COVID-19 safety complaints: What businesses have the most in Hampton Roads? – WAVY.com

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) Since mid-June, thousands of complaints about businesses violating Gov. Ralph Northams reopening restrictions have been reported to the Virginia Department of Health.

In Eastern Virginia, 36 percent of the regions complaints have been filed since Northam signaled hed be beefing up enforcement last week.

Since May 29, Virginians ages 10 and up have been required to wear face coverings inside all brick-and-mortar stores, salons and barbershops, on public transportation and anywhere 6 feet of social distancing isnt possible.

The state created anonline system to report violationsof face coverings and select phase 3 restrictions. The form allows a person to list the type of establishment in violation, the name, address, and information pertaining to the violation.

On Tuesday, it was revealed that since the pandemic began, nearly 1,700 complaints have been submitted concerning conditions at just over 1,000 businesses within the Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Portsmouth, Western Tidewater and Peninsula Health districts.

The majority of complaints were about restaurants, followed by grocery or convenience stores and then brick-and-mortar retail. The three violations the VDH is tracking are: whether face-coverings are being worn; if social distancing is being adhered to; and if the establishment is overcrowded.

10 On Your Side investigators sifted through the complaints provided by VDH to find the locations and businesses people reported most from the beginning of the pandemic to July 21.

Its important to clarify that complaints from citizens dont necessarily mean the claim was founded by the health department or any enforcement was carried out.

In the case of Macks Barge, they were forced to shut down. However, Barons Pub in Suffolk has remained open.

Dr. Todd Wagner, who oversees the Western Tidewater Health District, says no businesses have been shut down for non-compliance in that district.

Weve not needed to go there yet, Wagner said. Oftentimes, educating the business owner solves the problem.

Wagner said every complaint is looked at and once at least three separate complaints are filed, the health department staff calls the business.

The third complaint, Im going to call them and we are going to walk down the governors checklist, Wagner said. In some cases, we will also do secret shoppers.'

To encourage more businesses to comply, Chesapeake City Manager Chris Price said they are reaching out to businesses with a central message.

Regardless of what you believe, if you mask up, you are helping that small business, you are helping them stay open, you are helping them not going back to phase 2, Price said.

See the original post here:

COVID-19 safety complaints: What businesses have the most in Hampton Roads? - WAVY.com

Young artists drew a world where kindness defeats COVID-19 We animated it – UNHCR

Refugee superhero

Nomie, 16, France

This contest caught my attention for its goal to inspire hope and solidarity and for its ability to raise awareness while staying at home. My superhero is a woman inspired by a Sudanese refugee girl walking under the rain on one of your Instagram posts.

My art is not only for this girl but for all refugees, their unique stories, and their courage I admire. My superhero also has a metal leg which at first is an injury but now is her strongest power, as her fears are now strengths.

Nesime, 16, Greece (from Afghanistan)

It is true that the coronavirus is now a part of our lives, but we should not be worried. We should fight together to defeat the coronavirus.

I now live in Greece. People have an image of me in their minds, but I am who I am.

Mukah, 24, Cameroon

The COVID-19 outbreak and the crisis in my country motivated me to participate. My artwork is entitled Ray of Hope. A group of refugees on the left depict those stricken by war.

Through the donations of nations and individuals that care, UNHCR is able to help refugees. This comes to them as a ray of hope for a brighter future and shows that they matter to our world.

Alpha, 25, Kenya (from Democratic Republic of the Congo)

Im a Congolese refugee living in Kenya. I wanted to communicate through my painting that solidarity is the best way to protect the lives of everybody in the world from this pandemic, including refugees.

Maria, 23, Cyprus

The girl in the drawing offers love to the refugee boy. He in turn conveys the love to his father. The father is a doctor and offers his love to a patient suffering from the coronavirus.

Finally, the patient, who is now healthy, offers her love to her daughter, who is the girl who appears in the original cartoon.

Mayu, 16, Japan

My drawing shows two hands joining each other to protect a refugee boy, inspired by the flag of UNHCR. There is a dark sky full of conflicts and viruses in the back. But people have united to form a cage that blocks them.

The boy has a hole in his heart. But the hearts of people all over the world pour down to create a deep blue heart. There are so many he cant hold them. You can also imagine that the boy sends back the love.

The potential of a child is immeasurable.

Faida, 20, Rwanda

Refugees in a camp are looking forward to receiving a heart which symbolizes love.

Just for a moment, love is enough to solve their problems, and that is love which comes from everywhere thats why its coming from the sky.

As countries around the world went into COVID-19 lockdown, many young people reached out to UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, asking if there was a way to help while staying at home. We launched the 2020 Youth with Refugees Art Contest to give them a chance to use their creativity for a good cause. Within two months, we received 2,000 drawings from 100 countries.

The selection of the seven global winners whose drawings have been animated by Japanese studio SPEED inc.was made by a jury drawn from UNHCR high-profile supporters, refugee members of our Global Youth Advisory Council, artists, animation experts and our partners. UNHCR has also awarded five regional prizes, five prizes for cartoons and 20 special mentions. All participants have received a certificate of participation.

The rest is here:

Young artists drew a world where kindness defeats COVID-19 We animated it - UNHCR

After falling for months, Covid-19 hospitalizations in the US are nearing April’s peak – CNN

The reason is simple: the US is experiencing a surge in cases, with states such as Florida, Texas and California reporting thousands of new confirmed cases in recent weeks.

Adm. Brett Giroir, an official on the White House coronavirus task force, said on Monday there was "no question we are having a surge right now."

But while President Donald Trump, his allies and some Republican governors have pointed to increased testing as the reason, others have rightly pointed out that hospitalizations are not the result of testing, as testing does not send people to the hospital.

Only a serious illness like Covid-19 would do that.

"As rates of testing increase, we also are seeing increases in three other key indicators that suggest we are seeing a real increase in Covid infections," said Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, director of the Infectious Diseases Division at the University of Alabama School of Medicine. She cited hospitalization rates, positivity rates, and deaths, which are now increasing in 26 states.

Here's how the coronavirus is affecting hospitals in areas where it is spreading.

Hospitalizations in Florida

There are more than 9,500 people hospitalized in Florida and least 53 hospitals in 27 counties said they had no more beds in their ICUs, according to AHCA data.

Statewide, ICU bed availability stands at 15.98% -- that's "available adult ICU beds," according to AHCA data. On Monday, the available ICU bed count was 18.1%.

For comparison, in New York City, where the pandemic first took hold in the US, officials reported a positivity rate of just 2%.

Hospitalizations in California

California was the first state to issue a stay-at-home order on March 18.

Less than a month later, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said residents had "bent the curve," and the state started to phase out the early stages of its reopening plan in May.

Now, Los Angeles County has surpassed its record for daily hospitalizations for the fourth time in just the past week alone, according to Dr. Barbara Ferrer, the county's public health director.

Statewide, hospitalization rates and those in the intensive care unit are again reaching highs with increases of 1.9% and 0.7% respectively, according to the California Department of Public Health (CDPH).

Meanwhile, California's positivity rate over the past two weeks stands at 7.5%, which is slightly under the state's goal of remaining below 8%, according to CDPH data. More than 6.5 million tests have been performed to date.

"We opened up too soon," Anne Rimoin, an epidemiology professor at the University of California Los Angeles, told CNN. "We didn't have the virus totally under control."

California is fast approaching New York in total number of confirmed cases, and at this rate, could easily surpass New York to have the highest number of confirmed cases in the US.

"Whatever is done, states experiencing these increases in severe illness and with health care facilities under siege need help and a plan B, because plan A, reopening with lukewarm or no adherence to masks or social distancing clearly did not work," Marrazzo said.

Hospitalizations in Texas

Hospitals in Texas are facing an unprecedented wave of hospitalizations -- it is the only state in the US currently with more than 10,000 hospitalizations.

While that number is still comparably low to the record 18,825 hospitalized in New York during the peak of the pandemic, there are fears it could potentially be matched or surpassed at its current rate.

On Monday, President Trump acknowledged that the state, along with Florida, was dealing with a "flare up" in cases.

It's not the second wave -- it's the first

Officials and experts have long warned the public about bracing for a second wave, but the first wave has not truly ended and the spread of the virus has not even remotely been contained, some experts say.

"Some places never experienced an end of a first wave -- certainly in the South, we never really got below a baseline level since April," Marrazzo said. "A real second wave to me would be if someplace that has truly controlled spread, like New York or Connecticut, had another surge."

Marrazzo believes that the surge in hospitalizations can be attributed to one simple thing: The uncontrolled and sustained spread of infection in the community. Until the spread of the virus is contained, the rate of hospitalizations will continue to remain high.

"None of those currently experiencing these worrisome trends ever fulfilled the criteria laid out by the task force, which included a sustained downtrend in the percent positive tests for at least 2 weeks," Marrazzo said.

At least 27 states in the US have paused or rolled back their reopening plans due to the rising rates of infections. The math is simple: more infections will lead to more hospitalizations.

CNN's Ryan Browne, Erica Henry, Randi Kaye, Jason Kravarik, Christina Maxouris, Sarah Moon, Jenn Selva, Sara Sidner, Naomi Thomas, Ben Tinker and Holly Yan contributed to this report.

Excerpt from:

After falling for months, Covid-19 hospitalizations in the US are nearing April's peak - CNN

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-18-2020 – 5 PM – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

The West Virginia Department of Health andHuman Resources (DHHR)reports as of 5:00 p.m., on July 18, 2020, there have been 226,616 totalconfirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 4,922 totalcases and 100 deaths.

Inalignment with updated definitions from the Centers for Disease Control andPrevention, the dashboard includes probable cases which are individuals that havesymptoms and either serologic (antibody) or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to aconfirmed case) evidence of disease, but no confirmatory test.

CASESPER COUNTY (Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour (25/0), Berkeley (545/19), Boone(57/0), Braxton (7/0), Brooke (37/1), Cabell (224/7), Calhoun (5/0), Clay(15/0), Fayette (102/0), Gilmer (13/0), Grant (21/1), Greenbrier (76/0),Hampshire (48/0), Hancock (51/3), Hardy (48/1), Harrison (135/1), Jackson(149/0), Jefferson (264/5), Kanawha (489/12), Lewis (24/1), Lincoln (21/0),Logan (43/0), Marion (130/3), Marshall (80/1), Mason (27/0), McDowell (12/0),Mercer (69/0), Mineral (71/2), Mingo (50/2), Monongalia (693/15), Monroe(16/1), Morgan (20/1), Nicholas (20/1), Ohio (174/0), Pendleton (19/1),Pleasants (4/1), Pocahontas (37/1), Preston (89/25), Putnam (108/1), Raleigh(92/3), Randolph (196/2), Ritchie (3/0), Roane (12/0), Summers (3/0), Taylor(29/1), Tucker (7/0), Tyler (10/0), Upshur (31/2), Wayne (147/2), Webster(2/0), Wetzel (40/0), Wirt (6/0), Wood (193/10), Wyoming (7/0).

Ascase surveillance continues at the local health department level, it may revealthat those tested in a certain county may not be a resident of that county, oreven the state as an individual in question may have crossed the state borderto be tested. Such is the case of Cabell County in thisreport.

Please note that delays may be experiencedwith the reporting of information from the local health department to DHHR.

Please visit the dashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

Additional report:

Toincrease COVID-19 testing opportunities, the Governor's Office, the HerbertHenderson Office of Minority Affairs, WV Department of Health and HumanResources, WV National Guard, local health departments, and community partners todayprovided free COVID-19 testing for residents in counties with high minoritypopulations and evidence of COVID-19 transmission.

The testing resulted in 2,300 individuals tested: 559 inBerkeley County (two-day testing event); 717 in Jefferson County (two-daytesting event); and 1,024 Monongalia County (one-day testing event).Please note these are considered preliminary numbers.

Continue reading here:

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-18-2020 - 5 PM - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Covid-19 Live Updates and Analysis – The New York Times

The latest mask mandates came a day after Mr. Trump, who has long resisted wearing masks and at times even disparaged them, made his most robust call for wearing them yet, urging: When you can, use a mask. Some of the nations largest retail chains, including Walmart, Winn-Dixie and Whole Foods, have also moved to require customers to wear them.

Asked if he favored such mandates, Mr. Trump said Wednesday evening that it should be up to the governors I think all are suggesting if you want to wear a mask, you wear it, he said and that he would decide over the next 24 hours whether to require masks be worn on federal properties in Washington and at the White House.

But several more governors decided the time for masks had come.

Weve got to get this virus under control, Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio said Wednesday as he issued a statewide mask order that will take effect Thursday evening. Wearing a mask is going to make a difference.

We all want kids to go back to school, we want to see sports, we want to see a lot of different things, we want to have more opportunities in the fall, said Mr. DeWine, who had previously ordered people only in the states hardest-hit counties to wear masks. And to do that, its very important that all Ohioans wear a mask.

Gov. Eric Holcomb of Indiana, a Republican, said Wednesday that he would sign an order mandating masks in most public settings beginning Monday. As we continue to monitor the data, weve seen a concerning change in some of our key health indicators, he said on Twitter. Hoosiers have worked hard to help re-open our state & we want to remain open.

In Minnesota, Gov. Tim Walz signed an executive order Wednesday requiring residents to wear masks in indoor stores and other public indoor spaces beginning Saturday. Mr. Walz said that the state would distribute masks to people and businesses in underserved communities.

Minnesotas lieutenant governor, Peggy Flanagan, whose brother died of Covid-19, acknowledged that masks had turned into a political football, but said the mandate could prevent the virus from spreading. I just simply dont want anyone else to endure what my family has endured, she said.

Go here to read the rest:

Covid-19 Live Updates and Analysis - The New York Times

NIH leadership details unprecedented initiative to ramp up testing technologies for COVID-19 – National Institutes of Health

Media Advisory

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

RADx efforts seek to create capacity for 6 million daily tests by the end of 2020, address underserved populations.

In a paper in the New England Journal of Medicine, scientific leaders from the National Institutes of Health set forth a framework to increase significantly the number, quality and type of daily tests for detecting SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, and help reduce inequities for underserved populations that have been disproportionally affected by the disease. The authors describe the current testing landscape and explain the urgent need for nationwide deployment of low-complexity, point-of-care molecular diagnostics with rapid results. To fill this urgent need, the Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx) program was established in just five days following the announcement of $1.5 billion in federal stimulus funding in April 2020. RADx covers the entire life cycle of the target testing technologies, is tightly focused on timelines and outcomes, receives applications from small and large companies and is expressly focused on health disparities. While based at NIH, RADx is closely coordinating with the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health, the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, and the Department of Defense.

Current testing methods to diagnose COVID-19 detect either viral RNA or viral antigens. These tests are highly sensitive and specific when conducted in centralized laboratories with standardized protocols, but require a large amount of lab space, complex equipment, regulatory approvals for the laboratory operations and skilled technicians. Results may take hours to days, and samples often need transport to a central laboratory, furthering delays. During that time someone who is unknowingly carrying the virus may go on to infect others, instead of being quickly isolated. These issues highlight the need for reliable, rapid, point-of-care testing diagnostics.

RADx includes four major components to enable approximately 6 million daily tests in the United States by December 2020, many times the current daily testing rate. In the near term, RADx confronts the pandemic by expanding testing capacity by fall 2020 as the nation faces the beginning of seasonal flu. In the slightly longer-term RADx aims to produce additional innovative diagnostic technologies and strategies for making testing available to diverse, vulnerable and underserved populations.

Tromberg BJ, et al. Rapid scaling up of COVID-19 diagnostic testing in the United-States: the NIHs RADx Initiative. New England Journal of Medicine. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMsr2022263 (2020).

NIH Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., and National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering Director Bruce J. Tromberg, Ph.D., are available to provide comment upon request.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

###

Visit link:

NIH leadership details unprecedented initiative to ramp up testing technologies for COVID-19 - National Institutes of Health

San Diego County conceals assisted living homes with COVID-19 deaths – inewsource

Behind the doors of a spacious house in Chula Vista, Aury McDaniel was caring for six residents when the coronavirus pandemic struck this year.

By the end of May, five residents had tested positive for COVID-19 and three of them were dead.

McDaniel, 69, owns the assisted living facility and believes one of the aides contracted the virus from her husband, then brought it into the home before experiencing symptoms. By the time the worker felt sick after work one day, it was too late.

Then McDaniel contracted the virus. So did another one of her caregivers. So did all of her residents, except one who declined to be tested.

And so did McDaniels husband, who was rushed to the hospital with difficulty breathing. After about a month in the ICU, he is now recovering at the assisted living home in a private room. Hes taken up the bed of a 94-year-old resident who died from COVID-19.

The resident, Betty Gentry, was a veteran who served as a nurses assistant in World War II and the Korean War. She was taken to Sharp Chula Vista Medical Center in late April with a bad cough. Her son Chris called the hospital to tell his mom he loved her.

Betty, weak and hard of hearing, mustered the strength needed for a one-word reply: Same.

She died in her sleep on May 13 as a result of cardiac arrest, respiratory failure, pneumonia and COVID-19.

My mother died from this virus when she didnt need to die, Chris Gentry said. She didnt need to be in a situation where she was going to be contaminated by this.

Despite the tragedy at Aurys Home Care, theres no way for the public to see that the assisted living facility was affected by the virus.

Citing health privacy laws, the state has refused to name assisted living facilities with six or fewer beds that have had COVID-19 cases, including Aurys Home Care. San Diego County health officials wont release the names of any local facilities even those with seven or more beds that have been affected by the virus, despite frequent requests from reporters and outcry from advocates.

This whole issue of not disclosing names has not protected public safety, said Chris Murphy, executive director of Consumer Advocates for RCFE Reform. The San Diego nonprofit supports people living in Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly, more commonly referred to as assisted living facilities, where aides help residents with daily tasks such as feeding and bathing.

By contrast, data on COVID-19 in all of Californias nursing homes which provide medical services, are overseen by a different state department and follow more regulations is readily available online.

This is a public health issue, Murphy said. To not share the information with consumers when they have big decisions to make is, I think, irresponsible.

Three-quarters of Californias assisted living homes have six or fewer beds, excluding them from much of the public scrutiny during the pandemic.

The state Department of Social Services has published the names of 154 facilities with seven or more beds that have COVID-19 cases. In a statement, a spokesperson said another 96 smaller facilities have had cases but have not been named because it may allow the public to identify people who contracted the virus, which would violate health privacy laws.

Department spokesperson Jason Montiel said the agency carefully considered the privacy and security of residents at RCFEs, which are often residential homes.

That decision has effectively denied the public access to valuable information, said Eric Carlson, an attorney at the Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit Justice in Aging.

Knowledge about the presence of COVID-19 is just incredibly important at this point, Carlson said. Its not helpful for consumers and others to be deprived of that information.

On the county level, health officials have provided a range of reasons for hiding the names of elder care homes with COVID-19 cases. Public Health Officer Dr. Wilma Wooten has said the state already makes the information available. County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher has stated that publicizing them would discourage facilities from reporting honestly to the government about outbreaks.

And county spokesperson Sarah Sweeney told inewsource in an email it would violate the privacy rights of those with COVID-19.

San Diego County has 590 assisted living facilities but has refused to publish the names of those with COVID-19 cases. If publicized, this information could be used by advocates, families of the elderly and other members of the public to make informed decisions during the pandemic.

Murphy, the consumer advocate, called the health privacy explanation the most bogus thing Ive ever heard.

Nobody cares to know the name of the person in the facility of six beds that has COVID, she said. Nobody cares. What people care about is the public health issue of having COVID in the community and caregivers who are coming and going and where theyre being infected.

The county has also not released the number of local assisted living facilities with COVID-19 cases and deaths. Instead, officials combine these facilities with jails, immigration centers, homeless shelters and other residential locations as part of the ongoing data they publish on active outbreaks in congregate settings.

Plus, since cases exploded in late June, the county has only sporadically released that data to the public.

What the county is providing is useless information, Murphy said.

How is a family or community supposed to respond to that when they dont know what settings those are? she asked. I dont know. They have done an excellent, excellent job at masking and making the data opaque.

Neither the state nor the county would confirm the number of COVID-19 cases McDaniel said have occurred at her Chula Vista assisted living home or describe what steps the facility needed to take to continue operating after three people died. Two residents are currently living in the home, McDaniel said.

During the five years Betty Gentry lived at the facility, McDaniel said she looked after her like she would with her own mom, bringing the mother of four chamomile tea at night and lying in bed beside her to help her sleep.

She was so sweet, the caregiver said. The best resident I had in 20 years was Betty. I love her with all my heart.

McDaniel, an immigrant from Chile who worked as a nurses assistant before opening her assisted living home, said she was following state recommendations to frequently disinfect the building and anything that entered it but COVID-19 came anyway.

She was very shocked when her residents became ill, she said.

This is like Russian roulette, McDaniel said. Some people get it. You dont know how the virus enters your facility. If I publish my facility was affected by COVID, do you know what impression people are going to have? Careless.

McDaniels son Erik, the administrator of the assisted living facility, disagreed.

I think it should be accessible, he said. It should be something that you could find, that someone like you could easily discover.

Chris Gentry, Bettys son, said his family would not have sent his mother back to the Chula Vista facility if she had survived her hospital stay, and he wants others to know the home suffered from an outbreak.

I would definitely want to see that information from her home or any other assisted living home made public, he said.

Its critical so that when an outbreak happens, residents can be moved to a safer place, because its a breeding ground for people to get infected, he added.

Assisted living homes werent designed to face a pandemic.

Unlike skilled nursing homes, which have nurses on-site at all hours to help patients with acute healthcare problems, assisted living facilities follow a non-medical model and rely on aides to help residents with day-to-day tasks.

When the virus made landfall on the West Coast, assisted living facilities didnt have stockpiles of protective medical gear at the ready. They didnt have emergency infection control plans either, which nursing homes are required to prepare.

Nobody ever considered that personal protective equipment was going to be required for a pandemic experience like this, Murphy said.

But over the past decade, the line between these two types of elder care centers has blurred. Patients at nursing homes are staying longer, and residents at assisted living facilities have more underlying health conditions, meaning theyre especially vulnerable to COVID-19.

This is no independent living by any stretch of the imagination, said Carlson, the attorney with Justice in Aging.

Even so, because assisted living facilities mostly accept private insurance rather than Medicare and MediCal, they have less oversight than nursing homes do. The state Department of Social Services licenses and regulates them, but they face little scrutiny from federal and local governments, even though they are widespread: San Diego County has 590 assisted living centers, compared to 86 nursing homes.

The county has provided detailed instructions for nursing homes to help fight COVID-19 but has not released any specific rules for assisted living facilities. When asked about the countys role in aiding these facilities during the pandemic, a spokesperson told inewsource it does not regulate them.

Murphy said the county could be offering more support by improving access to testing and protective equipment.

I think its a real opportunity missed that the county of San Diego hasnt gone in like a little task force and said, Holy cow, weve got 600 facilities here in San Diego County, plus or minus 10 on any given day, she said. Were going to systematically go out in teams of three, and were going to saturate these ZIP codes. And were going to work through this ZIP code first, and then were going to move to the next ZIP code. And were going to do that from East County to the ocean.

And then were going to start over again.

It wasnt until June 26 that the state outlined instructions for screening people at the entrances to assisted living facilities for symptoms and regularly testing staff and residents. Even then, the department described these steps as guidance rather than requirements.

Raychell Jones, the director of patient care services at Sonata Hospice, said assisted living homes have been following different rules. Some have allowed her team of San Diego healthcare workers to enter during the pandemic, but others havent.

Some assisted living said yes, as long as you have the PPE, and some assisted living said no, absolutely not, Jones said. We have a handful of facilities that have not allowed anybody in their facilities for greater than 90 days.

Since information isnt easily available online, especially for smaller assisted living homes, industry experts said that direct knowledge of whats happening behind the scenes in these homes is key.

Because of the fact that weve stepped foot into all of these places, and oftentimes we know the owners on a personal basis, we just flat out ask, Do you have any positive COVID cases? And theyll tell us yes, I do. Or no, we dont, said Kie Copenhaver, co-owner of San Diegos CarePatrol franchise.

Copenhaver helps families find the right elder care homes for people in need.

We just believe that full transparency is the best for everybody involved, she said.

Assisted living facilities have been scrambling to mitigate the spread of the virus, but limited access to masks and tests has presented challenges.

More than half of them have less than a two-week supply of N-95 masks and gowns, according to a letter sent by the National Center for Assisted Living to governors on July 14.

The letter, co-authored with the American Health Care Association, urged state leaders to help nursing homes and assisted living facilities acquire more protective gear and improve the turnaround time for COVID-19 test results.

Read more about the coronavirus outbreak in San Diego County and the response by local leaders and public health officials to the pandemic.

As equipment and testing shortages continue, cases at assisted living homes are escalating. It took a month for the number of COVID-19 cases at Californias facilities to jump from 1,000 to 2,000, according to state data. It took another month to hit 3,000, which occurred in late June. But it only took two more weeks to reach 4,000 on July 7.

As of July 20, the states assisted living facilities have now accumulated more than 5,000 cases and suffered from 539 coronavirus deaths.

As you might expect, our member communities have made significant changes to create the safest environment possible for both residents and staff during the pandemic, Sally Michael, president and CEO of the California Assisted Living Association, said in a statement.

As guidance has changed, assisted living providers have stayed in step, implementing new protocols and updating procedures as circumstances and science have evolved, she added.

In San Diego County, at least 202 residents and 196 staff have tested positive for COVID-19, state data shows.

McDaniel said she and her workers in Chula Vista wear face coverings, but when her caregiver carried the virus into the facility, she didnt have access to the highly protective N-95 masks common in hospital settings.

She said she had no way to stop her employee from contracting the virus from her husband or bringing it into the building.

If I have to do it again, Im going to select the caregivers who are not married, she said with a laugh.

Ramona Rhoads, an 89-year-old with dementia, was the third person at Aurys Home Care to die from COVID-19. Her daughter Tammy Wahl said the caregivers worked hard to protect residents from infection.

Its very heartbreaking this happened, both to our loved ones and to Aury, Wahl said. She was taking precautions before I was even taking coronavirus seriously.

McDaniel cut back on staff and worked overtime to avoid having too much traffic in and out of the facility. She also kept families informed of the outbreak and what steps were being taken to control it, Wahl said.

When Wahl was searching for a home that would provide the close attention and care her mother needed, she discovered that McDaniels facility stood out.

When I stepped into Aurys Home Care, I knew something was different, she said. Aury is a true caregiver. The care I feel my mom got there was very loving.

But the family of Betty Gentry, who lived a few doors down from Wahls mother, thinks more could have been done to save her.

Gentrys daughter, Bonne Bandolas, said the worker who became ill should have taken more precautions, since she knew her husband was sick.

I think it is easy for people to think that a loved one is safer and more sheltered in a smaller living situation, Bandolas and her husband, Banjo, wrote in an email. However, we found out the hard way that all it takes is one person disregarding protocols to infect the entire household with the COVID-19 virus.

The caregivers husband eventually died from COVID-19.

At the time the virus entered the Chula Vista home, staff didnt have their temperatures taken when they arrived for work and werent regularly tested for the virus, but neither was recommended or required by the state. Since then, the Department of Social Services has advised assisted living centers to do both.

These smaller places need to have stiffer regulations, so people dont die like this, said Betty Gentrys son Chris.

Betty Gentry is survived by four children, two grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

I want my mothers death to have some kind of meaning and maybe change the way they proceed from here on out to save elderly patients lives when a virus like this comes, Chris Gentry said. Because this isnt going to be the last time this is going to happen.

We'll let you know when big things happen. Email address:

Original post:

San Diego County conceals assisted living homes with COVID-19 deaths - inewsource

Faces Of COVID-19: Eleonore Anderson, 93, Remembered As A Tough Cookie – CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) Eleonore Anderson was known for her quilting talent and her pride of Polish traditions.She died on Sunday from complications related to COVID-19 at the age of 93.

WCCO continues our Faces of COVID-19 series with a loyal friend and mother who grew lonely as the pandemic wore on.

A two-time cancer survivor, Eleonore was a fighter from the start. She was born on the East side of St. Paul, and she became a secretary, sharing part of her paycheck with her family through World War II.

She was a tough cookie, Eleonores daughter, Barb, said.

Polish recipes of perogies and sausage were a staple in their household.

I guess in our family and Barbs food is love, Mark Anderson, Eleonores son-in-law said.

It brought everyone together, Barb added.

Eleonore raised Barb and her five siblings while working for the Minnesota Revisors Office in St. Paul, the publisher of state laws and statutes.When she retired, she traveled with her husband, Howard. She was widowed, and Eleonore moved to an assisted living facility in Roseville three years ago.

She got sick in February with a really bad cough, which by May she had a really bad phenomena and a high fever, Barb recalled.

Her first COVID-19 test came back negative.

Then a week later (she) was re-tested and it was COVID, Barb said.

Eleonore was moved to hospice care. That was the first time in months her family could see her face-to-face.

That was truly the hardest with all of this, was not being able to be with her, Barb said.

Eleonore again fought back and actually beat the virus. But her daughter believes the damage had been done.

It was after that we saw a very quick decline and within about a month she passed away, she said.

Her family will hold a small funeral Thursday, with the quilts Eleonore spent countless hours on draped over church pews.

Were trying our best to make it nice but its not how we would want to do it, Barb said.

The Andersons hope well think of those like Eleonore moving forward, and follow the guidelines to give people like her more time.

Its all really important, Barb said.

If youd like to share any memories of someone youve lost to COVID-19, send an e-mail to tips@wcco.com.

View original post here:

Faces Of COVID-19: Eleonore Anderson, 93, Remembered As A Tough Cookie - CBS Minnesota

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-16-2020 – 5 PM – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR)reports as of 5:00 p.m., on July 16, 2020, there have been 219,052total confirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 4,657 totalcases and 99 deaths.

In alignment with updated definitions fromthe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the dashboard includes probablecases which are individuals that have symptoms and either serologic (antibody)or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to a confirmed case) evidence of disease, but noconfirmatory test.

CASESPER COUNTY (Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour (24/0), Berkeley (536/19), Boone(50/0), Braxton (5/0), Brooke (31/1), Cabell (202/7), Calhoun (4/0), Clay(14/0), Fayette (95/0), Gilmer (13/0), Grant (21/1), Greenbrier (74/0),Hampshire (44/0), Hancock (47/3), Hardy (48/1), Harrison (133/1), Jackson(148/0), Jefferson (257/5), Kanawha (463/12), Lewis (23/1), Lincoln (15/0),Logan (40/0), Marion (120/3), Marshall (74/1), Mason (26/0), McDowell (12/0),Mercer (67/0), Mineral (68/2), Mingo (39/2), Monongalia (633/15), Monroe(14/1), Morgan (19/1), Nicholas (19/1), Ohio (162/0), Pendleton (17/1),Pleasants (4/1), Pocahontas (37/1), Preston (88/21), Putnam (96/1), Raleigh(85/3), Randolph (193/2), Ritchie (3/0), Roane (12/0), Summers (2/0), Taylor(26/1), Tucker (7/0), Tyler (10/0), Upshur (31/2), Wayne (141/2), Webster(1/0), Wetzel (38/0), Wirt (6/0), Wood (191/10), Wyoming (7/0).

As case surveillance continues at thelocal health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certaincounty may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individualin question may have crossed the state border to be tested.Such is the case of Logan County in this report.

Pleasenote that delays may be experienced with the reporting of information from thelocal health department to DHHR.

Please visit thedashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

Continued here:

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-16-2020 - 5 PM - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Contact Tracing, a Key Way to Slow COVID-19, Is Badly Underused by the U.S. – Scientific American

There is no coronavirus vaccine. Medications for COVID-19 are still being tested. Across the U.S., states that once acted as if the pandemic was going away are setting new daily records for infections, hospitalizations and deaths. There is one proved tool that has helped other countries stem the pandemic, but in the U.S. it is severely underused; the Trump administration tried to cut financing for it from the latest pandemic relief bill, say reports this week. And it often meets resistance from the people it is intended to help. The tool is called contact tracing.

The tracing approach is built on a simple idea: When someone tests positive for the new coronavirus or becomes sick with COVID-19, you find all the people the infected person came into contact with, because they, too, may be infected. Then you help them quarantine for two weeksalmost everyone who becomes sick will show symptoms within 14 daysso they do not accidentally spread the virus any further. The goal is to stop the chain of transmission, says Emily Gurley, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, who has created afree online course to train contact tracers.

Contact tracing is a tried-and-true method that epidemiologists have been using for decades to tackle everything from foodborne illnesses to sexually transmitted diseases, as well as recent outbreaks of SARS and Ebola. Its a great tool for bringing an epidemic into the suppression or containment phase, says special pathogens expert Syra Madad of NYC Health + Hospitals, which leads New York CitysTest & Trace Corps contact-tracing program.

Large-scale contact-tracing programs in places such as South Korea and Germany have been instrumental in suppressing the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2. Within days of detecting its first case on January 20,South Korea created an emergency response committee that quickly developed wide-scale virus testing, followed by an extensive scaling up of the nations network of contact tracers. Germany similarly committed resources to mobilizing a tracing workforce. Inbothcountries, cases have dropped dramatically.

By contrast, tracing efforts lag in the U.S., where COVID-19 cases hit record highs in mid-July and which leads the world with more than 3.7 million infections and more than 140,000 deaths. The country has no national strategy for contact tracing, says Adriane Casalotti, chief of government and public affairs at the National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO). Instead the federal government has said to states, do as you wish, she adds. This week, the White House moved to block $25 billion for tracing and testing in the latest pandemic relief bill being considered by Congress, according to news reports, contending that states already have funding.

Yet many states do not have the money to start large tracing programs. In fact, state public health departments across the U.S. were drastically underfunded even before the pandemic. Since 2008, local health departments have lost close to 25 percent of their employees.

The result is a patchwork of programs with insufficient money and uneven implementation. NACCHO estimates that, given national levels of confirmed cases, the nation needs at least100,000 contact tracers. And that number would cost local, state, territorial, Native American and federal public health agencies at least $3.7 billion. So far, however, no federal dollars have been specifically allocated to contact tracing or to any federal contact tracing programs, Casalotti says.

A look at some individual states makes it clear that the workforce has not reached the scale required in several places. For instance, Arkansas recently announced plans to hire350 new contact tracers, which would bring its total to about 900. But based on the number of current cases, the state actually needs 3,722 tracers, according to acontact-tracing-workforce estimator developed by the Fitzhugh Mullan Institute for Health Workforce Equity at George Washington University. In Florida, where the pandemic is surging terribly, the same estimator calculates that 291 tracers per 100,000 residents are needed. Yet as of early July, the state had onlyseven per 100,000. And cases of COVID-19 surged in Texas, even as contact tracers working for the Texas Department of State Health Services were taken off the job.

Some states and local governments have increased operations. Massachusetts has launched a large effort, and New York and Washington State have also mobilized strong programs, says Margaret Bourdeaux, a physician and research director of global public policy at Harvard Medical School. In California, San Francisco has called up city employees, such as librarians, to join its tracing workforce.

Yet making contact-tracing programs successful means more than just boots on the ground. Tracers are trained to help people think through who they might have been in contact with. Though numerous phone apps now aid in identifying potential contacts, technology cant solve the problem of convincing someone they should pick up the phone when a contact tracer calls, says Mary Gray, a social scientist at Microsoft Research, who also has affiliations with Harvard University and Indiana University Bloomington. It is the reason we are failingbecause we keep searching for something else we can buy or put into place. We have not conceded how deeply human this process is.

Contact tracing is built on trust. The first call from a tracer is the beginning of a relationship, Gurley says. Its not just explaining what someone needs to do; its also explaining why. From there, the contact tracer will follow up every day to make sure the contact is getting the support that person needs to maintain self-isolation. Contact tracers have to be good at building rapport, Gurley says.

The U.S.s divisive political climate can make this process challenging. The systemic racism that has disproportionately affected people in minority groups with the virus may also make them more hesitant to disclose their personal information, Madad says. With all the political rhetoric about immigration, people in [immigrant] communities may be afraid to talk.

Elizabeth Perez is bilingual in Spanish and English and works as a contact tracer in San Francisco. She mostly speaks with people in the Latino community, and she says that doing so in Spanish can help her build trust. Ramss Escobedo, who works in the same program, says that sometimes individuals worry about the information being collected. Occasionally, reluctant people give out incorrect phone numbers, and the team has to do some detective work to track down potential infected cases.

New York Citys program has approached this problem by recruiting contact tracers with diverse backgrounds from within local communities, Madad says. More than half of the contact tracers in her program are from the hardest-hit zip codes. Theyre part of that community, she says.

One of the biggest challenges is misinformation being disseminated on social media. BuzzFeed News reports that Facebook posts and YouTube videos spreading hoaxes and lies about contact tracers have received hundreds of thousands of views. Some of these posts compare tracers to Nazi secret police and falsely say they take people to internment camps. Others suggest they should be greeted with guns. Contact tracers report they have faced death threats.

The next action that comes after a tracer has identified a potential infected persongetting that individual to adhere to quarantinehas proved exceptionally difficult in the U.S. For stopping the spread of a virus, however, isolation is absolutely key. You can do the contact tracing all you want. But if youre not also providing these support services people need to isolate, it wont work, Madad says. No one is going to quarantine for 14 days if that means losing a job and income or abandoning caregiving.

That fact is why the availability of services to support people in quarantine, such as housing, childcare, income or meal services, can make or break a contact-tracing program, Madad adds. For example,South Korea transformed existing public and private facilities into temporary isolation wards and has ensured that people quarantined via contact tracing receive a twice-daily check in from a public health worker, as well as deliveries of food and other necessities.

In the U.S., these kinds of resources have not been offered, by and large. New York City has set up quarantine hotels where people can go, and so have a few other localities. But efforts such as these are not widespread, and they are not enough tomeet the needs of every community.

At this point in the pandemic, that shortfall is a desperate problem, according to Harvards Bourdeaux. We are looking into the abyss, she says. Contact tracing at the large scale that is needed might seem overwhelming, but what other choice do we have? Bourdeaux asks. You cant have an economy, you cant have open schools, you cant have normal life if the epidemic is raging and uncontrolled. Until we have effective medications and a vaccine, she says, testing, contact tracing and quarantine are the most effective plague stoppers in existence.

Read more about the coronavirus outbreak from Scientific American here. And read coverage from our international network of magazines here.

Originally posted here:

Contact Tracing, a Key Way to Slow COVID-19, Is Badly Underused by the U.S. - Scientific American

Group calls for standardized data collection to better track Covid-19 – STAT

In a new review of the Covid-19 response across the country, a group of public health experts conclude that critical data the public needs to assess their risks and tailor their behaviors is often unavailable.

The assessment, released Tuesday by the nongovernmental organization Resolve to Save Lives, calls on states and communities to start recording and sharing standardized data on 15 key metrics, so that people and health departments can get a clearer picture of how the response to the pandemic is working in their area.

Tom Frieden, president and CEO of Resolve, which is an initiative of the global health organization Vital Strategies, said there is currently both a glut of data and a scarcity of information a situation that needs to change if the country has any hope of gaining ground against the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

advertisement

People are just drowning in case counts and testing numbers, and theyre not seeing whats really important, Frieden told STAT in an interview in which he explained the thinking behind the plan.

More important than the sheer number of Covid-19 tests administered is the number of tests processed within 48 hours, said Frieden, a former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Many test results he estimated maybe as many as three-quarters of tests conducted are processed days after the swabs were taken. That tells the tested person whether they were infected at the time of testing, but cant be used as an indicator of their current Covid infection status.

advertisement

Other metrics that should be commonly collected and reported, the group said, include daily Covid-19 hospitalization rates per capita in each community and state; the percentage of licensed hospital beds occupied by confirmed or suspected Covid patients; the percentage of new cases among quarantined people; and the percentage of new cases with a known epidemiological link to previously confirmed cases.

Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesotas Center for Infectious Diseases Research and Policy, said the type of standardized data collection and reporting that Resolve is proposing is a key tool for combatting the spread of the virus.

I dont know how you can judge where youre at if you dont have this kind of information, he said. I think the informations not just timely for whats happening today but it allows you then to plan for what you must do to bring those numbers down tomorrow.

Frieden acknowledged some state officials may have at least some of the information, but it isnt being posted because they are afraid to share it for fear of being blamed for the sorry state of the pandemic response. A lot of these indicators, if we reported them, would be bad, he said.

But Frieden said the public has the right to know these key facts, many of which need to be broken down by age, sex, race, and ethnicity.

If and I admit its an if if we can get states to report this, then were going to be in much better shape. And in the absence of strong national leadership, at least being on the same page is something that can help us get our response to a much better shape, he said.

What gets measured can get managed. And what gets measured and reported publicly, can absolutely get better, he said. Right now, were not managing this response well at all.

Asked why an NGO, not the CDC which he led through the 2009 flu pandemic is trying to rally states to collect standardized, useful data, Frieden sighed.

We are where we are.

Read the original post:

Group calls for standardized data collection to better track Covid-19 - STAT

COVID-19 UPDATE: Gov. Justice reports active church outbreaks in 7 counties; will hold meeting to discuss reopening plan for colleges and universities…

ACTIVE CHURCH OUTBREAKS IN SEVEN COUNTIES During Mondays briefing, Gov. Justice announced that several new church-related outbreaks of COVID-19 have been identified at places of worship in Grant, Logan, and Wood counties.

Last week, the Governor announced that additional church-related outbreaks had already been identified in Boone, Kanawha, Raleigh, and Taylor counties.

Between all seven of these counties combined, these outbreaks account for about 75 total cases.

Weve absolutely got to stay on top of this with all in us, Gov. Justice said. Please know that the church setting is the ideal setting to spread this virus.

The Governor urged all West Virginians in church settings to follow the States safety guidelines, including using every other pew, maintaining social distancing, and wearing face coverings.

I know these things are really difficult to do, Gov. Justice said. But, for right now, they have to be done because, if we dont, all were going to do is lose more people.

We could very well lose a lot of our grandmothers and grandfathers people who have so much wisdom to still continue to pass on we absolutely dont need to be losing these great West Virginians.

More:

COVID-19 UPDATE: Gov. Justice reports active church outbreaks in 7 counties; will hold meeting to discuss reopening plan for colleges and universities...

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-18-2020 – 10 AM – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of 10:00 a.m., on July 18,2020, there have been 225,385 total confirmatory laboratory results receivedfor COVID-19, with 4,894 total cases and 100 deaths.

In alignment with updated definitions fromthe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the dashboard includes probablecases which are individuals that have symptoms and either serologic (antibody)or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to a confirmed case) evidence of disease, but noconfirmatory test.

CASESPER COUNTY (Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour (25/0), Berkeley (545/19), Boone(57/0), Braxton (7/0), Brooke (37/1), Cabell (226/7), Calhoun (4/0), Clay(15/0), Fayette (101/0), Gilmer (13/0), Grant (21/1), Greenbrier (76/0),Hampshire (46/0), Hancock (51/3), Hardy (48/1), Harrison (135/1), Jackson(149/0), Jefferson (263/5), Kanawha (486/12), Lewis (24/1), Lincoln (20/0),Logan (43/0), Marion (130/3), Marshall (80/1), Mason (27/0), McDowell (12/0),Mercer (68/0), Mineral (70/2), Mingo (49/2), Monongalia (686/15), Monroe(14/1), Morgan (20/1), Nicholas (19/1), Ohio (173/0), Pendleton (19/1), Pleasants(4/1), Pocahontas (37/1), Preston (89/25), Putnam (105/1), Raleigh (92/3),Randolph (196/2), Ritchie (3/0), Roane (12/0), Summers (2/0), Taylor (28/1),Tucker (7/0), Tyler (10/0), Upshur (31/2), Wayne (145/2), Webster (2/0), Wetzel(40/0), Wirt (6/0), Wood (193/10), Wyoming (7/0).

As case surveillance continues at thelocal health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certaincounty may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individualin question may have crossed the state border to be tested.

Pleasenote that delays may be experienced with the reporting of information from thelocal health department to DHHR.

Please visit thedashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

Read the original:

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-18-2020 - 10 AM - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

NFL and players union agree on daily Covid-19 testing to start training camps – CNN

In a league-wide memo obtained by CNN, the NFL outlines the screening and testing guidelines now in place. Coronavirus testing will commence at the start of training camps and last for two weeks. Results from those weeks of testing will dictate a move to test every other day.

The memo says that players are required to test for coronavirus twice before entering team facilities for the first time. Tests must be separated by at least 72 hours.

On Monday, Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL's chief medical officer, outlined the guidelines on a conference call with select media including ESPN.

If after two weeks of daily testing the results for all team members are at or below 5%, testing will shift to every other day.

"Our union has been pushing for the strongest testing and tracing protocols to keep our players safe," according to a statement from the NFL Players Association confirming the agreement.

"The testing protocols we agreed to are one critical factor that will help us return to work safely and gives us the best chance to play and finish the season."

Possibly zero preseason games

Also on Monday, the NFL offered the player's union the opportunity to play zero preseason games, according to a source familiar with the negotiations between the league and the union.

According to the source, the league started at four, which is the custom number of preseason games played per team. That offering then went down to two games, and then to none. The union has not accepted the offer, the source says.

"Precise points on the discussions between the NFL and NFLPA:

"1. NFL didn't offer or give up preseason games for us. They had the right to set those (or not) under the CBA already.

"2. NFL didn't "concede" on health and safety issues. We implemented the best protocols together.

"Of course our union had to advocate hard for all of these protections because everyone wants to ... start and - most importantly - finish a full season, but the fact is we all conceded to a virus that is still rampant in our country. Crassly put: no protections, no games, no $," Atallah wrote.

The players are being encouraged to wear "non-intrusive wearable sensor technology" that the league says will measure respiratory functions, heart rate, and sleep patterns, according to the document. Players are advised to utilize the offered antibody testing but will not be required to participate.

Team training camps are set to begin July 28.

Read more:

NFL and players union agree on daily Covid-19 testing to start training camps - CNN

Coronavirus daily news updates, July 21: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world – Seattle Times

With the coronavirus crisis worsening in the United States and emergency relief about to expire, President Donald Trump is resuming daily virus briefings and talking with top Republicans in Congress about the next step for another COVID-19 aid package.

Meanwhile, researchers at the University of Washington say theyve developed a promising vaccine candidate.

Throughout Tuesday, on this page, well be posting Seattle Times journalists updates on the outbreak and its effects on the Seattle area, the Pacific Northwest and the world. Updates from Monday can be foundhere, and all our coronavirus coverage can be foundhere.

Only a tiny fraction of the population in many parts of the United States had antibodies to the novel coronavirus as of mid-May, indicating most people remain highly susceptible to the pathogen, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The agency also said the number of actual coronavirus infections is probably 10 times higher than reported cases, confirming its previous estimate of a vast undercount. There are about 3.8 million reported cases; the CDC data suggests the actual number of infections could be 38 million.

The data appeared Tuesday in JAMA Internal Medicine as the nation struggles with a wily pathogen that can produce no symptoms at all, or sicken and kill 138,000 Americans have died of the coronavirus to date.

Large swaths of the nation are in turmoil as many communities debate how to reopen schools this fall, wrestle with rising virus-related hospitalizations and, in some cases, roll back restrictions to restart a flailing economy.

Read the story here.

The Washington Post

A majority of registered voters in Washington who were polled this month remain wary in the face of COVID-19, with nearly three-quarters saying they wear masks regularly and 59% saying that any reopening should be at least paused for the time being.

According to the Crosscut/Elway pollgauging public opinion on pandemic response and policing, which was conducted by phone and online earlier this month, 35% of participants said they or someone they know personally has contracted coronavirus, which causes COVID-19.

Nearly 50% of the respondents said they are not yet back to their normal work routine and more than 30% reported wearing a mask at all times in public, in- and out-of-doors; 43% said they wear a mask in public when indoors or unable to social distance outdoors.

People are taking this pandemic seriously, said pollster Stuart Elway.

Questioned on politics, 49% of the 402 respondents gave Gov. Jay Inslee positive marks for his handling of the pandemic while the same number viewed his record negatively. About 45% of those polled said they intend to vote for Inslee and 14% said they favor GOP candidate Loren Culp.

According to the poll, released on Tuesday, a little over 25% want to reimpose state restrictions to contain the virus, and a third said the state should put reopening on hold to see how things develop. However, 38% said the state should continue reopening, and learn to live with the virus.

Christine Clarridge

Residents from 31 states including Washington must now quarantine for 14 days when arriving in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, as dozens of states experience rising positive COVID-19 rates.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo acknowledged Tuesday that the quarantine is imperfect, but said the quarantine could help protect the states against the risk of increased spread. The list of states no longer includes Minnesota, but now includes Alaska, Delaware, Indiana, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, Virginia and Washington.

The infection rate across the country is getting worse, not better, Cuomo said in a conference call with reporters.

New York, New Jersey and Connecticut last month issued a joint travel advisory that requires a 14-day quarantine period for travelers from a list that now includes 31 states, including Texas and Florida, where COVID-19 appears to be spreading.

The advisory includes states if their seven-day rolling average of positive tests exceeds 10%, or if the number of positive cases exceeds 10 per 100,000 residents.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

As the world continues to watch the number of COVID-19 cases increase (and daily records being broken), patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis, aka chronic fatigue syndrome, want to tell those recovering from coronavirus to listen up.

COVID-19 patients may be at risk of developing the neuroimmune condition ME/CFS, which depletes ones energy. ME/CFS, which leaves 75% of those affected unable to work and 25% homebound or bedridden, impacts 15 million to 30 million people worldwide, and symptoms may be triggered by an infection, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, says some people diagnosed with coronavirus are showing symptoms that resemble those seen in ME/CFS patients.

The ME/CFS community is saying: 80% of us had some sort of virus and that went away, and were still stuck with all of these symptoms, said Sanna Stella, an Oak Park resident who was diagnosed with ME/CFS. If youre a patient, you really have to listen to your body and not all those shoulds we tell ourselves. Because if you keep pushing, for some of these patients, it really will make things a lot worse.

Read the story here.

Darcel Rockett, Chicago Tribune

UW Medicine laid off about 100 staffers, the hospital system announced Monday.

The layoffs include those who work in outpatient therapy, laboratory medicine, population health, enterprise records, information technology and voluntary psychiatric care.

UW Medicine previously announced the closure of Seven North, its voluntary psychiatric care unit.

This was a difficult decision, and we sincerely regret the hardship this will create for the employees affected by these layoffs, said Lisa Brandenburg, president of UW Medicine Hospitals & Clinics. As a critical provider of healthcare in the Pacific Northwest, we recognize the need to allocate resources in new ways so that we can continue to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic and meet all of the health needs of our patients.

COVID-19s disruptions, including the cancellation of many elective procedures early in the pandemic, have caused financial hardship for the health care system.

The organization sent furlough notices to some 5,500 staffers in May in an effort to shore up its budget.

Evan Bush

The new coronavirus has been present in Washington state since at least January, when a Snohomish County man received the United States first known diagnosis.

Yet, public health officials and researchers still dont know how many people have been infected because many people who have the virus show mild symptoms or, in some cases, no symptoms at all.

The state Department of Health (DOH) and UW Medicine are setting out to discover how prevalent COVID-19 is across the state by studying the blood of Washingtonians.

Were still trying to really understand, at a state level, wheres the virus really been? How many people have had it? And how does that vary between different parts of the state? said Dr. Keith Jerome, head of the virology division in UW Medicines Department of Laboratory Medicine.

The survey is expected to provide a clearer picture of whether certain populations for example, racial and ethnic groups, or people working particular types of jobs have been infected at higher rates, Jerome said.

Serological surveys detect whether people have antibodies that develop in response to the body fighting an infection. Specimens for an antibody test are collected by drawing blood, as opposed to the nasal swabs used for diagnostic tests. Antibodies can develop five days to two weeks after symptoms stop.

The study is also intended to provide data to inform policymakers public health decisions as cases of COVID-19 continue to mount.

Washington state saw its largest one-day total on July 16, with 1,267 new cases. As of Monday, 47,743 people in the state had been infected, including 1,453 who have died.

Read the story here.

Ryan Blethen

Floridas skyrocketing coronavirus death rate is now higher than any other state, edging out Texas, which has about 25% more people.

Florida recorded another 134 deaths Tuesday, bringing its daily average for the past week to 115, topping the 112 deaths a day Texas has reported during that same time, Associated Press statistics show. A month ago, Florida was averaging 33 coronavirus deaths a day.

Overall, 5,317 people have died in Florida from COVID-19 since March 1 and nearly 370,000 have tested positive for the disease. About 19% of tests have returned positive in Florida over the last week, compared to 10% a month ago and 2.3% in late May.

The state reported that an additional 517 people have been admitted to hospitals with the disease.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has a scheduled news conference Tuesday afternoon to discuss the outbreak.

The Associated Press

The Justice Department on Tuesday accused two Chinese hackers of stealing hundreds of millions of dollars of trade secrets from companies across the world and more recently targeting firms developing a vaccine for the coronavirus.

The indictment, which officials expected to discuss at a news conference, says the hackers in recent months had researched vulnerabilities in the computer networks of companies publicly known for their work in developing vaccines and treatments.

The indictment includes charges of trade-secret theft and wire-fraud conspiracy against the hackers, who federal prosecutors say stole information not only for themselves but also details that they knew would be of interest and value to the Chinese government.

The charges are believed to be the first accusing foreign hackers of targeting scientific innovation related to the coronavirus, though U.S. and Western intelligence agencies have warned for months about those efforts.

Last week, for instance, authorities in the U.S., Canada and the United Kingdom accused a hacking group with links to Russian intelligence with trying to target research on the disease.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

More than one in five people in Delhi have been infected with the coronavirus, according to a study released Tuesday, indicating that most cases in the Indian capital region have gone undetected.

The National Center for Disease Control tested 21,387 people selected randomly across Delhi, the state that includes New Delhi, and found that 23.48% had antibodies to the virus. Adjusting for false positives and negatives, it estimated that 22.86% of the population had been infected by the virus, Dr. Sujeet Kumar Singh, who heads the institute, said in a news conference Tuesday.

Delhi, with a population of 29 million, has officially reported 123,747 cases and 3,663 deaths. The study, however, indicates more than 6.6 million likely cases, with most not identified or tested.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

As pressure mounts for teachers to return to their classrooms this fall, concerns about health risks from the coronavirus are pushing many toward alternatives, including career changes, as others mobilize to delay school reopenings in hard-hit areas.

Among those opting for early retirement is Liza McArdle, a 50-year-old high school language instructor in New Boston, Michigan. She considered the health risks and the looming instructional challenges trying to teach French and Spanish with a mask obstructing her enunciation, or perhaps a return to virtual learning and decided it was time to go.

Were always expected to give, give, give. Youre a teacher. You have to be there for the kids, McArdle said. And now its like, Oh, yeah, now you have to put your life on the line for the kids because they need to be in school.

Teachers unions have begun pushing back on what they see as unnecessarily aggressive timetables for reopening. The largest unions say the timing should be guided by whether districts have the ability and funding to implement protocols and precautions to protect students and teachers, even if that means balking at calls from President Donald Trump to resume in-person instruction.

On Monday, a teachers union filed a lawsuit to block the reopening of schools in Florida, where state officials have ordered school districts to reopen campuses as an option unless local health officials deem that to be unsafe. Educators in several cities have called for the school year to start with remote instruction. Some have joined demonstrations in Arizona, where three teachers sharing a classroom during summer school tested positive for the virus and one died.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

A judge has recused herself from hearing a lawsuit filed by Georgias governor to get Atlanta to stop enforcing a mask mandate and other measures related to the COVID-19 pandemic, causing a hearing scheduled for Tuesday to be canceled, according to the attorney generals office.

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Kelly Ellerbe had scheduled a hearing for 11 a.m. Tuesday on Gov. Brian Kemps emergency motion. But a spokeswoman for Attorney General Chris Carr said the hearing is not happening because Ellerbe is recusing herself. Further details were not immediately available.

The state plans to seek another emergency hearing once the case has been assigned to another judge, Carr spokeswoman Katie Byrd said in an email.

Atlanta is among at least 15 local jurisdictions statewide that has ordered people to wear masks in many public places to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. In a lawsuit filed Thursday against Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and the members of the City Council, Kemp argues that local leaders do not have the authority to impose measures that are more or less restrictive than those in his executive orders.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

Kris Higginson

Some of the best recipes are the oldest ones. One such classic, burnished by time: this summery lemon cake.

You need only five ingredients to make your own delicious flour tortillas. Seattle teen chef Sadie Davis-Suskind explains how.

"Marrying Millions": Nonie Creme is rich, Reese Record is not, and the Seattle couple is headed for reality TV. Age and wealth gaps aren't issues for them, Creme says, but filming the show has had its moments.

Kris Higginson

UW researchers say theyve developed a promising vaccine candidate that induced a strong immune response in monkeys and mice. Trials of the vaccine, created in partnership with a Seattle biotech, may start this summer.

President Donald Trump has reversed course on masks, tweeting it is Patriotic" to wear one. He added a photo of himself wearing one: There is nobody more Patriotic than me, your favorite President! He's also bringing back his public coronavirus briefings.

Congress and Trump are deeply divided over virus aid as emergency relief for Americans nears its expiration date. Among the toughest issues: school reopenings and a payroll tax cut.

An overwhelmed New York hurried to open a new hospital for virus patients, at the cost of $52 million. It treated just 79 people before closing.

Workers have sued Whole Foods, accusing the grocer of discriminating against them when it barred them from wearing Black Lives Matter face coverings while on the job.

The Beefeaters guarding the millennium-old Tower of London are facing job cuts for the first time in their storied 535-year history.

Kris Higginson

Want major coronavirus stories sent to you via text message?Text the word COVID to 855-480-9667 or enter your phone number below.

Seattle Times staff & news services

View original post here:

Coronavirus daily news updates, July 21: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world - Seattle Times

Concern over rapid rise in COVID-19 cases in South Africa – The Associated Press

JOHANNESBURG (AP)

There is growing concern that South Africas hospitals may not be able to cope with the numbers of COVID-19 patients expected in the next two months.

Neighboring Zimbabwe imposed a dusk to dawn curfew, banned large public gatherings and reduced business operating hours to try to slow the spread of the disease.

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in South Africa continues to surge, accounting for more than 50% of cases in Africa and making it the country with the fifth-highest number of cumulative reported infections in the world.

South Africa has 373,628 confirmed cases, including 5,173 deaths, according to figures released by the health minister.

The rapid rise of the rate of infections in the country has raised concerns about whether South Africas hospitals will be able to cope with the influx of COVID-19 patients when the peak of cases is expected between August and September.

Many hospitals in Gauteng province, South Africas virus epicenter that includes the largest city of Johannesburg and the capital Pretoria, are already feeling the pressure of increasing numbers of COVID-19 patients.

Health minister Zweli Mkhize warned earlier this month that the country did not have enough hospital beds equipped to treat the expected numbers of COVID-19 patients. He appealed to citizens to wear face masks, now mandatory in all public places, and to keep a distance from others.

We are extremely concerned that fatigue seems to have set in and South Africans are letting down their guard at a time when the spread of infection is surging, said Mkhize, in an address to the nation last week.

Zimbabwe has reported 1,713 cases, up from about 50 two months ago, and President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Tuesday evening announced a night curfew, banned political, religious and social gatherings, and reduced business operating hours in order to try to slow the spread of the virus.

Mnangagwa said the curtailing of freedoms we have always enjoyed, and had grown accustomed to was necessary, although some claim the banning of political gatherings is aimed at suppressing an anti-government protest planned for July 31.

The accelerating spread of COVID-19 in South Africa could be a precursor to what will happen in the rest of Africa, said World Health Organization executive director of emergencies, Dr. Mike Ryan.

I think this isnt just a wake-up call for South Africa, We need to take what is happening in Africa very seriously, said Ryan at the WHO weekly news conference in Geneva on Monday. Many of those countries exist in the midst of fragility and conflict, many of them need external help support.

___

AP journalist Farai Mutsaka in Harare, Zimbabwe, contributed to this report.

See the article here:

Concern over rapid rise in COVID-19 cases in South Africa - The Associated Press

Summer vacation plans stay the course in spite of Covid-19 spikes – CNN

(CNN) Not long ago, Lori Morell did something radical: She flew. On an airplane. All the way from her home in Grand Rapids, Michigan, to Reno, Nevada. It was time for her annual family vacation at the Mourelatos Lakeshore Resort in north Lake Tahoe, and she wasn't going to miss it.

"I'm going to live my life and nothing's going to stop it unless it's mandated," says Morell, 42, who works within the Department of Justice and has been spending summers in Lake Tahoe since she was a toddler.

Morell is not alone in her insistence on taking previously planned trips -- or spontaneously deciding to hit the road -- pandemic be damned.

Michelle Wild says her kids live for their annual summer road trip and that this year Covid caused some modifications but otherwise went off without a hitch.

Courtesy Michelle Wild

Different people are traveling in different ways. Some are driving. Others are renting RVs. Still others, like Morell, are hopping on planes.

And the question remains: why? Why are some people forging ahead with planned trips, despite the fact that the coronavirus is raging across the country?

No one reason

That's why Scott Gorenstein didn't cancel his family vacation to Lincolnville Center, Maine, where he's summered for over 50 years. "It is collectively our favorite thing to do and place to go," says Gorenstein, a media and talent executive with Sony Pictures Television, in New York. "It would be very disheartening to cancel and a blow to our psyche."

What's more, his 80-year-old mother, who lives in Philadelphia, hasn't gone anywhere since March. "She needs something to look forward to, and our annual trip is at the top of that list," he says.

For others, traveling is about ticking items off a bucket list, and they want to continue to do so. Alisha Brown, 46, and her husband, James, booked a two-week trip to Egypt with Osiris Tours for late October. "Our goal is to hit every continent," says Brown, an accountant in Houston.

Alisha Brown and her husband James booked a two-week trip to Egypt with Osiris Tours for late October in an effort to tick another box off the bucket list.

AFP/Getty Images

It's not that she doesn't worry about getting sick. She does. But she's been social distancing, wearing a mask and washing her hands diligently for the last few months.

"We've been doing everything we needed to be safe," she says. "But at some point we're like, 'we're going to have to live with this.' I have Purell wipes in my bag. I can wipe down things I feel uncomfortable with, like elevator buttons."

Since the only way to get to Egypt is by plane, Brown booked two seats on Emirates with extra legroom. She's also planned private tours on the ground. "The only place where we're with a number of people is on the four-day Nile cruise, but we have someone who meets us on the dock and takes us on our own tour," she says.

The family vacations

Some families are continuing with their trips because they don't want to disappoint their kids, which is how Michelle and Tom Wild of Buffalo, New York, feel. Four years ago, the couple bought a 31-foot RV so they and their two sons could explore the country.

Michelle and Tom Wild bought an RV a few years ago so they could take long road trips with their two boys.

Courtesy Michelle Wild

"My husband makes a big PowerPoint presentation before we go. We look online and at books and on apps to find the coolest things to visit in every state," says Wild, 38, assistant director of nursing at a hospital in Buffalo. "My kids live for this trip, more than anything else -- even Disney! I didn't want to take that away for them."

They saw some friends and family, but slept in the RV, which has a kitchen and bunk beds. "I wasn't nervous," says Wild.

The Wilds saw some friends and family, but slept in the RV, which has a kitchen and bunk beds.

Courtesy Michelle Wild

"The self-isolation really started to get to people, they were getting severe cabin fever (pun intended) in their own homes and started craving a change of scenery," says spokesperson Miguel DeJesus in an email. "We represent the next best and safest option: close to home, private and somewhat remote, no common areas, no interaction with staff, away from crowds, immersing in nature and the outdoors."

The great outdoors

In June, Sue and Matt Scaffidi went on a hiking trip with travel company Backroads.

Courtesy Sue and Matt Scaffidi

Sue Scaffidi, 50 and her husband, Matt, of Buffalo, returned from a June hiking trip with Backroads to the Blue Ridge Mountains, in North Carolina and the Great Smokey Mountains, in Tennessee. It was their fifth trip with the outfitter.

"This is our anniversary gift to each other," says Scaffidi, 50, who works in healthcare. "We'd been talking about where we want to go since November and booked the trip in early January. Then Covid hit and we were like, let's see what happens.'"

Although they had originally planned to fly, the couple decided to do the ten-and-a-half hour drive by car. Once they arrived at their hotel, she felt safe. Guides did temperature checks in the mornings, guests wore masks in the vans, and breakfast, lunch and snacks were laid out in advance, limiting physical contact.

The Scaffidis hiking trip took them to the Blue Ridge Mountains, in North Carolina and the Great Smokey Mountains, in Tennessee.

Courtesy Sue and Matt Scaffidi

"You're very self-contained, no one else is walking down your hallway and dinner is outside," she says.

Risks weighed

As for Morell, she, too, made sure she was going to be as safe as possible. She flew Delta, which is capping passengers and blocking middle seats through September 30. They hand out sanitizer; all customers and crew members are required to wear face coverings

She also spoke in advance with the owner of the resort, Alex Mourelatos, who told her about the safety precautions in place, which includes leaving a 'rest' day between room cleanings; not having housekeeping during guest's stay to limit person-to-person interaction; and leaving extra disinfectant in the rooms. While guests don't have to wear masks on property, they are asked to socially distance.

"I'm not worried," she says. "I pray that I don't get it, but I'm not going to live in fear. I'm not in a high-risk category and I'm going to social distance and wear my mask, but I'm also going to paddleboard. How much more socially distant can you get?"

Read more:

Summer vacation plans stay the course in spite of Covid-19 spikes - CNN

WHO concerned about COVID-19 impact on indigenous people in the Americas – UN News

More than 70,000 cases and over 2,000 deaths were reported among this population as of 6 July, according to the UN agency.

There have been at least six cases among the Nahua people, who live in the Peruvian Amazon, latest information has revealed.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus explained that because indigenous people are among the worlds poorest and most vulnerable groups, they are especially at risk of contracting the disease.

Like other vulnerable groups, indigenous peoples face many challenges. This includes a lack of political representation, economic marginalization and lack of access to health, education and social services, he said, speaking from Geneva during the regular crisis update.

Indigenous peoples often have a high burden of poverty, unemployment, malnutrition and both communicable and non-communicable diseases, making them more vulnerable to COVID-19 and its severe outcomes.

WHOs Regional Office for the Americas recently published recommendations for preventing and responding to COVID-19 among indigenous peoples.

The agency also is working with the Coordinator of Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon River Basin, to step up the fight against the disease.

WHO also used the briefing to underline the importance of contact tracing to suppress COVID-19 transmission among indigenous communities and the population at large.

The process is essential as more countries begin to re-open after lifting lockdown measures.

One of the lessons from the recent Ebola outbreak in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, which was declared over the last month, is that contact tracing can be done even in the most difficult circumstances, with security problems, Tedros told journalists.

Dr Ibrahima Soc Fall, WHO Assistant Director-General for Emergency Response, said contact tracing helps break further transmission of COVID-19, thus reducing its caseload and impact.

What we need to understand is that contact tracing is not an isolated practice. It is part of the best practices for epidemiology, he said, speaking in French.

WHO has welcomed promising news about a potential vaccine against COVID-19, as research into treatments in multiple countries, continues.

An experimental vaccine developed by Oxford University and the pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, appears safe and triggers an immune response, according to a study published in the medical journal The Lancet.

It is good news, said Dr. Michael Ryan, Executive Director of WHOs Health Emergencies Programme, though he cautioned that the data is very new.

Dr. Ryan said the vaccine was given to 1,000 healthy adults aged 18 to 55 years. None appeared to suffer any serious adverse effects, other than chills, muscle aches and headaches, which were expected.

But again, there is a long way to go, he said. These are phase one studies. We now need to move into large-scale, real-world trials, but it is good to see more data and more products moving into this very important phase of vaccine discovery.

Dr. Ryan reported that 23 COVID-19 candidate vaccines are currently in clinical development.

See more here:

WHO concerned about COVID-19 impact on indigenous people in the Americas - UN News

Whistleblower Reality Winner has tested positive for COVID-19 in prison – The Verge

Former intelligence contractor and whistleblower Reality Winner has reportedly tested positive for COVID-19. Winners sister, Brittany Winner, tweeted her diagnosis earlier today. Winner is currently incarcerated in a federal medical prison in Fort Worth, Texas, where an outbreak has sickened hundreds of inmates and killed at least two.

Winner is seeking compassionate release during the coronavirus pandemic, citing underlying medical conditions. An early petition for release from her imprisonment at FMC Carswell was denied in April. Shortly afterward, Carswell reported its first coronavirus death: Andrea Circle Bear, who died after giving birth on a ventilator. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported last week that 130 people had contracted COVID-19 at the prison; the most recent Federal Bureau of Prisons statistics show over 500 cases. An appeal is currently pending.

Winners attorney, Joe Whitley, told Law.coms Daily Report that he hopes the court will take the outbreak into consideration. I hope the BOP is equipped to handle the geometric surge in cases, effectively at all their facilities, but I am concerned that may not be the case. According to Daily Report, Winners sister says she is currently asymptomatic, and one of her cellmates also tested positive.

Prisons have emerged as one of the most dangerous hotspots for Americas coronavirus outbreak. Attorney General William Barr has ordered prisons to prioritize releasing inmates to home confinement, but numerous reports have demonstrated confusion and delays in the process although some high-profile Trump associates, like Paul Manafort and Michael Cohen, have been released.

Winner, who previously worked for the National Security Agency, accepted a plea deal for espionage in 2018 after leaking a report on Russian election interference to The Intercept. She is currently scheduled for release in November 2021.

Follow this link:

Whistleblower Reality Winner has tested positive for COVID-19 in prison - The Verge

These five women were starting businesses in Lynn. Then COVID-19 hit, and the challenges multiplied – The Boston Globe

The other newbie owners echo her sentiments. Rachel Miller, who had been chef at the former Clio in Boston, opened Nightshade Noodle Bar last December in a tiny space in downtown Lynn, serving the Vietnamese and Asian-inspired dishes for which she had gained a pop-up following. Sommelier Sarah Marshall started Lucille Wine Shop in January, wagering that Lynn and surrounding communities were ready for her specialty wine and beer, plus tastings and classes. And Estefani Orellana Garcia and her mother, Fidelina Garcia, opened Estefanis, serving Central American and Mexican specialties on bustling Union Street, just a few weeks before the governor temporarily closed down indoor dining in Massachusetts.

The shock to hospitality businesses everywhere continues as restaurateurs assess whether offering takeout and opening dining rooms at reduced capacity makes financial sense, all while worrying about the health of customers and employees. These owners have the same concerns. Miller tells of crazy, long days after Nightshade Noodle pivoted in early spring to takeout and delivery and she reduced her staff to only a few people. The first two weeks were slow, but then rocked, and since then she figures she and her tiny staff sell just as much as before with half the staff. There is now a little patio with a pickup window, a rarity in the neighborhood, and takeout Wednesday through Sunday.

But, she adds, Ive definitely found a new sense of purpose. Miller, who was drawn to Lynn for its diversity, also found a deeper sense of community, donating a portion of profits in June to the North Shore Juneteenth Association and the NAGLY, the North Shore Alliance of GLBTQ Youth.

Mulfords Uncommon Feasts has become not just a takeout and delivery restaurant but a retail space for products from farmers who lost other restaurant accounts. She wanted to support them and offers their products on her takeout menus along with prepared foods. Ive completely shifted my perspective, she says. Catering and larger events are off the table, and in fact she cant see opening her airy dining room again in the near future because we cant do service the way we want. But artists in the Lydia Pinkham Building where the restaurant is located have presented online shows. The small patio is surrounded by the bustle of Western Avenue, she says, where trucks rumble by and children play in nearby spaces. It all feels fun and vibrant.

Estefani Orellana Garcia grew up in Lynn and is fiercely proud of that. After graduating from Bentley University and spending several years working in accounting and finance, she decided she hated the corporate world, and realized she wanted something more fulfilling.

With her mother, she opened Estefanis in the heart of the city, on the first floor of a residential building that her family owns. Their goal, she says, has always been to make their city better. The restaurant serves dishes of her Guatemalan and Salvadoran heritage, plus popular Mexican specialties, and its very much a family affair with her cousins husband as chef, her mother running the kitchen, and Orellana Garcia dealing with social media, customers, and everything else. Since reopening in early May, theyve been doing takeout and delivery, but the restaurant space is large so Orellana Garcia is considering trying indoor seating.

Marshall, of Lucille Wine Shop & Tasting Room, was able to stay open throughout the shutdowns, but found she also had to find new ways of doing business. It was almost like starting a second business, she says, as she added curbside pickup and home delivery, substituted in-store tastings with online events, and began to put her eclectic inventory online. The first couple of weeks were very stressful, Marshall, who was formerly sommelier for Oleana in Cambridge and Sarma in Somerville, says. But there were silver linings, she adds. I wasnt planning to do e-commerce for a year or so but now that shes got online ordering up and running, shes glad thats out of the way.

Now after months when every single week was a new animal, she is beginning to feel more confident that customers will gravitate to her very personal customer service and curated inventory. The neighborhood and her customers have been loyal and supportive, ordering cases of wine and joining in virtual tastings. More clients now are feeling more confident about coming into the store, and shes getting calls about private events (16 people or fewer) in the future.

The other women also found loyalty in customers. People deliberately shop with us weekly, Mulford of Uncommon Feasts says, adding that, surprisingly, shes even getting new customers. Its growing our connection to Lynn, she says.

The difficulties are real, too. Orellana Garcia says that when Estefanis reopened to offer takeout, there were shortages of supplies every week. One week it was trays, another week bags, another food compartment boxes. One week there were no containers anywhere, she says, and she had to figure out ways of getting supplies. Although she had waitressed in college and her mother had been a banquet waitress, the whole restaurant business was so new to them that she admits to Googling how to open a restaurant. Now shes getting comfortable with social media as Estefanis birria tacos, with slow-roasted beef and a Mexican favorite in Los Angeles, is taking off, attracting customers from as far away as Maine and New York.

One benefit, all the owners say, is a sense of women working together. When Orellana Garcia couldnt find supplies for takeout at Restaurant Depot, she said, Rachel [Miller of Nightshade] said she would share some. Mulford, Miller, and Marshall also talked of earlier collaborations with other women owners.

The owners have formed like a little club, says Miller. Its huge to have women-owned businesses.

For, as Marshall of Lucille Wine Shop says: If I can survive opening through a pandemic, I can do anything.

Alison Arnett can be reached at arnett.alison@gmail.com.

Read the original:

These five women were starting businesses in Lynn. Then COVID-19 hit, and the challenges multiplied - The Boston Globe