  • Elon University / Today at Elon / March 16 update from Vice President for Student Life Jon Dooley

    Elon University / Today at Elon / March 16 update from Vice President for Student Life Jon Dooley

    Vice President for Scholar Lifetime Jon Dooley is furnishing normal electronic mail update messages to retain pupils and moms and dads educated about the endeavours for a wholesome Spring Semester.

    Expensive Learners, College, and Personnel,

    Summary of updates in this message

    • Standing updates
    • New mask coverage
    • Spring Split campus basic safety and services
    • Reporting good exams during Spring Split
    • Tests sources after Spring Split

    Status updates

    The university dashboard is up to date on the Balanced Elon site each weekday early morning.

    New campus mask plan now in impact

    On Monday, March 14, Elon adopted its new indoor mask optional coverage for most campus areas. This adjust is in line with steerage from the CDC and North Carolina well being officers. Elon endorses the legal rights of anyone to make their possess personal choices about sporting masks, even though masks are continue to expected in specified campus health care areas and for those people with COVID-like signs and symptoms. All members of the campus neighborhood should really turn into familiar with the total specifics of the university’s new mask plan.

    Absolutely everyone ought to carry on to carry a mask with them on campus and continue to keep in thoughts that each and every particular person has various experiences, household and professional medical situations, and considerations as we navigate this method. We ask the campus group to be respectful and honor requests to have on a mask and assist others on campus to defend on their own. If you are requested to use a mask, the best point to do is guidance the person earning the request. Elon understands and is compassionate to the simple fact that this sickness impacts each individual specific in a different way. Human Assets and Pupil Treatment and Outreach are completely ready to satisfy with associates of the campus group to ascertain how to be practical for the duration of this transition.

    Spring Break campus protection and companies

    Spring split for undergraduate college students and a lot of graduate courses is this 7 days and Friday, March 18, has been specified a spring crack holiday break for workers. Most campus providers have reduced hrs or availability this week, until courses resume Monday, March 21. Pay a visit to Right now at Elon for in depth data about campus basic safety and solutions during Spring Crack.

    Reporting good checks through Spring Crack

    Must learners test optimistic for the duration of Spring Split, report favourable exam outcomes from an off-campus tests facility or an authorised around-the-counter/at-home take a look at to College student Care & Outreach by emailing [email protected]. Scholar Treatment & Outreach, Residence Everyday living, and College student Health and fitness Products and services will coordinate get in touch with tracing, care, housing, and overall health precautions.

    Tests assets following Spring Split

    Students, school, and team are welcome and encouraged to take a look at on returning to campus soon after Spring Crack and throughout the semester.

    Additional data

    In depth data is normally readily available on the Healthful Elon site, which supplies critical wellbeing and wellness details for learners and staff members, including what to do if you really feel unwell, check positive, or have near speak to with a beneficial situation. The website also gives responses to usually asked queries about lecturers, vaccination, and staff data, as perfectly as solutions to issues associated to the most recent mask optional coverage and other campus protocols. Human Sources is also accessible to supply aid as personnel navigate COVID coverage changes. Remember to contact 336-278-5560 to get to an HR agent or e-mail [email protected].

    The following email update will be sent Wednesday, March 23, at 10:45 a.m., unless of course an added message is warranted ahead of then.

    Dr. Jon Dooley

    Vice President for College student Life

  • Friday, March 11, 2022 | Kaiser Health News

    Friday, March 11, 2022 | Kaiser Health News

    How Many Have Died From Covid? Toll May Be Triple The Confirmed Tally

    The global death toll from the covid-19 pandemic has been alarmingly undercounted, researchers find. They estimate the total to be 18.2 million people.


    Bloomberg:
    Covid Study Finds 18 Million Deaths, Three Times Official Tally


    The pandemic’s death toll may be three times higher than official Covid-19 records suggest, according to a study that found stark differences across countries and regions. As many as 18.2 million people probably died from Covid in the first two years of the pandemic, researchers found in the first peer-reviewed global estimate of excess deaths. They pointed to a lack of testing and unreliable mortality data to explain the discrepancy with official estimates of roughly 5.9 million deaths. (Gale, 3/10)


    USA Today:
    ‘Very Sobering’: Global Deaths From COVID May Be More Than 3 Times Higher Than Official Toll, Study Says


    As the U.S. approaches the grim milestone of one million COVID-19 deaths, a team of researchers published the first peer-reviewed study looking at excess death estimates on a global scale. The results are alarming, health experts say. Excess deaths is the difference between the number of recorded deaths from all causes and the number of expected deaths based on past trends. Researchers at the University of Washington’s Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation found an estimated 18.2 million people may have died by the end of 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, more than three times the official toll of 5.9 million, according to the study published Thursday in The Lancet. (Rodriguez, 3/10)

    In more news about covid cases —


    Detroit Free Press:
    Michigan COVID-19 Death Rates By County: Education, Age, Trump Factors


    Who died of COVID-19 in Michigan during the first two years of the coronavirus pandemic was heavily influenced by demographics like age, education level, the county where they lived, vaccination rates — and even who got their vote in the 2020 presidential election. As Michigan marked the grim two-year anniversary Thursday of the day when the first cases were identified, a Free Press analysis of state and federal data shows a higher death rate in counties where a larger share of people voted for Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election. “I would expect to see significant correlation,” said Peter Jacobson, professor emeritus of health law and policy at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. (Jordan Shamus and Tanner, 3/11)


    The Boston Globe:
    Number Of COVID-19 Deaths In Mass. Will Drop Under State’s New Counting Method


    The official count of COVID-19 deaths in Massachusetts will decline by about 3,700 under a new surveillance system that state health leaders say more accurately captures the true toll from the virus. “We think this is an absolutely critical step in improving our understanding of who COVID has impacted most significantly during the pandemic,” Dr. Catherine Brown, the state’s epidemiologist, said at a media briefing Thursday. Currently, the state’s reported confirmed and probable deaths total about 23,700. Under the new method, that could drop to about 20,000. But Brown said a team at the state’s health department is still crunching the numbers and would release them Monday. (Lazar, 3/10)


    AP:
    Nevada Shifting To Weekly COVID Stats As Cases Keep Falling 


    State health officials are moving from daily to weekly reporting of COVID-19 statistics as the public health emergency fades and new infections and hospitalizations continue to fall to their lowest levels in Nevada since last June. Beginning next week, they’ll also be changing the way they track the spread and response to the coronavirus, including dropping regular reporting of positivity rates that are increasingly skewed due to widespread use of home-testing results. (Sonner, 3/10)


    Crain’s New York Business:
    NYC Says It Is Ready To Take On ‘Test To Treat’ Initiative


    Despite modest stockpiles of oral COVID treatments, New York City says it is ready to carry out the new federal initiative to treat patients who test positive on the spot. The Department of Health and Human Services on Tuesday outlined details for the “Test to Treat” initiative, introduced by President Joe Biden in his State of the Union address last week. The program allows individuals who receive a positive COVID test result to receive treatment with antiviral pills on the spot. It kicked off Monday, and participating pharmacy-based clinics, federally qualified health centers and long-term-care facilities are eligible to receive direct distributions of molnupiravir and Paxlovid from HHS. Molnupiravir was developed by Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics and Paxlovid comes from Pfizer. (Sim, 3/10)

    The ‘Deltacron’ Variant — Something To Worry About, Or Just A ‘Scariant’?

    Experts say it’s too soon to worry about deltacron and that it appears unlikely to spread as easily as omicron. In other covid news, a database created by the Federation of State Medical Boards shows that at least 26 states have proposed or passed legislation that would make it easier for patients to get ivermectin, USA Today reported.


    USA Today:
    A New COVID Variant Called Deltacron? Here’s What We Know


    A potential new COVID-19 variant, a combination of the delta and omicron variants – you can call it “deltacron” – has been identified. The World Health Organization said Wednesday that the new COVID-19 combination has been detected in France, the Netherlands and Denmark. It’s also been found in the U.S., according to a new report soon to be published on research site MedRxiv, and viewed by USA TODAY. The San Mateo, California-headquartered lab Helix, which works with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to track COVID-19, sequenced 29,719 positive COVID-19 samples collected Nov. 22 to Feb. 13 from across the U.S., according to the research team, which included the University of Washington Medical Center and testing company Thermo Fisher Scientific. (Snider, 3/10)


    Deseret News:
    Should You Worry About The New ‘Deltacron’ Variant?


    Society has had a run-in with a “deltacron” variant before. In January, scientists in Cyprus said they had discovered a COVID-19 variant that mixed the omicron and delta variants, per Bloomberg News. However, the medical community — including biologist Eric Topol of the Scripps Research Translational Institute — disputed the science behind “deltacron.” Experts called it a “scariant” of COVID-19 that wouldn’t pose much of a threat, but made for a scary headline in the news. (Scribner, 3/10)


    The Atlantic:
    So … What Will The Next Variant Look Like?


    Let’s start with the worst-case scenario, because it’s also probably the least likely. A new variant checks each of the Big Three boxes: more transmissible, more deadly, and much more evasive of the defenses that vaccines and other SARS-CoV-2 flavors have laid down. In this version of events, even immunized people could suffer high rates of severe disease; additional boosters might not mount a sufficient blockade. The chasm in protection between the vaccinated and unvaccinated would start to close—perhaps rapidly, if the new variant collides with us when many people aren’t up-to-date on their shots and population immunity is low. (Wu, 3/9)

    In other pandemic news —


    Axios:
    Axios-Ipsos Poll: Media Habits Defined The COVID Culture War


    The key factor determining how Americans have handled COVID-19 — more than race, education or even political affiliation — is where they get their news, according to an analysis of two years of data from our Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index. Partisan divisions weaken U.S. leaders’ ability to deal with such existential crises — and the modern media landscape feeds that cycle. In March 2020, when everything changed, roughly nine in 10 Americans, regardless of their preferred media outlet, said they trusted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Within weeks, though, that trust was plunging among Americans who mostly watch Fox News or other conservative outlets, as well as those who cited no source. (Talev, Bettelheim and Alberti, 3/11)


    The 19th:
    Moving In With Other Adults Has Become A Lifeline For Single Moms Hit ‘Tenfold’ By The Pandemic


    As a single parent, Gabriela Villagomez-Morales faces one question with uncomfortable regularity: What are you willing to do for your kids? It’s the question Villagomez-Morales’ own mother asked her when, at the start of the pandemic, her job at a child care facility ended indefinitely. Other workers could tap into coronavirus relief, including enhanced unemployment payments, to keep the lights on and a roof over their heads. But despite being a taxpayer who contributes to that system, Villagomez-Morales and other undocumented immigrants couldn’t access those programs. Without those payments, she had no way to make rent in the home she shared with her four children, ages 20, 18, 10 and 9. So when her mom posed the question, they both knew the answer. (Carrazana and Mithani, 3/10)

    And in news about covid vaccines and treatments —


    USA Today:
    Lawmakers Push Legislation To Protect Doctors Who Prescribe Ivermectin For COVID-19. Can They Do That?


    Dozens of state lawmakers push bills that would make it easier for doctors to prescribe ivermectin for COVID-19, even though the anti-parasitic has not been proved effective at preventing or treating the disease. As of Thursday, at least 26 states have proposed or passed legislation that would increase patient access to the drug, according to a database created by the Federation of State Medical Boards. Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, chair of the department of medical ethics and health policy at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, said the bills “drive (him) nuts.” (Rodriguez, 3/10)


    CIDRAP:
    Study: Third COVID MRNA Vaccine Dose Needed Against Omicron


    mRNA COVID-19 vaccines are highly effective in preventing adult hospitalizations from the Alpha, Delta, and Omicron SARS-CoV-2 variants, but three doses are needed to reach the same efficacy against Omicron as two doses offer against the first two strains, suggests an observational test-negative study yesterday in BMJ.A team led by University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) researchers prospectively estimated the effectiveness of the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines against COVID-19 hospitalization among 5,728 adult COVID-19 patients and 5,962 uninfected controls at 21 US hospitals. (Van Beusekom, 3/10)


    The Boston Globe:
    Scientists Say We Need Universal Coronavirus Vaccines, But Will They Arrive In Time?


    Over the last several months, the COVID pandemic has become an exercise of vaccination whack-a-mole. A variant arises, and the vaccine manufacturers figure out how to tweak their product to address it — but not quickly enough. New variants keep arising, making the variant-specific shots outdated before we even get a chance to use them. But what if scientists could develop one universal vaccine that could address all variants? That work is underway at academic labs and biotech firms, including several in Boston, and in recent months, progress has picked up speed. (Cross, 3/10)


    The Atlantic:
    Vaccinating Kids Has Never Been Easy


    In September 1957—two years after church bells rang in celebration of the new polio vaccine, two years after people rejoiced in the streets, two years after Americans began lining up for their shots—the proportion of children fully vaccinated against polio remained at about 50 percent. Supply was not the problem. Nor were doubts about the vaccine’s safety or efficacy, concluded a report from around that time by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, now known as the March of Dimes, which had funded research into the vaccine. But the “initial excitement” had nevertheless “faded,” and vaccine proponents found themselves in an incremental slog to reach the remaining unvaccinated Americans. Well into the 1960s, doctors held “Sabin Oral Sundays,” dispensing sugar cubes dosed with a drop of the oral vaccine invented by Albert Sabin. It would ultimately take more than two decades to go from ringing church bells to polio eradication in the U.S. (Zhang, 3/10)


    FiercePharma:
    Novavax, Eyeing The COVID ‘Vaccine Hesitant’ And Kids, Unveils New Education Campaigns As Nuvaxovid Nears US Finish Line 


    Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson were quickest off the mark in getting COVID vaccines into American arms, but Novavax is hoping to add another pandemic vaccine to the U.S. mix soon—and it’s pushing new campaigns to get the word out. The biopharma, which has approvals and authorizations in Europe and around the world, is now on the cusp of a potential green light in the U.S. And with a market comes the need for marketing. (Adams, 3/10)

    In related news —


    FiercePharma:
    Moderna CEO’s Pay Jumps 41{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} To $18.2M As COVID Vaccine Giant Expands Globally


    Moderna’s business took flight in 2021 thanks to authorizations for its COVID-19 vaccine, and so did its CEO’s pay. Moderna is hiking CEO Stephane Bancel’s 2021 pay by 41{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} to $18.2 million, citing “unprecedented growth” at the mRNA specialist, a securities filing (PDF) shows. The CEO pay bump comes as the Massachusetts biotech generated $18.5 billion in revenues last year, a massive increase over the prior year when it recorded $803 million. (Liu, 3/10)

  • COVID-19 update for March 9: Here’s the latest on coronavirus in B.C.

    COVID-19 update for March 9: Here’s the latest on coronavirus in B.C.

    Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the coronavirus situation in B.C.

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    Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the coronavirus situation in B.C. for March 9, 2022.

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    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

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    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. COVID-19 Symptom Self-Assessment Tool


    LATEST NEWS on COVID-19 in B.C.

    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.

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    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.

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    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.

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    “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.

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    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.

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    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.

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    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.

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    Read full story here.

    Austria says it is putting its COVID-19 vaccine mandate on ice

    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.

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    —Reuters

    Remember COVID? Why many of us are suffering from brain fog

    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.

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    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.

    Read the full story here.



    DEATHS BY HEALTH AUTHORITY


    WHAT’S HAPPENING ACROSS CANADA


    LOCAL RESOURCES for COVID-19 information

    Here are a number of information and landing pages for COVID-19 from various health and government agencies.

    B.C. COVID-19 Symptom Self-Assessment Tool

    Vancouver Coastal Health – Information on Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19)

    HealthLink B.C. – Coronavirus (COVID-19) information page

    B.C. Centre for Disease Control – Novel coronavirus (COVID-19)

    Government of Canada – Coronavirus disease (COVID-19): Outbreak update

    World Health Organization – Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak

    –with files from The Canadian Press

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