COVID-19 Economy Stimulus Battle: Dems Fight Pres. Trump’s New Executive Actions – 9&10 News

President Trump signed four new executive actions, bypassing Congress in an effort to ease some of the burden of the coronavirus pandemic.

It comes as the U.S. reaches another sobering milestone of 5 million coronavirus cases.

The president signed the four new executive actions on Saturday.

Now the recently-expired $600 a week supplement to unemployment benefits would be cut to $400.

The president said only some states will be expected to chip in about a quarter of the money for the benefits.

Another big change is a measure to defer student loan payments and payroll tax withholdings for some workers.The president said there may still be room to negotiate with Deomocrats on a new coronavirus relief package.

Weve gotten much of what we wanted and they didnt get what they wanted and they would have. And I guess they still could, in all fairness, he said.

But Democrats say the presidents new actions are unlawful, making it even more important for Congress to make a deal on a new stimulus package.

Speaker of the House Rep. Nancy Pelosi says, The presidents meager, weak and unconstitutional actions further demand that we have an agreement.

And Sen. Chuck Schumer, SENATE minority leader, says, Its so put together in a crazy way. If he just would have renewed the $600, as we do in the HEROES bill through January, things would flow smoothly.

The presidents new measure on evictions is another big sticking point for Democrats and Republicans.

It would not renew a freeze on removing tenants from properties with government-backed mortgages. Instead, it would have the government look for ways to help those on the brink.As we just mentioned, part of President Trumps executive actions require states to cover 25% of federal unemployment payments.

If they dont, unemployed workers wouldnt receive any federal assistance.

This comes as many states are facing significant budget challenges during the pandemic.

Michigan projected a more than $3 billion shortfall earlier this year.

In a statement, Gov. Whitmer says:

Once again, the president has refused to work together with Congress on a bipartisan recovery package that supports our states, families, frontline workers, and small businesses. He has routinely proven that hes more focused on his chances in the November election than fighting the virus that has killed more than 160,000 Americans.

The presidents recent actions do nothing to protect the millions of unemployed Americans who need to put food on the table for themselves and their families. He cut federal funding for unemployed workers and is requiring states that are facing severe holes in our budgets to provide 25% of the funding. His refusal to provide full federal funding to states across the country to help us combat this virus will hurt the brave men and women on the front lines of this crisis, like our first responders, health care workers, child care workers, and more.

The president has repeatedly said that its time for our kids to return to school for in-person learning, but he wont work with Congressional leaders to provide districts with the support they need to keep students, educators, and support staff safe. His executive actions yesterday do nothing to protect our kids from the spread of this virus.

Its time for the president to do the right thing, stop playing political games, and work with Congress on a recovery package that will help us fight this virus, protect working families, and send our kids, educators, and support staff back to school safely.

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COVID-19 Economy Stimulus Battle: Dems Fight Pres. Trump's New Executive Actions - 9&10 News

Many Americans have adopted pets amid Covid-19. But beware the costs – CNBC

Strelciuc Dumitru | iStock | Getty Images

Many Americans are adding to their families amid Covid-19.

While you might think that means babies, it's actually pets.

A new survey from TD Ameritrade finds that 33% of Americans have considered fostering or adopting a furry friend now that social distancing is the norm. Across generations, that rate is highest for millennials, who came in at 50%, versus Gen X, at 33%, and baby boomers, 25%.

And while 89% of respondents said their dogs and cats help them feel less lonely at this time, there's something else potential pet owners should be aware of: the high costs that can come with that companionship.

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The survey found that 47% of dog owners said that having a pet is more expensive than they had thought it would be, while 41% of cat owners said the same.

Dog owners spend up to $1,201 a year on average on their pets, according to the survey. Food was the largest expense, followed by veterinary care, grooming and other supplies.

Meanwhile, cat owners shell out up to $687 per year on average about half what dog owners spend. Food, veterinary care and pet supplies rank also rank among their highest expenses.

Most survey respondents said they consider their pet their best friend, "fur baby" or starter child.

That means they are willing to shell out large payments if their pets get sick. Dog owners said the average maximum they would be willing to spend on treatment is $3,307, while cat owners said they would be willing to spend $1,991.

Many pet owners indicated they are also willing to engage in some more complex financial planning, including buying pet insurance, having funeral ceremonies, including pets in their willsand anticipating joint custody arrangements if they were to split with their partners.

But pet parents also admitted to more celebratory splurges. Some surveyed also said they have either bought or would consider purchasing a Christmas gift for their pet, buying them a Halloween costume or throwing them a birthday party.

Because the cost of owning a pet can add up, it's important to plan in advance, said Chris Bohlsen, director of investor services at TD Ameritrade.

"You want to think of the future and what can you do to protect yourself financially when owning a pet," Bohlsen said.

Fostering a pet can help you understand whether you're up to long-term ownership and what kind of animal would be ideal for you. Generally, the bigger the pet, the larger the food costs, he said.

Once you do decide to commit to pet ownership, having insurance will help mitigate some of the unexpected expenses that crop up.

Another important thing to keep in mind is whether the pet will fit into your lifestyle post-pandemic.

"Consider what life changes you may go through over the long haul, as well," Bohlsen said.

TD Ameritrade's survey was conducted online between April and May. It included 1,008 adults ages 24 and up with at least $10,000 in investable assets.

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Many Americans have adopted pets amid Covid-19. But beware the costs - CNBC

Gov. Wolf Announces $96 Million for Small Businesses Impacted by COVID-19 – pa.gov

Application Period for Final Round of Funding Now Open

Governor Tom Wolf today announced that $96 million in state grants have been awarded to 4,933 Pennsylvania small businesses that were impacted by the COVID-19 public health crisis and subsequent business closure order.

Businesses in every Pennsylvania county received grants in this first of two rounds of funding, and 2,512 grants or 51 percent were awarded to historically disadvantaged businesses.

As we continue to address this public health crisis, its critical that we also focus on our states economic recovery and supporting our small businesses across the state, which continue to be impacted by our necessary mitigation efforts, Gov. Wolf said. This funding will go a long way to help small businesses, including historically disadvantaged businesses, at a time when they need it most.

The COVID-19 Relief Statewide Small Business Assistance funding was developed in partnership with state lawmakers and allocated through the state budget, which included $2.6 billion in federal stimulus funds through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, of which $225 million was earmarked for relief for small businesses.

The Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED) distributed the funds to the Pennsylvania Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs), which are administering the grants through three programs: $100 million for the Main Street Business Revitalization Program, $100 million for the Historically Disadvantaged Business Revitalization Program, and $25 million for the Loan Payment Deferment and Loss Reserve Program.

The COVID-19 pandemic unexpectedly affected small businesses across the commonwealth, an unfortunate circumstance that could not have been predicted or prepared for, said DCED Secretary Dennis Davin. However, through the collective action of the Wolf Administration, the General Assembly, and the CDFI Network, Pennsylvanias hardest hit and most at-risk businesses will be able to access the funding they need to shore up their resources and regain sound financial footing as we move into recovery.

The second and final round of funding is open starting today through 11:59 PM on Friday, August 28. Eligible applicants not awarded in the first round do not need to reapply and will be rolled into the next round for consideration. More information on the COVID-19 Relief Statewide Small Business Assistance Program, including how to apply, is available on DCEDs website.

The PA CDFI Network targeted these funds to reach the smallest and most vulnerable businesses across the state and we received an immense response with close to 50,000 applications submitted in the first round and more than $860 million in total requests, said Daniel Betancourt, chairman of the PA CDFI Network and President & CEO of Community First Fund. We are grateful to be part of this first step with Governor Wolf and the Pennsylvania Legislature to get much needed resources to the small businesses that have been so adversely impacted by the pandemic.

The grants may be used to cover operating expenses during the shutdown and transition to re-opening, and for technical assistance including training and guidance for business owners as they stabilize and relaunch their businesses.

These grants and the relief they will provide are testament to what we can do when we prioritize the right initiatives, said state Sen. Vincent Hughes (D-Philadelphia, Montgomery), Democratic chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee. It is because of collaboration and a collective focus that today we were able to deliver help to the auto body shops, the barbershops, the beauticians, the pizza shop owners, the soul food establishments and other businesses across the commonwealth. It is critical to understand that there is still a great deal of need and must continue to direct resources and aid to our small business community to help it recover from the devastation of the pandemic.

I could not be more proud or more grateful for the great work of DCED and Pennsylvanias CDFI Network in delivering substantive, fair, equitable, need-based assistance to our states main street and historically disadvantaged small businesses. Our program design and the accountability it provides to taxpayers and to our federal funders is a model for the nation, said state Sen. John Blake (D-Lackawanna, Luzerne, Monroe), Democratic chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. I appeal to the US Congress and to our colleagues on both sides of the aisle in Harrisburg to recognize the success of this program in assisting small businesses devastated by the pandemic and to invest further in the program so we can help even more of them.

Our business community has been severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and is in need of immediate assistance. The grant program is targeted to help small businesses manage costs, handle expenses, and stay in operation in this exceptionally difficult time, said state Sen. Jim Brewster (D-Allegheny, Westmoreland). Since COVID struck our state and debilitated our business community, I have been advocating for bridge grants and sought millions in aid for impacted businesses and workers. The small business assistance grants are one of the tools we can use to bolster business, maintain jobs and help workers at a time of immense distress.

For minority and women-owned businesses in Pennsylvania COVID-19 didnt create a crisis, it laid bare the crisis our minority entrepreneurs have been facing for decades, said state Rep. Jake Wheatley Jr (D-Allegheny), Democratic chairman of the House Finance Committee. While Im glad to see the positive impact of these grants and I urge all local community businesses to apply for the next round of grants, we need to expand investment in programs like this because its long past time for the legislature to address the systemic flaws that are leaving too many marginalized people behind.

The burden that COVID-19 has put on business owners, employees and families in southeast Pennsylvania gets heavier every day, said state Rep. Chris Sappey (D-Chester). At this point, when we talk about addressing the pandemic, we must not only fight it with masks and social distancing, but we also must equally and strongly support our business community, where this fight for our health and safety actually is taking place. Commerce and industry must survive this virus, as well. Pennsylvania needs this aid now, and my office is eager to work with any business that needs help applying.

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Gov. Wolf Announces $96 Million for Small Businesses Impacted by COVID-19 - pa.gov

Georgia school seen in photo of a crowded hallway will briefly move to online learning after reporting 9 cases of Covid-19 – CNN

"As a result of our being informed of nine cases of Covid-19 at North Paulding High School following the first week of in-person instruction, along with the possibility that number could increase if there are currently pending tests that prove positive, we have consulted with the Department of Public Health and are temporarily switching the instructional method to Digital Learning at NPHS," the letter from Paulding County Schools Superintendent Brian Otott said.

The high school will only offer digital learning Monday and Tuesday. Tuesday evening families will be informed of whether remote instruction will continue or if students can return to school, the letter said.

Meanwhile, "the school will be thoroughly cleaned and disinfected," Otott wrote. The school district will also work with the Georgia Department of Public Health to identify anyone else who had close contact with the confirmed patients and have yet to be identified.

Principal Gabe Carmona wrote in a separate letter Saturday that "six students and three staff members who were in school for at least some time last week ... have since reported to us that they have tested positive."

One student at a middle school in the county, Sammy McClure, Sr. Middle School, has tested positive for the coronavirus, according to a letter sent by Principal Jaynath Hayes to parents Sunday.

The student was in school "for at least some time last week" and reported to the school that they have tested positive, the letter said.

The school is being cleaned by custodial staff and is following DPH recommendations, according to the letter.

The school is asking anyone whose child exhibits symptoms to have them tested as soon as possible and notify the school.

Last week, the high school in Dallas, Georgia, -- about 40 miles from Atlanta -- attracted nationwide attention thanks to a photo posted on Twitter by sophomore Hannah Watters. The viral image showed Hannah's classmates in a crowded school hallway with few visible masks. The school district resumed classes August 3.

Hannah previously told CNN she shared the photo because she was concerned for the safety of her classmates and school staff, as well as the wider community.

"We're all pretty concerned about going back," Hannah said of her friends Sunday. "And I know a lot of my teachers are, too."

She added, "We all want to go to in-person. I have no intention of shutting the county down, the state down, because I know a lot of people don't learn well online, I don't learn well online. ... I want to be able to have some type of normality this year ... but we can't if we're not safe."

In his letter Sunday, Otott apologized to families for "any inconvenience this schedule change may cause, but hopefully we all can agree that the health and safety of our students and staff takes precedence over any other considerations at this time."

'Good and necessary trouble,' student says

Dr. Jonathan Reiner, a CNN medical analyst and professor of medicine at George Washington University said Sunday it was nice the school would be disinfected. But he said it wouldn't have a large effect on containing the virus, pointing to the virus' high rate of spread in Georgia.

"The virus isn't being transmitted by the school, it's being transmitted by the people who attend the school," he said. "It's in the community. Disinfecting the school isn't going to have a big impact."

Otott previously said in a letter to the community that the viral photo was taken out of context and that class changes in high school were a challenge.

"It is an area we are continuing to work on in this new environment to find practicable ways to further limit students from congregating. Students are in this hallway environment for just a brief period as they move to their next class," the superintendent wrote.

He added: "There is no question that the photo does not look good. ... Wearing a mask is a personal choice, and there is no practical way to enforce a mandate to wear them."

Otott's letter also said the district anticipated needing to make "adjustments." The district previously decided to make Thursday and Friday virtual learning days for students receiving in-person instruction, "so that all of our schools can step back and assess how things are going so far," Otott said.

Hannah said she was initially suspended for posting the photo. But on Friday, her mother told CNN the suspension had been reversed. Lynne Watters spoke with the school's principal Friday morning, she said, and was told her daughter would not be suspended and a suspension would not appear on her record. Hannah can return to school on Monday.

Hannah doesn't regret sharing the photo, she told CNN.

"I'd like to say this is some good and necessary trouble," she said Thursday. "My biggest concern is not only about me being safe," she said. "It's about everyone being safe because behind every teacher, student and staff member there is a family, there are friends, and I would just want to keep everyone safe."

Hannah said Sunday that she had received backlash and "threats" for sharing the photo. According to Hannah, her family and friends have received screenshots from group chats that included threatening language against her.

Hannah said she understands some students, especially seniors, might be worried about having their last year of high school taken from them, but said she doesn't want that.

"I just hope that sooner or later everyone can understand that I'm not trying to shut it down and when I did expose the school district, it wasn't to cancel the senior year, not to go after anyone," she said. "It was just to keep us all safe."

CNN's Hollie Silverman and Bill Wunner contributed to this report.

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Georgia school seen in photo of a crowded hallway will briefly move to online learning after reporting 9 cases of Covid-19 - CNN

US tops 5 million Covid-19 cases, with five states making up more than 40% of tally – CNN

The number means the country holds about a quarter of global cases of the virus and also tops the list with the most reported deaths in the world. Of the country's 5,036,387 estimated cases, 162,851 have been deadly, according to data collected by John Hopkins University.

To put the number in perspective, that means the United States has had more Covid-19 cases than Ireland has people. The number of cases is also slightly higher than the entire population of Alabama.

To put the speed in which the number is growing in perspective: It took the country 99 days to reach 1 million, 43 days to hit 2 million, 28 days for 3 million and 15 days to surpass 4 million on July 23. The number has jumped to 5 million in 17 days.

"This is such a sobering number," said Dr. William Schaffner, a professor of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University.

"That's a huge number of cases and a very large number of hospitalizations and deaths -- and more to come," Schaffner said. "Because over much of this country, this virus is spreading unimpeded because so many folks are not getting with the program to contain it."

As of this week, five states account for more than 40% of US infections: California (with the most cases in the country), Florida, Texas, New York and Georgia.

"Our daily numbers remain low and steady, despite increasing infection rates across the country, and even in our region -- and we had the lowest one-day positive rate since we started," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement Sunday. "That's an incredible achievement, all thanks to the hard work of New Yorkers."

Florida reported 6,190 new cases on Sunday -- the 13th consecutive day the state reported more than 6,000 cases, according to CNN's tally. There are more than 527,000 cases among residents in the state, according to the state Department of Health.

In Texas, the governor extended his disaster declaration as the state reported its highest seven-day positivity rate: 19.41%. The previous high, 17.43%, was recorded around mid-July. More than 481,000 infections have been reported statewide and about 7,872 people remain in hospitals.

Schools begin welcoming students back

Local school districts will decide what their reopenings will look like, whether they choose to return in-person, conduct remote learning or opt for a hybrid model.

Officials will be "looking like hawks at the numbers," Carranza said. "If the numbers of the positivity rate start inching upwards and if it gets to 3%, we will remote learn for the entire system."

In Georgia, many schools have already reopened.

"I guarantee you, any number of people brought the virus to this event and it will spread among many of the participants and will be taken back to their homes where they will spread it further," Dr. Schaffner from Vanderbilt University told CNN on Sunday. "This is an accelerant of the outbreak that we're having in the United States today."

South Dakota has so far recorded one of the lowest number of cases with about 9,605 infections, according to Johns Hopkins data.

Dr. Carlos del Rio, an infectious disease professor at Emory University, isn't worried about the rally itself because it will mostly be outside, he said. Instead, he said he fears what will happen after hours, when people go to restaurants, bars and begin congregating indoors.

"I'm quite concerned that this event could potentially be a disaster," he said. "There could not only be a lot of transmission there, but a lot of people could get infected there and go back to their home states and take the virus over there."

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US tops 5 million Covid-19 cases, with five states making up more than 40% of tally - CNN

It’s taking a week for contact tracing to reach COVID-19 patients – Mission Local

Sushi is in the news of late. In yet another attempt to grab the brass ring of the defining San Francisco image in times of COVID-19, an enterprising restaurateur is offering diners the option of consuming $200-a-head sushi dinners in a cordoned-off corner of Mint Plaza, only a few meters from where homeless people congregate.

Conspicuous consumption an arms length from misery is commonplace enough in San Francisco that someone may want to think about translating that line into Spanish and making it our city motto on our new city flag. But what really pushes this moment into that wondrous realm of San Francisco self-parody is that diners are ensconced within tiny, transparent geodesic domes of the sort Buckminster Fuller might have designed for exhibitionists.

Well, nobody wants to think about that. But it did get us thinking about sushi. No matter how much you pay for sushi and no matter how good it is, its a substance with an extremely limited shelf life. Leave it sitting around for even a little while and, soon, its worthless.

And that got us thinking about San Franciscos attempts to corral COVID-19. In every realm that has managed to get a handle on this pandemic, the turnaround time between someone deciding to get a test, getting the results, and, if positive, being tracked down by a contact tracer and case investigator is minimal a day or two.

Ideally, says Dr. Darpun Sachdev, who heads the Department of Public Healths contact tracing efforts, it would only take 48 hours from someone developing symptoms and/or contemplating a test to receiving a call from a contact tracer.

But thats not happening. If you want to get a test in San Francisco, the current wait at city sites tends to hover between nine and 11 days. Getting your results can take several days more or, in all too many instances of late, the better part of two weeks.

These glacial turnarounds make a mockery of any attempt at contact tracing.

Among the multitudes of COVID data the city posts online, you wont find the elapsed time between someone being swabbed and receiving a call from a contact tracer.

But its there if you give the data a deep swabbing. And Peter Khoury did that.

The big blue dots indicate the weighted average of how long it takes to return results for a COVID test. The big red dots indicate the weighted average of how long it takes for contact tracers or case investigators to contact people who test positive. The small dots indicate how long it takes to reach the 90th percentile for both of the above. Chart by Peter Khoury.

The Mission District data scientist combed through the day-by-day testing results through the latter two-thirds of July, measuring how long it required for positive cases categorized as unknown to be reclassified as emanating from a known contact or the more ambiguous community spread.

That cant happen without a contact tracer or case investigator speaking to an individual and, in doing so, Khoury gleaned that it takes six to nine days after a person has had a swab shoved up their nose for them to receive a call from a contact tracer. Thats a weighted average but, we repeat, six to nine days.

In six to nine days, an individual can cough on half the residents of San Francisco. Pretty much all a contact tracer or case investigator can do after so much time has elapsed is watch the rear end of the horse as it disappears into the distance, having long since galloped out the barn door.

Youre not going to be effective with contact tracing if its more than three days, says Dr. John Swartzberg, a UC Berkeley clinical professor emeritus specializing in infectious diseases and vaccinology. Six-to-nine-day delays essentially negate the point of contact tracing. Its horrifying.

San Francisco, then, is putting great deals of money and effort and brainpower behind testing and contact tracing, but to what effect? This city has bought plate after plate of $200 sushi and left it to rot.

Like a Coen Brothers film, the above graphic Peter Khoury created warrants a few views. Theres just too much to take in on one go.

Everyones busy now, but its only nine seconds long. You have time.

Try focusing on just one column. Youll notice cases keep trickling in and being sorted, even days and weeks later.

After youve done that, watch how the yellow unknowns are gradually recategorized by case investigators into blue from known contact and orange community spread.

Its not quite playoff baseball at AT&T Park, but there is a lot of orange to see here. Too much: In June, the city was able to nail down the source of an infection just about as often as it was forced to assign the ambiguous community spread. But in July, with far more cases, community spread beat out from known contact by a 2-to-1 margin.

What does this mean? It means that not only is this city undergoing a COVID-19 surge, but we dont really know where its coming from and how its spreading.

The ratio of known to unknown origins is something for us to be paying attention to, says Sachdev. What we would ideally see in this epidemic, if we were able to control it, is more and more people being identified having had a known contact somebody with COVID-19 and thereby suggesting were on the right track.

But we arent. Rather, its the opposite of that.

The six-to-nine day delays really arent the fault of Sachdev or her charges; they cant start running until the baton is in their hands, and its just taking too damn long for that to happen. The data culled by Khoury, in fact, indicates that contact tracers are making calls pretty quickly: within hours or, at most, two days, of the city receiving results.

But when they do reach people, theyre not learning the information wed most want to know.

And thats bad news for everyone.

Dozens of people lined up before 7 a.m. to get tested on the first day of the 24th Street pop-up COVID-19 test site. By Annika Hom.

In case youre wondering, yes, peoples memories do fade significantly after a few days, rendering contact tracing even more difficult and ineffectual. Dr. Kim Rhoads isa UC San Francisco professor of epidemiology and biostatistics, and the director of community engagement for the cancer center. Shenotes that Oaklands Roots Clinic, anticipating long delays, simply hands test subjects a pen and pad and asks them to keep track of their contacts beforehand just in case.

This pen-and-pad technology would be a good idea here. And, no, San Francisco contact tracers dont ask you about going to stores or riding on the bus they focus on people you spent in-person time with for 15 minutes or more; unsurprisingly, most close contacts turn out to be family or roommates.

So we could do better. But thats not really the point.

Rather: Contact tracing is the governments coup de grce against COVID-19 if everything else is going well. But its hard to overstate how far that is from the case.

There is, right now, simply too much COVID-19 in the population for contact tracing to be effective.

Swartzberg pegs this at only about 3 percent. And thats around the ratio of positive tests in San Francisco these days.

With exponential spread, 3 percent well, you dont have enough contact tracers to balance the number of people to be contacted, adds Rhoads.

COVID positivity in the United States is nearing 2 percent: Contact tracing, nationally, will soon not be useful, she says.

That, too, is horrifying.

If it wasnt clear before, its crystal clear now that Ozarks Independence Day pool revelers and non-mask-wearing Texas mall shoppers and Georgia politicians forcing kids back into packed high schools were making grave mistakes.

But, albeit to a lesser extent, so were we. Considering the limited testing and contact tracing resources at its disposal, California and San Francisco clearly chose overly aggressive paths to re-opening.

And without adequate testing and contact tracing, we dont have too many more options other than shutting down.

Government officials arent wrong to urge people to wear masks and keep physically distant and wash their hands and, generally, not behave like selfish idiots. But, after a while, it feels like a dodge. We need to do all of these things, but unless we can effectively test and trace, we are doomed to a Groundhog Daylike repetition of re-openings and re-closings.

Like so much else these days, nobody knows when well develop that ability. Or if.

Were not going to go back to normal. So much will be destroyed after this, says Rhoads. And if where government isnt able to help, communities will have to help themselves.

Communities will need to build that up. I see this as practice on how to work together.

It is quite the silver lining to state well build a better world after this one crumbles.

But, like that COVID test slot 11 days down the road or aging sushi well take what we can get.

If you like our coverage, please support it. We count on our readers.

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It's taking a week for contact tracing to reach COVID-19 patients - Mission Local

TDH: 2,127 new COVID-19 cases, 8 new deaths in Tennessee – WKRN News 2

Sunday Total Numbers: 122,712 Total Cases; 1,223 Total Deaths

by: WKRN Web Staff

WKRN

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) The Tennessee Department of Health hasconfirmed additional cases and deaths related to COVID-19 across the state on Sunday, August 9.

The health department reported 2,127 new cases, bringing the state to 122,712 total cases, a 2% day-to-day increase since Saturday. Of the total cases, 120,911 are confirmed and 1,801 are probable.

Tennessees seven-day new cases average now sits at 1,869 additional cases per day.

TDH also confirmed 8 additional deaths, bringing Tennessee up to 1,223 total deaths.

Out of the confirmed positive cases, 80,997 have recovered, an increase of 657 recoveries.

The latest number of hospitalizations went up by 42 to 5,304. A note on the departments website states this total is an indication of the number of patients that were ever hospitalized during their illness and not an indication of the number of patients currently hospitalized.

Of the 122,712 cases, 59,804 are male (49%), 61,562 are female (50%), and 1,346 are pending (1%).

Tennessee has conducted 1,711,319 tests with 1,588,607 negative results. The percentage for positive cases remains around 7.2%. Sundays update added 27,597 tests to the states total.

Earlier Sunday, Metro Public Health Department officialsreported22,904 cases of COVID-19 in Davidson County.

On July 28, Nashville Mayor John Cooper announcedthe orderclosing all bars in Nashville and requiring restaurants serving alcohol to shut down by 10 p.m. dailyhas been extended through at least mid-August.

All transpotainment vehicles are banned from the streets of Nashville and Davidson Countyas of July 31, regardless of whether there is alcohol on-board, according to the Metro Public Health Department.

Metro Police saidthey will issue citations to anyone who defies Metro Public Health ordersby not wearing masks. The news comes after weeks of criticism aimed at Nashville leaders fornot ticketing crowds of maskless people partying downtown. On Thursday, Metro police issued 16 civil citations to people on Broadway for violating Nashvilles mask mandate. On Friday, a man was arrested on Broadway after refusing to wear a face mask, according to Metro Police.

On Friday, Cooper announced Public Health Order 10 that prohibits open consumption, possession, and late-night to-go sales of alcoholic beverages in downtown and midtown Nashville.

Nashville is still in the modified Phase Two, but the city could advance to Phase Three of the Roadmap to Reopening again in a few weeks, which would mean bigger crowds near bars and restaurants downtown. Some Metro council members are floating around anidea they believe would boost business while reopening the area safely.

On July 28, Governor Bill Leeannounced the State of Tennessees recommendations to reopen schools for the 2020-2021 school year.The governors plan for re-opening schoolsis getting criticized by some state leaders.

The Williamson County School district is starting the year with one of its campuses closed when it was scheduled to have students learning in-person.

The director of the Tennessee Association of School Nurses said frustration was the best word to describe how school nurses felt as students head back to classrooms across the state this week.

Putnam County Schools released an update on Friday regarding the first week of school during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Director of Schools Corby King, one student at Cookeville High School this week tested positive for COVID-19 and was in close contact with other students. Those students have been reportedly contacted and have been placed on a 14-day quarantine.

Also on Friday, Coffee County Schools announced it will move to a hybrid schedule beginning Wednesday, August 12due to anincreasein active COVID-19 cases.

News 2 digs deeper into how schools are planning to move forward safely for the new academic year. See how other districts around Middle Tennessee are handling everything from classroom concerns to the future of sports in our special series. Click here to see more.

Lee also announced Executive Order No. 55 would include Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association member schools in an exception to contact sports restrictions.He officially signed the order on July 31.

The TSSAA said although contact practice is now permissible, regulations and requirements for practice and competition adoptedby the Board of Control at their July 22 meeting are still in place for all sports and must be followed.

A day after Lees announcement, school leaders in Davidson sent out a letter to all schools in the countyasking to cancel all sports and extracurricular activities until after Labor Day.

On the collegiate level, several conferences have released their plans for the season amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Dr. Deborah Birx met with Governor Lee in Nashville on July 27.The Coronavirus Response Coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force called for all Tennessee counties to issue mask mandates.Several counties have issued mask requirementsaround the state already.

A number of retailers and restaurants are also requiring masks while visiting their stores.See a full list of locations here.

In June, the Tennessee Department of Healthannounced changes to itsformat for sharing COVID-19 data. The departments total number of cases and total deaths now include both laboratory-confirmed cases and probable cases as defined in theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention surveillance case definitions. Learn more about the changes here.

Stay with News 2 for continuing coverage of the COVID-19 Pandemic.

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TDH: 2,127 new COVID-19 cases, 8 new deaths in Tennessee - WKRN News 2

COVID-19 Roundup: more reversals and the start of in-person classes – Inside Higher Ed

The fall term has been on the minds of nearly everyone in higher education for months now. As some colleges around the country begin move-ins and online classes this week, the rubber will finally be meeting the road as far as plans and preparations. Some universities and colleges, faced with days or weeks until doors open, are reversing decisions to invite students to campus. Others are pushing full-steam ahead, sometimes with consequences.

Though new COVID-19 cases have declined in the United States nearly 19percent in the last two weeks, new cases are still averaging at more than 50,000 per day. Nearly 1,000 people died of the coronavirus on Saturday alone. Nationally, 161,900 people have died, according to The New York Times.

At this point numerous colleges and universities have reversed their plans to bring some or all undergraduate students back to campus. These past few days added at least three to that total: Howard University, Mount Holyoke College, and Princeton University.

Those colleges had been preceded by a number of their geographic or market position peers, and some cited state-imposed quarantine requirements as one reason for keeping residence halls closed.

In the case of Howard University, three other private colleges in the District of Columbia -- Georgetown, George Washington and American Universities -- previously reversed plans to bring undergraduate students to campus. Howard also follows fellow HBCU's Spelman College, Morehouse College and Clark Atlanta University in its announcement.

"Nationally, we continue to see COVID-19 cases rise, with an increasing infection rate among young people. We have also grown more painfully aware of the disparate impact of COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths among people of color, with particular devastation on the Black community," wrote President Wayne Frederick in his announcement. Frederick also noted that if campus reopened, 40percent of Howard students would need to quarantine for two weeks on arrival to be in line with District of Columbia regulations.

Mount Holyokes announcement was preceded by those of Smith College and University of Massachusetts -- Amherst, all three of which are part of a five-college consortium in Massachusetts.

Princeton's announcement makes it the strictest of the Ivy League universities, many of which are planning to bring students back to live on campus. The university's president, Christopher Eisgruber, said in his announcement that while restrictions on travel and commerce made by the state of New Jersey were necessary and justified, they have prevented the university from moving forward with its reopening plan. Along with other restrictions on gatherings, the state has required anyone traveling from 34 other states to quarantine for two weeks upon arrival. The College of New Jersey, a public institution in the state, cited similar reasons for its decision to keep instruction online.

Joining those colleges in playing it safe, the Mid-American Conference announced Saturday that it would be postponing its entire fall season this year, affecting 2,500 athletes in various fall sports. The decision makes MAC so far the only Football Bowl Subdivision league (meaning in NCAAs top football tier) to not hold games this season. Soccer, cross-country, field hockey and womens volleyball will also be affected. A statement from the conference left open the possibility that athletes in fall sports would have a chance to compete in spring 2021.

Division II and Division III fall championships for football have already been canceled.

And yet in some places, the parade marches on.

Iowa State University moved undergraduate students into residence halls last week, beginning August 3. The process will be spread over two weeks. With over 3,000 residential students having now undergone COVID diagnostic tests, the college announced that 2.2percent, or 66 students, tested positive.

About 120 students moved into Arizona State Universitys downtown Phoenix campus this weekend. The process there will be spread over six days.

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, along with several colleges in the University System of Georgia, are set to begin in-person classes on Monday.

For colleges in California that are hoping to reopen in-person, the state has put out its own guidance on what measures need to be in place to do so. Prioritizing single-room housing, switching dining halls to grab-and-go and disposables, limiting social events and increasing cleaning are some of the recommended procedures, though the guidance says reopening will also depend on local conditions. Intercollegiate athletics can only begin (without fans) if the college can provide diagnostic testing and results in a 72-hour period in advance of competition in high contact-risk sports.

The University of Louisville dismissed three men's soccer players from its team for organizing a party, the college's athletics department announced Thursday. The three students each had prior team violations. At least 29 athletes in four sports at Louisville have tested positive for COVID-19, with others suspected of contact and in quarantine. Voluntary activities and preseason workouts for four sports have been temporarily shut down.

In other news, fans of Pennsylvania State University's football team are not happy about how the college has handled refunds for its fall season, PennLive reports. The university announced it would be playing football this upcoming term, but with no fans in attendance.

Season ticket holders can have their ticket payments either converted into a charity donation to the Levi Lamb Fund (which provides scholarship and medical treatment to Penn State's athletes), rolled over into 2021, or refunded. But seat contributions, additional fees fans pay for the ability to buy a season ticket, will not be refunded or rolled over, they can only be converted into a Levi Lamb Fund donation. Seat contributions range from $100 to $2,000 per seat. The University of Michigan previously announced that both seat contributions and ticket payments for its football season could be refunded or rolled over.

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COVID-19 Roundup: more reversals and the start of in-person classes - Inside Higher Ed

COVID-19 safety is the focus for National Health Centers Week – WGEM

HANNIBAL (WGEM) - As COVID-19 cases continue to rise in the Tri-States, health is a topic on many people's mind.

Local health officials say National Health Centers Week takes on new importance due to the pandemic.

Clarity Healthcare in Hannibal has an entire week of events planned to give back to the community and promote healthy habits.

A back-to-school drive-thru is planned for Monday, August 10. from 9 a.m. until 12 p.m. at the Marion County Ambulance District Administration Building.

The giveaway event has been happening for the past five years, but because of COVID-19, the event will look different this time.

Its just parents or grandparents or whoever can bring the kids through. Theyll be able just to drive through and well give them backpacks, said Jacinda Epperson, National Health Center Week coordinator.

The group has 500 backpacks full of supplies to give away to children in the community. There will also be other resources, including snacks and health information.

They also want to help the community learn about the importance of healthcare, especially during a pandemic.

They said there are simple ways for people to protect themselves.

There are so many things that I think we took for granted before and now you have to be even more vigilant, especially with the COVID-19, Epperson said. "Just in your day-to-day things, like wearing a mask, proper handwashing, sanitizing, just being mindful of how you go throughout your day now.

Tuesday's event will be a presentation of nebulizers to local daycares.

Wednesday is a blood drive from 12 to 5 p.m. at Clarity Health Care in Hannibal.

Thursday will be a Healthcare for the Homeless event. Blessing bags for 200 will be delivered to local homeless shelters.

On Friday, Clarity Health Care will celebrate Patient Appreciation Day.

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COVID-19 safety is the focus for National Health Centers Week - WGEM

COVID-19 live updates: Here’s what we know Monday in Reno, Northern Nevada – Reno Gazette Journal

Young people of color reflect on living in the era of Covid-19 and the battle against systemic racism. Rockland/Westchester Journal News

This is a breaking news story and will be updated throughout the day Monday, August 10.This story is part of the Reno Gazette Journals essential COVID-19 coverage and is being provided for free.Pleaseconsidersubscribing to the RGJ to support our work.

Washoe County reported two more COVID-19 deaths on Sunday, bringing the county death toll to 120,according to the Regional Information Center.

The two most recent deaths include a man in his 70s and a woman in her 80s. Both had underlying health conditions.

More: WCSD says no principal has told the district schools aren't ready to open

There were also 65 additional recoveries reported, bringing the county total to 4,548 recoveries, and 36 more cases of the coronavirus, for a total of 5,792.

Other data released Sunday include:

Sisolak: Nevada signs new bill to tackle unemployment backlog

Nevada reported eight more COVID-19 deaths and 811 additional cases on Sunday, according to thestate's COVID dashboard.

There are now 56,230 confirmed cases in the state, with most of them in Clark County.

There have also been 8,597 more tests administered, bringing the state'stotal to 799,212.

The daily positivity rate was listed at 11.3% as of Sunday morning. The number of people hospitalized with confirmed cases of COVID-19 is listed at 796, down by 40 people, while the number of people being treated in intensive care units was at 287, down by 11 people.

Read or Share this story: https://www.rgj.com/story/news/2020/08/10/nevada-covid-update-washoe-county-coronavirus-cases-deaths/3332487001/

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COVID-19 live updates: Here's what we know Monday in Reno, Northern Nevada - Reno Gazette Journal

Five weeks with COVID-19: A Spokane woman’s battle to overcome the coronavirus – The Spokesman-Review

Leslie Laursen had been careful. Since the pandemic hit, the retired mother and now grandmother had stayed at home, only venturing out every couple weeks to do grocery shopping in a mask and even with gloves at times. It was not until early June that she ventured out to a few medical appointments that had been postponed by prohibitions earlier in the states pandemic response this year. On June 18, she had been invited to an outdoor potluck with friends, which she was already leery about attending in the first place. She declined the invitation. Laursen had made an auspicious choice. That exact Thursday afternoon, her symptoms began. What followed was a five-week battle with COVID-19 that shook and tired Laursen to her core. When it comes to

of COVID-19, Laursen had nearly every single one, and

her illness persisted for more than just a week or two

. In fact, her illness lasted longer than even health authorities would consider her to be recovered. A person is considered recovered if they are 28 days past their onset of symptoms and not hospitalized. Laursen experienced a suite of symptoms that lingered for a little more than five weeks from mid-June to late

July, putting her in a category of many people around the country and world who do not just get over COVID-19 when they catch it but instead suffer from a long, persistent illness very unlike any type of virus or sickness theyve ever experienced.

have dubbed these cases of COVID-19 as long-haulers, and Laursen is not alone in her

experience of the virus. The Atlantics science writer Ed Yong interviewed several patients with similar symptoms to Laursen and long-haul cases of COVID-19 in June. In Laursens case, she isnt even counted in Spokane Countys positive case count numbers because she tested negative twice for the virus, although both medical providers she saw told her she had the virus. This is also not uncommon. First, symptoms of COVID-19 can appear from two to 14 days after a person has been exposed, which is part of what makes the virus so easy to spread, especially before a person is experiencing any symptoms. But then when a person is actually tested, timing might matter on whether a result comes back positive, guidance from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. A negative test result is a point-in-time test, and guidance on the CDCs website says, You might test negative if the sample was collected early in your infection and test positive later during your illness. Laursen was tested early in her illness both times, which is why doctors still believed she had COVID-19 and advised her to isolate herself at home. She never went to the hospital for her symptoms, although she did get chest X-rays when she started experiencing chest pain so bad she could not stand. Her lungs stayed clear throughout her illness, eliminating her need to seek emergency treatment, and while she was told to treat her symptoms at home, the virus was no flu bug. On June 18, Laursen was out in her garden, as she often is in the summer, when a wave of fatigue hit her seemingly out of the blue. She came inside and laid down to rest, but then a wave of joint pain and aches began to seize her body. It was like arthritis in every joint of my body, she said. Next came an ear-splitting headache. Her husband of 43 years came home and noticed she seemed ill. He brought her Tylenol, and Laursen went to bed at 7 or 8 p.m.

But her sleepless nights, interrupted by bone-rattling chills, fevers and sweats, were just beginning. Laursen recalled feeling nauseous, wanting to vomit,

but nothing coming up. Her fever was spiking at over 102 degrees, and she would sweat more profusely than she ever has. She recalled leaning over the toilet, and her sweat dripping off her face into the bowl below. After the fever spiked and began to drop, the chills would set in, which Laursen said was the worst part for her. You could feel them coming on, and you could feel them in your face and hands, and it would go into this full-

body internal shaking, and it was teeth-

rattling, she said. Her chills would last for a half hour before ceasing. She began to track her symptoms judiciously. She soon learned the viruss course. Every six hours,

a new bout of chills and rattling would seize her. Laursen called her health care provider and went to an urgent care center in n

orth Spokane to get tested, just a couple days after her first day of feeling fatigued. After listing

her symptoms, the nurse stared at her. She had ticked off nearly every symptom of the virus, save a loss of taste or smell. The test came back negative, but

that is not unusual, especially early in the virus

course. She also saw her doctor, who works in Post Falls, a few days later, who had her get tested. Laursen

tested negative, but her doctor agreed with the provider at the urgent care center: she had COVID-19 and needed to stay home and isolate. Laursen said

her first week, with the clockwork chills, reminded her of the movie

Inside Out, a Pixar film that depicts a girls emotions working inside her head. What would be her last episode of teeth-chattering chills came earlier than the six-hour mark and lasted for a grueling hour and a half. It was almost like I had this image in my mind of that COVID ball with the red things on it, and it was coming into my head in an elevator and busting into that room where all those little people are handling everything, and it busts in and says move over, she said. Laursen gets angry when people compare COVID-19 to the flu. She turns 70 at the end of August and said she has never experienced an illness like COVID-19 in her life. She also recognizes that the virus easily could have been the end for her. There were points during her fight with COVID-19 that she thought of expressing her dying wishes to her children. There were moments I was in tears, she recalled. I have three kids they are all grown, of course I was writing letters to my kids in my head and hoping I had time to actually write them and telling my husband, Please dont take me to the hospital; I dont want to go there. After about a week of intense chills, spiking fevers and nausea, Laursens symptoms changed. She began to cough, experiencing immense chest pain that doubled her over. She had her lungs X-rayed to ensure that the virus had not worked its way into them. She wouldnt need oxygen, according to the X-rays, but her cough and fatigue continued for weeks. Self-described by her family members as a pistol, Laursen was never a person who napped regularly. She did with COVID-19, though, and she often felt too tired to go out in her garden or do much of anything. On July 12, nearly a month since her symptoms had begun, Laursen said goodbye to her husband, who was leaving to play golf. He asked if she would be okay, and she said yes. Tired, she took a nap, intending it to last an hour. She woke up four and a half hours later, disoriented. Laursen recalled feeling foggy in her brain, unable to gather her thoughts. She managed to dial her daughter on the phone but began to cry hysterically. She suffered what felt like an anxiety attack, unable to gather her thoughts around her. Her daughter came to the house, with her mask on, to sit with her mother until her husband got home. That marked the last extreme disillusionment Laursen experienced in her fight with COVID-19. She still experienced extreme fatigue until July 24, when it finally seemed to leave altogether. So far, theres been no resurgence of symptoms, and she doesnt need to take Tylenol or other medications for her symptoms. Laursen recognizes that she is fortunate, not needing hospitalization for her symptoms, but even still, she said it is frustrating when others do not take the virus seriously. Im watching, listening and trying to do the right thing, Laursen said. But its frustrating to get looks about wearing masks. I get angry its a mask.

Leslie Laursen had been careful.

Since the pandemic hit, the retired grandmother had stayed at home in north Spokane, only venturing out every couple of weeks to go grocery shopping always wearing a mask, sometimes wearing gloves, too.

It was not until early June that she went to a few medical appointments that had been postponed by prohibitions earlier in the states pandemic response.

On June 18, Laursen was invited to an outdoor potluck with friends, but she was leery about attending and declined the invitation.

That turned out to be a good choice. That Thursday afternoon, her symptoms began.

What followed was a five-week battle with COVID-19 that shook and tired Laursen to her core.

Laursen developed nearly every known symptom of COVID-19 coughing, fevers, chills, headaches, nausea, chest pain and her illness lasted a remarkable period of time. Most people who people develop symptoms only have them for a week or two.

In fact, health authorities would typically consider someone like Laursen to be recovered from the illness. COVID-19 patients who are not hospitalized are considered recovered 28 days after their first symptoms appear.

Laursen experienced a suite of symptoms that lingered for a little more than five weeks, from mid-June to late July, putting her in a category of patients that some writers and scientists have dubbed the long-haulers.

These patients dont succumb to COVID-19 or quickly get over an infection. Instead, they suffer persistent, sometimes debilitating symptoms unlike any theyve experienced before.

Two medical providers diagnosed Laursen with COVID-19, but she isnt counted in Spokane Countys tally of cases because she twice tested negative for the coronavirus. Thats not unheard of.

Symptoms of COVID-19 can appear two to 14 days after a person has been infected, which is partly why the virus spreads so rapidly. The timing of the test matters, too: A person carrying the virus might give a false negative if theyre tested early in the course of the infection or before symptoms begin, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

You might test negative if the sample was collected early in your infection and test positive later during your illness, the CDC says.

Laursen was tested early in her illness both times, which is why doctors still believed she had COVID-19 and advised her to self-isolate at home. She was never admitted to the hospital for her symptoms, though she did get X-rays when she started experiencing chest pain so bad she could not stand.

Her lungs stayed clear throughout her illness, so there was no need for emergency treatment. While she was told to treat her symptoms at home, the virus was no flu bug.

On June 18, Laursen was tending her garden, as she often does in the summer, when a wave of fatigue hit her, seemingly out of the blue. She went inside and laid down to rest, but then her body was seized by sudden aches and joint pain.

It was like arthritis in every joint of my body, she said.

Next came an ear-splitting headache. Her husband of 43 years arrived home and noticed she seemed ill. He brought her Tylenol, and Laursen went to bed at 7 or 8 p.m. It was the first of many sleepless nights interrupted by bone-rattling chills, fevers and sweats.

Laursen recalls feeling nauseous and wanting to vomit, but nothing would come up. Her fevers spiked at more than 102 degrees, and she would sweat more profusely than she ever had before. She recalls leaning over the toilet with sweat dripping off her face into the bowl.

When the fevers broke, the chills would set in. For Laursen, that was the worst part.

You could feel them coming on, and you could feel them in your face and hands, she said. And it would go into this full-body internal shaking, and it was teeth-rattling.

Her chills would last a half-hour before ceasing. She began to studiously track her symptoms and soon learned the viruss course. Every six hours, like clockwork, a new bout of chills and rattling would seize her.

Laursen called her health care provider and went to an urgent care center in north Spokane to get tested, just a couple days after her first day of feeling fatigued. After listing her symptoms, the nurse stared at her. She had ticked off nearly every symptom of COVID-19, except a loss of taste or smell. Still, the test came back negative.

A few days later, Laursen saw her doctor in Post Falls, who had her tested again. She again tested negative, but her doctor agreed with the provider at the urgent care center: She had COVID-19 and needed to stay home and isolate.

Laursen gets angry when people compare COVID-19 to the flu. She will turn 70 at the end of August and said she has never experienced an illness like COVID-19 in her life. She also recognizes that the virus easily could have been the end for her. At times during her ordeal, she thought of expressing her dying wishes to her three adult children.

There were moments I was in tears, she recalled. I was writing letters to my kids in my head and hoping I had time to actually write them and telling my husband, Please dont take me to the hospital. I dont want to go there.

After about a week of intense chills, spiking fevers and nausea, Laursens symptoms changed. She began to cough, experiencing intense chest pain that doubled her over. She had her lungs X-rayed to ensure the virus had not worked its way into them. She wouldnt need an oxygen tank, but her cough and fatigue continued for weeks.

Described by her family members as a pistol, Laursen had never napped regularly. She did while she was sick, though, and often felt too tired to tend her garden or do much of anything.

On July 12, nearly a month after her symptoms began, Laursen said goodbye to her husband, who was leaving to play golf. He asked if she would be OK, and she said yes. Tired, she took a nap, intending it to last an hour. She woke up four and half hours later, disoriented.

Laursen recalls feeling foggy, unable to gather her thoughts. She managed to dial her daughters number on the phone but began to cry hysterically. She suffered what felt like an anxiety attack. Her daughter returned home, with her mask on, to sit with her mother until her husband got home.

That was the last time her symptoms were so severe. She continued experiencing extreme fatigue until July 24, when it finally seemed to leave altogether. So far, shes not experienced any resurgence of symptoms, and she no longer takes Tylenol or other medications.

Laursen recognizes she is fortunate because she never needed a long hospitalization.

She said its frustrating when others dont take the virus seriously.

Im watching, listening and trying to do the right thing, Laursen said. But its frustrating to get looks about wearing masks. I get angry its a mask.

Go here to read the rest:

Five weeks with COVID-19: A Spokane woman's battle to overcome the coronavirus - The Spokesman-Review

Content Creation in the Age of COVID-19 – MD Magazine

As we entered the year 2020, life in North America seemed quite normal and unlikely to change. In January, COVID-19 was a newly emerging, yet-unnamed disease in a far away place. Many people were unaware of it, and few considered it a potential local threat.

One of the first warnings to garner public interest came in the form of a now-deleted tweet from Eric Feigl-Ding, an epidemiologist who had approximately 2,000 followers on Twitter. In a matter of months, his audience increased tenfold, and he has been quoted in national media sources including Newsweek and WebMD. How this happened is both a social media success story, and a cautionary tale about content creation in the age of coronavirus.

You have probably read the standard social media marketing advice: create sharable content. Many doctors ask exactly what that means, and there is no single right answer. However, there are a few common guidelines. The tweet that landed Feigl-Ding squarely in the spotlight checks all the boxes:

Include images Visual content tends to perform best on most social networks. The tweet included graphs, which may have been too technical for the layperson to understand, but they were visually appealing.

Provide value People tend to share content that they find informative, entertaining, or otherwise useful. Feigl-Ding was issuing a warning, something people felt that others needed to know about.

Use a catchy intro Social media users tend to scan their feeds, and you need to grab their interest right away or they will keep scrolling. The infamous coronavirus tweet began HOLY MOTHER OF GOD in all capitals. It was a dramatic, possibly alarmist statement and it was attention catching.

Establish credibility With the plethora of misinformation on the internet, people are sceptical of vague statements. Links, statistics, expert quotes, or facts and figures lend credibility to education content. Feigl-Dings tweet included a link to a scientific paper, and described the new coronavirus having a R0 of 3.8, making it as eight times as contagious as SARS. He had made an error in the comparison to SARS. By the time he published the tweet, researchers decreased the R0 estimate for this new virus. At the moment, he was unaware of those facts, as were his followers. It appeared to be proven facts and science.

Be social If social media were a physical place, it would be the casual coffee shop on the corner or the roadside diner. Dull, dry content is boring, and an overly formal tone seems out of place. Feigl-Dings tweets are mostly written in non-clinical (some would say unprofessional) terms and liberally sprinkled with emoticons, slang, and personal commentary. It is relatable.

The core of Feigl-Dings message was correct and important. This strain of coronavirus did indeed become a pandemic, the likes of which we have not seen in recent history. Yet, it also included misinformation, outdated figures, and a flamboyant style that does not convey professionalism. Throughout the pandemic he has continued tweeting in similar style. As a result, he has gained a reputation as a renowned epidemiologist or charlatan, depending on who you ask.

This is the unfortunate downside to social media success. A mistake is unlikely to haunt you if only ten people see it. However, it may become fodder for local or national media if tens of thousands see it. Unless you wish to cultivate a controversial image, it is good practice to double-check facts and avoid sensationalist statements. Furthermore, the unprecedented nature of the pandemic presents unique challenges. For example:

Facts can change The tweet discussed above included outdated facts, even though Feigl-Ding posted it immediately after reading the paper. Many months later, the latest information is still evolving at lightning speed. Verify statistics immediately before posting and remove or update old material to avoid causing confusion.

Best practices change Early on, Feigl-Ding had supported the idea that facemasks were useless. Within weeks, he changed course and embraced mask-wearing. His advice was in line with official recommendations, but it was often presented as his own opinion, making the sudden change seem self-contradictory. Be clear and concise in your public messaging.

Remember your audience is not clinicians The secret ingredient in Feigl-Dings remarkable social media popularity is likely his relatable tone and style. He puts complex information in terms the average layperson can understand and relate to. However, there is a danger in over simplifying. People may take your statements too literally or misinterpret your words. Choose your words carefully and avoid generalizations or out-of-context comments.

Eric Feigl-Ding is just one example. Jeffrey VanWingen, gained unexpected fame for making a video about disinfecting groceries. Unfortunately, he is a family physician, not a food safety expert. Therefore, he included advice such as washing vegetables with soap, which is considered unsafe because it can leave a residue. He also made a general statement about leaving groceries in the garage for days, without stipulating to exclude perishables.

Do not be discouraged. There are also countless stories of medical professionals successfully using social media to provide valuable, beneficial, important information to the public and simultaneously building an excellent reputation. The key is a combination of meticulous fact-checking and a keen awareness of your readers mindset.

Naren Arulrajah, President and CEO of Ekwa Marketing, has been a leader in medical marketing for over a decade. Ekwa provides comprehensive marketing solutions for busy doctors, with a team of more than 180 full time professionals, providing web design, hosting, content creation, social media, reputation management, SEO, and more.

If youre looking for ways to boost your marketing results, call 855-598-3320 for a free strategy session with Naren.

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Content Creation in the Age of COVID-19 - MD Magazine

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 10 August – World Economic Forum

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have now reached more than 19.8 million globally, according to Johns Hopkins University & Medicine. The number of confirmed coronavirus deaths now stands at more than 730,000.

Brazil has recorded more than 3 million cases of COVID-19, with more than 100,000 confirmed deaths. Its outbreak is the world's second worst, after the US.

Economic activity in France was 7% below normal levels in July up slightly on June. The French economy contracted nearly 14% across the same period.

New Zealand has recorded 100 days without a domestic transmission, but is warning against complacency as countries like Australia have seen cases increase.

China reported 49 new coronavirus cases on the mainland on 9 August, up 23 on a day earlier. Thirty-five of these new infections were imported cases, said the National Health Commission.

The first global pandemic in more than 100 years, COVID-19 has spread throughout the world at an unprecedented speed. At the time of writing, 4.5 million cases have been confirmed and more than 300,000 people have died due to the virus.

As countries seek to recover, some of the more long-term economic, business, environmental, societal and technological challenges and opportunities are just beginning to become visible.

To help all stakeholders communities, governments, businesses and individuals understand the emerging risks and follow-on effects generated by the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, the World Economic Forum, in collaboration with Marsh and McLennan and Zurich Insurance Group, has launched its COVID-19 Risks Outlook: A Preliminary Mapping and its Implications - a companion for decision-makers, building on the Forums annual Global Risks Report.

The report reveals that the economic impact of COVID-19 is dominating companies risks perceptions.

Companies are invited to join the Forums work to help manage the identified emerging risks of COVID-19 across industries to shape a better future. Read the full COVID-19 Risks Outlook: A Preliminary Mapping and its Implications report here, and our impact story with further information.

Australia has reported its deadliest day since the pandemic began, with the largest single-day rise in COVID-19 deaths.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said that internal border closures were unlikely to be lifted before Christmas. The federal political system has given rise to the internal closures, with states and territories taking different measures.

But there was some brighter news, with hard-hit Victoria reporting a drop in daily new infections. Melbourne, the state capital, has been in lockdown since early July.

Cases have risen in Australia after plateauing.

Image: Our World in Data

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COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 10 August - World Economic Forum

NIOSH Stresses the Importance of Collecting COVID-19 Case Job Information – Occupational Health and Safety

NIOSH Stresses the Importance of Collecting COVID-19 Case Job Information

Collecting, coding, analyzing and reporting industry and occupation data from COVID-19 cases is crucial to informing public health strategies to reduce the impact of the pandemic on workers. One NIOSH article gives some examples.

Studying the virus in terms of its prevalence among certain industries and types of workers is important to informing and building policies that will best help the public. One NIOSH article elaborates on its previous blog post, Collecting occupation and industry data in public health surveillance systems for COVID-19.

Having data about industry and occupation helps the public health community identify work-related outbreaks and evaluate risks among various groups of workers. While researchers have had to adjust their methods of data collection as science on the virus has evolved, there is a growing effort by public health officials to focus on COVID case job collection.

See another recent post on the topic titled Making Industry and Occupation Information Useful for Public Health: A guide to coding industry and occupation text fields.

The article from NIOSH highlights two recent examples of how collecting and coding job information for cases can be used to ensure worker safety.

What Washington State Learned: Cases by Occupation and Industry

The Washington State Department of Health worked with the Washington State Department of Labor and Industries Safety & Health Assessment & Research for Prevention Program to study COVID-19 cases among occupation and industry. Here are the key findings:

As of July 23, 2020, there were 26,799 lab-confirmed cases of COVID-19 among Washington residents.

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NIOSH Stresses the Importance of Collecting COVID-19 Case Job Information - Occupational Health and Safety

After 150 days of the COVID-19 pandemic, here are the best- and worst-performing stocks – MarketWatch

Last Friday was the 150th day since the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a pandemic. During that period of unprecedented volatility, stocks extended gains.

The S&P 500 Index SPX, +0.18% rose 16.3%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.92% was up 9.7%, the Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -0.24% jumped 32% and the Nasdaq-100 Index NDX, -0.36% added 33.1%.

The best and worst performers in those indexes are listed below.

At 100 days on June 17, the best-performing sector of the S&P 500 was information technology, and even the beleaguered energy sector was up 11.7% because of the recovery in the price of oil. Heres how the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 performed during the first 150 days of the pandemic:

The information technology sector has been the strongest during the pandemic and for all of 2020 so far, but the consumer discretionary sector (which includes Amazon.com AMZN, -0.49%, up 67% during the pandemic and up 71% for 2020) is close behind. The energy sector has pulled back from its level at the end of the pandemics first 100 days, even though the price of oil has risen another 10% since June 17. The year-to-date chart of continuous quotes for West Texas crude CL00, +2.57% for 2020 remains ugly:

Among the S&P 500, 341 stocks rose between March 10 and Aug. 7. Here are the 20 strongest performers during the first 150 days of the pandemic:

And here are the 20 worst-performing stocks among the S&P 500 for the periods:

Heres how all 30 components of the Dow Jones Industrial Average performed during the first 150 days of the pandemic:

Here are the top 10 performers among components of the Nasdaq-100 index during the first 150 days of the pandemic:

Here are the 10 worst performers among the Nasdaq-100 for the period:

Dont miss: Gold rising to $4,000 an ounce would not be an unreasonable move, fund manager says

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After 150 days of the COVID-19 pandemic, here are the best- and worst-performing stocks - MarketWatch

Seattle Seahawks become first NFL team to use CLEARs COVID-19 screening tool – GeekWire

(Seahawks Photos)

The Seattle Seahawks are turning to technology to help keep players and personnel safe as a season unlike any other kicks off next month.

The team is now using CLEARs Health Pass software to screen players, coaches, and support staff at its training facility near Seattle and at CenturyLink Field. Its the first NFL franchise to use the service, which launched in May and is already implemented in the NHL and at restaurants.

Before arriving at the Virginia Mason Athletic Center each day, Seahawks personnel are required to log into the Health Pass app, verify their identity with a selfie photo, and answer health screening questions. When they arrive, the app is scanned at the entrance and a user gets a green or red check green means all is good, while red requires more questions to be answered.

Health Pass is being used alongside the NFLs other COVID-19 screening protocols including routine testing, daily temperature checks, mask wearing, and more.

With air travel down due to the pandemic, CLEAR is finding other use cases for its security software. The New York-based company is best known for its identity verification technology at more than 50 airports and venues across the U.S. It previously worked with the Seahawks in 2018 to offer fast lanes at the CenturyLink Field entrance and for food and drink purchasing.

Recode reported that some privacy advocates are raising concerns about Health Pass given the type of private data collected, and one expert said it could become part of security theater. Some U.S. senators also sent privacy-related questions to the company.

CLEAR says it could potentially integrate data such as a vaccine status into Health Pass.Heres Clear CEO Caryn Seidman-Becker talking about Health Pass in May:

After nearly two weeks of testing, receiver John Ursua on Sunday became the first Seahawks player listed on the leagues COVID-19 list, which tracks players who either tested positive or came into close contact with someone who did.

Players began reporting to training camp late last month and padded practices begin this week. The season is scheduled to begin Sept. 10; there are no preseason games this year.

More than 60 players have already opted out of playing. The NFL is not using a bubble strategy like the NBA and NHL. The upcoming season for college football is up in the air; the Big Ten reportedly will cancel games this fall.

The latest data from the NFLPA shows 107 positive cases for players during the offseason, and 56 since training camp began.

There are a number of companies selling COVID-related screening tools, including various health tech firms. Fitbit recently debuted a Ready for Work symptom tracker. Microsoft and UnitedHealth Grouprolled out a free app in Maycalled ProtectWell that surveys workers about their health. Companies such as Amazon areconducting temperature checks and setting up COVID-19 tests across its operations network.

The first spinout from a new Seattle innovation studio run by Pioneer Square Labs (PSL) and Fortive is TeamSense, which helps employers track COVID-19 symptoms at the workplace.

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Michigan records 514 new COVID-19 cases and two deaths – The Detroit News

The state of Michigan reported514 new cases of COVID-19 on Sunday with two additional deaths.

Sunday's update brings the state's total number of cases to87,403 and total number of deaths to 6,249.

The total number of deaths were reduced by one by the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.According to the site, three deathsthat were previously reported were corrected by local health jurisdictions.

"These cases may have been recorded as deceased in error or jurisdictions may have received additional information indicating previously reported deaths were determined to not be COVID-19 associated," the department posted online.

The state also added 9,323probable cases and 270probable deaths.

Last week, the state recorded almost 50 deaths related to the virus. Michigan's fatalityrate dropped to 7.1% in August from 9.5% in June. The number of test that came back positive last week remained low around 3%.

As the month of July saw increases in cases of the virus, Gov.Gretchen Whitmerextended Michigan's state of emergency Friday through Sept. 4.

The state of emergency, which has been in place for almost half of the year, will allow Whitmer to keep her COVID-19 related powers intact that were set to expire on Tuesday.

According to the state's coronavirus site, 63,636 people have recovered from the virus.

In long-term care facilities, 7,854 residents have confirmed cases, another 6,131 have recovered or are recovering. Since March, 2,024 residents and 22 staff members have died from the virus. Another 3,840 workers have confirmed cases as of Wednesday, according to state data

Over 1,600 nursing home workers from 18 nursing homes are planning to strike "over unfair labor practices" during the pandemic starting Aug.17.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 8-6-2020 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

The West Virginia Department of Health andHuman Resources (DHHR) reports as of 10:00 a.m., on August 6,2020, there have been 307,255 total confirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 7,277 totalcases and 124 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 (29/0), Berkeley (647/28), Boone (95/0), Braxton (8/0), Brooke(60/1), Cabell (358/9), Calhoun (6/0), Clay (17/1), Doddridge (5/0), Fayette(137/0), Gilmer (16/0), Grant (96/1), Greenbrier (88/0), Hampshire (76/0),Hancock (103/4), Hardy (56/1), Harrison (206/1), Jackson (160/0), Jefferson(288/6), Kanawha (863/13), Lewis (27/1), Lincoln (79/0), Logan (176/0), Marion(175/4), Marshall (125/3), Mason (53/0), McDowell (48/1), Mercer (174/0),Mineral (114/2), Mingo (154/2), Monongalia (913/16), Monroe (18/1), Morgan(25/1), Nicholas (34/1), Ohio (262/3), Pendleton (57/1), Pleasants (9/1),Pocahontas (40/1), Preston (101/22), Putnam (177/1), Raleigh (203/7), Randolph(203/3), Ritchie (3/0), Roane (14/0), Summers (7/0), Taylor (55/1), Tucker(11/0), Tyler (13/0), Upshur (36/3), Wayne (194/2), Webster (4/0), Wetzel(40/0), Wirt (6/0), Wood (230/12), Wyoming (29/0).

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 Barbour, Preston, and Marshall counties in this report.

Pleasenote that delays may be experienced with the reporting of information from thelocal health department to DHHR. Visitthe dashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

On July 24,2020, Gov. Jim Justice announced that DHHR, the agency in charge of reportingthe number of COVID-19 cases, will transition from providing twice-dailyupdates to one report every 24 hours. This became effective August 1, 2020.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 8-6-2020 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

COVID-19 Only Adding to the Challenges Health Centers Face – MD Magazine

Community health centers provide much more for their clientele then just medical advice and health care.

Because of the low income demographic often served at these facilities, health centers also serve as a place people can go to connect them to a world of different opportunities, from literacy and education programs to employment possibilities.

However, even in good times these centers can struggle financially. Factor in the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic might be creating an exceptionally difficult time for health centers across the country.

Larry McReynolds, Executive Director, Family Health Centers at NYU Langone, explained in an interview with HCPLive, how health centers were able to weather the initial storm and switch to telemedicine to help maintain services.

Well, it's certainly been very challenging, but I am very encouraged that health centers for the most part, were able to move from an in person face to face model to a virtual model very, very quickly, he said.

The Nature of Health Centers

Health centers generate $12.6 billion in economic benefits for low-income, rural and inner city communities and create 143,000 jobs, while serving over 24 million patients in 6000 of in Americas most economically challenged neighborhoods.

The overall goal of health centers across the country is to increase access to care and reduce health disparities. This could mean serving patients who either do not have insurance or have insurance that other institutions do not want to take.

Health centers generally serve a high proportion of Medicaid recipient, as well as a large number of uninsured individuals. McReynolds said these patients can come with multiple social economic issues, including unstable housing, low literacy levels, low education levels, low income levels, and food insecurities.

They need to be able to go to a place that doesn't ask the first question of what's your insurance in order to get in the door to see a doctor, he said. So, health centers have a sliding fee scale, so that even the poorest of individuals can have access to care to see a doctor for very little or no money.

The Impact of COVID-19

Those factors in normal times make it very difficult for health centers to even break even. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has made the situation even more untenable and difficult for health centers across the country.

McReynolds said one of the unfortunate byproducts of the situation is the NYU Langone Health Center was forced to lay off some workers, which more than 85% of health centers across the country were forced to do.

However, as case numbers began to improve, McReynolds said, Langone was able to rehire some of the laid off workers.

Like traditional doctors offices and hospitals, McReynolds said one of the tools health centers have successfully utilized during the ongoing pandemic has been telemedicine services. The popularity of these telehealth programs can be seen in Langones behavioral health programs, where McReynolds estimated a 130% increase in productivity from where they were before the pandemic.

The Future

Another service offered at the health center is a school-based program, with programs in more than 63 schools across New York City. However, the mass school closings forced the health center to temporarily halt their own programs.

And so, it really just kind of compounded this disparity problem that COVID adversely affects Hispanics and blacks in infection rates and mortality, McReynolds said. And now the services that are designed to help those folks had to lay people off. So that's a very big challenge for fragile organizations that serve fragile populations.

McReynolds also expects, should a vaccine gain FDA approval, that health centers will have a role in administering it to the public.

McReynolds said there have been a number of new pilot programs tried in an effort to reduce the burden on emergency room visits in favor of community health centers.

The most successful pilot that I think will stay in place is that there will be community health workers or case workers and emergency rooms that will help those people that showed up to the emergency room when it wasnt a real emergency and connect them with the primary caregiver in the community.

Since the pandemic began, there have been an increase in the type of patients needing care, including cardiovascular issues, psychiatric conditions, sleep problems, and substance abuse.

While there are certainly financial worries, to compound what might be an increase in people needing medical assistance, Reynolds said there will always be a role for community health centers.

I think that the biggest challenge is to, to reach out to patients to let them know that we're here for you regardless, he said. Regardless of if you just lost your job and now you don't have insurance anymore because there's 40 million newly unemployed people.

We're here for you, regardless of whatever your health condition is, he added. It's really building on that trust factor of getting the patient to trust us and they have always trusted us because we don't judge them based on income or citizenship or language or anything.

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COVID-19 Only Adding to the Challenges Health Centers Face - MD Magazine

Alaska reports death of Anchorage resident tied to COVID-19 and 86 new cases – Anchorage Daily News

Alaska reported another death associated with the new coronavirus on Saturday, as cases of the illness continued to increase statewide.

The Alaskan who passed away was an Anchorage man in his 60s who had underlying conditions, according to a release from the states health department.

The state also reported eight new hospitalizations, but noted that new hospitalization reports can lag. There were 31 people hospitalized with COVD-19, according to state data on Saturday. In addition, seven other people were hospitalized and under investigation for the illness.

An Utqiagvik resident who tested positive for the illness was transferred to Anchorage, due to the severity of complications from COVID-19, the Arctic Slope Native Association said in a release.

In total, there were 86 new COVID-19 cases announced on Saturday. The daily total is a slight uptick compared with recent days in the past week. Daily case counts decreased somewhat this week after multiple days when those numbers reached over 100 at the end of July and into early August.

In the Municipality of Anchorage, there were 57 new cases announced: 48 among Anchorage residents; 3 among Chugiak residents; 5 among Eagle River residents and one in a nonresident within Anchorage.

In the Mat-Su, there were two cases of COVID-19 in people from Palmer and four in Wasilla residents.

The Kenai Peninsula Borough had four new cases, including two in Sterling residents, one in someone from Soldotna and one in a person from Seward.

There were three cases reported in Fairbanks residents and two in smaller communities in the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area. There was also one new case each in residents of Cordova and Sitka.

The state announced 3 cases among Juneau residents and 3 cases among nonresidents there on Saturday.

Additionally, among nonresidents, one person working in the seafood industry in Cordova, one person from the North Slope oil industry in Prudhoe Bay and someone in an unlisted industry in Dillingham tested positive, as well as one nonresident from a location that was still under investigation, according to the states release.

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Alaska reports death of Anchorage resident tied to COVID-19 and 86 new cases - Anchorage Daily News