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State employees approve vaccine mandate compromise – local and national COVID update for September 10, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) Hospitals in Eastern Washington continue to struggle with more officials warning they are running out of staff and resources. Counties with higher vaccination rates have fewer new COVID cases, while counties with low vaccination rates run out of options.

There were more COVID cases in all three school districts we are monitoring, including Peter Kirk Elementary and an expansion of quarantined students at Juanita High School and Kamiakin Middle School.

The Washington Federation of State Employees overwhelmingly approved a compromise agreement with Washington in support of the Governor’s vaccine mandate.

The Proud Boys and Patriot Prayer ignored a court order barring protests within one mile of Vancouver, Washington schools. The same organizers of the ongoing Vancouver protests have an event scheduled in Woodinville on September 25.

New data from the CDC shows that Moderna is the vaccine winner against the Delta variant and provides a hint on why the Johnson and Johnson vaccine has all but disappeared.

Reactions to announcements made by the Biden Administration yesterday are following partisan lines to the surprise of no one.

Finally, you probably heard about a study that indicated that 85% of men who take ivermectin become infertile. A study that we haven’t mentioned until right now. We cover that one in our misinformation section.

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on September 10, 2021.


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Washington State Update for September 10, 2021

Washington state COVID update

Although COVID cases remain on a plateau statewide, counties with lower vaccination rates have more new cases per capita.

Percent of Total Population Fully VaccinatedAverage 14-Day New Case Rate (unadjusted)
50.00% or above (12 counties)517.8
40.00% to 49.99% (17 counties)697.2
27.30% to 39.99% (10 counties)828.5
14-Day New COVID Cases per 100K average by Vaccination Rate, Not Adjusted for Population

In the South Central Hospital Region, which includes Benton, Franklin, Klickitat, Walla Walla, and Yakima counties, new cases are 844.9 per 100K people.

Through September 9, Washington’s statewide 14-day rolling average was 508.0 COVID cases per 100K. Clallam (1,008.2 per 100K), Columbia (1,075.3 per 100K), Franklin (1297.0.0 per 100K), Lincoln (1049.5 per 100K, Okanogan (1,001.6 per 100K), and Stevens (1,060.5 per 100K) reported an extreme number of new cases. Counties in the 800.0 to 999.9 per 100K range include Asotin, Benton, Chelan, Cowlitz, Douglas, Grant, Lewis, Pend Oreille, and Yakima. Garfield County dropped to 764.0

King County is at 301.1 cases per 100K, statistically unchanged from yesterday.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 13.73%, and over the previous 7 days, 13.84%. These numbers indicate the state is under testing, and testing locations are becoming overwhelmed in the hardest-hit counties. The rate of hospitalization was flat to down across all age groups.

Age Group7-Day Case Rate7-Day Hospitalization Rate
Ages 0-1128.3 (up)0.1
Ages 12-1922.00.2
Ages 20-3450.4 (down)1.2 (down)
Ages 35-4945.22.8
Ages 50-6433.23.8 (down)
Ages 65-7916.63.8 (down)
Ages 80+5.1 (down)1.6
7-day case rate and 7-day hospitalization rate is per 100K within the age group – the target for 7-day case rate is <25.0, but there are other factors such as vaccination rates within the age groups, how many total tests within the 7-day period, and the positivity rate within each age group

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 59 deaths yesterday.

Washington Federation of State Employees union ratifies COVID vaccination mandate agreement

Members of the Washington Federation of State Employees ratified an agreement with the state addressing the effects of Governor Inslee’s vaccine mandate. The vote concluded Thursday night, with more than 80 percent casting their ballot in favor of ratification.

The agreement provides an additional leave day, a retirement option, vaccine access and education on work time, and a fair, equitable, and consistent process for employees seeking a medical or religious exemption.

“Our union was able to achieve what we set out for—a victory for public health and due process,” said WFSE President and Psychiatric Social Worker Mike Yestramski.

State employees have until this Sunday to get their first dose and comply with the October 18 deadline to be totally vaccinated. Although the Johnson & Johnson vaccine could be received as late as October 4 to meet the deadline, the supply of the single-dose vaccine is low.

Patriot Prayer, Proud Boys, and activists ignore protest injuction in Vancouver

Multiple groups protested at Skyview High School in Vancouver in defiance of a court order restricting protests within one mile of any school in the city. Skyview High School parents received an e-mail informing them of the multiple protests planned. The school district added security and was “coordinating with the Clark County Sheriff’s Office.”

E-mail message sent to Skyview High School parents warning of new protests by anti-vaccination and anti-government groups

Members of Patriot Front, the Proud Boys – including Tusitala “Tiny” Toese, and the Washougal Moms protested on school grounds and across the street. Police did not intervene to enforce the court order. The group then left to protest at the home of Clark County district judge Suzan Clark’s home. Social media posts and a website listed the judge’s address publicly, and on Telegram, there were calls to come armed to her home. Protesters arrived at the published address this afternoon to find that it wasn’t the residence of Judge Clark.

The Group Wake Up Washington calling for a protest at a District Judge’s home to protest a court order

The group that organized the planned protest at the judge’s home also organizes anti-vaccination protests across Washington state, including upcoming area protests in Seattle, Marysville, and Woodinville. The Seattle Truth Network, in coordination with Wake Up Washington, is planning an anti-vaccination event on September 25 at Rooster’s Bakery and Cafe in Woodinville.

Palmer Davis of La Center is behind the announcement to protest at the judge’s house yesterday. Davis ran for a city council seat in La Center last month, receiving 4.68% of the vote in a 4 candidate field.

The anti-vaccination and the anti-government movements are intersectional, with Open Schools USA, Wake Up Washington, and Washougal Mom’s have embraced support from right-wing organizations. In a study released on August 27, the Proud Boys were among the top three factions in the country that brandished firearms at protests, and Patriot Prayer was among the top ten. The same study found that 25% of the events that the Proud Boys showed up at descended into violence.

Travel Advisories

We recommend avoiding all travel to Yakima, Klickitat, Benton, Franklin, and Walla Walla counties, along with the state of Idaho. Hospital resources in these regions are so constrained that you may receive inadequate care if you experience a medical emergency.

Thank you

Thank you to our new subscribers and those of you who have made one-time contributions. On behalf of the entire team, thank you for helping us keep the lights on!

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

The CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) included a new report studying the Interim Estimates of COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness Against COVID-19–Associated Emergency Department or Urgent Care Clinic Encounters and Hospitalizations Among Adults. The report studied vaccine effectiveness against the Delta variant in nine states from June to August.

The research data was collected from 187 hospitals and 221 emergency departments and urgent care clinics. The nine states utilized were selected because the Delta variant accounted for at least 50% of the laboratory-confirmed COVID cases at the start of the study period. Researchers examined confirmed COVID cases among 32,867 adults 18 and over, and vaccination status was confirmed using electronic records and immunization registries. For the study, a person was considered fully vaccinated 14 days after they received their final dose.

The median age of an infected person was 43 years old, and the median age for an individual hospitalized was 65. The study did not take into account factors such as weight, race, community COVID restrictions or mandates, or comorbidities.

The study found that the Moderna vaccine was the most effective against the Delta variant, followed by Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson. For the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, some of the data is concerning.

VaccineEffectiveness Against Delta VariantEffectiveness Against Hospitalization
Johnson & Johnson65%60%
Moderna92%95%
Pfizer77%80%
All Vaccinated Individuals82%86%
CDC Study on vaccination effectiveness against the Delta variant – September 10, 2021

The study does have several limitations. Overall vaccine effectiveness and how much immunity declines over time have not been fully evaluated, and the time between being completely vaccinated before testing positive was not considered. The study did not account for partial vaccinations, with data included in the unvaccinated group. Lastly, although the study uses a significant population sample, the findings are likely too narrow to apply to the entire United States.

The federal government stopped the distribution of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in June of this year, and doses are very hard to find. This report provides some insight into why the one-dose vaccine has fallen out of favor.

King County, Washington is reporting over 84% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 22.4% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID. A hospital system caring for this many COVID-positive patients in acute care is considered to be under “severe stress.” ICUs are at 89.6% of capacity statewide, with 34.1% of ICU patients fighting COVID, a small increase compared to yesterday.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 176 per day on September 7. The Department of Health reported there were 1,755 COVID patients statewide and 261 on ventilators.

Yesterday, we reported that at least one hospital in Yakima was having to ration care and warned they were close to crisis standards of care. In Colville, Mount Carmel Hospital is full, and more than half of the patients have COVID.

“Stevens County today has 14. When you think about only having 25 beds or less in critical access,” Peg Currie, the chief operating officer at Providence Healthcare, explained. “Imagine what the emergency rooms are like, the waiting lists are like, to try to get into a higher level of acute care.”

The Walla Walla County Department of Community Health reported over the last 2 weeks, Mary Hospital had no beds available, and the county recorded the most lab-confirmed cases of COVID in a single month since the pandemic began. On Wednesday, 90% of the hospitalized COVID patients in Walla Walla were unvaccinated.

Officials in Spokane County held a press conference today, reporting a record number of COVID and total patients in the hospital.

As of Friday morning, 150 patients with COVID-19 are hospitalized at Sacred Heart and Holy Family Hospital in Spokane, and 95% are unvaccinated, Providence COO Peg Currie said during the press conference.

“It’s not a record that we wanted to break, but we have broken that,” Currie said. “Many of these [patients] are in our ICUs, and everybody that is in the Sacred Heart and Holy Family ICU now on a ventilator is not vaccinated.”

The age group that Providence is seeing the most in its hospitals is 40 to 50 years old, Currie said, which is much younger than previously hospitalized patients. 

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueYELLOW– Bellevue (7)
– Chinook (10)
– Highland (1)
– Interlake (1)
– Newport (3)
– Sammamish (2)
– Somerset (1)
– Tillicum (1)
– Tyee (1)
– Woodridge (13)
None
Lake WashingtonRED– Kamiakin Middle School (94)
– Juanita Elementary (1)
– Juanita High School (37)
– Peter Kirk Elementary (2)
– Thoreau Elementary (4)
– Mark Twain Elementary – 2nd-grade class (multiple confirmed cases)
NorthshoreYELLOW– Arrowhead Elementary (1)
– Bothell High School (18)
– Canyon Creek Elementary (10)
– Canyon Park Middle School (4)
– Crystal Springs Elementary (5)
– East Ridge Elementary (2)
– Fernwood Elementary (2)
– Frank Love Elementary (9)
– Hollywood Hills Elementary (1)
– Inglemoor High School (1)
– Kenmore Elementary (1)
– Kenmore Middle School (10)
– Maywood Hills Elementary (2)
– North Creek High School (11)
– Ruby Bridges Elementary (2)
– Shelton View Elementary (6)
– Skyview Middle School (11)
– Sunrise Elementary (1)
– Timbercrest Middle School (6)
– Westhill Elementary (5)
– Woodin Elementary (1)
– Woodinville High School (6)
– Woodmore Elementary (9)
None
Local Districts Scorecard

The number of students moving to quarantine expanded at Juanita High School and Kamiakin Middle School in the Lake Washington School District. Parents were notified that 29 at Juanita High and 13 at Kamiakin had close contact with a positive COVID case. Additionally, parents at Peter Kirk Elementary were notified that 2 students had been put into quarantine due to a COVID exposure.

Multiple school districts throughout Western Washington are reporting COVID cases, including Shoreline and Edmonds.

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is Monday, September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

No update

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulitaive Case Tracker was not updated at press time.

Yesterday’s announcement by the Biden Administration’s mandating the COVID vaccine for most federal employees and contractors, and requesting OSHA to implement a program that mandates vaccination or weekly COVID screening at companies with 100 or more employees, is being met with fierce resistance along partisan lines.

The governors of Arizona, Indiana, Georgia, Montana, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas vowed to fight the looming OSHA rules in court. During a visit with first lady Jill Biden to a middle school in Washington D.C., the president was asked his message to Republicans who decry the vaccine mandates as federal overreach and plan to challenge them in court.

“Have at it,” Biden said. “We’re playing for real here. This isn’t a game.”

Alaska

Officials reported another record number of patients in the hospital with COVID as the medical struggles to cope. Large hospitals in cities such as Anchorage are so full of COVID patients that rural hospitals can’t transfer critical care patients. Similar to Idaho, Oregon, and Eastern Washington, patient care is starting to suffer as hospitals weigh their options.

Nome’s hospital doesn’t even have any COVID-19 patients, but it still faces “a COVID problem,” as Dr. Tim Lemaire, a family practitioner and member of the Norton Sound Health Corp. incident command team, put it. “We don’t have COVID here, but we can’t get our regular patients … care because of COVID everywhere else.”

Trying to move patients with heart attacks, strokes, or injuries from four-wheeler accidents, Norton Sound Regional Hospital sometimes has to call three or four facilities to find an open bed, at least once moving a patient all the way to Seattle to get them into an ICU.

State officials say rural hospitals throughout the state are suddenly facing unheard-of medical situations because they’re holding patients they’ve never had to before.

Brian Ritchie, the state’s health emergency response operations manager, helped a rural hospital find oxygen supplies after COVID-positive patients on high-flow therapy ran through existing cylinders faster than expected.

California

San Francisco schools started in-person instruction on August 16. A month later, the school district has reported 227 confirmed COVID infections among 52,000 students and almost 10,000 staff. Officials noted that in San Francisco, 90% of students age 12 to 17 are fully vaccinated.

The district hasn’t experienced a single outbreak during the first month of instruction. Officials define an outbreak as “three or more cases in non-related households in which the source of infection occurred at the school, and not another setting.”

The San Francisco health department also emphasized that vaccinations “are our best defense to protect children,” noting most pediatric cases of COVID-19 in the city came from unvaccinated adults in a household getting the virus and spreading it to unvaccinated children.

Colorado

Hospitals are starting to move to surge plans as the number of available ICU beds dropped below 200 today. COVID-19 Incident Commander Scott Bookman spoke with reporters today at a press conference with Governor Jared Pollis.

“The difference between this wave and all past waves is that Coloradans have returned to their normal lives,” Bookman said. “Those who have been vaccinated have been given the opportunity to go out and live their lives. What comes with that is additional cases of trauma, additional heart attacks, additional strokes – we have seen people who have delayed receiving care over the course of the pandemic because they were afraid to go to their doctor. And this is all coming together with the increase in COVID hospitalizations at this point to really stress our health care system.”

Colorado’s hospitals report that 81% of those hospitalized in the state are unvaccinated, and 85% of recent COVID deaths were unvaccinated, said Herlihy.

Florida

Less than 24 hours after a court blocked a mask mandate ban in Florida, the First District Court of Appeal has reinstated a stay on DeSantis’ ban on mask mandates in schools.

DeSantis’ press secretary Christina Pushaw tweeted: “(First) District Court of Appeals just granted the State of Florida’s request to reinstate the stay — meaning, the rule requiring ALL Florida school districts to protect parents’ rights to make choices about masking kids is BACK in effect!”

Yesterday, a Brevard County School Board meeting was far more subdued than the August 30 meeting that made national headlines. While things were quieter outside, a crowd of over 20 people gathered to burn masks. A counter-protestor with a megaphone, a Firehouse Subs helmet, and a fire extinguisher lectured them about fire safety and threatened to put out any fire they lit.

Megan Alexandra Blankebhiller of Jacksonville, Florida, arrived in a hospital emergency room on August 13. As she waited to be seen, she shot a short Tik Tok video, where the screams of another person could be heard in the background. The screams were coming from a person who had lost a loved one in another area of the emergency department.

Blankenbiller, who was 31 and unvaccinated, was admitted to the hospital with COVID. She made a series of videos appealing for her followers to get vaccinated from her bed as her condition declined.

“I shouldn’t have waited,” she said in the video, which has been viewed nearly 900,000 times. “If you are even 70% sure that you want the vaccine, go get it. Don’t wait. Go get it because hopefully, if you get it, you won’t end up in the hospital like me.” 

@atasteofalex

**Also, Tonic Water. Nasty stuff but good for you!! Stay safe out there guys!

♬ original sound – It’s Alex, Betch. 💋

By August 20, Blankenbiller was in critical condition and on a ventilator, and she died shortly thereafter. Blankenbiller’s sister, Cristina Blankenbiller, told WebMD in an interview that their family had agreed to get vaccinated, including Alexandra, shortly before she became ill.

Idaho

The Panhandle and North Central Health Districts in Idaho continue to operate using “crisis standards of care.” We strongly recommend not to travel to Idaho during this time of medical crisis. Any health emergency requiring hospitalization could result in you receiving inadequate care.

Illinois

Veronica Wolski was well known in the Chicago area for producing videos and harassing retail employees and people wearing masks. In one video, she walked through a Staples, wearing a “Lone Ranger” style mask, telling the manager who asked her to wear a mask that she has one on and has a medical condition that exempts her.

Veronica Wolski in a Chicago area Staples refusing to wear a face mask, and on BIPAP therapy at a Chicago area hospital

Wolski is hospitalized with COVID at Ressurection Medical Center in Norwood Park, Illinois. According to her supporters, she has requested to be treated with ivermectin, and the hospital has refused. Wolski was known in QAnon circles. Her situation has drawn the attention of disgraced attorney Lin Wood and former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn (have we mentioned lately how the anti-vaccination and the anti-government movements are intersectional).

The hospital is being flooded with phone calls and e-mails after deciding not to treat her with ivermectin. Hospital officials released a statement to the media about the state of her care.

“At AMITA Health, our first priority is the health and safety of our patients. Our physicians and clinicians follow the full guidance of the FDA and the CDC in the treatment of COVID-19. And while AMITA Health Resurrection Medical Center has received hundreds of phone calls and emails associated with one patient’s care, we have simply and respectfully noted the concerns shared.”

The largest peer-reviewed study on the effectiveness of ivermectin in treating COVID so far indicated that the anti-parasitic provided no benefit compared to a placebo. For hospitalized patients, it made them sicker.

Oregon

The good news is Oregon appears to have a peak in cases and hospitalizations. The same forecast that accurately predicted the peak now is forecasting that cases will only gradually fall off over the next two to three months, leaving hospitals in the state straining to care for patients.

Hospitalizations peaked at 1,178 COVID-19 cases on Sept. 1, and critical care resources remain under extreme strain, with roughly half of all intensive care units in the state filled with COVID-19 patients who are largely unvaccinated.

“It looks like we are seeing the flattening of cases that we had hoped for,” said Peter Graven, Ph.D., lead data scientist in OHSU’s Business Intelligence unit. “However, we are still projecting it will be a very long time before hospitalization levels return to more manageable levels.

Tennessee

Tennessee High schooler Grady Knox’s passionate plea for the health of himself and others was mocked earlier this week at a Rutherford County Board of Education meeting, a scene that has drawn national attention. 

Knox was ridiculed, even laughed at, Tuesday evening by some in the school board meeting audience when he said his grandmother died of COVID-19 after being exposed to a person without a mask.

Knox’s grandmother lived at Adams Place retirement community in Murfreesboro before she died of COVID-19.

After three hours of debate and Knox being heckled, the board decided to have masks remain optional at the school.

One of the persons who heckled Knox was quickly identified as Erika Casher, a nurse who had spoken at other school board meetings. It was reported today that Casher was terminated from her position with Cigna.

Texas

Karra Harwood of Baycliff, Texas, is mourning the death of her 4-year old daughter, Kali Cook, who died of COVID. Harwood, who is unvaccinated, had become sick and was confirmed to have on Monday. After her diagnosis, she isolated herself from her family.

Later that evening, Kali’s grandmother noticed she was sick, and at 2 a.m. found that she had a fever. At 7 a.m., she was found dead in her bed. An autopsy confirmed that Kali also had COVID.

“She was so funny and sassy,” said Karra Harwood, Kali’s mother. “She wasn’t your average little girl. She’d rather play with worms and frogs than wear bows. She was just so pretty and full of life.”

Harwood said she didn’t want people to think of her daughter as an anonymous statistic through sobs Thursday. She wanted people to know who her daughter was.

“I would rather her be a name than just a little girl,” she said. “She was beautiful.”

“I was one of the people that was anti. I was against it,” she said. “Now, I wish I never was.”

Misinformation

A lot of schadenfreude has been spilled in the news on social media after a 2011 study on the Effects of Ivermectin therapy on the sperm functions of Nigerian onchocerciasis patients reemerged. The study found that 85% of men who took ivermectin to treat onchocerciasis (river blindness) suffered from low sperm count and poor sperm quality, rendering them infertile.

The story was widely published, and tonight, many media outlets are retracting the story. We never highlighted this piece of news, and we’re labeling the claim as misinformation.

The problems with the study are numerous. First, it only involved 37 men, which is a very small sample size. Researchers wanted to include more people in the study, but many were disqualified because they already had low sperm count and/or low sperm quality.

The men took ivermectin for 11 months to treat active river blindness, which is longer than almost anyone taking human or animal formulations of ivermectin as a preventative or treatment for COVID (no, it doesn’t do either).

The study found that 85% of the men they observed over the 11 months had poor sperm quality and/or count, rendering them infertile. The study didn’t account for other potential factors, which may have been very likely given so many test subjects were rejected before the study was done because they were already functionally infertile.

Misinformation cuts both ways, and you should always consider your own personal biases when consuming information and deciding what is fact and fiction.

Eastern Washington hospitals on the brink – local and national COVID update for September 9, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) Hospitals in Eastern Washington are in a state of collapse with oxygen running low and open discussion of having to move to crisis standards of care. Our Pacific Northwest neighbors in Idaho and Alaska continue to see cases and hospitalizations rise, while Oregon is seeing numbers decline. The updated IHME forecast also paints a bleaker picture for the Evergreen State.

Northshore School District was stable for new cases, while Bellevue moved into status yellow and Thoreau Elementary in Lake Washington reported a new case, and 4 quarantined. Microsoft decides to pause the reopening of U.S. offices indefinitely as Delta continues to surge.

Governor Inslee announced a statewide mask mandate for outdoor large events and fielded questions on why the state isn’t moving to restrict capacity at restaurants, bars, and other venues.

The Clallam County health officer is receiving threats after requiring vaccination verification in restaurants in bars. School officials in Vancouver, Washington had to get an emergency court order against the Proud Boys, Patriot Front, and Open Schools USA. This wasn’t the only COVID-related violence in the United States in the last couple of days.

The Biden Administration announced a long list of measures that will require as many as 100 million to get vaccinated and enable additional safety protocols.

We explain religious exemptions and dive into misinformation about the COVID vaccine and convicted felon Robert O. Young who pretends to be a doctor.

We have good news in Mississippi in Texas tonight – so it isn’t all gloom and doom.

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on September 9, 2021.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for September 9, 2021

Washington state COVID update

Through September 8, Washington’s statewide 14-day rolling average was 511.6 COVID cases per 100K. Clallam (1,029.0 per 100K), Columbia (1,123.1 per 100K), Franklin (1,328.0 per 100K), and Okanogan (1,027.1 per 100K) reported an extreme number of new cases. Clallam and Okanogan counties broke 1,000 per 100K again, and Franklin County’s 1,328.0 per 100K is one of the highest infection rates we have ever seen. Counties in the 800.0 to 999.9 per 100K range include Asotin, Benton, Chelan, Cowlitz, Douglas, Garfield, Grant, Lewis, Lincoln, Pend Oreille, Stevens, and Yakima.

King County is at 302.2 cases per 100K, nearly unchanged from yesterday.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 13.36%, and over the previous 7 days, 13.74%. The rate of hospitalization by age was nearly unchanged from yesterday.

Age Group7-Day Case Rate7-Day Hospitalization Rate
Ages 0-1127.00.1 (down)
Ages 12-1921.70.2
Ages 20-3451.9 (down)1.4
Ages 35-4945.82.8
Ages 50-6434.1 (up)4.2
Ages 65-7917.04.3 (up)
Ages 80+5.4 (up)1.8
7-day case rate and 7-day hospitalization rate is per 100K within the age group – the target for 7-day case rate is <25.0, but there are other factors such as vaccination rates within the age groups, how many total tests within the 7-day period, and the positivity rate within each age group

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 48 deaths yesterday. There may be delayed reporting in that number from the holiday weekend. Still, the dramatic increase of Washingtonians on ventilators that started last week is probably running its course.

Governor Inslee mandates masks at large outdoor events

In a press conference today, Governor Jay Inslee announced that Washington was expanding its existing mask mandate to include large outdoor events. The new rule, which will go into effect on September 13, requires anyone 5 or older to wear a mask, regardless of vaccination status, at outdoor events with more than 500 people.

The new mandate mirrors existing rules already implemented in King and Pierce counties. Additionally, everyone is encouraged to wear a mask outdoors if they are in an area where social distancing and free movement are challenging or impossible.

This expands the current indoor mask mandate that was implemented on August 23.

The governor stated, “We have no plans to do that. We are not considering doing that,” after being asked why the state was not implementing capacity restrictions for bars, restaurants, and other venues.

Dr. Umair Shah, the Washington State Secretary of Health, added, “we have that tool today. Vaccines and that is the tool we are using today.”

When asked if Washington was considering a statewide vaccine passport, Governor Inslee said, “It is not something that is going to happen in the next couple of days, but we are looking at it.”

Clallam County Health Officer receiving threats after restaurant and bar vaccination requirement

Dr. Allison Berry, the Clallam County Health Officer, expressed fear for her safety and refused to go into her office due to threats and harassment after implementing a so-called vaccine passport requirement at bars and restaurants last week.

“It’s been really scary,” said Berry. “It’s certainly affected my life, the way I take care of my child, the way I try to guarantee both of our safety, and the way I do my job,” Berry told KING5 news.

The Clallam County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a few of the comments made toward Berry but said, at this time, none are in criminal violation of the law.

While people are trying to instill fear, Berry said she stands by her decision. 

“I think for me, it’s important not to let people who would threaten public officials win,” said Berry.

After the failure of the January 6 insurrection, right-wing and white nationalist groups have been aligning themselves with the anti-vaccination movement. Matt Braynard, who is leading the Justice for J6 rally in Washington D.C. on September 18, is aligned with Del Bigtree of ICAN. Bigtree produced the movie Vaxxed and was a speaker at the Stop the Steal rally on January 6.

Violent incidents were reported in Texas, Michigan, and Missouri in the last 24 hours.

Judge issues emergency order in Vancouver, Washington to protect students

Last Friday, the Proud Boys joined other protesters in Vancouver, Washington, forcing three schools into lockdown while harassing students and faculty and attempting to enter the school building. The protest was caused by misinformation spread by an anti-vaccination and antimask advocate, who claimed a student would be arrested at Skyview High School for refusing to wear a mask. Many of the same people who protested on Friday were in Olympia Saturday at an event that devolved into multiple people being attacked and a shooting.

The same person who organized the protest last week in Vancouver posted on social media on Tuesday, calling for another protest at Skyview High School. This morning, Clark County District Judge Suzan Clark granted an injunction prohibiting protests, rallies, or other gatherings.

The injunction requires that “protests, rallies, gatherings on or near school premises that disrupt educational services, immediately cease and desist and not be allowed to convene on or within a one-mile radius of any Vancouver School District building or grounds.” The injunction is effective as long as state-issued mask mandates are in effect.

“Our district understands and supports free speech and the right for people to be involved in peaceful protests,” said Superintendent Jeff Snell. “However, our first priority is to ensure student and staff safety and an educational environment free of disruption. This responsibility prompted us to present our concerns to the court.”  

Former prosecutor and criminal defense attorney Angus Lee penned a warning letter to Clark County Sheriff Chuck Atkins and Chief James McElvain advising them not to make an”invalid arrest.” Lee’s letter is inflammatory and includes transphobic rhetoric while accusing the Clark County Sheriff of providing carte blanche to Black Live Matters protesters last year.

The protests are being driven by the parents and supporters of 14-year old Melanie Gabriel, who is seeking a 504 Plan with the Vancouver School District to allow her to attend Skyview without wearing a mask.

Gabriel made news last year as an 8th grader in Oregon, where she was involved in protests demanding the return of in-person instruction, and she is listed as a co-founder of Open Schools USA, along with Michelle Morales-Walker. The group attended an anti-vaccination mandate in McMinnville, Oregon, on September 6.

IHME forecast for Washington state gets bleaker

The IHME updated the forecast for Washington state through December 1, and the situation has gotten bleaker. The model now forecasts 8,864 COVID deaths total by December 1 if the state continues on its current trajectory. Fatalities are forecasted to peak on November 2.

Hospital resources are projected to peak next week but stay at that high state until October. More concerning, the model predicts the state may be at a peak for new cases now but shows cases increasing again in November to even higher levels than the current peak.

If everyone wore a mask, we could save 1,000 lives, according to the model.

Travel Advisories

We recommend avoiding all travel to Yakima, Klickitat, Benton, Franklin, and Walla Walla counties, along with the state of Idaho. Hospital resources in these regions are so constrained that you may receive inadequate care if you experience a medical emergency.

Thank you

Thank you to our new subscribers and those of you who have made one-time contributions. On behalf of the entire team, thank you for helping us keep the lights on!

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

With vaccination mandates growing nationwide, and the anti-vaccination movement shrinking in numbers, some people are applying for a religion-based vaccine exemption. This raises the question, Which religions shun vaccination as part of their tenets.

To research this, we wanted to go back before 2020, and we decided to use a source from academia. The Health and Wellness portal of Vanderbilt University Medical Center has a white paper on the topic, published in 2010.

The short answer is none of the major religions, nor their branches have an anti-vaccination doctrine. There are a few sects, mostly aligned with Christianity, that have an established theological objection. That includes Dutch Reformed, Faith Tabernacle, Chuch of the First Born, Faith Assembly, and End Time Ministrie.

In Islam and Judaism, only the strictest adherents are against vaccines that specifically use porcine gelatine – an ingredient not found in any version of the COVID vaccine.

Additionally, the Church of Christ, Scientist, which strongly encourages members to rely on faith and prayer for healing, does not have an official doctrine against western medicine or vaccinations.

Anyone who has already applied for an exemption claiming to be a member of the Jehovah’s Witnesses should expect it to be denied. It is a common misconception the religious group is against vaccination, but that hasn’t been a tenet since 1952. In an article published in 2011, the group provided a list of health recommendations, including encouraging vaccination.

King County, Washington is reporting over 84% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 22.3% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID. A hospital system caring for this many COVID-positive patients in acute care is considered to be under “severe stress.” ICUs are at 88.8% of capacity statewide, with 34.3% of ICU patients fighting COVID, unchanged from yesterday.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 188 per day, indicating that the state has caught up on reporting over the weekend. The Department of Health adjusted the number of total COVID patients reported on September 7 slightly down to 1,740 but increased the number of people on ventilators to 268. On September 8, there were 1,767 patients and 260 on ventilators.

In today’s press briefing, Dr. Shah said that balance loading at hospitals was “challenging,” and they were asking healthcare partners “to defer elective procedures.”

“We can’t do this alone. This isn’t about me. This is about the we,” he pleaded.

The University of Washington Medicine was only performing day surgeries unless they were trauma or critical care related. In some cases, patients were waiting in the operating room for an hour before being moved to the PACU or ICU at some hospitals.

Peg Currie, CEO of Providence hospitals in Spokane, used the word “misery” to describe ICU conditions. The number of patients waiting for care in emergency rooms has skyrocketed locally, Currie said, and transfer lists remain long and challenging to accommodate.

“You see these lists of people who want care from your (hospital), and you have to make them wait – that’s heartbreaking,” Currie said.

Providence has formed patient placement committees to triage patients at most risk for a higher level of care and decide what smaller hospitals can handle.

In Yakima, the situation is worse with Yakima Memorial Valley Hospital rationing care, low on oxygen, and patients leaving the waiting room without being seen. Recently the internal demand for oxygen rose so high an entire unit was push beyond capacity. The lines that deliver oxygen can freeze if the flow exceeds design, cutting off the supply to all patients.

Dr. Marty Brueggman said the hospital was moving closer to “crisis standards of care” and gave a stern warning.

“They may decide that we don’t have the resources to care for you and your chance of survival is low, so we’re not gonna ask if you want to resuscitate or not. We’re just not gonna be able to do it.”

Yesterday we shared a statement from the Washington Department of Health and information from the Washington State Hospital Association. The official plan in Washington state is not to let an individual hospital go to crisis standards of care. If all resources are exhausted statewide, either the worst impacted region or the entire state would move to so-called black tag triage.

Yakima is located in the South Central Hospital Region, including Yakima, Klickitat, Benton, Franklin, and Walla Walla counties.

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueYELLOW– Bellevue (4)
– Chinook (10)
– Interlake (1)
– Newport (1)
– Sammamish (2)
– Somerset (1)
– Tillicum (1)
– Tyee (1)
– Woodridge (6)
None
Lake WashingtonRED– Kamiakin Middle School (81))
– Juanita Elementary (1)
– Juanita High School (8)
– Thoreau Elementary (4)
– Mark Twain Elementary – 2nd-grade class (multiple confirmed cases)
NorthshoreYELLOW– Arrowhead Elementary (1)
– Bothell High School (12)
– Canyon Creek Elementary (4)
– Canyon Park Middle School (4)
– Crystal Springs Elementary (5)
– East Ridge Elementary (2)
– Fernwood Elementary (2)
– Frank Love Elementary (2)
– Hollywood Hills Elementary (1)
– Kenmore Elementary (1)
– Kenmore Middle School (19)
– Maywood Hills Elementary (2)
– North Creek High School (8)
– Ruby Bridges Elementary (1)
– Shelton View Elementary (6)
– Skyview Middle School (12)
– Sunrise Elementary (1)
– Timbercrest Middle School (6)
– Westhill Elementary (4)
– Woodin Elementary (3)
– Woodinville High School (4)
– Woodmore Elementary (9)
None
Local Districts Scorecard

With Bellevue School District reporting 10 confirmed COVID cases, it moves to Yellow on the scorecard. Lake Washington reported a confirmed COVID case at Thoreau Elementary, while Northshore adds to the list of schools with quarantined students. The number of quarantined people at Skyview Middle School dropped by more than half today, in a positive sign.

Multiple school districts throughout Western Washington are reporting COVID cases, including Seattle, Federal Way, Puyallup, Lynnwood, and Issaquah.

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is Monday, September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

Microsoft notified employees and vendors today it has indefinitely delayed their return to U.S. offices until the uncertainty around the trajectory of COVID is clearer.

“Given the uncertainty of COVID-19, we’ve decided against attempting to forecast a new date for a full reopening of our U.S. work sites, [sic]” Jared Spataro, a corporate vice president, wrote in a blog post.

Microsoft had planned to have workers return in October. Other area tech companies that have delayed a return to the office include Google and Amazon. Amazon and Microsoft have a large presence in Bellevue, and Google has a 54-acre campus in Kirkland.

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulitaive Case Tracker 176,710 new cases and 2,146 COVID-related deaths on Thursday.

President Joe Biden issued two executive orders today to combat the spread of COVID. The first mandates vaccination for all federal employees and contractors “to the extent consistent with applicable law.”

“In light of the public health guidance regarding the most effective and necessary defenses against COVID-19, I have determined that to promote the health and safety of the Federal workforce and the efficiency of the civil service, it is necessary to require COVID-19 vaccination for all Federal employees, subject to such exceptions as required by law.”

The mandate would extend the existing order to the US military and healthcare workers who provide services at facilities that accept Medicare and Medicaid to include 300,000 Head Start early childhood education and other federal education program employees.

The second executive order calls for Ensuring Adequate COVID Safety Protocols for Federal Contractors. The order does not specifically mandate vaccination for government contractors or their subcontractors but instead calls for the development of guidelines to assure that government contractors can fulfill their obligations.

“This order promotes economy and efficiency in Federal procurement by ensuring that the parties that contract with the Federal Government provide adequate COVID-19 safeguards to their workers performing on or in connection with a Federal Government contract or contract-like instrument.”

“These safeguards will decrease the spread of COVID-19, which will decrease worker absence, reduce labor costs, and improve the efficiency of contractors and subcontractors at sites where they are performing work for the Federal Government.  Accordingly, ensuring that Federal contractors and subcontractors are adequately protected from COVID-19 will bolster economy and efficiency in Federal procurement.”

The largest change for ordinary Americans is the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OHSA) developing rules that will require private businesses with 100 or more employees to do weekly COVID testing or mandate vaccination. The new rules, when implemented, would impact up to 80 million Americans, with a large swath already fully or partially vaccinated. Businesses would be required to pay employees for their time to get vaccinated or tested, and the administration is working with national pharmacies to expand testing to 10,000 sites. Additionally, Walmart, Amazon, and Kroger will offer at-home COVID tests at cost for the next 3 months.

In total, the order impacts roughly 100 million Americans and 80% of all businesses. Among active-duty service members, approximately 90% were fully or partially vaccinated on August 9. Nationally 88% of nurses and 96% of doctors are vaccinated. Earlier this week, the United States crossed the threshold of 75% of adults with at least one dose of the COVID vaccine.

Buried in the news today, the TSA has doubled the fines that passengers of buses, trains, and aircraft could face for refusing to wear a mask.

Alabama

Governor Kay Ivey responded strongly to the announcements from the Biden Administration.

“Once again, President Biden has missed the mark. His outrageous, overreaching mandates will no doubt be challenged in the courts. Placing more burdens on both employers and employees during a pandemic with the rising inflation rates and lingering labor shortages is totally unacceptable.

“Alabamians have stepped up by rolling up their sleeves to get the covid-19 vaccine, increasing our doses administered significantly in recent weeks. We have done so without mandates from Washington D.C. or Montgomery. I’ve made it abundantly clear: I support the science and encourage folks taking the vaccine. However, I am absolutely against a government mandate on the vaccine, which is why I signed the vaccine passport ban into law here in Alabama. This is not the role of the government.

“I continue encouraging any Alabamian who can to get the covid-19 vaccine. We have a safe and effective tool at our fingertips, so let’s roll up our sleeves and get this thing beat.”

Alaska

More than 200 people are now hospitalized with COVID-19 in Alaska, setting yet another record as health care leaders sound dire warnings and say the state’s hospitals are treading water.

By Thursday, hospitals and ICUs around the state continued to report being at or near capacity as a surge driven by the highly contagious delta variant continues in Alaska. Facilities have reported that staffing shortages and limited bed capacity are their top concern and say they’re not sure how much longer they can continue operating under such high levels of stress.

“Emergency departments remain open for emergency, life-sustaining treatments, but they are very tight,” said Dr. Anne Zink, Alaska’s chief medical officer, during a call with reporters.

Critical cardiac, orthopedic, burn, and infectious disease patients normally would be transferred to Seattle once they are stable enough to travel. Yesterday, the Washington State Hospital Association told reporters that transferring patients was a major challenge within Washington and were “under no obligation” to accept out-of-state patients.

California

On Thursday, the Los Angeles Unified School District’s school board approved a requirement for most students age 12 and over to be vaccinated against COVID-19 to attend in-person classes.

The mandate requires “COVID-19 vaccinations for all students who access in-person instructional programs operated on district facilities, who are 12 years of age and older.”

The plan requires students age 12 and older who participate in in-person extracurricular programs to have a first vaccine dose by Oct. 3 and their second no later than Oct. 31.

All other students aged 12 and up would be required to receive their first dose by Nov. 21 and their second by Dec. 19. Other students would have to receive their first dose no later than 30 days after their 12th birthday and their second dose no later than eight weeks after turning 12.

Colorado

A total of 80 Colorado schools have active COVID-19 outbreaks as of Wednesday, according to the latest data released by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE). 

The outbreaks represent a total of 886 cases, 86% of which have been students. The number of K-12 outbreaks nearly doubled from the previous week when 42 were reported.

Georgia

Atlanta’s public safety-net hospital is the latest to temporarily cancel elective surgeries, saying it’s overrun with COVID-19 patients.

Grady Memorial Hospital CEO John Haupert said Wednesday that the hospital was “inundated” with patients over Labor Day even as it officially diverted ambulances.

More than 5,900 people sickened by the respiratory illness are in Georgia hospitals. COVID-19 patient numbers have been hovering around a record 6,000 for more than a week.

While hospitals in Georgia teeter on crisis standards of care, Governor Brian Kemp tweeted he would fight the Biden Administration’s executive order.

Florida

Cases in the Sunshine State continue to decrease along with hospitalizations, while fatalities continue at more than 1,000 per week.

“Let’s keep our fingers crossed because it looks like we are on the backend of this doggone delta wave,” said Dr. Thomas Unnasch, an infectious disease researcher at the University of South Florida who has been forecasting COVID-19 trends in our region since the beginning of the pandemic.

The seven-day rolling average of new COVID-19 infections in Florida peaked in mid-August at just under 21,800 and has been slowly declining ever since, according to Dr. Unnasch’s forecast models.

Idaho

The Panhandle and North Central Health Districts in Idaho continue to operate using “crisis standards of care.” We strongly recommend not to travel to Idaho during this time of medical crisis. Any health emergency requiring hospitalization could result in you receiving inadequate care.

Maine

More Maine residents were in critical care with COVID-19 or connected to ventilators on Thursday than at any point since the pandemic began 18 months ago.

While the 193 total hospitalizations in Maine is still shy of last winter’s peak numbers, the 74 patients in intensive care unit beds is the most to date. Additionally, 38 of those individuals – or roughly 20 percent of all hospitalizations – required ventilators to assist breathing.

New cases in Maine are now equal to the January 2021 peak and are continuing to climb.

Michigan

On Tuesday, a crowd of unmasked high school students backed by parents forced their way into Manchester High School.

When questioned about how the mask mandate would be enforced, a sheriff’s deputy who was overseeing the situation said: “I’m not going to force anybody. I’m not putting masks on anybody. That’s not my job. This is a county health department order.” 

Similar incidents happened at other schools in the district. These incidents do have consequences.

Like other states, Michigan is facing a staffing crisis in hospitals. Vaccine mandates aren’t a large factor at this time. Burn out, poor working conditions, and better pay as traveling nurses or on contract have skilled staff abandoning hospitals. As noted in the Vaccination Section, 88% of nurses and 96% of doctors are already vaccinated nationally.

“I am fatigued, and I am heartsick, and I’m tired of watching people suffer needlessly and die of a disease that could have been prevented by a simple and safe and effective vaccine,” Dr. Nicole Linder said. “I don’t want to watch my patients’ families suffer with the grief of this, and also the guilt if they played some role in their family member’s decision not to be vaccinated.

“The issues that we’re dealing with in caring for these hospitalized COVID patients that weren’t present during the earlier waves, I think, do create a new dimension of stress and sadness and fatigue for those of us on the front lines. You’re taking care of people who are dying that didn’t need to die.”

Mississippi

In good news, Mississippi closed its last field hospital located in a Jackson parking garage as cases and hospitalizations continue to decline.

Jim Craig, senior deputy for the Mississippi Department of Health and Director of Health Protection, said the state is seeing a small improvement in hospital bed availability, but ICU capacity continues to be “very scarce.”

“The bed capacity for ICU space is effectively zero still in the state of Mississippi,” Craig said. Craig said the Department of Health has applied to extend the support of federal partners working at the Jackson and Biloxi Veterans Affairs hospitals, the 23-person Department of Defense military team at the University of Mississippi Medical center, and a group working on monoclonal antibody administration at the university.

A total of 1,660 people were hospitalized with coronavirus in Mississippi on Aug. 18, compared with 1,285 on Tuesday. A Johns Hopkins COVID-19 tracker showed that, as of Tuesday, Mississippi had the ninth-highest COVID-19 rate in the U.S. The state had 79.5 new cases and 1.3 deaths per 100,000 residents.

Missouri

In ironically named Pleasant Hill, a fight broke out in the Pleasant Hill High School parking lot after the school board voted unanimously to pass a mask mandate. Three people were cited.

One man was handcuffed by a sheriff’s deputy after confronting a woman who used her cell phone to video record a group of parents who had gathered outside the Pleasant Hill High School auditorium, said Maj. Kevin Tieman, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office.

“There was an altercation between a couple of people out front of the school with a lady saying that she’d been harassed or assaulted by somebody else,” Tieman said. “She said they took her cell phone away from her.”

Missouri was one of the first states to see Delta surge and was the first state to improve. That progress may be fading as the state’s southeast corner is now dealing with a major outbreak.

In June, Missouri Delta Medical Center in Sikeston posted on Facebook that it had just six people hospitalized with COVID-19. That number rose to 21 in July and 79 in August. The first six days of September saw 20 patients already, including six in intensive care and two on ventilators. None of the 20 patients were vaccinated, the hospital says.

The town of 16,000 residents about 145 miles sits in Scott and New Madrid counties. State tracking on Thursday showed those counties had the worst rates of new COVID-19 cases over the past seven days. Eight of the nine hardest-hit counties over the past week are in the southeastern corner of the state.

New York

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio nixed the idea of a vaccine mandate for the city’s students.

“We just don’t think that’s the right thing to do,” he said.

Ohio

Ohio’s children’s hospitals are reporting an increase in admissions of children with COVID-19, fueled by the spread of the Delta variant.

It has pushed some hospital intensive care units near capacity and comes amid an early peak in hospitalizations due to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).

“The Delta variant seems to be causing more symptoms in children than the initial COVID variant,” said Dr. Michael Bigham, a pediatric ICU physician, and chief quality officer with Akron Children’s Hospital.

COVID-19 is not the only virus resulting in filled beds in children’s hospitals. Doctors said RSV is nearing a peak about two to three months earlier than usual.

“As soon as the masks went away, boom, there was RSV, even being in the middle of summer where RSV has no business being,” UH Rainbow Pediatric Infectious Disease Specialist Dr. Amy Edwards said.

She said the reduction in masking and the return to school are clear factors in the increasing spread of respiratory viruses.

Oregon

Oregon is joining Florida in hitting its peak, and the worst part of the surge is now upon the state.

“For the past several days, OHA has reported sharp increases in the daily deaths associated with COVID-19,” OHA Director Patrick Allen said in a statement. “This grim trend follows several weeks of record, or near-record, daily cases and hospitalizations. Oregonians should be prepared to see this tragic toll escalate dramatically in coming days and weeks.”

South Carolina

According to data released by the state Department of Health and Environmental Control, South Carolina reported nearly 3,500 more COVID-19 cases and 55 more deaths on Thursday.

More than 1,000 people have died of COVID-19 in South Carolina over the last month. The statewide death toll is now 11,051.

DHEC also reported Thursday that 3,466 new cases came in from testing completed two days ago. That brings the state’s COVID-19 case count to nearly 780,000 since the beginning of the pandemic, according to DHEC.

Texas

Nothing says “howdy partner” like threatening to hang a country judge in a grocery store and live stream the whole thing. Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff, who was physically assaulted last year, had a woman follow him around an H-E-B grocery store, calling him a traitor, communist, and supporter of the devil.

As she trails behind Wolff, a masked H-E-B employee comes up to speak with her. “You’re a traitor, too,” she tells him, before turning her attention back to the judge.

“You’re going to go to jail. They’re going to hang you. Treason, crimes against humanity, Nuremberg trial. You’re going down,” the woman said. “You better enjoy your freedom while it lasts, buddy, and you got to answer to God.”

In better news, Flavia Souza, the Houston’s Museum District Child Care Center director, worked diligently and patiently to fight misinformation and vaccine hesitancy to convince the entire staff to get vaccinated. Instead of using incentives or mandates, she applied logic, education, and open dialog among her staff as more and more got vaccinated.

Today, the Fort Worth Independent School District was handed a legal victory when a judge with the Second Appellate District of Texas in Fort Worth sided with the school district – opening the door for Fort Worth ISD to bring back a mask mandate.

“At this time, there are no court orders or executive orders that are prohibiting the District from implementing a mask requirement,” Fort Worth ISD officials said.

Wyoming

Wyoming is now fewer than 15 COVID-19 patients away from reaching a new all-time high during the pandemic. Peak hospitalizations in Wyoming occurred on Nov. 30, 2020, when there were 247 COVID-19 patients in hospitals across the state.

Four hospitals in the rural and sparsely populated state have no ICU capacity left, while Ivinson Memorial Hospital in Laramie had only one bed.

Misinformation

There appears to be a fresh take in the misinformation department about the COVID vaccine containing graphene oxide. This is a super sciency document about the characteristics of the compound. The Reader’s Digest version is as a powder, graphene oxide is brown, and when suspended in a fluid, it is yellow. The COVID vaccines are clear, so there is an immediate problem with this conspiracy theory.

The second issue is the viscosity of graphene oxide. The accusation is the vaccination is made up of 99% of the stuff, but if that were the case, the injection would be in a solid-state. Even at just an 8% solution, the fluid would have the same density of axle grease or peanut butter.

The biggest issue with this conspiracy theory is its origin. The disinformation campaign comes from Dr. Robert O. Young, who double-downed on his claims as recently as August 27. There is a major problem. Dr. Robert O. Young isn’t a doctor. He doesn’t hold a master’s degree, an undergraduate, an associate, or even a vocational certificate. He has never had any education beyond graduating high school.

In 2018, as part of a settlement in a $105 million lawsuit, he agreed never to use the title of doctor again or make any claims of having any medical expertise. As a matter of fact, Mr. Young has been charged 21 times for practicing medicine without a license in Arizona, Utah, and California from 1995 to 2014.

In 2014 when he pleaded guilty, he had to state that he has no post-high school educational degrees from any accredited schools as part of the deal. Additionally, He stated he was none of the following: a microbiologist, a medical doctor, a hematologist, a naturopathic doctor, or a trained scientist.

Mr. Young offered a “pH Miracle Retreat” before he was shut down, which cost attendees $1,295 to $2,495 per night.

DoH issues a stark warning – local and national COVID update for September 8, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) The somewhat positive news that new COVID cases continue to try and hold a peak was dampened by a stark warning issued by the Washington State Department of Health over dwindling resources. While new cases plateau, the number of hospitalized patients, ICU patients, and patients on ventilators continues to climb.

There were no new cases or quarantines reported in the Lake Washington School District today, where officials are working on a remote learning solution for students who can’t attend class. Northshore saw more cases, including a significant jump at two middle schools.

Yes, Sounders FC will also require vaccination or a negative PCR test to attend games, and a potential sickout at Seattle City Light didn’t materialize. Washington state poison control is getting a lot of calls about ivermectin, and Cowlitz County requested a mobile morgue.

Amazon gets called out for surfacing books and materials that provide COVID misinformation.

In the south, the Gulf States appear to have reached a peak (we don’t know about Louisiana) while the Pacific Northwest, including Alaska, and Kentucky, Ohio, West Virginia, and Indiana deal with regional surges.

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on September 8, 2021.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for September 8, 2021

Washington state COVID update

The data today is still a bit hazy, but hospitalization data has caught up with more health systems reporting after the long weekend. Through September 7, Washington’s statewide 14-day rolling average was 506.4 COVID cases per 100K, which is down slightly from the last update. Washington state continues to bounce between 500.0 and 535.0. Columbia (1,147.0 per 100K) and Franklin (1,208.1 per 100K) reported an extreme number of new cases. Counties in the 800.0 to 999.9 per 100K range include Asotin, Benton, Chelan, Clallam, Cowlitz, Douglas, Garfield, Grant, Lewis, Okanogan, Pend Oreille, Stevens, and Yakima.

King County is at 300.4 cases per 100K, another decline from yesterday. The data is encouraging that the state is holding at a plateau for new cases, after some alarming trends last week.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 13.11%, and over the previous 7 days, 13.83%. The rate of hospitalization was unchanged for ages birth to 49, and up for ages 50 and above.

Age Group7-Day Case Rate7-Day Hospitalization Rate
Ages 0-1126.3 (down)0.2
Ages 12-1921.2 (down)0.2
Ages 20-3453.1 (down)1.3
Ages 35-4945.1 (down)2.8
Ages 50-6431.5 (down)4.1 (up)
Ages 65-7917.0 (down)4.0 (up)
Ages 80+5.01.7 (up)
7-day case rate and 7-day hospitalization rate is per 100K within the age group – the target for 7-day case rate is <25.0, but there are other factors such as vaccination rates within the age groups, how many total tests within the 7-day period, and the positivity rate within each age group

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 52 deaths yesterday, but that almost certainly includes more than one day of data due to the holiday weekend.

The Sounders FC too

Yesterday we covered how the Cougars, Huskies, Mariners, Kraken, Seahawks, and Storm would require proof of vaccination or a negative COVID test to attend games – you can add the Sounders FC to that list too.

Seattle Sounders FC announced for events at Lumen Field during the 2021 regular season and postseason that proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative FDA-approved test for entry to games and events will be required, beginning at the Rave Green’s first home match on September 19.

“Sounders FC is proud to work with our friends at the Seahawks to take steps forward together in supporting public health,” said Sounders FC Owner & President of Business Operations Peter Tomozawa. “As excited as we have been to welcome fans back to Lumen Field this season, we recognize that the COVID-19 pandemic is not yet over and we want to do everything in our power to continue to provide a safe and comfortable matchday experience to everyone who comes out to the stadium. Part of that means executing King County’s expanded mask mandate effectively immediately, and a larger part is working with the Seahawks and Lumen Field to institute vaccination verification for all of our events. The Seahawks are beginning that process on September 19, and Sounders FC is prepared to follow suit starting with our first home match after that point, on October 3.”

Calls to Washington Poison Control about ivermectin triples

Scott Phillips, medical director for the Washington Poison Center, told the Seattle Times that his agency has seen a threefold increase in calls relating to ivermectin since last year, attributing the rise to misinformation about the drug’s effects on COVID-19.

According to Phillips, most calls were inquiring about the safety of the drug, which is used to treat parasites and certain skin conditions in animals and less often in humans. However, the center has also received calls from individuals who were recently hospitalized or were experiencing symptoms of poisoning, Phillips said.

Ivermectin was developed in the 1970s and was first approved for use in animals in 1981. Developed from an organism found in the soil of Japan, it is highly effective against a wide range of internal and external nematodes and arthropods. In 1988 it was approved to be used in humans. The drug is credited for the near eradication of river blindness and lymphatic filariasis. Both diseases were common in Africa and are caused by parasites. River blindness is spread by flies and lymphatic filariasis by mosquitoes.

In the United States, particularly in rural communities and through disinformation from anti-vaccination groups, people have been self-medicating using animal formulations as a preventive or treatment. The improper use has led to hospitalizations, blindness, and liver damage in extreme overdoses. Where many online recommendations include daily dosing followed by a wider interval, in impoverished areas where ivermectin use is ubiquitous to prevent parasites, dosing can be a single pill a year.

Ivermectin as a treatment for COVID rose in popularity due to a preprint study earlier this year. The study was pulled after failing peer review, which indicated that data was manipulated and falsified. Media outlets NewsMax, OAN, and InfoWars continue to advocate its use, despite numerous warnings and the single discredited study. Contrary to the accusation from people such as U.S. Senator Rand Paul (KY-R), tests for ivermectin for combating COVID, and a long list of other diseases are not being blocked by any government agency or Merck. Quite the contrary, there are countless studies going on for a wide range of potential applications, almost all of them for the treatment of parasites.

The largest study to date for the effectiveness of ivermectin against COVID, which has received multiple peer reviews, indicated that ivermectin had no meaningful impact, and for sicker patients created worse outcomes. The study done in Argentina was randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled – the gold standard. The report concluded the only statistical difference was subjects taking ivermectin who became moderately to severely ill, required mechanical ventilation much sooner than the placebo group.

If you take away one thing from this let it be this. For humans, ivermectin is a Class C Pregnancy Drug that should not be taken by children under 33 pounds, pregnant women, or women who are nursing. In studies during its development, it was shown to cause birth defects in animals. There is no clinical or scientific evidence it has any impact on the prevention or treatment of COVID, and the best available data indicates that for the sickest patients, it produces worse outcomes.

Another threat of a sickout that didn’t happen

Seattle City Light braced for a sickout yesterday over a looming vaccine mandate, which never materialized. Online groups called for the sickout, involving the city’s 250 linemen. Yesterday only 2 called in sick.

Senator Warren (MA-D) urges Amazon to tackle COVID misinformation

Last week we wrote about how Amazon, Google, and Microsoft were amplifying COVID misinformation around ivermectin due to their algorithms. It appears other people are noticing also. In a letter to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy, Senator Warren outlines her staff’s findings when searching the Amazon website for various COVID-related terms, and asks the company to take action.

The senator’s staff found that searches for terms including “COVID-19,” “COVID,” “vaccine,” “COVID-19 vaccine” and “pandemic” led to results such as books offering “falsehoods about COVID-19 vaccines and cures,” including at least one that Amazon tagged as a best seller. We were able to duplicate some of the findings in her letter.

“As cases of COVID-19 continue to rise, Amazon is feeding misinformation loops through its search and ‘Best Seller’ algorithms, potentially leading countless Americans to risk their health and the health of their neighbors based on misleading and inaccurate information that they discover on Amazon’s website,” Warren wrote.

Editor’s Note: Irresponsible headlines like the one used by the New York Times (Elizabeth Warren Accuses Amazon of Peddling COVID Misinformation) for this story do not benefit the general public or support an environment of open dialog.

Thank you

Thank you to our new subscribers and those of you who have made one-time contributions. On behalf of the entire team, thank you for helping us keep the lights on!

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

King County Health updated its COVID-19 outcomes by Vaccination Status dashboard today. The unvaccinated are sevenfold more likely to test positive for COVID, 50 times more likely to be hospitalized, and 30 times more likely to die from the data compiled over the previous 30 days.

King County Public Health COVID-19 Outcomes Vaccination Status Dashboard for September 8, 2021

So if vaccines are so effective, why is the number of vaccinated people with breakthrough cases increasing? Those numbers of people who were vaccinated testing positive are alarming!

King County has 2.26 million residents and according to King County Public Health, 67.6% of all residents are fully vaccinated. That would come out to 1,527,760 fully vaccinated, and 732,240 partially vaccinated or unvaccinated. The King County website indicates 1,528,211 fully vaccinated, so it provides a check for our math.

For positive COVID tests during the last 30 days, 6,010 vaccinated people, out of 1,527,760 total had a breakthrough case. That’s 0.39% of all vaccinated King County residents. During the same time period, 12,972 partially vaccinated and unvaccinated residents out of 732,240 tested positive for COVID – that’s 1.79%. Looking only at the 32% versus 68% can lead to a data fallacy if you don’t consider the total population of the two groups.

Study from Yale University and published in The Lancet indicate average age for hospitalized breakthrough cases is 80-1/2 years old

In a study of hospitalized patients in the Yale New Haven Health System, researchers identified 969 individuals who tested positive for the SARS-CoV-2 infection during a 14-week period between March and July 2021. Of that group, 54 were fully vaccinated.

These patients tended to be older — between 65 and 95 years old with a median age of 80.5 — and had preexisting comorbidities, such as cardiovascular disease and Type 2 diabetes. A subset of patients was also on immunosuppressive drugs that may affect vaccine efficacy.

“The majority of fully vaccinated patients experience mild or no symptoms if infected with SARS-CoV-2,” Chun said. “This research identifies those who suffered more severe disease, and we need a better understanding of how to best manage these patients.”

Chun noted that many of the patients with severe breakthrough infections in the study were hospitalized before the Delta variant became the predominant variant of SARS-CoV-2 in the United States. Additional research will be needed to determine the impact of the Delta variant on the rate of breakthrough COVID-19, he said.

Researchers noted the study was done before Delta became the dominant variant, and they are continuing to gather data.

King County, Washington is reporting over 84% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

Washington State Department of Health sounds the alarm with available hospital resources dwindling

The Washington State Department of Health released a statement today, indicating that the state is running out of options to stretch healthcare resources further.

Hospital capacity is currently stressed across the state of Washington. The surge in hospitalizations is one that the Washington Department of Health (DOH), with its healthcare partners, has been monitoring closely. At this time, partners across Washington have undertaken a number of strategies to stretch resources and mitigate current challenges.

DOH has adopted and plans to use the ethical framework developed by the National Academy of Medicine, which stresses the importance of an ethically grounded system to guide decision-making in a crisis standard of care situation. It also defines surges capacity within the healthcare systems, during normal operations and disaster operations, as a continuum: from conventional to contingency and finally crisis. The goal is to prevent ever having to utilize crisis standards of care anywhere in Washington.

DOH is working with state, federal, and private partners to mitigate Washington’s health care surge by accessing additional volunteer and contracted resources, coordinating information sharing, and supporting efforts to shift patients to healthcare facilities that can best support their care. DOH encourages Washingtonians to help by doing their part such as getting vaccinated, wearing masks in crowded or indoor public places, and taking other preventive steps.

Hospital status update

According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 22.2% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID, unchanged from yesterday. A hospital system caring for this many COVID-positive patients in acute care is considered to be under “severe stress.” ICUs are at 88.7% of capacity statewide, with 34.3% of ICU patients fighting COVID.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 188 per day, indicating that the state has caught up on reporting from over the weekend. The Department of Health adjusted the number of total COVID patients reported on September 6 to 1,775, a new record. On September 7, the number dropped slightly to 1,743 with 265 on ventilators.

Cowlitz County commissioners declared an emergency and formally requested a mobile morgue for the county. Coroner Tim Davidson said the morgue and the county’s funeral homes are maxed out on capacity and are “being creative” to maintain cold storage. All together, the facilities can typically hold 45 bodies and right now have about 65, he said.

PeaceHealth St. John Medical Center in Longview ended COVID testing at the hospital on August 19 because they were overwhelmed with patients. Yesterday hospital officials reported 30% of all patients are fighting COVID, and 80% are unvaccinated.

PeaceHealth St John COVID patients in Longview, Washington, September 7, 2021

Data for pediatric patients receiving acute care or in a PICU due to COVID is not available.

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueGREEN– Bellevue (4)
– Chinook (4)
– Newport (1)
– Sammamish (2)
– Somerset (1)
– Tyee (1)
– Woodridge (6)
None
Lake WashingtonRED– Kamiakin Middle School (81))
– Juanita Elementary (1)
– Juanita High School (8)
– Mark Twain Elementary – 2nd-grade class (multiple confirmed cases)
NorthshoreYELLOW– Bothell High School (17)
– Canyon Creek Elementary
– Canyon Park Middle School (3)
– Crystal Springs Elementary (5)
– Fernwood Elementary (2)
– Frank Love Elementary (2)
– Kenmore Elementary (1)
– Kenmore Middle School (19)
– Kokanee Elementary (1)
– North Creek High School (3)
– Ruby Bridges Elementary (1)
– Shelton View Elementary (6)
– Skyview Middle School (28)
– Sunrise Elementary (1)
– Timbercrest Middle School (3)
– Westhill Elementary (4)
– Woodin Elementary (3)
None
Local Districts Scorecard

The biggest change overnight was in the Northshore School District, where 19 students at Kenmore Middle School and another 27 students at Skyview Middle School were put into quarantine. Cases slightly increased in the Bellevue School District, while no new cases or additional closures were reported for Lake Washington. LWSD is setting up virtual learning for the 81 students in quarantine at Kamiakin Middle School.

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

No update

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulitaive Case Tracker 261,683 new cases and 1,513 COVID-related deaths on Wednesday. The new case number would include a backlog of data from the holiday weekend, while the COVID-related death number is likely incomplete.

Alabama

Alabama may be reaching a plateau in cases, as officials hold their breath to see the impact of the Labor Day weekend. According to Dr. Don Williamson with the Alabama Hospital Association, when looking at the numbers of hospitalizations during the last couple of weeks, the state of Alabama might have hit a plateau. He said only the coming weeks will tell.

“We had 27 hundred and 76 patients in the hospital, and that is about 300 below our historic highs but we are running that number now for over a week,” Williamson said.

Like other hospital officials and researchers, models are being based on the Delta variant and its spread in the United Kingdom, where cases reached a peak about 60 days after it first arrived.

Alabama is ramping up test capacity statewide and has partnered with CVS to provide 13 additional testing locations.

Alaska

Alaska is the forgotten member of the Pacific Northwest states and is in a state of crisis that mirrors Washington state. According to the state’s data, almost all of Southcentral and Interior intensive care units are full or near capacity. Doctors in the state have repeatedly warned that the system is at its limit. Hospitalizations have roughly doubled since state hospital officials sounded the alarm about a month ago.

The state also reported more than 840 new cases of COVID-19 for Tuesday — among the highest single-day counts since the pandemic began. Alaska is dependent on Washington state to take their critical patients that need orthopedic, cardiac, and burn care.

Currently, almost 21% of all patients hospitalized are fighting COVID, with 23 on ventilators.

Arizona

Last week reported on an alarming incident at Mesquite Elementary School in Tuscon, Arizona where three men confronted the principal and threatened to citizen arrest her. All three men have been identified and all three have been criminally charged. Frank Tainatongo, 48, was charged on Tuesday, Kelly Walker, the owner of a Viva Coffee Shop was charged Monday and Rishi Rambaran was charged last week.

All three men face a single count of third-degree trespass, which has a maximum sentence of 30 days.

In another high-profile incident of Arizona’s acting badly, Janene Hoskovec, 55, went viral after harassing people in a Nebraska grocery store for wearing masks. In the video, she coughed on people intentionally, while mocking their mask wear and calling them, “sheep.”

Viral video of Janene Hoskovec

Lincoln, Nebraska, where Hoskovec was visiting family, currently has an indoor mask mandate. The video went viral after being posted on Tik Tok, and internet sleuths quickly tracked down her identity. The father of the 13-year old girl who shot the video, and was the target of Hoskovec said, “She instigated the whole thing. Picked a mother/child to harass. Think they just wanted to getaway. Lady kept following them. Some other folks stepped in.”

Earlier today her employer, SAP, said it was investigating the situation and at press time released a statement.

“We have reviewed the incident and can confirm that the individual in question no longer works for SAP.”

Florida

In Florida, Leon County circuit court judge John C. Cooper ruled the state cannot enforce a ban on public schools mandating the use of masks against the coronavirus while an appeals court sorts out whether the ban is ultimately legal.

Cooper said the overwhelming evidence before him in a lawsuit by parents challenging the DeSantis ban was that wearing masks does provide some protection for children in crowded school settings, particularly those under 12 for whom no vaccine yet exists.

“We’re not in normal times,” Cooper said, in a hearing held remotely. “We are in a pandemic. We have a variant that is more infectious and dangerous to children than the one we had last year.”

Idaho

Yesterday the Panhandle and the North Central Health Districts in Idaho had to move to “crisis standards of care.” Today there was a report of a non-COVID-related cardiac patient who died in the northern part of the state because there was no oxygen available for their care.

Now, other parts of the state are sounding the alarm, as the hospital system is collapsing despite all efforts to prevent it.

According to the South Central Public Health District (SCPHD), southern Idaho is right on the edge.

“What we’ve been warned as a health district is that we’re very close in our region, the situation is very extreme,” said Public Information Officer with SCPHD, Brianna Bodily. Department of Health and Welfare officials stated that Treasure Valley hospitals are “really close” to activating crisis standards of care too.

Editor’s Note: We strongly recommend not to travel to Idaho during this time of medical crisis. Any health emergency requiring hospitalization could result in you receiving inadequate care.

Kentucky

A house bill in the Kentucky legislature that would end the student mask mandate failed to pass in a special session called on Tuesday. The bill, House Bill 1, would give schools more flexibility to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. It would give schools 20 flexible remote learning days and create a “test-to-stay” program, so they can test out of quarantine. Students who are exposed to COVID-19 can stay in school as long as they continue to test negative each day. The mask mandate survived by one vote.

Mississippi

Mississippi COVID cases appear to have peaked (along with Alabama, Arkansas, and Florida) but pediatric cases in particular, and deaths continue to rise. Currently, more than 15,000 students in Alabama are in quarantine and over 18,825 tested positive for COVID in the last 28 days.

Officials recorded another death of a child – a 4-month old baby.

Nevada

Officials are enacting a statewide mask mandate as cases continue to rise in rural areas. Nevada Health Response reported all of Nevada’s 17 counties are currently experiencing substantial or high COVID-19 transmission.

Ohio

The Ohio Children’s Hospital Association released a 17-page statement, signed by dozens of members issuing a dire warning on pediatric hospital resources in the state.

“Twelve to 15 kids hospitalized per day in the ICU and on ECMO,” said Grace Wakulchik, president and CEO of Akron Children’s Hospital, during the press conference.

“We currently have 26 children in the hospital, nine of which are in the ICU and five on ventilators,” said Tim Robinson, CEO at Nationwide Children’s Hospital.

“We have been very full, and we anticipate being very full again this week,” said Patty Manning-Courtney, MD, chief of staff at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.

Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana are seeing a similar surge to the one ongoing in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho.

Oregon

The models that predicted Oregon would hit its peak this week appear to be coming true with hospitalization numbers starting to trend down. But like in other states where cases are tailing off, the final phase where fatalities increase has now begun.

Douglas County Public Health reported the death of an infant from COVID, who passed on Monday.

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler (who is in open competition with Jenny Durkan for least popular large city major in the United States) has dropped the vaccination requirement for Portland Police officers.

The city attorney’s office advised city staff on Tuesday that the order issued last week that all employees be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or risk losing their jobs could not be extended to the city’s police force. That was due to new guidance from the Oregon Health Authority, which said the Governor’s order mandating vaccines for health care workers likely did not apply to police.

The issue in question was whether police officers were medical first responders, similar to firefighters. The city attorney determined that this was not the case.

South Carolina

If South Carolina was a country, it would have the third-highest rate of COVID cases on the planet behind only Mongolia and Grenada. When asked who bears responsibility for South Carolina’s latest surge, Dr. Brannon Traxler, director of public health at the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control, on Wednesday said, “I don’t think that this is a matter of who to blame.

“From a public health standpoint, we know that the answers to stopping the spread of this virus are vaccines, wearing masks, washing hands, and practicing physical distancing,” Traxler said.

“DHEC is not interested, myself included, in pointing fingers or blaming one person or a group of people because this pandemic, which really is unprecedented, as we’ve all heard so many times, is just so complex. … We all have individual choices to make.”

Three South Carolina cities, Columbia, West Columbia, and Cayce passed emergency mask orders today.

South Dakota

Active cases of COVID in South Dakota are now at levels not seen since January 7. Active cases are now at 6,182, up from Friday (5,970) while hospitalizations ticked down slightly.

Texas

The state of Texas is seeing a trend similar to Alabama. Hospitalizations appear to have peaked for adults, while pediatric hospitalizations continue to increase. The state has been hit with COVID and RSV cases, stretching pediatric ICU resources to the limit.

Dr. Jim Versalovic from Texas Children’s believes that we are seeing this spike right now because so many kids are back inside classrooms.

He says Texas Children’s is at a high plateau right now, which hopefully means their numbers will start to go back down at some point.

“We’ve had a census exceeding 50 children and adolescents per day most of the past two weeks,” Dr. Versalovic said about Texas Children’s. “We continued to have numbers above 40 just in the past 24 hours. We set a new record in the past week in terms of the number of children testing positive at Texas Children’s, well over 380 positive tests in a 24 hour period.”

Over the holiday weekend, Texas had more than 300 children hospitalized for confirmed COVID cases.

West Virginia

Governor Jim Justice announced Wednesday “West Virginia leads the nation in the acceleration rate of new cases.”

He also outlined that 10 schools have closed due to an increase in cases and one entire county, Clay County, has closed schools in the district due to COVID-19 cases and exposure. 29 districts have issued masked mandates for students K-12.

As of Wednesday, 813 West Virginians are in the hospital battling COVID-19 complications. According to DHHR data, 252 have been admitted to the ICU and 132 are currently on ventilators. Gov. Justice said the number of patients in the ICU and on ventilators is at an all-time high for the state.

Governor Justice is a bit of a minor star on social media due to his mannerism and delivery of his COVID updates to his state. You can watch for yourself in this clip that went viral today.

Governor Jim Justice of West Virgina

Misinformation

Taking the day off

Mark Twain Elementary closes classroom – local and national COVID update for September 7, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) The number of students in quarantine at Kamiakin Middle School almost tripled today, and a second-grade classroom at Mark Twain Elementary was closed due to “multiple confirmed COVID cases.” All three school districts we are following are reporting students and faculty in quarantine.

If you want to watch live professional sports in Washington, you’re going to need a COVID vaccination or a PCR test, with every team along with the Huskies and Cougars announcing requirements today.

Washington state COVID numbers are incomplete due to the long holiday weekend, but they aren’t good as hospitalizations, and ICU patients set new records. In a press conference today with the Washington State Hospital Association, the alarm was sounded about the impact COVID is having on pregnant women and shrinking available medical resources.

Vaccination rates at a local, county, state, and national level grew as fewer people are vaccine-hesitant. It was reported up to 200 Seattle Police Officers will resist or quit over the City of Seattle vaccine mandate, and someone has set up a website calling for officers to resist.

There was a lot of irresponsible hype about the Mu variant this weekend after several news sources ran with a story about the variant being identified in 49 states. No, you don’t need to lose sleep over Mu. A pre-print report that was recently released and is well researched indicates the number of COVID mutations is declining at a country and global level as more people get vaccinated.

Nationally, Idaho had to move to “crisis standards of care” today in two districts, imperiling the health of Idahodians that require medical resources. Hawaii got an emergency shipment of oxygen from the mainland over the weekend, averting a crisis. Remember the ivermectin story out of Oklahoma last week? We go over what went sideways with that and what is truth and reality as more information has come out. The short version – almost everyone got it wrong except the doctor interviewed in the first place.

Finally, my day started at 7 AM, and I haven’t had lunch or dinner. There are probably a lot of typos – your patience is appreciated. (OK, just did a ton of edits)

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on September 7, 2021.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for September 7, 2021

Washington state COVID update

Today is the first update from Washington state since Friday. Data isn’t complete from all agencies, making the fidelity of data cloudy for the next couple of days. Through September 6, Washington’s statewide 14-day rolling average was 517.7 COVID cases per 100K, which is statistically unchanged from the last update. Clallam (1,042.1 per 100K), Columbia (1,147.0 per 100K) Franklin (1,217.4 per 100K), and Okanogan (1,015.5 per 100K) reported an extreme number of new cases. Counties in the 800.0 to 999.9 per 100K range include Asotin, which dropped below 1,000.0 over the weekend, and Benton, Chelan, Cowlitz, Douglas, Garfield, Grant, Lewis, Pend Oreille, Stevens, and Yakima. Lincoln county fell off the list, dropping to 760.2

King County is at 311.8 cases per 100K, a slight decline.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 13.29%, and over the previous 7 days, 15.31%. Hospitalizations were down for the 20 to 34 and the 50 to 64 age groups. The data released today should be considered incomplete due to the 3-day holiday weekend.

Age Group7-Day Case Rate7-Day Hospitalization Rate
Ages 0-1127.4 (down)0.2
Ages 12-1922.40.2
Ages 20-3458.5 (down)1.3 (down)
Ages 35-4947.3 (down)2.8
Ages 50-6433.2 (down)3.7 (down)
Ages 65-7917.8 (down)3.8
Ages 80+4.91.5
7-day case rate and 7-day hospitalization rate is per 100K within the age group – the target for 7-day case rate is <25.0, but there are other factors such as vaccination rates within the age groups, how many total tests within the 7-day period, and the positivity rate within each age group

The USA Today COVID Tracker did not report the number of COVID-related deaths today.

Huskies, Cougars, Mariners, Seahawks, Storm and Kraken requiring vaccinations for home games

In an avalanche of announcements today, almost every major college and professional sports franchise announced that proof of vaccination would be required to attend home games in Washington state.

The Seattle Seahawks announced that the team and Lumen Field will require proof of COVID-19 vaccination. All guests age 12 and older will be required to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test result taken within 72 hours before kickoff to attend Seahawks games at Lumen Field. The Seahawks will begin enforcing the new policy starting with the team’s home opener on September 19 vs. the Tennessee Titans. In accordance with current Washington state and King County mask mandates, fans and staff will also be required to wear masks at all times except while actively eating or drinking, regardless of vaccination status.

The Seattle Kraken and Climate Pledge Arena made an identical announcement almost at the same time. In compliance with the mandate from Washington state, Climate Pledge Arena and the Seattle Kraken have announced that all guests, ages 12 and over, attending Kraken games, concerts, and events at Climate Pledge Arena will be required to provide proof of vaccination upon entry. In the near term, all guests will also be required to wear a mask while attending events until further guidance from Washington state.

The Kraken and Climate Pledge Arena will introduce a seamless and convenient process to allow guests to show proof of full vaccination via their smartphones. Additionally, Climate Pledge Arena will require proof of vaccination for all events.

A few hours later, the University of Washington Huskies and the Washington State Cougars made their announcements. The Huskies will implement a vaccine verification system for all Husky Athletics tickets events beginning on Sept. 25, starting with the Huskies’ football game against California at Husky Stadium.

Husky fans over the age of 12 will need to provide proof of vaccination or proof of a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of the event.

The Washington State Cougars will require proof of vaccination for fans age 12 and older, beginning with home games at Gesa Field in October.

Cougar fans that are not vaccinated will need to show proof of a negative COVID-19 within 72 hours of the event.

Shortly after the college announcements, the Seattle Storm and the Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett made their announcement. According to a team spokesperson, the team will require proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of game time during playoffs, which begins on Sept. 23.

Until then, the team plans to provide vaccinated and unvaccinated sections for its remaining two home games on Tuesday, Sept. 7, and Friday, Sept. 17.

An hour later, the Mariners and T-Mobile park made a similar statement. However, any proof of vaccination requirement won’t happen unless the Mariners make the postseason. For now, the Public Health order for masks applies to fans ages 5 and older in all locations of T-Mobile Park, including seats and concourses, but masks are not required while fans are actively eating and drinking. The proof of vaccination policy won’t be installed until potential postseason games at the earliest.

4 ejected and 6 arrested on Seattle to Anchorage Alaska Airlines flight forced to make an emergency landing over mask wear

Four passengers were ejected from Alaska Airlines flight 109 before it even departed Seattle for Anchorage, Alaska, and another 6 were arrested when the flight had to divert to Juneau. Officials in Seattle had to escort 4 people off the aircraft on Saturday before it even left the gate for being disruptive and refusing to wear masks.

After the plane took off, 6 additional passengers from the same group became combative. They refused to follow directions, and things escalated to threats directed at passengers and the flight crew, with one stating, “we are locked and loaded.” The cabin crew became so nervous about the threats they approached several passengers, asking if they could assist if the group got more violent.

The pilot announced the aircraft had a mechanical problem and needed to make an emergency landing in Juneau. When the plane landed, local and state police were waiting, boarded the aircraft, and escorted the six men off the plane in handcuffs.

Alaska Airlines stated the six men removed did not continue to Anchorage on Alaska Airlines flight. There was no information at press time on whether any of the six men were booked or are facing criminal charges.

Seattle Police Officers Guild “unofficially” sets up anti-vaccination website

Someone within the Seattle Police Department has set up a website encouraging officers not to report their vaccination status to the City of Seattle, with the vaccination looming. The introduction of the website reads, “Welcome fellow SPD family members who have made it here. As you are aware by now, the city is demanding that all SPD officers provide the City with proof of vaccination or submit a request for vaccination exemption by September 22, 2021. This mission is one of human rights, constitutional rights, civil liberties, and freedom of choice. We all must band together in our stance for freewill, personal choice, medical freedoms and consent without coercion, retaliation, harassment, disciplinary action, or termination.”

The legality of local and state government-mandated vaccinations was addressed by the Supreme Court in 1905, in the case Jacobson vs. Massachusetts. As reported on Saturday, the WFSE reached an agreement with the State of Washington on modifications to the vaccination mandate that provides more equity. This agreement doesn’t impact SPOG or the Seattle Police Department. It is also clear the union, for that matter, any union would have pursued a Constitutional legal avenue if a valid one existed.

The site states it is not affiliated with the Seattle Police Officer’s Guild but uses the SPOG rallying cry of “hold the line.” Interestingly, the site does not state if it is affiliated with the Seattle Police Department.

The about section states, “My name does not matter. I took an oath, just the same as so many of you. I am someone who refuses to sit back and watch the futures of so many great men and women be placed at risk of being ripped away by a government entity who has no right forcing us all to to [sic] submit to a vaccine and disclose private medical information regarding the same.”

Jason Rantz reported that up to 200 Seattle Police Officers refuse to get vaccinated or hand over their information for verification. This would represent about 19% of the current force but does not align with other municipalities, states, schools, and private businesses that have had vaccine mandate deadlines pass. The state of Hawaii mandated 14,000 workers to get vaccinated, and so far, 92.6% have gotten at least the first dose. Vaccine mandates at hospital systems and colleges have yielded 95% to 99.6% compliance.

Reports King County and Seattle are working on a vaccine verification program to access non-essential businesses

KOMO reports that Seattle and King County are working on starting a vaccine verification program similar to those implemented in Honolulu, New York City, San Francisco, and Clallam and Jefferson counties. No details were announced, but similar programs in other cities and counties have required proof of vaccination to enter bars and restaurants.

The program would not be implemented until at least October, and according to Constantine, would have at least a five-week lead time to give people time to get vaccinated.

First deadline to get first vaccination to meet October 18 state work vaccination requirement has come and gone

For employees planning to get vaccinated by the October 18 stated deadline, the date for the first dose of the Moderna vaccine was yesterday. The interval between the first and second shot is 4 weeks, followed by two weeks to reach maximum effectiveness. Guidelines still under consideration by the federal government would call for a booster shot 8 months after the second dose.

The Pfizer vaccine, which is fully FDA approved for people 16 years old and over, has a deadline of September 13. The first vaccine to reach full approval has a 21 day period between the first and second shot.

The Johnson & Johnson shot is a one-and-done shot, requiring 14 days to reach maximum effectiveness. On paper, state employees could wait until October 4. However, federal distribution of the vaccine has ground to a halt, making doses difficult to find.

King and Pierce counties outdoor mask mandate begins

Washington’s two most populous counties, including the cities of Bellevue, Seattle, and Tacoma, had their outdoor mask mandates go into effect today. People who attend outdoor events with 500 or more people will be required to wear masks regardless of vaccination status. Mask wear is highly recommended in crowded outdoor areas where social distancing is impossible, and movement is restricted. Mask wear is required outdoors if you’re unvaccinated in almost all situations.

Did you go to the Ellensburg Rodeo or Dave Matthews Band shows at The Gorge?

County officials in Kittitas County are appealing to anyone who went to the Ellensburg Rodeo or Dave Matthews at the Gorge to get a COVID test over the next few days. Officials in Kittitas County are going to be adding testing capacity. The public health community is concerned that the combination of these two events and public schools starting this week will break the back of the local hospital.

Kittitas Valley Hospital is a small acute care facility with 25 beds. They are currently full, and 24% of their patients have COVID. According to a spokesperson with the facility. Officials warned in a Washington State Hospital Association press conference today that the ability to move patients between Washington hospitals is starting to gridlock.

Pediatric death

The Washington State Hospital Association reported a pediatric COVID patient died in Spokane at Sacred Heart last week. No additional information on age, hospital or city of residence was given. This is the 13th COVID-related death of a juvenile patient in Washington state.

Thank you

Thank you to our new subscribers and those of you who have made one-time contributions. On behalf of the entire team, thank you for helping us keep the lights on!

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

King County Health reports 84.4% of all eligible residents age 12 and older have received at least one dose of the COVID vaccine. Additionally, every eligible age group from 12 to 80+ years old is over 70% for at least a first dose. Twenty to 29 years old are the furthest behind at 71.5%, with adolescents from 12 to 19 years old at 72.5%.

Washington state reports that 73.9% of all residents age 12 and up have received at least one dose of the COVID vaccine.

Nationally the United States reached a milestone with 75% of all adults 18 and over, with at least one dose of the COVID vaccine.

United Kingdom vaccine advisory board does not recommend vaccination for 12 to 15 year olds

The United Kingdom vaccine advisory board determined that children age 12 to 15 were at such a low risk from COVID that vaccination would provide only a “marginal benefit.”

The UK’s four chief medical officers have now been asked to have the final say and consider the wider impact on schools and society.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said a decision would be made shortly.

The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation did advise widening the existing vaccine program to include an extra 200,000 teenagers with specific underlying conditions such as children with chronic heart, lung, and liver conditions.

A CDC study released last week, Hospitalizations Associated with COVID-19 Among Children and Adolescents — COVID-NET, 14 States, March 1, 2020–August 14, 2021, found that children 5 to 11 years old were at a significantly lower risk than children from birth to 4 and 12 to 17. The CDC study found that the hospitalization rate among unvaccinated adolescents from 12 to 17 was 10 times higher than among the vaccinated.

University of Washington Medicine appeals for pregnant women to get vaccinated

A spokesperson from UWMC outlined data on the increasing number of pregnant women hospitalized in Washington state today in a press conference with the Washington State Hospital Association. In a recent study evaluating 800,000 pregnant women at more than 500 medical facilities, researchers found that being unvaccinated increased the risk of early delivery (before 37 weeks) 22 fold. Unvaccinated pregnant women had a 14 times greater risk of needing a ventilator and a 15 times greater risk of death.

When the blood oxygen level in a pregnant woman drops to a dangerous level, early delivery may happen spontaneously. In other cases, it may need to be induced to try and save the mother and child. UWMC reported turning away patient transfer requests for pregnant women who needed ICU-level care and not just due to COVID. The hospital has no capacity for interstate transfers.

King County, Washington is reporting over 84% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 22.2% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID, another new record. A hospital system caring for this many COVID-positive patients in acute care is considered to be under “severe stress.” ICUs are at 88.8% of capacity statewide, with 34.9% of ICU patients fighting COVID, virtually unchanged from last week.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 173 per day, down significantly from last week – however, the Washington State Hospital Association note in a press conference this morning that hospital occupancy information was incomplete due to the holiday weekend. On September 6, there were 1,585 patients hospitalized with COVID and 246 on ventilators, according to the Department of Health. This was a new record.

The WSHA reported 1,674 COVID patients hospitalized, up 7% from last week, a new record. The number of ICU patients on ventilators was up 34% from last week.

The Washington Department of Health has not responded to our request to explain the difference between the state and WSHA numbers.

EvergreenHealth reported 39 COVID patients at Kirkland and zero at Monroe on Monday. This is lower than the 44 reported last week but higher than the 35 reported on Friday.

EvergreenHealth Kirkland hospitalized COVID patients for September 7, 2021

During the WSHA press conference today, red flags were raised on several issues within Washington state, as hospitalized patient numbers and ICU use continues to grow. It was explained that staff and equipment for kidney dialysis are in critically short supply in Washington, impacting more than COVID patients.

When the Delta variant exploded in India, officials saw numerous patients with kidney and pancreas damage developing type 1 diabetes as a long-hauler syndrome. A recent study by the Washington University of Medicine and US Veterans Affairs sees a similar trend in the United States.

Additionally, the organization reported that Washington state is already “triaging care.” Currently, the Washington Medical Coordination Center, operated out of Harborview Medical Center, assists hospitals in Washington state to “find beds for patients where beds can’t be found…beyond the normal system.”

Routinely, hospitals work within their networks and with agreed partnerships to move patients. A year ago, the state agreed to share resources so that if moving patients within networks wasn’t possible, coordination could happen across the state. Larger hospitals are on a “guaranteed acceptance” if a patient has nowhere to go, but that is not a long-term commitment, and the WMCC has no commitment to coordinate with or accept out-of-state patients.

“If you come in with a stroke or a cardiac event, there is no bed for you,” said Dr. Linda Eckert of Kittitas Valley Hospital. “This isn’t just a COVID emergency. This is an emergency for rural residents.”

When questioned about what going to “crisis standards of care” would look like, WSHA president Cassie Sauer explained that Washington has an agreement not to let a single hospital going into crisis care. If resources were to become exhausted, a hospital region or the entire state would move to crisis care standards.

“Healthcare is not an unlimited resource,” Dr. Sauer concluded.

Data for pediatric patients receiving acute care or in a PICU due to COVID is not available.

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueGREEN– Bellevue (4)
– Chinook (4)
– Newport (1)
– Sammamish (1)
– Somerset (1)
– Tyee (1)
– Woodridge (6)
None
Lake WashingtonRED– Kamiakin Middle School (81))
– Juanita Elementary (1)
– Juanita High School (8)
– Mark Twain Elementary – 2nd-grade class (multiple confirmed cases)
NorthshoreYELLOW– Bothell High School (12)
– Canyon Park Middle School (1)
– Crystal Springs Elementary (5)
– Fernwood Elementary (3)
– Frank Love Elementary (1)
– Hollywood Hill Elementary (1)
– Inglemoor High School (1)
– Hollywood Hills Elementary (1)
– Kokanee Elementary (1)
– Maywood Hills Elementary (3)
– North Creek High School (1)
– Northshore Middle School (2)
– Ruby Bridges Elementary (15)
– Shelton View Elementary (5)
– Skyview Middle School (2)
– Timbercrest Middle School (2)
– Westhill Elementary (1)
– Woodin Elementary (3)
– Woodmoor Elementary (6)
None
Local Districts Scorecard

All three area school districts are now reporting COVID cases and quarantines. The Lake Washington School District moved into red status less than one week after school started.

Bellevue School District is reporting exposures and confirmed cases at 7 different schools. However, they currently have less than 10 confirmed cases.

The Lake Washington School District has hit growing quarantines and exposures at two schools, while infections spread to four facilities. Kamiakin Middle School now has 81 students, with 53 more exposed to a COVID positive student.

Additionally, in a message sent to parents this morning, school officials indicated an entire classroom at Mark Twain Elementary was put into quarantine.

“We are writing to inform you that there have been positive cases of COVID-19 reported that involves our school. The individuals and the families who tested positive, along with close contacts, have already been notified by the school.  This letter is intended to keep our community informed to what is happening at Mark Twain.  Currently, we are following the direction of the Department of Health and shutting down a classroom in an abundance of caution because of multiple positive cases.”

There was an additional single case at Juanita Elementary reported over the weekend.

The Northshore School District is reporting 19 facilities with students or faculty in quarantine. Currently, none of the 19 schools impacted have reported widespread exposure.

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

No update

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulitaive Case Tracker 73,331 new cases and 530 COVID-related deaths on Tuesday. These numbers are missing many reports nationally due to the Labor Day holiday.

About the Mu variant

An article over the holiday weekend about the Mu variant got a lot of attention in the press. Catchy headlines announce that Mu has been found in 49 states (including Washington) and now represents 4% of all cases in Alaska.

Mu, also known as B.1.621, is considered a “variant of interest” by the World Health Organization, had blaring headlines that the variant represents 39% of all COVID cases sequenced in Columbia, is worse than Delta, and breaks through vaccines more effectively. The variant gained the “variant of interest” distinction because of the number of genetic mutations, its increased resistance to current COVID vaccines and people infected do become sicker.

Scary headline-grabbing stuff!

Mu only represents 0.2% of cases globally, and that 39% number of Columbia is under 1,000 total cases. Additionally, there are signs that the number of Mu cases globally is in decline.

When a virus mutates, it becomes concerning if it is more transmissible, more deadly, and can escape vaccine immunity. Data from Belgium indicates that Mu is more deadly, and data from multiple countries shows that it is better at causing breakthrough cases than Delta. An official R0 is not available for Mu, but nothing indicates it is equally or more transmissible than Delta. Because Mu can’t outspread Delta, it can only establish itself in small pockets of unvaccinated communities.

For another variant to become the next globally dominant strain, it will have not only to be more vaccine-resistant than Delta, but it is going to have to out replicate it. That’s a tall task for the next mutation.

The end of the pandemic and moving to an endemic is in sight

Are you ready for some good news? A report published as a pre-print in medRxiv called COVID-19 vaccines dampen genomic diversity of SARS-CoV-2: Unvaccinated patients exhibit more antigenic mutational variance and provided insight into how increasing vaccination rates are impacting the formation of new COVID mutations.

A critical disclaimer, the article has not been peer-reviewed, and several of the researchers have connections to various firms and agencies. However, the researchers include doctors from the Mayo Clinic and Harvard and analyzed genomic sequencing information globally. In a discussion, Dr. Katelyn Jetelina referenced the study today, along with a couple of our researchers.

The study examined 1.8 million genomes from 183 countries and territories between December 2019 and May 2021 and identified 1,296 unique lineages for COVID mutations. The study reached three critical conclusions:

  • The diversity of COVID mutations is declining globally
  • The diversity of COVID mutations is declining at a country level
  • Areas with more vaccinated people are seeing less total mutations
Study indicating that the number of COVID mutations is declining as vaccinations become more widespread globally

The study also indicated that vaccinated patients with breakthrough cases produce significantly fewer mutations than unvaccinated patients.

The good news is as more people get vaccinated, the number of variants is in decline, and as of early this summer, globally, we are starting to win the war. The Delta variant waves in India and the United Kingdom ran for 40 to 60 days before sharply declining. This happened because Delta is so infectious, it spreads easily among the unvaccinated and runs out of uninfected hosts.

There are signs that the United States is reaching a national peak, but there will be hotspots for weeks to come. The more vaccinated people, the harder it will be for COVID to produce a variant that can out replicate Delta and can breakthrough vaccinated and natural immunity.

We will never eliminate COVID, but if we can slow down the mutation of the existing strains, it becomes increasingly unlikely we will get something worse than Delta, that can also out replicate it.

Biden Administration to announce a new national COVID strategy on Thursday

President Joe Biden will deliver remarks on Thursday laying out a six-pronged strategy involving both the public and private sectors in his administration’s latest efforts to stop the spread of the coronavirus and boost vaccination rates.

The announcement from White House press secretary Jen Psaki comes as the U.S. reached more than 40 million recorded cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic began and as health officials race to contain the highly contagious delta variant.

We can tell you this much. It will not include a national mask or vaccine mandate.

Today, the United States reached a grim milestone of 650,000 COVID deaths and is currently adding more than one million COVID cases a week.

Alabama

Alabama continued to struggle with COVID and reported having negative 92 ICU beds over the weekend, meaning 92 more patients needed ICU bed care than the state’s hospitals had formal ICU beds. While some hospitals had available ICU beds to care for the critically ill, others had patients awaiting that care. More than half of the state’s 1,618 ICU patients on Sunday had COVID-19. In plain language, Alabama is in “crisis care management” even without the declaration.

Of the 2,713 people hospitalized with COVID-19 statewide on Sunday, 84 percent were unvaccinated, according to the Alabama Hospital Association. 

This evening, a group of night-shift nurses and hospital workers gathered outside UAB Hospital, briefly refusing to clock in for work in protest of long hours driven by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and what they say is unfair pay.

“The COVID pandemic and recent Delta variant surge have stressed the healthcare system and put tremendous pressure on our staff – including nurses on the front lines,” UAB Hospital Chief Nursing Officer Terri Poe said in a statement.

Lindsey Harris, president of the Alabama State Nurses Association, spoke to reporters after the workers entered the hospital. Although she had not spoken to the specific nurses who gathered at UAB tonight, Harris said Alabama nurses are paid 8% less on average than their counterparts in neighboring states.

Many hospitals are losing thousands of nurses and skilled professionals moving to contract work and traveling nursing due to significantly higher pay.

The state held a moment of silence today for the 12,000 Alabamians who have died from COVID.

Arizona

Tucson cannot force its employees to get a COVID-19 vaccine, and the city puts millions of dollars of state revenue at risk if it continues to enforce a mandate handed down by the City Council last month, Attorney General Mark Brnovich said Tuesday.

Tucson’s vaccine mandate is illegal, and the city could be held liable for attempting to force government employees to take it against their beliefs,” Brnovich said in a released statement. “COVID-19 vaccinations should be a choice, not a government mandate.”

If the city does not rescind or amend the policy within 30 days, it could lose state revenue dollars, Brnovich’s office said.

In other news, the Cyber Ninjas are still sick with COVID and have not released their election report to the Arizona state Senate.

Florida

A Florida doctor said she would no longer treat primary care patients in person who has not received the COVID-19 vaccine. 

Linda Marraccini, a family medicine doctor in South Miami, sent a letter to patients informing them that because the Pfizer vaccine has been approved for general use by the Food and Drug Administration, unvaccinated individuals will no longer be allowed to attend in-person appointments at her practice.

“This is a public health emergency — the health of the public takes priority over the rights of any given individual in this situation,” Marraccini wrote in the letter obtained by NBC Miami. “It appears that there is a lack of selflessness and concern for the burden on the health and well-being of our society from our encounters.”

Dr. Marraccini is not the first physician to make this announcement, and doctors can fire patients if they follow a procedure that does not medically abandon their patients.

There is a lot of evidence that the surge in Florida has reached its peak. Sewage samples from the Space Coast paint a different picture, with the amount of COVID in the waste system doubled from what was tested a month ago.

Georgia

Georgia set a new hospitalization record with 6,032 COVID patients statewide. In another tragic tale, a 4-year-old girl in a pediatric hospital recovering from abdominal surgery became infected with COVID and died one day later.

“It’s an empty hole in our heart, and she was amazing,” Chris Wishart told WRDW. “I couldn’t have had a better daughter. She was everything I’d want in a daughter.”

Hawaii

Maui County will require vaccination cards to access indoor restaurants, nearly identical to a vaccination ID mandate in Honolulu. The program will go into effect on September 15.

Hawaii got an emergency shipment of medical-grade oxygen on Sunday, preventing disaster at state hospitals that were critically low of the important resource. Another shipment is expected later this week.

Idaho

The sum of all fears became a reality today as multiple hospitals in Northern Idaho went to “crisis standards of care,” including the Panhandle and the North Central Health District. The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare announced the decision Tuesday morning. It applies to North Idaho, based on a recommendation from a large health care committee and patient-advocacy stakeholders from around the state.

Kootenai Health in Coeur d’Alene and surrounding area hospitals have run out of resources to care for the influx of patients.

According to the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, hospitals and healthcare systems potentially affected are:

Panhandle Health District — Benewah Community Hospital, Bonner General Hospital, Boundary Community Hospital, Kootenai Health, Shoshone Medical Center.

North Central Health District — Gritman Medical Center, Clearwater Valley Hospital and Clinics, St. Joseph Regional Medical Center, St. Mary’s Hospitals & Clinics, Syringa Hospital & Clinics.

The move allows hospitals to allot scarce resources like intensive care unit rooms to patients most likely to survive.

Other patients will still receive care, but they may be placed in hospital classrooms or conference rooms rather than traditional hospital rooms or go without some life-saving medical equipment.

“Crisis standards of care is a last resort. It means we have exhausted our resources to the point that our healthcare systems are unable to provide the treatment and care we expect,” Idaho Department of Health and Welfare Director Dave Jeppesen said in a statement.

This standard of care isn’t just for COVID patients but any other medical care. Travel and activity in this area should be avoided because a medical emergency or car accident could result in not receiving adequate care due to a lack of resources.

Ohio

A judge ruled Monday that an Ohio hospital cannot be forced to give a patient ivermectin for Covid-19, reversing an earlier decision that ordered it to administer a parasite medication that has not been approved to treat the disease.

In an 11-page decision, Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Michael Oster Jr. wrote that there “was no doubt that the medical and scientific communities do not support the use of ivermectin as a treatment for Covid-19.”

Jeffrey Smith has been at West Chester Hospital since July and has been intubated since August 1. The original order has run its course. Julie Smith, the patient’s wife, claims that her husband’s condition has improved, but he is still on a ventilator.

UC Health, which operates West Chester Hospital, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokeswoman told The Cincinnati Enquirer that the decision was “positive.”

“We implore all members of the community to do what we know works: wear a mask, become fully vaccinated and use social distancing whenever possible,” Martin told the newspaper. “At UC Health, we respect the expertise of our clinicians and appreciate the scientific rigor used to develop treatments, medications, and other therapies.

“We do not believe that hospitals or clinicians should be ordered to administer medications and/or therapies, especially unproven medications and/or therapies, against medical advice.”

Oklahoma

Last week we shared a local news report from Oklahoma from Dr. Jason McElyea about ivermectin overdoses overwhelming hospitals in the rural southeast portion of the state. In his report, he indicated that patients, including gunshot victims, had to wait in ambulances for available resources.

Rolling Stone and several other publications picked up the story. Over the weekend, one of the hospitals denied the claims made by Dr. McElya. Fox News then jumped on that claim, roasting Rolling Stone for publishing false information.

Having shared the KFOR story ourselves, we monitored this over the weekend and were prepared to do a retraction. Today, INTEGRIS Gover Hospital made a statement, “what we can confirm is that we have seen a handful of ivermectin patients in our emergency rooms.” The hospital added: “And while our hospitals are not filled with people who have taken ivermectin, such patients are adding to the congestion already caused by COVID-19 and other emergencies.” In a follow-up message Monday night, hospital spokesperson Kristi Wallace said they had no beds available that night.

So what went wrong here? The original story we linked to provided quotes from Dr. McElya but didn’t fully explain what he said. In another article done by Tulsa World, more context from the same interview was provided. He told a story about being unable for hours to find space at a big-city hospital for a gunshot victim he was treating in a small-town emergency room — but this article did not attribute the scarcity of appropriate beds to ivermectin. In fact, the article did not mention ivermectin at all.

When Northeastern Health System Sequoyah issued a statement saying he hadn’t worked there in more than two months, that the hospital hadn’t seen any patients with complications from taking ivermectin and that it “has not had to turn away any patients seeking emergency care,” ring wing media pounced on the story as badly as KFOR did.

One thing that jumped out at us was the word “northeast,” as the original KFOR story referenced “Southeast Oklahoma.” At the time the statement was made over the weekend, several other hospitals had not released statements.

In reaching the finish line, it appears KFOR didn’t provide proper context, aggregators (including us) were too quick to grab the story, the right-wing media was too quick to jump on a single denial, and Dr. McEyea statement as presented by KFOR was taken out of context.

Everyone screwed up – including us – we aren’t going to retract the story now there is more context, but we do apologize and will not use KFOR as an aggregate source in the future.

Texas

A 74-year-old man whose family sought a court order against Memorial Hermann over his COVID-19 treatment has died.

Pete Lopez of Richmond had been at Memorial Hermann Sugar Land for almost a month battling COVID-19. According to his family, he was put on a ventilator on Aug. 19.

His family, who has been appealing with Memorial Hermann to administer the controversial drug, won a court order for the hospital to treat him with the controversial drug.

Despite the family’s court order win, they claimed the hospital refused to administer the drug.

According to Snider, Lopez was previously prescribed ivermectin by VA Medical Center, but he was admitted to the hospital before he was able to take it.

“He had the prescription with him at the hospital, and the doctors knew that,” Snider told Eyewitness News on Sunday. “We have been asking them to administer it since day one.”

A judge signed a court order in favor of the family on Sept. 3, according to documents.

Vermont

Three Vermont State Police troopers out of the Shaftsbury barracks have resigned, and a criminal probe is underway into allegations that they may have violated federal law by making fake Covid-19 vaccination cards.

The matter has been referred to the U.S. Attorney Office in Vermont and FBI, which is investigating, according to a statement released by the Vermont State Police Tuesday afternoon in response to questions raised by VTDigger.

Michael Schirling, the commissioner of the Vermont Department of Public Safety, told VTDigger he couldn’t comment beyond the statement. 

“Because there’s an ongoing federal investigation, I can’t get into in any more detail than what’s in the release,” he said.

Two of the troopers, Shawn Sommers and Raymond Witkowski, submitted their resignations on Aug. 10, according to the state police statement. That’s a day after another trooper brought the matter to a supervisor.

As a result of further investigation by the state Department of Public Safety, the third trooper, David Pfindel, resigned effective Sept. 3, according to the statement. 

According to the statement, the troopers “are suspected of having varying roles in the creation of fraudulent COVID-19 vaccination cards,” a possible violation of federal law.

Misinformation

Taking the day off

Antivax protest turns violent – local and national COVID update for September 4, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) An anti-vaccination protest led by the Proud Boys turned violent in Olympia today, with one person shot. The Northshore School District reported new COVID cases at multiple schools on Friday. Predictions of a sickout over vaccine mandates by Washington State Ferry appear to have not come true.

The Washington state employees union appears to have reached a deal with the state over the COVID vaccine mandate. Federal unemployment programs including $300 a week in extra federal benefits, Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) for the self-employed, Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC), and extended unemployment benefits end today for Washington state residents.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for September 4, 2021

Washington state COVID update

The Washington State Department of Health does not report data over the weekend.

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 48 COVID-related deaths on Friday and the third day in a row with more than 4,000 new COVID cases in the Evergreen State.

Anti vaccination “End of the Mandate” rally turns violent in Olympia with one shot

After forcing three schools into lockdown on Friday in Vancouver, Washington, the right-wing extremist group Proud Boys, planned an anti-vaccination protest in Olympia on Saturday called End of the Mandate. The group originally planned to gather on the Capitol grounds but moved their planned event to Sylvester Park to confront a group of Antifa protesters.

Several short video clips showed 50 to 75 heavily armed Proud Boys, including some carrying firearms and others with shields, paintball guns, and baseball bats, roaming the streets of Olympia chanting, “fuck Antifa.” The Proud Boys and their supporters left the main anti-vaccination protest and stalked the streets of Olympia for 20 minutes, assaulted several people including area residents who were uninvolved in the protest. All of their actions were documented on live streams.

Reporter Alissa Azar was chased, beaten, and sprayed with bear mace before patrons in a bar came to her aid and pulled her inside. A short video on the edge of the assault has Azar screaming in pain, while Proud Boys laugh.

Reporter Alissa azar being attacked by the proud boys in Olympia

The group then started chasing another person for approximately a half-mile. According to a Facebook post by the Washington State ACLU, several people running from the Proud Boys tried to board a city bus, and reports are one of them fired 5 shots, striking one person in the foot. The bullet allegedly struck Proud Boy leader Tusitala “Tiny” Toese in the ankle. A single 9mm casing was observed at the scene on a live stream.

Other people are reporting that the gunshot was self-inflicted, while others are claiming it was fired at the people boarding the bus by a person among the Proud Boys, ricocheted, and struck Toese. There is no update on Toese condition. The actual shooting was not caught on camera.

Gunshots fired in Olympia during an anti-vaccination protest that rapidly devolved into violence

In another video, Toese required a tourniquet and there was a significant amount of blood loss. The Proud Boy leader is currently on probation and was involved in violent assaults in Portland, Oregon last month. Tiny’s profile has increased in recent months with the arrests of Ethan Nordean and Rufio Panman for their alleged involvement in the January 6 insurrection, thrusting Toese into a leadership role.

Reports of multiple people being shot and a potential stabbing appear to be untrue. The situation is evolving and more information continues to come in. Despite multiple claims of a person arrested by right-wing social media accounts, the Gateway Pundit is reporting no one has been arrested.

There is an additional report of a person being arrested for pepper-spraying police officers before the shooting, but that is also unconfirmed. Olympia Police and Washington State Patrol didn’t have a significant presence, gathering on the edges of Sylvester Park. At one point the Proud Boy mob marched past the Washington State Patrol building adjacent to Capitol grounds. Over police scanners, the Olympia Police reported they didn’t have adequate resources to respond to the Proud Boys.

This is by far the most violent incident involving protests against mask and vaccination policy in the United States after a series of increasingly violent events in the past week.

Washington Federation of State Employees reaches tenative agreement with Governor Inslee over vaccine mandate

In sharp contrast to the bloodshed in Olympia, the Washington Federation of State Employees announced they have reached a tentative agreement with the state of Washington over the looming vaccination mandate. The agreement will move to a ratification vote on Tuesday among the almost 47,000 members.

The union is reporting the following concessions were made by the state and is encouraging members to vote in favor of the deal.

  • Members who complete vaccination by October 18 will be credited one day of personal leave as an incentive, that must be taken within the 2022 calendar year
  • Anyone who wishes to retire by December 31, 2021, can do so regardless of their vaccination status as long as they submit their retirement paperwork by October 18
  • Any employee who files for a medical exemption by September 13, and has not had the evaluation process completed by October 18, will not have their pay suspended until the exemption decision is made
  • If an exemption is denied on valid grounds, the employee can use their annual leave and leave without pay to become fully vaccinated within 45 days
  • If an employee is not fully vaccinated by October 18, but has received their first dose, they can use leave without pay for up to 30 days to complete vaccination and return to their previous position or equivalent
  • The state will share vaccination rate data with the union, and partner to target worksites that are lagging for vaccine education and access
  • A requirement for telecommuting workers to return to the office on 3 days notice has been removed

Washington State Ferries sickout over vaccine mandate never materializes

According to the Washington State Ferries site, operations have been smooth over the holiday weekend. The only run impacted due to staffing issues was Seattle/Bremerton, which is operating on one ferry over the weekend, which was announced yesterday.

PeaceHealth reports 95% of employees elected to get vaccinated by deadline

PeaceHealth is a 6,000 employee hospital and medical clinic with facilities in Alaska, Oregon, and Washington. The medical group was one of the first in the country to announce a COVID vaccination mandate, with a deadline of August 31, 2021 to be fully vaccinated.

When PeaceHealth made the announcement, they reported that 80% of their staff had already been vaccinated. On August 31, leadership reported that 91% of employees had been fully vaccinated. Yesterday evening, PeaceHealth reported that 95% of employees were fully vaccinated, leaving approximately 300 remaining across the three-state network.

Among the less than 300 remaining, an undisclosed number are awaiting final disposition on medical exemption or religious requests. The number of personnel who opted to resign is far lower than what activists predicted.

Thank you

Thank you to our new subscribers and those of you who have made one-time contributions. On behalf of the entire team, thank you for helping us keep the lights on!

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

Another poll has come out showing support for getting the COVID vaccination is growing. The latest NPR/PBS News Hour/Marist poll conducted after the Food and Drug Administration gave the Pfizer vaccine full approval for people over 16 years old, mirrors findings from the Axios/Ipsos poll we reported on last week.

The survey was done from August 26 to August 31 and found 19% of U.S. adults declaring they do not intend to be vaccinated. This is down 5 points from the previous poll and is almost identical to the Axios/Ipsos poll that found 14% would never get vaccinated, and 6% declaring it was unlikely.

The same poll reported 72% of respondents have already received the vaccine. According to the CDC, 74.8% of Americans 18 and older have received at least one dose. On September 3, 1.4 million COVID vaccine doses were administered, including 550,000 people who were newly vaccinated. It was the highest number of doses given since July 1.

King County, Washington is reporting over 83% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

Yakima Valley Memorial Hospital appealed to the public to follow guidance from officials to prevent any additional surges The 226-bed facility is caring for 223 patients, 50 with COVID and 6 on ventilators. Although the hospital has 226 beds on paper, 36 of those are for psychiatric care and labor and delivery. The hospital has expanded capacity by adding wards and parking patients in the emergency room while they wait for an available bed.

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueGREENNoneNone
Lake WashingtonYELLOW– Kamiakin Middle School (28)
– Juanita High School (8)
None
NorthshoreYELLOW– Bothell High School (12)
– Cottage Lake Elementary (3)
– Crystal Springs Elementary (6)
– Fernwood Elementary (4)
– Frank Love Elementary (1)
– Hollywood Hill Elementary (1)
– Inglemoor High School (1)
– Kokanee Elementary (1)
– Maywood Hills Elementary (4)
– North Creek High School (2)
– Northshore Middle School (2)
– Ruby Bridges Elementary (15)
– Shelton View Elementary (4)
– Skyview Middle School (2)
– Sunrise Elementary (1)
– Timbercrest Middle School (2)
– Wellington Elementary (6)
– Westhill Elementary (1)
– Woodin Elementary (2)
– Woodinville High School (8)
– Woodmoor Elementary (6)
None
Local School Districts Scorecard

The scorecard has been updated to include data from the Northshore School District.

How we score a district

GREEN: Less than 10 reported COVID cases within the entire school district contained to one facility.

YELLOW: More than 10 confirmed COVID cases resulting in quarantine of students, faculty, coaches, or transportation, or less than 10 confirmed COVID cases in more than one facility. Less than 10% of the student body is infected, and no school buildings have been closed due to infections or loss of faculty.

RED: The district has been forced to close at least one school or makes the decision to move to remote learning due to COVID infections, or the district remains opens with no school closures, but more than 10% of students are quarantined.

Officials in Spokane are reporting an unknown number of COVID cases among students at Rogers High School. Spokane Public Schools Spokesperson Sandra Jarrard doesn’t know how many cases there currently are, she told KREM 2’s Morgan Trau. In an email to parents, she added that the “situation is considered confined and not considered an outbreak.”

The contact tracing team is conducting an investigation to compile a list of close contacts, she said. Anyone who is considered to have been in close contact with those COVID-19 positive received “separate communication” with more information regarding testing and quarantine requirements. Staff and students that are not notified by the contact tracing team, have been determined not to have had close contact with the confirmed case, she added in the email. 

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

Yesterday in the comments, there were questions about the vaccination rates by zip code in our area. We have that information.

King County COVID vaccination rates – at least one dose – by zip code as of September 3, 2021
Zip CodePercent vaccinated, at least one dose, 12 and older
9815592.0%
9802888.7%
9801188.0%
9803485.2%
9803391.9%
9807291.0%
98052>95.0%
98004>95.0%
9803993.8%
9800594.5%
9800788.9%
Vaccination rates for those 12 and older by zip code – at least one dose

Local area vaccination rates far exceed state and national averages, and are even higher for adults 18 and over. There is a touch of irony that the lowest vaccination rate is in the same zip code where the first COVID death was officially recorded in the United States.

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulative Case Tracker reported 300,957 new cases and 3,910 COVID-related deaths on Friday. It is important to note several states, including hard-hit Florida, only report their data once a week. This creates an artificially high number. Data is best viewed on a 14-day rolling average to analyze long-term trends and a 7-day rolling average for emergent trends.

Tom Brady and Bill Belichick

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady reported he had COVID in February, shortly after the Super Bowl. He has since been vaccinated, and NFL officials report that the Buccaneers are one of only two NFL teams to be 100% vaccinated. It is reported that COVID filed a complaint with the NFL, claiming Tom Brady cheated by deflating his blood pressure and watching films on how COVID infects cells and replicates. A representative for Brady refused to comment.

Brady’s former coach, Bill Belichick, created controversy on Wednesday when being asked about the release of Quarterback Cam Newton. Belichick dodged the question, but went on to say, “high number of players, coaches and staff members” have tested positive for COVID-19 after they were fully vaccinated.”

NFL’s chief medical officer, Dr. Allen Sillis released a statement today, that the data doesn’t support Belichick’s opinion.

“We released our data last week from the first three weeks of August, and that data has consistently shown higher rates of infection in unvaccinated players than in vaccinated players. That was true at intake when they first came into training camp and it was true during that first three-week period of August that we released,” he said. “From a medical perspective, go to any major medical center in the country and as you walk around, those patients who are hospitalized, those who are in the ICU, you see the evidence the vaccines are working.

“We know that vaccines are working. What we are seeing are some vaccinated people who test positive. But their illness tends to be very short and very mild, and that’s exactly what the vaccines were designed to do,” he continued. “Let’s all remember the vaccines were designed to prevent serious illness, hospitalization, and death. They’re doing a terrific job of that so far, not only in the NFL where we haven’t seen any serious cases but in society as a whole.”

According to data from the NFL, 0.3% of players experienced a breakthrough case from August 1 to 21, while 2.2% of unvaccinated players became ill. The sevenfold difference between the vaccinated and unvaccinated mirrors data across the country.

COVID also claims that Belichick filmed how it operates against the immune system and supplied the films to Brady. However, officials were quick to point out that the relationship between the two soured in 2019.

Alabama

After the Labor Day holiday, 90% of all school districts in Alabama will require students to wear masks. Infections among students doubled last week, with 83 of143 districts and charter schools reporting COVID positive cases.

At a Madison County School Board meeting Thursday night, parents remained split on masks with seven speakers opposed to a mandate and four in support.

“What kind of future will our kids have if they are being told from a young age to cover their mouth?” Kim Davis said during the meeting. “This is a decision for we the parents, not the school board. I demand the right for parents to decide for their child.”

Arizona

A coalition of teachers, parents, and advocates are trying to overturn Arizona laws that provide protections to students and faculty at primary schools and universities. The group wants to make mask mandates illegal, prevent universities from requiring vaccinations, and forbid establishing so-called vaccine passports.

The state argues the coalition lacks legal standing to challenge a law that, among other things, bars communities from enacting COVID-19 restrictions that affect businesses, schools, and churches. Irvine argued members of the coalition can’t show they were harmed by the law.

Irvine also argues the challenged provisions are constitutional.

Kelly Walker has not been arrested for his role in the incident at a Tuscon elementary school on Thursday, despite instigating the incident and issuing threats over social media.

California

Although California has done better than other west coast states in the current surge and has a highly vaccinated population, regional hot spots persist. Hospitals in the eight-county San Joaquin Valley region have had fewer than 10% of staffed adult ICU beds for three consecutive days. State officials labeled it a “surge,” triggering special rules announced last month that require nearby hospitals to accept transfer patients.

In Fresno County and neighboring counties, the number of confirmed and suspected coronavirus patients in hospitals is more than double what it was four weeks ago, the Fresno Bee reported.

If ICU capacity were to drop to zero, the state of California would enact forced patient transfers to other facilities where surging cases are not occurring.

Florida

It’s another sign that Florida has reached a peak, but the last part of a COVID surge is the worst. While new cases and hospitalizations continue to drop, COVID-related deaths continue to climb. Fatalities are a trailing indicator, and typically peak 4 to 6 weeks after new cases reach a peak, and 2 to 3 weeks after hospitalizations peak. Outcomes for patients who end up on ventilators are poor with the Delta variant, with 70% to 80% dying. For the lucky few who quality for ECMO, only 30% will move back to a ventilator.

The state added 129,240 new COVID-19 cases over the past seven days, the lowest weekly case rate in more than a month, in a state report released Friday.

But it also reported 2,345 new COVID-related deaths, the highest single-week death toll since the start of the pandemic.

Due to normal lags in how deaths are reported, more than 1,900 of these deaths occurred weeks earlier. New federal data shows that Florida’s daily death toll peaked at 244 on Aug. 15, well above the previous record of daily deaths set in August 2020.

It is estimated 40,000 Floridians received monoclonal antibody treatment, which is credited for preventing 10,000 hospitalizations.

Hawaii

Overnight officials reported that ICU capacity is outstripped and AirGas, the largest producer of oxygen on the islands, reported to FEMA on August 27 that the state would run out of medical-grade oxygen on Monday.

Currently, the only thing that has staved off a worst-case scenario, in which health care officials have to start rationing care to those most likely to survive, is 438 medical relief workers, including nurses and respiratory therapists, provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, according to a blunt assessment that Hilton Raethel, president and CEO of the Healthcare Association of Hawaii, provided Friday to the Senate Special Committee on COVID-19. HAH is the major trade group for hospitals and long-term care facilities.

While last week Raethel didn’t want to disclose projections on when the state’s demand would outstrip supply, he told senators Friday that AirGas, which runs the state’s largest liquid oxygen plant, notified FEMA on Aug. 27 that Hawaii could run short as soon as Monday. Since then federal, state and hospital officials have been scrambling to find a remedy.

Oxygen is being flown to the state and is expected to arrive on Sunday. Another shipment is expected to be flown in on Wednesday.

Lt. Governor Josh Green warned that if total hospitalizations exceed 500 people, a statewide shutdown would be considered. Additionally, government officials warned that if the state has to move to “crisis standards of care,” vaccination status would be considered.

Currently, 85% of all hospitalized patients are unvaccinated.

Idaho

Micron announced on Friday it would require all employees and contractors to be vaccinated in the United States. Micron released a statement to employees on Thursday, announcing the mandate.

On Sept. 3, 2021, we will require all U.S. employees, plus all U.S. contractors who must work inside our buildings to conduct their jobs, to be vaccinated against COVID-19. Any U.S. employee (without an approved accommodation exemption for religion or disability) who chooses not to complete a full vaccine regimen by Nov. 15, 2021, will no longer be permitted to work for Micron following that date. Any U.S. contractor (without an approved accommodation for religion or disability) who chooses not to complete a full vaccine regimen by Nov. 15, 2021, will no longer be permitted to work inside a Micron building following that date. As vaccines become more readily available in other Micron locations worldwide, we anticipate requiring vaccination where allowed by local law.

Micron has locations in Colorado, California, Idaho, Minnesota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Washington. The company is one of Idaho’s largest employers.

Kentucky

Governor Andy Beshear announced on Saturday he is calling a special session of the legislature to work on pandemic policies after the legislature stripped the governor of most of his emergency powers.

Various emergency measures issued by Beshear are set to expire as a result of the landmark court decision. Lawmakers will decide whether to extend, alter or discontinue each emergency order, and they are expected to put their own stamp on the state’s response to COVID-19.

Minnesota

While Minnesota hasn’t seen a surge in cases similar to other states, in areas where vaccination rates are lower, hospitals are feeling the strain.

In the CentraCare health care system, which operates hospitals and clinics in central Minnesota including St. Cloud, the number of hospitalized patients is higher now than during the spring surge, said Dr. George Morris, medical incident commander for CentraCare’s COVID-19 response team.

The vast majority of patients with COVID in CentraCare’s hospitals — more than 90 percent — are unvaccinated, Morris said. 

“I’m not trying to shame or blame here,” he said. “But so much of our resources have to be committed to unvaccinated COVID patients … that limits our ability to provide needed medical care for others.”

Nebraska

State officials activated the statewide patient transfer center as increasing cases push rural hospitals to the brink. Nurse Sarah Swistak at Nebraska Medicine is exhausted and frustrated.

“It’s filling up quicker and quicker every day that I come in,” said Swistak. “Last week I think our numbers were in the 40s. I believe this morning we were in the 70s. So our infectious disease unit is full.”

Swistak said the pandemic is overwhelming the hospital once again.

“The rate of this surge and this spike is so much quicker than what it was last fall that it’s scaring a lot of us,” said Swistak.

Starting September 4, nurses at the center will call hospitals around the state to find open beds for COVID-19 patients.

Doctors are echoing the frustration of nurses.

“I tell people I’m crisped. I’m way past burnt out,” says Dr. Andrea Jones, a Nebraska Medicine family medicine physician who has spent much of the past 18 months caring for desperately ill COVID-19 patients. “It’s hard for me to understand why people won’t do the right thing. What’s it going to take for people to do the right thing?

“I’m going to be honest. It’s really made me question my faith in humanity.”

Jones says she has been screamed at by hospitalized COVID-19 patients who refuse to believe they have the virus. On other occasions, she has told family members that a patient’s heart is damaged, or their liver is failing, and the patient’s family members have laughed in her face.

That’s ridiculous, they say. That can’t be from COVID-19. It can’t make anyone this sick.

“These people are in complete denial,” Jones says. “All I can do is care for them the best I can and move on.”

Oregon

Last week we wrote about Josephine County and how the COVID ravaged county suffers from poverty, low overall vaccination rates, and rampant misinformation supported by their political leaders. The numbers out of the rural county are in a word, devastating.

In Josephine County, 60.1 people are dying of COVID for every 100,000 residents — the worst death rate in the entire state.

On Saturday, Josephine County released information on the deaths of their most recent COVID fatalities, including a 25-year-old unvaccinated woman who had underlying conditions.

Josephine County officials said they now have a total of 145 COVID-related deaths. Of those patients, 144 died from complications relating to COVID infections. Of the 145 COVID-19 patients who died, 129 were unvaccinated.

Combined, the southwestern counties of Oregon have a COVID death rate 17 times greater than the more vaccinated metro tri-counties.

To provide some context on how extreme 60.1 deaths per 100K is, the target for new COVID infections is 25.0 or less per 100K.

Wyoming

Memorial Hospital in Sweetwater County has been forced to move to “crisis standards of care,” which includes the canceling of day surgeries and considering patient care on a “case by case basis.” The 99-bed acute care hospital located in Rock Springs is currently caring for 16 COVID patients, but the emergency department is overwhelmed with both COVID and normal medical cases.

Emergency services director Kim White stated, “We are at crisis level. We appreciate the patience. The emergency room staff is extremely busy keeping up with the number of people presenting in the ER. Extra members of the hospital’s healthcare team have been brought in to help cover the influx.”

Only two weeks after school started, multiple districts are enacting mask mandates. Some parents have pulled students out of school rather than complying, and some teachers have been suspended. Wyoming has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the nation.

In the rugged state, no state agency is tracking COVID infections or impacts to schools, resulting in a patchwork quilt of reporting sources, frustrating some.

Misinformation

Ivermectin, again. Outrage has grown among advocates of ivermectin that the US government is giving the drug to Afghanistan refugees. The theory being pushed in social media memes and short twitter bursts is the refugees are being given the drug to treat and prevent COVID while Americans aren’t being offered the same options.

These messages use a common misinformation technique, linking to a document that doesn’t support the position in the meme in the hopes no one will actually go to the document and read it. Well, we did.

The document referenced is the Overseas Refugee Health Guidance, which was updated in 2019. There is your first problem with the conspiracy theory, the document was updated before SARS-CoV-2 was detected. We bolded the key language.

This guidance is intended for the International Organization for Migration (IOM) physicians and other panel physicians who administer overseas pre-departure presumptive treatment for intestinal parasites but may also be referenced by U.S. medical providers caring for refugees who will be receiving presumptive treatment after they arrive in the United States.

While these recommendations have been implemented in many overseas sites, logistical and procurement issues still limit their full implementation in some. All Middle Eastern, Asian, North African, Latin American, and Caribbean refugees should receive presumptive therapy with:

  • All Middle Eastern, Asian, North African, Latin American, and Caribbean refugees should receive presumptive therapy with:
    • Albendazole, single dose of 400 mg (200 mg for children 12-23 months)
      AND
    • Ivermectin, two doses 200 mcg/Kg orally once a day for 2 days before departure to the United States.

Further in the documents for recommendations, which were created in 2008:

Prior to departure for the United States, all refugees originating from the Middle East, Asia, North Africa, Latin American, & Caribbean should receive presumptive therapy with ivermectin for Strongyloides infection and with albendazole for infections caused by soil-transmitted helminths.

Further, the guidance states that children under 33 pounds, pregnant women, and women who are breastfeeding should not be given ivermectin. Ivermectin is listed as a Category C drug, which indicates, “Either studies in animals have revealed adverse effects on the fetus (teratogenic or embryocidal, or other) and there are no controlled studies in women or studies in women and animals are not available. Drugs should be given only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus.”

In simple terms, ivermectin can cause birth defects.

An analysis of existing studies concluded, “After excluding dozens of ivermectin studies with “high risk of bias,” the collaboration left little room for optimism: “Based on the current very low- to low-certainty evidence, we are uncertain about the efficacy and safety of ivermectin used to treat or prevent Covid-19.” The Cochrane Collaboration recommended that ivermectin use be restricted to clinical trials that might actually generate high-quality data.

One more time, for the people in the back, ivermectin is an effective treatment used around the world to treat intestinal parasites and some parasites of the dermis and epidermis.

COVID cases confirmed in LWSD – local and national COVID update for September 3, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) Two Lake Washington School District schools reported COVID cases today, as the CDC released a study on the impact the Delta variant is having among pediatric patients. New COVID cases continue at a very elevated rate, and data continues to hint the plateau in new cases is crumbling.

Pierce County joins King County in an outdoor mask mandate for large events, and members of Patriot Prayer and the Proud Boys forced three Vancouver, Washington schools into lockdown due to an antimask protest. Someone is running around Pullman pretending to be a mask enforcer, including taking pictures of driver’s licenses. For big breakfast and cholesterol fans, sad news from Seattle with Beth’s Cafe announcing they are closing again.

Nationally, this felt like awful humans doing awful things day. A high school principal in Tuscon was threatened by a group of anti-maskers leading to one arrest. We learned that a doctor in Arkansas did not get medical consent to give prisoners Ivermectin.

In good news, Florida has hit peak COVID, but hospitalizations and deaths are trailing indicators. Some models indicate that Oregon will hit its peak next week as the state teeters on running out of resources.

Finally, if you have tickets to Dave Matthews, two band members have been exposed to COVID, but the show will go on.

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on September 3, 2021.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for September 3, 2021

Washington state COVID update

Through August 22, Washington’s statewide 14-day rolling average increased again to 521.7 COVID cases per 100K. Asotin (1,033.6 per 100K), Columbia (1,290.3 per 100K) Franklin (1,218.5 per 100K), and Okanogan (1,082.8 per 100K) reported an extreme number of new cases. Benton, Chelan, Clallam, Cowlitz, Douglas, Garfield, Grant, Lewis, Lincoln, Stevens, and Yakima counties are not far behind, with rates between 800.0 and 999.9 per 100K.

King County is at 324.9 cases per 100K.

The Washington Department of Health will not be updating data Saturday through Monday due to the Labor Day holiday. We do not expect to have a clear view of the situation for COVID cases until the middle of next week.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 14.34%, and over the previous 7 days, 12.90%. Hospitalizations were up in all age groups except 12 to 19 years old. New cases for people over 80 years old were down slightly in the latest data.

Age Group7-Day Case Rate7-Day Hospitalization Rate
Ages 0-1128.2 (up)0.2 (up)
Ages 12-1923.0 (up)0.2
Ages 20-3466.41.6 (up)
Ages 35-4953.1 (up)2.8 (up)
Ages 50-6437.1 (up)4.4 (up significantly)
Ages 65-7918.5 (up)3.8 (up significantly)
Ages 80+4.8 (down)1.5 (up)
7-day case rate and 7-day hospitalization rate is per 100K within the age group – the target for 7-day case rate is <25.0, but there are other factors such as vaccination rates within the age groups, how many total tests within the 7-day period, and the positivity rate within each age group

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 32 COVID-related deaths on Thursday. Another concerning trend, the data from USA Today, indicates that the plateau has broken, with Washington reporting over 4,300 new cases on Thursday, the second day in a row over 4,000.

Pierce County enacts outdoor mask mandate for large events

One day after King County enacted an outdoor mask mandate for large events, Dr. Anthony L-T Chen, Director of Health for Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department, issued a countywide health order requiring the same. Everyone 5 years and older in Pierce County must wear a face covering at any outdoor event with 500 or more people in attendance regardless of vaccination status beginning Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2021.

The county also recommends wearing a mask in any crowded outdoor setting where physical distancing is not possible. This order, along with the statewide mask order, requires masks to be worn in indoor public settings like grocery stores, malls, and community centers.

“We are taking this step to ensure the most vulnerable people in our community do not become infected or spread COVID-19,” Dr. Chen said. “The highly contagious Delta variant is causing a rapid increase of positive COVID-19 cases and leading to increased hospitalizations and deaths.

“Wearing masks in crowds of 500 or more will reduce community transmission and protect children under the age of 12, people who are immunocompromised and unvaccinated adults.”

Yesterday, Pierce County Health released a video featuring Zac Duris, an ICU Nurse at St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma.

ICU Nurse Zac duris from st. joseph medical center talks about his experiences treating covid patients

Duris tells heartbreaking stories. From young, seemingly healthy people dying to families who can’t see their loved ones. 

“What sticks with me is the really ill patients who have families at home who are really concerned about them,” Duris said. “I can take care of critically ill patients with or without COVID. But what COVID has done has made families have to suffer more because they can’t be at their bedsides with their loved ones.” 

Right Wing extremists force three Vancouver schools into lockdown, harass students and staff

Patriot Prayer, headed by Joey Gibson, spread misinformation on the Internet that a student at Skyview High School was refusing to wear a mask and would be arrested on school grounds on Friday. Members of Patriot Prayer, the Proud Boys, and other anti-mask and anti-vaccination protesters gathered at the school chanting “USA.”

Three schools, Skyview High School, Alki Middle School, and Chinook Elementary School, went into lockdown. Students reported that teachers guarded classroom doors, and people trying to enter Skyview High School were met by security.

“All the learning gets disrupted. We have to sit down quietly, not make noise, and we were hunkered down in our classrooms for around an hour to an hour-and-a-half,” said Lucas, a 16-year-old high school student at Skyview. OPB is withholding Lucas’ last name to protect his identity.

He compared the lockdown to similar drills performed to prepare students for school shooters. Lucas said some students were harassed by the anti-mask demonstrators outside the school building.

“They’ve gotten pretty wild out here recently. It’s kind of crazy,” Lucas said.

Equal opportunity reporting – someone is trying to enforce mask wear at Washington State University – Pullman

Washington State University in Pullman sent out an alert to students warning them about a person claiming to be part of “mask enforcement.” The university, university police, and the city of Pullman all stated they were not doing any enforcement activity, and the person doing this is not an employee.

More alarming, the person took pictures of driver’s licenses and claimed that students would get a ticket in the mail. The person is described as a male driving a 2000s Toyota (which we realize doesn’t say much).

Northwest Washington Fair linked to 108 COVID cases

The Whatcom County Health Department is aware of 108 COVID-19 cases associated with the 10-day 2021 Northwest Washington Fair in Lynden.

“This includes both people who were contagious while they were at the fair and people who may have been exposed while they were at the fair,” health department spokesperson Jennifer Moon told The Bellingham Herald in an emailed statement Friday, Sept. 2. “We don’t have a more specific breakdown. This number may continue to increase as we continue to investigate cases.”

Officials refused to release attendance numbers for the fair.

Fake COVID vaccination cards intercepted in Seattle

Homeland Security Investigations in Seattle, which is a part of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said agents recently intercepted some fake COVID vaccination cards that were shipped to the United States through Seattle, with a final destination of Idaho.

No arrests have been made, and no information was shared on who the intended recipient in Idaho was.

Seattle icon Beth’s Cafe closing again due to COVID

During the height of the winter peak, Beth’s Cafe closed its doors because delivery only wasn’t fitting their business model. The cafe was sold to new owners, who reopened operating under limited hours. A combination of construction on Aurora Avenue eliminating parking, COVID, and a reduction in the nightlife, which fueled their business, is forcing Beth’s to close again.

The webpage indicates the closure will be for 3 to 6 months, or until things with COVID get under control. The 24-hour restaurant opened in 1954 and is famous for its 12-egg omelets, quirky clientele, and amazing milkshakes.

Expect long ferry waits this weekend

Washington State Ferries are expected to have significant delays this weekend due to many staffers out with COVID. Ironically, there were rumors of a “sick out” this weekend over looming vaccine mandates. Officials report that a sickout hasn’t materialized beyond the employees they already knew were sick so far.

“We just don’t have enough people to help run the boats,” said Ian Sterling with the Washington State Ferries. “Add COVID onto that, and unfortunately, we just lose out on the ferry fleet.”

According to Sterling, they’re dealing with major staffing shortages because of the pandemic, and there were rumors of a potential “sick out” this weekend because of the state vaccine mandate for state workers.

“Thankfully,” Sterling said, “we’re not seeing any evidence of that at this point in time.”

Dave Matthews Band changing weekend shows at The Gorge to an “alternate format”

The bassist and drummer of the Dave Matthew’s Band have had a COVID exposure and won’t be available for a planned show at The Gorge in George, Washington this weekend (yes, national readers, there is a George, Washington). The site says they are moving to an “alternate format” and that things will sound different from previous shows.

Organizers require proof of vaccination or a negative COVID test in the last 48 hours. We request you wear a mask.

Thank you

Thank you to our new subscribers and those of you who have made one-time contributions. On behalf of the entire team, thank you for helping us keep the lights on!

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

King County Health released a new dashboard showing the effectiveness of vaccines in preventing new cases, hospitalizations, and death.

King County Health COVID-19 Outcomes by Vaccination Status Dashboard

Looking at data from the last 30 days, a person who is not fully vaccinated is 7 times more likely to test positive for COVID, 49 times more likely to be hospitalized, and 32 times more likely to die of COVID related illness. The data is age-adjusted to account for factors such as older people being more likely to have comorbidities while younger people are less likely to be vaccinated.

When looking at the data, be mindful that each statistic should be seen as a gate. You are 7 times more like to test positive for COVID if you’re unvaccinated. Among the people who tested positive, you’re 49 times more likely to end up in the hospital. If you’re unvaccinated and in the hospital, you’re 32 times more likely to die. So each number is a slice of a smaller and smaller group of people.

To booster shot, or not to booster shot, that is the question

Yesterday we wrote a lengthy piece about natural immunity versus immunity from vaccination and data out of Israel on the impact of booster shots. Our stressed-out editorial team (seriously, we need more copy editors desperately) struck the closing line of, “Confused? To some degree, we are too, but the evidence available supports that natural immunity wanes faster than vaccination-based immunity and booster shots are effective.”

Ehem – we should have left in.

A story in the New York Times reported Dr. Janet Woodcock, acting commissioner of the FDA, and Dr. Rochelle Walensky, head of the CDC, urged caution and advised that their agencies needed more time before approving any further action regarding booster shots. The issue isn’t around the existing recommendation for immunocompromised and the elderly to get booster shots. There is significant data to support they are needed and effective.

Yesterday, we reported a growing number of voices joining the World Health Organization, recommending putting the brakes on booster shots. The two critical issues are large swaths of the world population is currently unvaccinated and don’t have access to a first dose, let alone a third. Secondly, although the data is supportive of booster shots, the data also shows that a vast majority of people who get breakthrough cases only have mild symptoms, especially those under 65.

The whole question of booster or not might be moot, as Moderna is reporting that they will not meet a September 20, 2021 deadline for booster shot approval. The Biden Administration is faced with the choice of offering a booster shot for Pfizer only or delaying the program.

Widespread data isn’t available yet for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and the need for a booster shot, but early tests show a significant boost in the immune response. Unlike Pfizer and Moderna, which are mRNA vaccines, Johnson & Johnson uses a neutralized adenovirus as a messenger to the immune system.

Misleading headlines on the number of Americans with COVID anitbodies in their blood

Some digital ink has been spilled today after a study was published in JAMA declared 83% of blood donations have detectable COVID antibodies in them. This has led to a series of misleading headlines leaping to the conclusion that between natural exposure and immunization efforts, 83% of Americans now have some form of immunity against COVID.

No. Because the study includes this critical text.

“Based on a sample of blood donations in the US from July 2020 through May 2021, vaccine- and infection-induced SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence increased over time and varied by age, race and ethnicity, and geographic region. Despite weighting to adjust for demographic differences, these findings from a national sample of blood donors may not be representative of the entire US population.”

Here is the problem of leaping to conclude that 83% of Americans have some form of immunity. The data only represents people who donate blood, which is roughly 6.8 million Americans. People under 17 (16 in some states), who are under 110 pounds, have high or low blood pressure, diabetes, certain cancer and cancer history, HIV/AIDs, a history of Hepatitis or potential exposure, persons who are pregnant, or recently had a tattoo or STD can’t donate blood.

Because the pool (no pun intended) of people who can donate blood is already limited, there is no way to adjust this data to account for all the exceptions. It is a safer assumption that people who donate blood are more likely than the national average to have been vaccinated as a group.

When it comes to accepting donated blood, there is a movement among hardcore anti-vaccination adherents to refuse blood transfusions and blood-based agents because it can’t be proven the source is from an unvaccinated individual. We don’t recommend going too deep down that rabbit hole. The language used aligns with white nationalist ideals and the concept of “purity of blood.”

King County, Washington is reporting over 83% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 21.6% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID, another new record. A hospital system caring for this many COVID-positive patients in acute care is considered to be under “severe stress.” ICUs are at 88.5% of capacity statewide, with 34.2% of ICU patients fighting COVID, virtually unchanged from yesterday.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 189 per day, an increase from yesterday. On September 2, there were 1,533 patients hospitalized with COVID and 233 on ventilators. This is the first day since August 20, when a new record was not set. There were 31 fewer patients in acute care and 8 fewer patients on ventilators.

Data for pediatric patients receiving acute care or in a PICU due to COVID is not available.

EvergreenHealth released information on the number of patients currently under care in Kirkland and their vaccination status. On Monday, they reported 44 patients being treated for COVID. On Thursday, the number had dropped to 35. 72% of all COVID patients and 91% of ICU patients are unvaccinated. These numbers align with data released from King County today.

EvergreenHealth patient information at the Kirkland hospital for September 2, 2021

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueGREENNoneNone
Lake WashingtonYELLOW– Kamiakin Middle School (28)
– Juanita High School (8)
None
NorthshoreGREENNoneNone
Local School Districts Scorecard

The first day of school brought COVID exposures to two Lake Washington School District schools. Parents at Kamiakin Middle School were notified about a confirmed COVID-positive case involving 28 people in close contact with the infected person.

Close contact is defined as anyone who has been within 6 feet of a person with COVID for a combined total of 15 minutes or more within a 24-hour period, or a person who lives in the same household as a person with a positive e COVID test, including caregivers. The standard does not mention any difference between licensed caregivers such as daycares or after-school programs or non-licensed caregivers such as a neighbor providing babysitting.

Unvaccinated close contacts are advised to quarantine for 14 days. Vaccinated contacts are advised to get a PCR COVID test (not a rapid test) 3 to 5 days after exposure.

Juanita High School also notified parents about a COVID-positive confirmed case involving 8 people in close contact. In both incidents, the district indicated they are deep cleaning the impacted areas. The Lake Washington School District COVID Safety Plan was last updated on August 18 and is available online.

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

Bellevue-based Peter Pan Seafoods, with locations in Washington and Alaska, is mandating vaccination for all employees. The company is rolling out the mandate in phases, with office personnel part of the first wave.

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulitaive Case Tracker 153,143 new cases and 1,588 COVID-related deaths on Thursday. With the holiday weekend upon us, we don’t expect to have another set of accurate numbers until the end of next week.

CDC release long awaited study on hospitalizations associated with COVID among children

Dr. Katelyn Jetelina provided an excellent analysis of an early release study from the CDC, Hospitalizations Associated with COVID-19 Among Children and Adolescents — COVID-NET, 14 States, March 1, 2020–August 14, 2021.

  • Infection rates were highest among children birth to 4-years old at 69.2 cases per 100K
  • This was closely followed by adolescents age 12 to 17 years old at 63.7 cases per 100K
  • Rates were lowest among children ages 5 to 11 years old at 24.0 cases per 100K
  • Among all age groups, 26.5% of children admitted to the hospital required PICU care, 6.1% went on ventilators, and the mortality rate was 0.7%
  • Pediatric hospitalizations rates increased fivefold in August compared to June
  • Hospitalization rates among infants and toddlers from birth to 4 years old increased tenfold
  • The hospitalization rate among unvaccinated adolescents from 12 to 17 years old was 10 times higher than among the vaccinated

We will deviate from one point Dr. Jetelina made in her analysis. We agree that there wasn’t a significant change in ICU admissions, children requiring ventilators, and fatalities when comparing Delta to the original strain and Alpha variants circulating in June. It is important to note that fewer children required ICU care, but the number of children who required ventilators increased, and the mortality rate went from 0.7% to 1.8%.

The challenge parents are facing isn’t that the Delta variant is more aggressive with children. The problem is there is widespread community transmission, particularly among the unvaccinated.

“Pediatric hospitalizations have dramatically increased in the past month,” Dr. Jetelina said. “Yes, the media is accurately portraying the situation on the ground. And, hospitalizations have increased the most for 0-4-year-olds. Importantly, this isn’t because Delta is more severe, it’s because we are transmitting Delta in the community, and our kids aren’t protected. Your decision not to get a vaccine or implement public health measures in schools or the community is directly impacting the health of kids.”

Etcetera

Boxer Oscar De La Hoya has tested positive for COVID and is hospitalized. De La Hoya, 48, who had a planned return to boxing this weekend after a 13-year break, is on hold. He tweeted from a hospital bed that is he is fully vaccinated. In the video, he isn’t on oxygen but appears exhausted and talks in a raspy voice.

We try to steer away from partisan sources and paywalls. We had a hard time finding a piece of local news or neutral source for this. Former President Donald Trump told the Wall Street Journal that he likely wouldn’t get a COVID booster shot, sort of.

“I feel like I’m in good shape from that standpoint—I probably won’t,” Trump said in an interview with the publication. “I’ll look at stuff later on. I’m not against it, but it’s probably not for me.”

We only toss in the “sort of” because in two sentences, he said probably twice, and given the last six years, OK, we’ll stop.

Alabama

Governor Kay Ivey on Friday reallocated $12.3 million of the Coronavirus Relief Fund to secure qualified, out-of-state travel nurses to work in Alabama hospitals in a temporary capacity.

“I’m pleased to see more folks getting vaccinated, but we are still in the thick of COVID-19, and our hospitals are overwhelmed,” Governor Ivey said. “In consideration of the current surge of the virus and the strain on our dedicated healthcare professionals, I have directed the $12.3 million of CARES Act funding be reallocated to recruit more trained staff to our nursing corps. Until our vaccination rates rise and our COVID-19 hospitalization rates fall, we will need the extra support these nurses provide.”

COVID cases in Alabama continue to surge, setting a new record of 4,705 new cases per day this week. Total hospitalizations declined—however, the number of patients in the ICU and on ventilators both set records.

The number of new COVID cases among school students more than doubled, with over 9,100 new cases reported in the last week, impacting 51 school districts.

Arizona

Kelly Walker, the owner of Viva Coffee House in Tuscon, Arizona, is no stranger to controversy. Rishi Rambaran is a 40-year-old parent of a student who attends Mesquite Elementary School in Tuscon. His child was told they would have to quarantine because of a COVID exposure and would not attend a school field trip.

Walker posted on his business’s Facebook page, “Apparently, Mesquite Elementary thinks they can break the law and act like the covid Gestapo. We will be headed over there shortly to disagree. Come join us because we won’t have this in OUR community!

Facebook post from Kelly Walker’s business Viva Coffee, highlighting another post from Rishi Rambaran

Walker, Rambaran, his child, and a third unidentified adult entered the school, confronted principal Diane Vargo in her office, and threatened her with a citizen’s arrest. Walker was allegedly equipped with black “military-style” zip-tie handcuffs and streamed the whole incident on his Instagram account. Vargo asked them to leave, and when they refused, called the police.

Vargo was forced to leave the school grounds for her own safety, and the men left before police arrived. Officials credit Vargo for using her active shooter training to deescalate the situation. Rambaran has been arrested and is facing a criminal charge of trespass. School officials and the Pinal County Sheriff say they are working on charges for the other men. There was no indication if Child Protective Services have become involved because a juvenile witnessed the interaction.

Vargo did nothing illegal and followed the guidelines established by the Republican-run Arizona state legislature and quarantining the child.

Editorial Opinion: Individuals such as Kelly Walker are a danger to the United States. He represents a small subset of very vocal individuals who actively foment the idea of violent action against the government and anyone that opposes his worldview. People like him, who have never served in a war zone, never been shot at, never watched their comrade’s in arms die, have a dangerous lust for the violence they’ve never experienced. His words and actions have motivated others into dangerous actions. We fully support the rights of the First Amendment to speak of your grievances and seek redress from the government. Continued calls for violence at a local, state, or federal level that lead people to action, are akin to screaming fire in a crowded movie theater. To quote the late Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, “I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description, and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it.”

(yes, Justice Stewart was addressing hardcore pornography, it’s an analogy)

We would also be remiss if we did not point out, the only person arrested to date is a member of the BIPOC community. The events that happened yesterday directly result from disinformation campaigns and the radicalization of a subset of Americans with continued calls for violence.

Arkansas

We reported last week about Dr. Rob Karas, who was prescribing Ivermectin to inmates at the Washington County Jail with the approval of Sheriff Tim Helder. A couple of days later, we reported that Dr. Karas was under investigation by the state of Arkansas Medical Board.

According to a report in the Associated Press, multiple prisoners have come forward stating they were never told they were receiving Ivermectin. Some were told they were receiving vitamins or steroids.

Edrick Floreal-Wooten, an inmate, said he was given ivermectin at the jail after testing positive on Aug. 21.

“I asked what are they, and they’d just tell me vitamins,” Floreal-Wooten said. “With me being sick and all of us being sick, we thought that they were there to help us. I never thought they would do something shady.”

After seeing a news article about ivermectin being prescribed to inmates, Floreal-Wooten said he refused to take the drug last week.

Asked whether he would have taken the drug had they told him at the outset it was ivermectin, he responded: “Never. I’m not livestock. I’m a human.”

The ACLU said it has also heard from several inmates who say they were told the drug was vitamins or steroids.

Anti-vaccination disinformation recently latched on to the Nuremberg Code, and in some cases, has threatened people with citizens arrest, violence, and execution.

In 2017, JAMA had this to say. “The story of the Nuremberg Code is not one of the ethical norms taking on the force of law. Rather, its legacy shows the fundamental importance of a robust, organized medical profession that protects its independence from political interests and its ability to chart its own moral course, yet is at the same time open to the essential role of nations and government agencies that respect broadly defined and agreed-upon rules to protect the rights and well-being of human research participants.”

California

Like Missouri and maybe Florida (read further), California appears to be moving past a peak in COVID cases. That doesn’t mean the 3rd largest state geographically and with the largest population isn’t seeing hot spots in rural areas. The Central Valley, northern California along the I-5 corridor, and hospitals in Sacramento are still dealing with a massive surge of patients as Delta tears through the unvaccinated.

The high caseload is impacting schools, with several districts being forced to close their doors. The situation is further complicated by regional wildfires creating dangerous conditions at times.

Colorado

If you see a pattern of COVID plus schools equal problems in schools, you would be correct. The number of COVID cases in Colorado schools tripled this past week, impacting 43 learning institutions. Positive infections among students grew to 410 this week, which indirectly impacts exposed students and educations who then must quarantine.

A doctor in Denver found a seller of fake vaccination cards on a gun-selling website, and the state attorney general’s office is now investigating.

Florida

Yesterday’s spike in COVID cases was likely an outlier, as the trend of falling new cases and hospitalizations continue in Florida. We feel confident in saying Florida has hit its peak. “While the total number of hospitalizations remain high and workforce challenges remain, it is encouraging that fewer hospitals are expecting critical staffing and oxygen shortages. As Floridians continue to get vaccinated and with expanded availability of monoclonal antibody treatments for those who test positive, it looks like the worst of this surge may finally be behind us.”

Over 40,000 Floridians have received monoclonal antibody treatments, reducing hospitalizations by 10%.

As tens of thousands of students are now in quarantine due to COVID exposure, more school districts are considering mask mandates in open rebellion of governor Ron DeSantis. Since DeSantis’ order, more than a dozen Florida counties have rebelled and voted to require masks to protect students and teachers as the Delta variant sweeps across the state.

Earlier this week, populous Brevard County along Florida’s east coast, which went for Trump over President Joe Biden by more than 16 percentage points in November, narrowly voted to approve a 30-day school mask mandate.

A day later, Hernando County, which supported Trump over Biden by almost 30 points, also passed a mandate, but one that allows parents to opt-out.

Georgia

Georgia hit a grim milestone, logging its 20,000 confirmed COVID death since February 2020. After setting a record for hospitalizations yesterday, the numbers declined slightly on Friday. However, the state reported 106 deaths yesterday, which could account for the drop in hospitalizations.

Hawaii

A city council meeting in Honolulu led by Mayor Rick Blagiardi devolved into a shouting match and a platform for misinformation as more than 250 people spoke virtually.

Many of those who spoke repeated misinformation about the shots that are circulating on the internet.

Outside Honolulu Hale, demonstrators stood in protest. Inside the city building, they listened to the virtual council hearing without wearing masks.

The mayor addressed the overwhelming takeaway of the testimony, telling councilmembers, “The kinds of things you’re hearing today, ‘It’s my right to get sick, and when I get sick, you have to take care of me’ has a breaking point.”

The issue of out-of-state travelers came up, but Dr. Julius Pham of Queen’s Medical Center pushed back.

“Mostly, it’s travel among our own residents who have gone out of state and have come back.”

The medical experts also underscored the gravity of the situation, saying that hospitals are overflowing with COVID patients and quickly running low on supplies.

Councilmember Tommy Waters called the testimony “sobering.”

Iowa

New data out of Iowa echoes data across the United States – most patients in the ICU with COVID are unvaccinated. The state moved from reporting data once a week to three times a week and rolled out new dashboards today.

As of Friday, the Iowa Department of Public Health reports that 88.7% of COVID-19 patients in intensive care are not fully vaccinated.

Individuals not fully vaccinated make up for 82% of patients hospitalized because of COVID-19.

The Iowa DPH reports 527 COVID-19 patients in Iowa hospitals, with 100 admitted in the past 24-hours. One hundred and forty-two patients are in intensive care.

Kentucky

The situation in Kentucky has gone from bad to very bad in the last 24 hours. Kentucky Children’s Hospital in Lexington has reached full capacity, with COVID patients and children infected with RSV. The hospital has 199 total beds, including 16 PICU and PCICU beds, 12 progressive care unit beds, and 43 acute care beds. The hospital is also a Level 1 pediatric trauma hospital. State officials reported 5,111 new cases today, 30% of them among children 18-years old and younger.

Almost 90% of all ICU beds in Kentucky are occupied, with 661 people fighting COVID. A stunning 69% of people in ICU are on ventilators. The mortality rate for people infected with the Delta variant and on a ventilator for 7 or more days is close to 70%.

Like Idaho, FEMA strike teams have been deployed to the state to shore up exhausted and demoralized medical staff.

Gov. Beshear said three FEMA Emergency Medical Services (EMS) strike teams are on site in Kentucky tasked with transfers and transporting COVID-19 patients. The EMS strike teams are being managed by the Kentucky Board of Emergency Management Services (KBEMS) through American Medical Response.

Each team is comprised of five advanced life support ambulances, and each ambulance is staffed with one paramedic and one emergency medical technician (EMT). Each strike team is positioned regionally in Somerset, Prestonsburg, and Louisville. They are centrally dispatched and can respond to any area in the state.

Nevada

The Clark County School Board of Trustees authorized mandating the COVID-19 vaccine for employees during a marathon meeting that stretched into early Thursday morning, but the plan itself remains subject to negotiations with employee bargaining groups.

The 5-1 vote came after five hours of public testimony — the overwhelming majority of which was in opposition — and more than two hours of discussion. Trustee Danielle Ford cast the lone dissident vote, outlining a myriad of concerns ranging from operational challenges to medical accommodations being upheld. 

Trustee Katie Williams, who has unabashedly argued for personal choice regarding vaccines, participated at the beginning of the meeting by phone but was not present for the vote. Last week, she included a hashtag known to be affiliated with the QAnon conspiracy theory in a tweet about the potential vaccine mandate. The tweet was later deleted.

Before the public weighed in, Clark County Superintendent Jesus Jara laid out his pitch for approving the resolution, which merely gives staff the green light to develop a plan for mandating the vaccine. 

“The best medically available mitigation strategy we currently have is the vaccine,” he said. “The authority that I am requesting is to allow me as the superintendent to develop a plan and processes necessary to implement the full vaccination of our staff. I am not — let me be clear — I am not asking for authority for student vaccinations. Planning takes time. Development of the processes takes time. COVID-19 is not waiting.”

Clark County includes the city of Las Vegas, where a significant majority of all Nevada residents live.

Oklahoma

An Oklahoma judge blocked a state law banning public school mask mandates but added a requirement that parents and students could opt out if they wanted to.

Judge Natalie Mai said she would issue a temporary injunction that will go into effect next week when she issues a written order detailing her ruling. Mai said she is blocking the law because it applies only to public, not private, schools and that schools adopting a mask mandate must provide an option for parents or students to opt-out of the requirement.

The ruling drew praise from Gov. Kevin Stitt, who signed the law and opposes mask mandates without exemptions, and Dr. Mary Clarke, president of the Oklahoma State Medical Association, which joined the lawsuit brought by four parents who oppose the law.

Oregon

More hospitals in Oregon have requested mobile morgues as fatalities continue to rise. Providence Portland and Providence St. Vincent hospitals are bringing in temporary morgues, and Salem Health has signed a contract for a temporary morgue if needed.

“We’ve never seen anything like this,” said Salem Health CEO Cheryl Nester Wolf in testimony to the Salem Chamber of Commerce on Thursday. “We didn’t see this at the beginning of the pandemic. The delta variant is a horse of a different color than where we started.”

Models predict that Oregon will hit its peak next week.

An Oregon State Trooper from Bend is on paid leave after post a video on social media in uniform from his issued vehicle. However, he does not directly identify himself as a member of the Oregon State Patrol.

“I have personal and religious reasons as to why I will not take the vaccine, but also the freedom not to,” said the trooper, which Portland attorney Dan Thenell confirmed to NewsChannel 21 is Zachary Kowing, 29, an eight-year OSP trooper assigned to the Bend office.

Kowing posted the 2-minute, 35-second video about a week ago on his Instagram account, thinblueline_patriot, where he refers to himself as “pro-choice-life” and “pro-freedom,” with a ‘SAVE OREGON!’ logo over the U.S. flag.

He calls mask requirements illegal (they mostly aren’t depending on the language) while saying he didn’t oppose vaccination in general but would rather rely “on his body’s ability to fight the virus.”

South Carolina

Pediatric cases are exploding in South Carolina, which now has the highest infection rate in the United States for all ages. Dr. Jonathan Knoche, DHEC medical consultant, said that, since Aug. 21, the 11 to 20 age group had recorded the highest number of new cases in the state. The second highest group are those 0 to 10 age group.

South Dakota

Hospitalizations in South Dakota are now at the highest level since January, as new COVID cases have increased 685% since the first day of the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally on August 6. The surge in new cases, total cases, and hospitalizations far exceed the surge in cases the state saw in 2020 after the famous motorcycle rally.

Texas

Small town Texas is reeling from the closure of 45 school districts, impacting 42,000 students. From August 23 to 29, 27,353 students tested positive for COVID in the Lonestar state.

“By far, this is worse in terms of planning than last year,” said Tim Savoy, spokesperson for Hays Consolidated Independent School District, which closed some classrooms. “There’s no question about it. Last year we had a lot of tools at our disposal: We could require masks, and we could provide a virtual option that was funded. The delta variant really kind of appeared and just exploded on us.”

State data about the number of coronavirus cases in districts that have closed at least once during the school year thus far is incomplete — 19 have not reported any cases in students or staff to the state, while the state has suppressed case totals in 22 districts due to privacy policies. The list of public school closures in Texas is also incomplete, according to TEA. The agency is tracking closures informally based on media and district reports since districts are not required to report closures to TEA, said Frank Ward, an agency spokesperson.

The closures have been particularly hard in Deep East Texas, with districts closed in Brackett, Groveton, Hemphill, Livingston, Lumberton, Onalaska, and Trinity.

While Governor Greg Abbott was on CNBC tonight saying things were going well in Texas, the Texas Department of State Health Services removed an FAQ page on the practice referring to it as “the oldest, most utilized, and most important tool public health uses to manage infectious diseases.”

The new state budget, which took effect September 1, prohibits the use of state funds “for the purpose of contact tracing of COVID-19.”

Misinformation

Taking the day off

Plateau begins to crack – local and national COVID update for September 2, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) New data out today continues to show that Washington is on a plateau, but it appears it is cracking. Hospitalizations continue to surge, which was expected, but six counties hit new high-level marks for COVID cases, and the state positivity rate jumped to over 14%. New cases and hospitalizations grew in almost every age group.

King County adds an outdoor mask mandate for large events, while Jefferson and Clallam counties will require proof of vaccination to enter restaurants and bars. Google pushes out its return to office date, and Alaska Airlines inches closer to a vaccination mandate. We are still working on confirming information out of Kent.

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on September 2, 2021.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for September 2, 2021

Washington state COVID update

Through August 21, the statewide 14 day rolling average for Washington increased to 513.1 COVID cases per 100K. The number has been bouncing between 500.00 and 535.0 for over a week, so continues at an alarmingly high rate, but still plateaued. Asotin (1,033.6 per 100K), Columbia (1,290.3 per 100K) Franklin (1,212.3 per 100K), and Okanogan (1,041.0 per 100K) reported an extreme number of new cases, with Asotin and Okanogan counties breaching 1,000 cases per 100K. Benton, Chelan, Clallam, Cowlitz, Douglas, Garfield, Grant, Lewis, and Lincoln, Stevens, and Yakima counties are not far behind. Garfield, Lewis, Stevens, and Yakima counties exceeded 800 cases per 100K in the most recent data.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 14.11%, and over the previous 7 days, 13.20%. This increase in positivity is a bad sign that the plateau may be breaking and Washington is headed in the wrong direction. Case rates and hospitalizations by age groups went in the wrong direction almost across the board.

Age Group7-Day Case Rate7-Day Hospitalization Rate
Ages 0-1127.0 (up)0.1
Ages 12-1921.9 (up)0.2 (up)
Ages 20-3466.4 (up)1.1 (up)
Ages 35-4951.9 (up)2.1 (up)
Ages 50-6435.6 (up)3.0 (up significantly)
Ages 65-7918.0 (up)2.5 (up)
Ages 80+4.91.1 (up)
7-day case rate and 7-day hospitalization rate is per 100K within the age group – the target for 7-day case rate is <25.0, but there are other factors such as vaccination rates within the age groups, how many total tests within the 7-day period, and the positivity rate within each age group

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 37 COVID-related deaths in Washington on Wednesday. Another concerning trend, the data from USA Today indicates that the plateau has broken, with Washington reporting over 4,000 new cases on Wednesday and according to the Department of Health data, Washington has set a new record high for daily new cases.

King County enacts outdoor mask mandate for large events

King County Health has implemented an outdoor mask mandate for large outdoor events with 500 or more people, regardless of vaccination status. As of September 6, King County requires that everyone ages 5 and older, regardless of vaccination status, wear masks in indoor public settings like grocery, retail, theaters, and entertainment establishments, and at outdoor events with 500 or more people. Masks are also recommended for everyone in crowded outdoor settings.

Masking in high-risk settings helps to protect everyone, including those that currently aren’t able to be protected by the vaccine such as children under twelve, and those who are immune suppressed. Some vaccinated people may choose to wear a mask if they are at increased risk for severe infection, have an underlying health condition, or are in close contact with someone at increased risk.

In addition, vaccinated individuals are recommended to wear a mask in crowded outdoor public places where 6 feet of distance can’t be maintained. The mandate is essentially a strong request, with no civil or criminal penalties attached to it for non-compliance.

Jefferson and Clallam counties to require proof of vaccination to enter restaurants and bars

All patrons entering an indoor restaurant or bar in Jefferson and Clallam Counties must provide proof they are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, beginning Saturday, September 4, according to a public health order issued today by Doctor Allison Berry, Health Officer for Jefferson and Clallam counties.

“Indoor bars and restaurants are known to pose a high risk for COVID-19 transmission, as they encourage unmasking of large groups of people indoors,” reports Dr. Berry. “Our goal is to make these safer places to be and to reduce transmission in our communities, allowing our hospitals to keep functioning and our schools to open more safely this fall.”

Acceptable forms of proof of vaccination include a completed CDC vaccination card, a State Department of Health Certificate of COVID-19 Vaccination, a printed copy of a State Department of Health vaccine record, a photograph of any of those documents, or an app-based vaccine passport.

According to the order, a person is fully vaccinated when they have received all the required doses of a vaccine for COVID-19 and 14 days have passed since the final dose. For the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, two doses are required. Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine requires only one.

Employees of bars and restaurants who mask continuously while in the building do not need to provide proof of vaccination. Additionally, children younger than 12, who are ineligible for vaccination, may enter without showing proof.

Jefferson and Clallam County encompass the northern half of the Olympic Peninsula including port Angeles, Sequim, and Port Townsend. They are the first two counties in Washington to require proof of vaccination to enter bars and restaurants.

Dick’s Drive-In fined $35K for health and safety violations, including problems with mask compliance

Dick’s Drive-In was fined $35,100 by the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries for various health and safety violations, according to the results of a health inspection report issued on August 4. The report found that management frequently ignored social distancing and masking requirements and employees were regularly exposed to maskless customers and coworkers.

Dick’s is appealing the findings and fines.

American Academy of Pediatrics tracking COVID cases, hospitalizations and deaths for children

The American Academy of Pediatrics started compiling state-level data on COVID cases, hospitalizations, and deaths from states that are sharing the data.

As of August 26, nearly 4.8 million children have tested positive for COVID-19 since the onset of the pandemic. About 204,000 cases were added the past week, marking the second week with child cases at the level of the winter surge of 2020-21. After declining in early summer, child cases have increased exponentially, with over a five-fold increase the past month, rising from about 38,000 cases the week ending July 22nd to nearly 204,000 the past week.

In the most recent report from August 26, 2021, data indicated there have been 11 pediatric deaths due to COVID since the first coronavirus case was detected on January 21, 2020.

Spokane Regional Health District’s Dr. Francisco Velazquez reported that a pediatric patient is in the ICU in Spokane County.

Alaska Airlines to require vaccination for all new employees

In a statement to its employees, Alaska Airlines creating a vaccination policy for all new employees of Alaska and Horizon Airlines.

“We have not yet made a decision on a vaccine requirement for current employees but did implement two new policies to help us reach this goal,” the statement said. “All new hires at Alaska and Horizon must now be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by their date of hire. In addition, current unvaccinated employees who become exposed to or infected with COVID-19, will no longer be paid for their quarantine time.”

Alaska Airlines is said to still be considering a vaccine mandate for all employees.

State Senator Phil Fortunato (31st District – R) creates a cringy COVID video

Phil Fortunato, a Republican state senator from Auburn representing the 31st District put out a cringeworthy video where he attempts to channel Buffalo Springfield while singing about Jay Inslee.

Etcetera

Spokane County is considering opening mass testing sites again as local hospitals and urgent care centers are buckling under patient load and test requests. CHAS Health announced they were suspending all COVID testing and reducing hours at least through September 12, because of the sheer volume of requests and patients.

Thank you

Thank you to our new subscribers and those of you who have done one-time contributions. On behalf of the entire team thank you for helping us keep the lights on!

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said Thursday he would not be surprised if the recommended full regimen for the Pfizer and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines in the U.S. becomes three doses, instead of two.

Giving people an additional dose, or perhaps a final dose, several months after they’ve received their initial vaccination helps the immune system mature, said Fauci, also the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

“I must say from my own experience as an immunologist, I would not at all be surprised that the adequate full regimen for vaccination will likely be three doses,” Fauci told reporters during a White House Covid briefing.

The debate over natural immunity versus vaccination is raging again after a pre-print study came out from Israel and some sources such as the Gateway Pundit have run unfactual headlines about the findings. We’ll get into that a bit further down.

There have been multiple studies done on natural immunity from catching COVID, versus vaccination. Additionally, more data about breakthrough infections and those with “natural” immunity who have been reinfected a second, and now for some, a third time is becoming available.

Dr. Fauci’s guidance is counter to that from the World Health Organization and the European Medicines Agency, which has concluded that booster shots are not needed. That data runs counter to several Israeli studies, which indicates there is significant benefits from booster shots.

On August 13, the CDC released a study, Reduced Risk of Reinfection with SARS-CoV-2 After COVID-19 Vaccination — Kentucky, May–June 2021. Right out of the gate, there is a caveat, Delta was not the primary strain in Kentucky during the study period.

The study found, “Kentucky residents with previous infections who were unvaccinated had 2.34 times the odds of reinfection compared with those who were fully vaccinated; partial vaccination was not significantly associated with reinfection.”

“The duration of immunity resulting from natural infection, although not well understood, is suspected to persist for ≥90 days in most persons. The emergence of new variants might affect the duration of infection-acquired immunity, and laboratory studies have shown that sera from previously infected persons might offer weak or inconsistent responses against several variants of concern.”

So in simple terms, the study found that persons who had COVID and then got vaccinated had a lower chance of reinfection versus persons who did not. It also “suspects” that the natural response lasts for at least 90 days, and likely more.

But what about the Israeli study, and the headline from the Gateway Pundit that states, “New Israeli study finds fully vaccinated people are at ‘greater risk of hospitalization’ and 13 times more likely to catch COVID-19 than those who have recovered and have natural immunity.”

We need to pump the brakes on this one because the headline misrepresents the study for starters, and there are some other issues. The study has generally been praised for being well done, however it is a pre-print and has not been peer-reviewed (the CDC study above went from pre-print to publication with edits, which is common). That doesn’t dismiss the study but should serve as a yellow light for now.

One of the biggest problems is the study was done via a records review, which creates a bias by only analyzing data from people who got medical treatment. It also doesn’t control for behaviors such as mask wear, social distancing, and risk-taking. Because Israel is highly vaccinated, and healthy people aren’t going to seek medical testing or treatment for COVID, the interpretation of the study can result in a statistical fallacy.

“This type of study design is not as robust as a prospective study that follows individuals forward in time, testing them at regular intervals and collecting data on symptoms systematically,” Dr. Matthew Laurens of the Center of Vaccine Development and Global Health at the University of Maryland said. “Prospective studies should be done to determine if these findings can be replicated.”

“The suggestion that you might be better off getting infected versus vaccinated does not take into account the inherent risks associated with COVID-19 infection, including death.”

We know this much. Immunity, whether natural or through vaccination wanes over time. The older you are, and the worse your overall health is the faster immunity wanes. We know that reinfection represents about 1% of all cases, but that may be a statistical fallacy because people with asymptomatic cases aren’t going to seek medical attention. We know that the Delta variant has lower vaccine effectiveness at preventing infection around 20%, but did not lower the vaccine’s ability to keep people out of the hospital.

There are a number of studies that indicate that the best possible immunity is secured by becoming naturally infected (with a 1:18 chance of being hospitalized and a 1:70 chance of dying, don’t forget those critical points) followed by vaccination. The next best layer of defense is vaccination.

What about antibody tests? Although the tests can detect if your body is producing an immune response, they can’t detect which white blood cell types (there are five, and they all serve different, critical roles) have responded. So the only thing the test can prove is your body responded to the vaccine or natural infection, it cannot provide evidence on how well you’ll respond if you become infected, or reinfected.

King County, Washington is reporting over 83% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 21.1% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID, a significant jump from the 18.3% reported yesterday and a new record. A hospital system caring for this many COVID-positive patients in acute care is considered to be under “severe stress.” ICUs are at 88.8% of capacity statewide with 34.2% of ICU patients fighting COVID.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 178 per day, an increase from yesterday. On September 1, there were 1,565 patients hospitalized with COVID and 240 on ventilators. This should be viewed as a preliminary number. This is a new record, and the state has added 115 additional patients since Monday.

Data for pediatric patients receiving acute care or in a PICU due to COVID is not available.

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueGREENNoneNone
Lake WashingtonGREENNoneNone
NorthshoreGREENNoneNone
Local School Districts Scorecard

Kindergarteners in the Bellevue School District have their first day tomorrow, representing the last group of students to start school in our local area.

We do not have additional information about the Kent School District at this time, beyond their online dashboard is not reporting any cases when we published.

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

Google has pushed back its return to in-person work date to January 10, 2022, in an e-mail sent to all employees on Tuesday. In an e-mail sent on Tuesday, Google CEO Sundar Pichai wrote, “The COVID-19 pandemic has been a humbling challenge for all of us and I continue to be impressed by the way our teams are navigating through it. In spite of these challenges, I’m happy to say that a large number of offices globally are already open for business, and we are welcoming back tens of thousands of Googlers on a voluntary basis. Given that conditions around the world are still highly variable, I wanted to share how we’re planning to approach the next few months.”

“First, as offices continue to reopen, we hope to see more teams coming together where possible, whether it be for regular team meetings, brainstorming sessions around a whiteboard, or outdoor socials. For some locations, conditions are starting to improve, yet in many parts of the world the pandemic continues to create uncertainty. Acknowledging that, we’ll extend our global voluntary return-to-office policy through January 10, 2022 to give more Googlers flexibility and choice as they ramp back.”

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulitaive Case Tracker 198,025 new cases and 1,973 COVID-related deaths on Wednesday. This is the first mid-week report to approach 200,000 and the highest number of deaths in a single day since the winter spike.

In the same briefing where Dr. Fauci indicated that three doses for Pfizer and Moderna will likely become the new normal, he indicated that the newly discovered Mu variant is not concerning for the United States for now.

General Motors announced they were joining Toyota and Ford in having to suspend vehicle production due to a continued semiconductor shortage. General Motors will be stopping virtually all production in the United States for two weeks after Labor Day weekend.

Most semiconductors are produced in Taiwan and Korea, and a combination of supply chain issues, COVID delays, and factory shutdowns have crippled the supply globally.

We debated doing keystrokes on this story, but since it has blown up on social media, why not. A week ago Candace Owens bowed out of a meet and greet a the Right to LIfe Summit in Indiana, and instead had someone hand out autographed copies of her book. On Saturday, she was a no-show at a planned speaking engagement at the Texas Youth Conference due to a “sudden illness.” The serial social media influencer has also gone silent on Twitter, creating significant speculation on her health.

On August 29, she tweeted out attacking people speculating she was ill and stated she was in Aspen on a family vacation and had limited cell service. Yesterday, she attempted to schedule a COVID test at a private clinic in Aspen, and her request was denied. She was referred to a public clinic to receive her test, which would meet ethical guidelines for patient care.

To say that Owens did not take hearing, “no,” well, would be an understatement. She’s been engaged in a tweetstorm ever since. None of this addresses her current health situation, or if she is more than mildly symptomatic after a week. Symptoms that are beyond mild after a week are a leading sign of a more serious infection, and we hope that Ms. Owens will get tested. The firebrand has made it clear she is not vaccinated, is against masks and social distancing, and will not seek treatment for herself – for now.

In a telephone interview, Owens said a private company has every right to turn away business. But in this instance, against the backdrop of public health, she questioned the call.

“She is a private business owner,” Owens said. “She does have a right to decline to give me service, and that’s not what the issue is here. I want that to be very clear. Assuming that she has not accepted any state or federal funding, assuming that she truly is a private-business owner, then she has every right to discriminate against who she serves. But it should be noted that she was seeking to prevent me from keeping the Aspen community safe.”

It is worth noting that Owens has stated many times that discrimination does not exist. She is now claiming on Twitter that the business has accepted federal funds, but so far there is no additional information to support that.

Alabama

There is mixed news coming out of Alabama as the state sets a grim and positive milestone. In the bad news column, Alabama set a new record for the number of people in the ICU of over 1000 patients and is now at negative 92 capacity. What was once a promising-looking plateau has been punched through. Officials are now saying they are at a “tipping point” and still several weeks away from their hospitalization peak.

In the good news column, Alabama no longer has the lowest vaccination rate in the country. Although a vaccination rate barely over 38% is nothing to cheer about, Alabama has moved into 49th place and is closing on 48th, getting ready to pass Wyoming and if the current rate of new vaccination holds, will pass Idaho and West Virginia in the next two weeks. It is worth noting that former President Donald Trump appealed to 50,000 people two weeks ago to get vaccinated, and while met with boos, it may have had an impact on motivating some people to get the jab.

Colorado

The Colorado Board of Health adopted an emergency rule mandating COVID vaccination for all employees, direct contractors, and support staff in licensed healthcare settings, and must receive their first dose by September 30, 2021, and be fully vaccinated no later than October 31. All covered employees are also required to obtain a subsequent, or booster, dose of the COVID-19 vaccination should one be recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunizations Practices within the CDC.

The rule also requires healthcare facilities to hire only fully vaccinated workers after October 31.

The mandate does not apply to individual health care practitioners or staff, or settings where patients seek medical care including primary care offices and urgent care locations. The Board does not have jurisdiction over such facilities. Impacted people can apply for a religious or medical exemption.

Florida

Add Florida to another state that was seeing a plateau or declining cases, to have a significant increase in today’s data. We were planning to declare the COVID surge in Florida had reached its peak, but we’re not sure now. After four days with new cases dipping below 20,000 per day, the number surged to 21,392. Florida reported more than 5,700 COVID deaths in the month of August, and the number is expected to climb higher over the next month due to the way Florida counts COVID-related deaths.

Starting on September 16, Florida will start issuing $5,000 fines to businesses, schools, and government agencies that require people to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccination. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill earlier this year that banned vaccine passports. So far, the cruise industry and major Florida employer Disney have indicated they will not stop their policies.

Wolfson Children’s Hospital in Tampa Bay reported two juvenile deaths related to COVID, including a two-week-old baby. Florida is now seeing 50 to 60 new pediatric admission due to COVID a day.

Georgia

The Peachtree state reported four pediatric deaths today, raising the total to 15 fatalities for those 17 and under. The state is struggling with more than 6,000 in the hospital due to COVID and the 5th lowest vaccination rate in the nation.

Idaho

Idaho logged more than 1,600 new COVID cases today with a test positivity rate up to 14.2%.

“We are not even close to the worst, and that scares us,” said Dr. Richard Augustus, chief medical officer of Caldwell’s West Valley Medical Center, at a press conference with other hospitals on Thursday. Leaders at multiple Treasure Valley hospitals stressed that 95% of their patients hospitalized with COVID-19 are unvaccinated, indicating that most severe illness is preventable with vaccination.

“We continue to lose people who didn’t have to die,” Augustus said. “We continue to comfort families about a death that didn’t have to happen.”

Iowa

There is one less state reporting COVID data just once a week. Iowa Department of Public Health Director Kelly Garcia said the state was making changes to the way the health department releases virus data, including updating it three times per week.

“We know that as the virus evolves as we see states struggling with high case counts in the south and as we hit another milestone in our response, it’s time to shift. We owe it to you to share and ensure that you have access to your information, and I want you to do it for me, that every day, all along,” Garcia said.

In a press conference today, Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds blamed the unvaccinated for the ongoing surge and indicated that 79% of all patients were unvaccinated. Children now make up 25% of all new cases in Iowa, mirroring a national trend.

Kentucky

Governor Andy Beshear held his weekly “Team Kentucky” update on Thursday, and based on what he had to say, this team is losing badly right now.

“We set records this last week in hospitalizations, in Kentuckians in the ICU and in Kentuckians on a ventilator,” the governor said.

Just last month, Kentucky recorded more than 93,000 positive cases, with a positivity rate of greater than 13%. That was the second-highest total since the pandemic’s onset in Kentucky in March of 2020.

In Kentucky, 24.5% of all cases are children. Thirty-one school districts have had to shut down due to COVID, and the state assembly can’t agree on what to do as the education system is starting to crumble just a month after in-person instruction started.

A report released yesterday indicated 80% of Kentucky prison and jail inmates have been infected with COVID, one of the worst rates not just in the United States, but in the world.

Louisiana

Data on COVID out of Louisiana is almost non-existent after Hurricane Ida, but the state reported two juvenile deaths today. One of the children was younger than 4 years old, and the other was between 12 and 17 years of age. So far, 13 children have died from COVID.

Missouri

Here is your good news, the latest wave of COVID cases in Missouri is on the decline. The Midwestern state was one of the first to see a massive surge, and there is enough data to confidently say, the worst is over.

The state’s COVID-19 dashboard on Tuesday showed 2,146 people hospitalized with the virus. That’s still more than three times the number hospitalized at the start of June, but it’s down from 2,463 hospitalizations on Aug. 19.

Nebraska

Nebraska’s veterans affairs agency is facing questions from a state lawmaker after it published job advertisements for nurses touting the fact that the state doesn’t require its employees to get coronavirus vaccinations.

The ads on a state jobs website prominently note the lack of vaccination requirements for state employees, right after mentioning a $5,000 hiring bonus. In a separate mail advertisement, the state lists “No mandated COVID-19 vaccination” as one of the “many great benefits” of its nursing jobs.

State Sen. Carol Blood, of Bellevue, said she inquired about the ad after constituents with loved ones in Nebraska’s state-run veterans homes brought it to her attention. Blood said she understands that the state faces a chronic nursing shortage but was concerned because many veterans’ home residents are elderly and sick.

On behalf of a grateful nation indeed.

New York

A staff member at a pediatrician’s office in Buffalo was pepper-sprayed by another person who was refusing to wear a mask, according to the city spokesperson.

A woman entered the doctor’s office without a mask and was asked to put one on by an employee. After refusing, the woman sprayed the employee.

Oklahoma

A rural Oklahoma doctor said patients who are taking the horse de-wormer medication, ivermectin, to fight COVID-19 are causing emergency room and ambulance backups.

“There’s a reason you have to have a doctor to get a prescription for this stuff because it can be dangerous,” said Dr. Jason McElyea.

“The ERs are so backed up that gunshot victims were having hard times getting to facilities where they can get definitive care and be treated,” he said.

Dr. McElyea said the patients are suffering from nausea, vomiting, muscle aches, and cramping, and that’s only in minor cases.

“The scariest one that I’ve heard of and seen is people coming in with vision loss,” he said.

Wait, how many gunshot wounds are happening in rural Oklahoma?

Oregon

After weeks of increasing cases, and having to take extraordinary steps to keep the hospital system from collapsing, Oregon appears to be reaching a plateau. Vaccination rates are up and a combination of mask-wearing and general caution is slowing down the progression of the outbreak. However, hospitals remain on the brink particularly in the southwest and eastern parts of the state.

The dip in hospitalizations isn’t happening because of fewer COVID cases, but due to a cancellation of elective surgery and clearing out of patients who under normal conditions, would require acute care.

South Carolina

Pediatric cases are exploding in South Carolina, which now has the highest infection rate in the United States for all ages. Dr. Jonathan Knoche, DHEC medical consultant, said that, since Aug. 21, the 11 to 20 age group has recorded the highest number of new cases in the state. The second highest group are those 0 to 10 age group.

South Dakota

South Dakota’s largest hospitals are bracing to receive a growing flow of COVID-19 patients over the next month, doctors for Avera Health and Sanford Health said Wednesday.

Top doctors for the health systems, alongside Sioux Falls Public Health Director Dr. Charles Chima, held their first public briefing in months as the state sees a wave of coronavirus cases spurred by the contagious delta virus strain. The state Department of Health has not held public briefings dedicated to the virus since June. At the time, coronavirus cases had reached one of their lowest levels since the pandemic began.

But over the past two weeks, the rolling average number of daily new cases has increased by 65% and one out of every 310 people in the state has tested positive for COVID-19 in the last week, according to Johns Hopkins researchers.

Texas

As COVID-19 case numbers and hospitalizations among students climb, a group of Texas physicians is asking Gov. Greg Abbott to reverse his decision to ban COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandates in schools. They’re also asking state legislators to side with them as the issue is discussed in special session.

“The danger of these policies to people’s health and safety could not be clearer,” Dr. Erin Amjadi, an internal medicine physician practicing in Austin, said of Abbott’s mandates. Amjadi said more than 20,000 COVID-19 cases have been tied to Texas schools since August 2.

“Our kids are being put directly in harms way,” she said.

As of this week, the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) is now providing hospital and capacity numbers broken down into adult and pediatric categories, which gives us a better idea of how many people in our hospitals are school-aged. As of Thursday’s update, there are 282 kids in Texas hospitals with COVID-19.

There are 81 available staffed pediatric ICU beds across the entire state of Texas, according to DSHS’ dashboard.

Misinformation

Taking the day off

School begins – local and national COVID update for September 1, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) New cases have plateaued in Washington while hospitalizations and the number of people requiring ICU care and ventilators increases. Throughout Western Washington, it was back to in-person school for the first time in almost two years for some as nervous parents wonder about the days and weeks ahead.

It’s one of the quietest days since we started the daily updates, so let’s dive into it.

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on September 1, 2021.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for September 1, 2021

Washington state COVID update

Through August 20, the statewide 14 day rolling average for Washington declined to 502.7 COVID cases per 100K, virtually unchanged from yesterday. Columbia (1,147.0 per 100K) and Franklin (1,1125.5 per 100K) are still reporting an extreme number of new cases. Asotin, Benton, Clallam, Chelan, Cowlitz, Douglas, Grant, and Lincoln are not far behind. Clallam is added to the list today with 849.3 cases per 100K.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 13.62%, and over the previous 7 days, 13.19%. These numbers indicate continued widespread community transmission driven by the unvaccinated and under testing of the population.

Age Group7-Day Case Rate7-Day Hospitalization Rate
Ages 0-1125.30.1
Ages 12-1920.80.1
Ages 20-3465.80.6
Ages 35-4950.81.4
Ages 50-6434.81.9
Ages 65-7916.81.6
Ages 80+4.90.6
7-day case rate and 7-day hospitalization rate is per 100K within the age group – the target for 7-day case rate is <25.0, but there are other factors such as vaccination rates within the age groups, how many total tests within the 7-day period, and the positivity rate within each age group

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 40 COVID-related deaths in Washington on Monday.

Almost 196,000 vaccine doses go to waste in Washington state

A report came out today on how many doses of COVID vaccine have been wasted at a national and state level, and Washington did an admirable job. Through September 1, the Department of Health reported 184,621 doses wasted by vaccine providers and another 12,067 returned unused. The Center for Disease Control considers returned doses as “wasted.”

There were regional power outages caused by a windstorm on January 13, 2021, which cut off electricity to special refrigeration units needed to keep the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines supercooled in storage. There was another power outage on January 29, 2021, at the University of Washington, which impacted additional doses and the snowstorm event in early February. Vaccines can become wasted if they are mixed improperly, a vial is dropped or cracked, or if at the end of a clinical day not all doses within a vial were distributed.

Since the first doses arrived in our state, about 3% went to waste.

Sweetgreen CEO scrubs social media posts after uproar

The CEO of salad chain Sweetgreen has deleted a controversial post he made pointing to obesity as the “root cause” of COVID-19 and pushing for the U.S. to implement “more health mandates” regarding food.

Jonathan Neman, whose billion-dollar company has fast-casual restaurants in 12 states, began in his rant Tuesday that “78% of hospitalizations due to COVID are Obese and Overweight people,” asking, “Is there an underlying problem that perhaps we have not given enough attention to?” and “Is there another way to think about how we tackle ‘healthcare’ by addressing the root cause?”

The backlash on social media is about what you would expect.

Etectera

A new COVID testing center opened at Yakima Valley College yesterday, and people were lined up an hour before it opened. On the first day officials did 482 tests. The site is run through a partnership with the University of Washington, Yakima Valley Memorial Hospital, Signal Health, and the college.

PeaceHealth mandated all their employees to be vaccinated for COVID by August 31, and the date has come and gone. Reports are a “vast majority” of employees got vaccinated, and those who have not were placed on leave and are being forced to use their vacation and sick time against that leave.

KPTV interviewed a former PeaceHealth nurse for the story, Viktoriya Bogdanova, who resigned over the summer after the hospital required N95 masks for unvaccinated staff.

Thank you

Thank you to our new subscribers and those of you who have done one-time contributions. On behalf of the entire team thank you for helping us keep the lights on!

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

No update

King County, Washington is reporting over 83% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 18.3% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID. This beats the old record of 17.7% set yesterday. ICUs are at 88.6% of capacity statewide with 34.1% of ICU patients fighting COVID.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 173 per day, down slightly from yesterday. On August 31, there were 1,529 patients hospitalized with COVID and 214 on ventilators. The Department of Health adjusted the number of patients on ventilators yesterday from 241 to 236 in today’s report.

Data for pediatric patients for acute care and PICU is not available. Providence Sacred Heart in Spokane has reported that six pediatric patients are in the PICU or neonatal ICU with COVID.

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueGREENNoneNone
Lake WashingtonGREENNoneNone
NorthshoreGREENNoneNone
Local School Districts Scorecard

First day of school for area districts:

  • Lake Washington School District – September 1
  • Bellevue School District – September 1, 1st through 12th, September 3, kindergarten
  • Northshore School District – September 1, 1st through 12th, September 1 or September 2 for kindergarten on a staggered start

A fair amount of apprehension was expressed as parents sent their children to school in districts across the Puget Sound lowlands.

We’ve created a scorecard to track the status in our area districts and you can help us crowdsource information. As you become aware of quarantines with students or facilities, you can send your information to malcontentnews@protonmail.com. This is a secure e-mail address and your reports will remain anonymous.

We will apply a “trust but verify” policy on reports so that parents can have a better understanding of what is going on with the school districts, and make informed decisions.

We have received several reports today from parents within the Kent School District, where classes started on August 26. We have received identical reports of “multiple confirmed COVID cases” at more than one school in the district. Parents are being told that CDC and DoH guidelines prevent the district from releasing more specific information. As we were preparing this story, we have another person come forward, but we were not able to speak to them before press time.

If you’re feeling nervous you’re not alone. Support for in-class school dropped significantly in a study done by the CDC. On July 23, support sat at 58% nationally, but by August 8, it had dropped to 43%

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

No update

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulitaive Case Tracker 140,704 new cases and 1,397 COVID-related deaths on Monday.

The World Health Organization is tracking a new variant of interest called Mu. The Mu variant, known as B.1.621. Mu appears to be vaccine resistant, but at the same level as the Beta variant (commonly known as the South African variant). Cases are increasing in Columbia in Ecuador, which would indicate that its R0, or “r naught,” is higher than Lambda.

The Lambda variant, which is prevalent in Latin and South America couldn’t establish a beachhead in the United States because Delta is more infectious.

A lot of digital ink has been spilled about C.1.2 in South Africa, and we’ve gotten some questions. Although the new variant has the most spike protein researchers had seen to date, and there has been some hype that it would break through current vaccinations, the variant is not establishing itself in South Africa or appearing in many cases. Because the R0 appears low, it is currently not a concern for health officials.

“It does not appear that its circulation is increasing”, said Dr. Margaret Harris, a spokesperson for the WHO.

Joe Rogan reported he has COVID on Instagram, and told his followers he was using Regen-COV, Zithromax, Prednisone, and Ivermectin to treat himself. Ya, all the headlines say ivermectin, go to his Instagram – journalism has a responsibility not to create sensational headlines.

There was allegedly going to be a trucker strike in the United States over mask and vaccine mandates today. It apparently didn’t happen.

Arkansas

Cases of COVID involving children continue to grow in Arkansas, as Governor Asa Hutchinson expressed concern over the growing numbers. Pediatric cases now represent 30% of all cases in Arkansas. Hospital admissions for children far exceeded records set late last year, with over 100 admissions in July and August.

Baptist Health CEO Troy Wells noted that his hospitals have been among the many working to increase COVID patient capacity across the state, especially for patients requiring intensive care. Wells said 33 new ICU beds were added as Phase 1 of the expansion but were filled within 12 to 24 hours.

He went on to say that his company’s facility in North Little Rock just added 12 more ICU beds and that the hospitals in Fort Smith and Conway were looking to each add eight more COVID-19 ICU beds.

California

A COVID-19 outbreak has sidelined a strike team of 16 firefighters battling a massive blaze encroaching on South Lake Tahoe.

California Department of Forest and Fire Protection incident commander Jeff Veik announced the loss of the crews and warned other firefighters to follow the agency’s COVID-19 protocols during a Tuesday operations briefing, SFGATE reported.

“We lost a whole strike team of crews yesterday, we lost a finance section chief due to (being) COVID positive, so understand, do not come to this briefing without a mask on,” he said.

A strike team includes five firetrucks, 3 crew each, and a commander. The team will have to quarantine for two weeks.

Georgia

Georgia’s health department is reporting workers and volunteers are being threatened at vaccine clinics, and in one case, a mobile clinic had to be shut down.

While a shrinking, but very vocal group continues to block progress, Georgia set new records for new cases as larger school district closures roll through the state. The 7-day rolling average for new cases is now 9,641, exceeding the old record set in January.

Bill County school district sent 21,000 students home to learn remotely at least through September 20. The county joined Richmond County which sent 29,000 students home to allow deep cleaning of all the district schools. After the first four weeks of school, 200,000 Georgia students have had instruction disrupted due to quarantines, loss of staff, or closures.

Another child’s death from COVID was reported today, this one at CRSA in Augusta, Georgia.

Idaho

An open letter was released by 29 healthcare groups in Idaho, sounding the alarm and appealing for help.

“Idahoans, we need your help. On behalf of nearly 30 health care groups representing thousands of providers at every level across the state, we want to express our alarm at what we are witnessing now.”

“As of Aug. 31, approximately 543 patients in Idaho were hospitalized with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 and 167 of those patients were in the ICU with confirmed COVID-19. Perhaps most discouraging is the fact that approximately 97 COVID-19 patients in Idaho were on a ventilator, the highest recorded number at any time during this pandemic.”

“Models indicate that by mid-October, Idaho could see 30,000 cases per week which is thousands more than any week in 2020. Discussions surrounding the activation of crisis standards of care are underway, which means hospitals may be forced to ration care. Or more simply put, your hospital may not be able to care for everyone in the community, whether you get COVID-19, get in a mountain biking accident, or have a heart attack.”

Idaho Governor Brad Little toured an ICU in Boise over the evening. Hospitalizations and ICU utilization set new records again today, with political and medical leaders openly talking about having to move to crisis standards of care.

While Governor Little appeals to Idahodians to keep the medical systems from collapsing, Lt. Governor Janice McGechin is actively undermining those efforts.

“It was shameful for Brad to suggest today that Idahoans must make a specific medical choice in order to show love for their neighbors,” McGeachin said in a tweet. “I trust YOU to make your own health choices.”

McGeachin is running to unseat Little and win the Republican gubernatorial nomination.

Illinois

Chloe Mrozak, 24, of Oak Lawn, Illinois spent $600 on a plane ticket to Hawaii, only to discover the state has a vaccination requirement for incoming travelers. To solve this problem she bought a fake vaccination card and apparently filled it out herself. She misspelled Moderna on the card as “Maderna,” listed she got the vaccination in Delaware by the NRA listing Corporal Wolf and a Sergeant Monety as the administrators. In the case of Sergeant Monety, it appeared she first wrote “Money,” and then penned in a tiny t.

Officials at the airport suspected the card was fake and started an investigation. She listed a Holiday Inn Express as the place she was staying, but there was no record of her. When she attempted to fly home, officials were waiting for her and she was arrested on August 28 at the airport. She faces at least a misdemeanor charge of falsified vaccination documents in Hawaii but could be charged with a federal crime.

Oregon

One hundred members of the National Guard are being deployed to Salem Hospital, as the facility struggles to keep up with patients. As of Tuesday morning, the hospital had 90 Covid positive patients admitted, 20 of them in the intensive care unit, and 481 out of 494 licensed hospital beds full, according to data Salem Health publishes daily. Seventy-four of those in the hospital with Covid are unvaccinated against the disease, the hospital said.

Virginia

Liberty University, a private evangelical Christian university in Lynchburg, had to enact a campus-wide quarantine after school reopened this year due to widespread COVID cases. The closure, slated to last at least through September 10, was made after hundreds of COVID cases were discovered among students. By the end of last week, over 10% of the student body was in quarantine, forcing the closures.

In response to the outbreak, the school notified students today they will be holding a vaccine clinic on September 3.

Misinformation

Taking the day off

UPDATE: Pediatric patient dies at Seattle Children’s – local and national COVID update for August 31, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) There is stronger evidence that cases are plateauing at a very high level in Washington state, while hospitalizations, the number of people in the ICU, and patients on respirators increase. School started from a number of districts across Washington today, and most districts start tomorrow in Western Washington.

On the national front, hospitalizations are approaching January 2021 levels, while the recent FDA approval of the Pfizer vaccine for people 16 and older is moving the needle on vaccine hesitancy. The quest to find home remedies for COVID has taken a dark turn, with some people turning to a herbicide as a preventive. The state of New Jersey cracked down on an Instagram influencer who was selling fake vaccination cards, as well as some of her customers with a litany of felony charges.

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on August 31, 2021.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for August 31, 2021

Washington state COVID update

We cannot provide insight into the epidemiological curve for new cases compared to last week because the data today is through August 19, 2021. Starting tomorrow, we can go back to discussing the daily trend.

Through August 19, the statewide 14 day rolling average for Washington declined to 500.7 COVID cases per 100K. Columbia (1,170.8 per 100K) and Franklin (1,079.0 per 100K) are reporting an extreme number of new cases. Asotin, Benton, Chelan, Cowlitz, Douglas, Grant, and Lincoln are not far behind. Among the counties with the highest new case rates, almost all were flat or declined for the first time in at least three weeks.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 13.52%, and over the previous 7 days, 13.22%. These numbers indicate continued widespread community transmission driven by the unvaccinated and under testing of the population. The fastest-growing age group for positive remains 20 to 34-year-olds.

The 7-day Case Rate for children ages birth to 11 is 24.7 per 100K and for children, 12 to 19 it is 20.8 per 100K.

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 27 COVID-related deaths in Washington on Monday.

BREAKING: Seattle Children’s Hospital reports first patient death due to COVID

Hospital officials reported the first death of a pediatric patient due to COVID, which occurred last week. No other information, citing privacy laws, was issued on the age and gender of the child.

“The people we are seeing in the hospital are typically people who are unvaccinated, either teens who are not vaccinated or younger people who are not eligible to be vaccinated,” said Dr. John McGuire. “We are clearly in a fifth wave here in Washington. And commensurate with that, we are seeing an increase in the number of kids needing hospitalization and needing intensive care.”

Washington State Fair announces COVID safety protocols day after state hospital officals call for its cancelation

Public health officials in Pierce County announced a series of safety protocols for the Washington State Fair scheduled to run from September 3 to 26, in Puyallup.

“As a condition of opening, Dr. Anthony L-T Chen, Director of Health at Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department, will issue a health order that requires masks be worn at all times at the Fair, indoors and outdoors, regardless of vaccination status,” a news release said. “With COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations at an all-time high in Pierce County, this will help prevent and limit the spread of the virus.”

The fair will have masks available and will not be checking vaccination cards or doing screenings. State Fair CEO Kent Hojem made it clear that mask wear will not be optional. As additional precautions, officials will:

  • Employees will be tested for COVID prior and during events
  • The number of rides has been cut by 10% to provide more space for social distancing
  • The number of vendors has been cut by 25%
  • Extra handwashing and sanitizing stations will be available

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

Increasing vaccination numbers locally, statewide, and nationally indicate that the number of people who are hesitant to get vaccinated continues to decline. The latest Axios-Ipsos Coronavius Index showed only 14% of Americans now say they will never get a COVID vaccination, the lowest level since the data has been tracked. Just 1 in 5 Americans expressing they won’t or are not likely to get the vaccine.

The number of parents who now say they will vaccinate their children has grown to 68%, and 70% of Americans support mask mandates in school.

Vaccination rates in the United States have almost doubled since July, to 900,000 vaccinations given a day, including 14 million residents nationwide who got their first shot in August.

Full FDA approval, significant problems with school reopening, and the grim toll that the Delta variant is taking on the nation is attributed with driving the shifting opinions.

King County, Washington is reporting over 83% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 17.7% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID. This beats the old record of 17% set yesterday. ICUs are at 88.4% of capacity statewide with 33.5% of ICU patients with COVID.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 177 per day, also a new record. On August 30, there were 1,465 patients hospitalized with COVID and 241 on ventilators. This is a significant increase from yesterday when the state reported 182 patients on ventilators.

Data for pediatric patients for acute care and PICU is not available.

Several hospitals reported they were adding tents as triage space for patients to provide better social distancing and isolation as emergency departments burst at the seams. Virginia Mason Franciscan Health, which operates St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma, St. Anthony Hospital in Gig Harbor, St. Clare Hospital in Lakewood and St. Elizabeth Hospital in Enumclaw have or will be adding tents outside of their entrances. This is in addition to MultiCare facilities in Tacoma and Puyallup.

Back to School

School DistrictStatusQuarantinesClosures
BellevueGREENNoneNone
Lake WashingtonGREENNoneNone
NorthshoreGREENNoneNone
Local School Districts Scorecard

First day of school for area districts:

  • Lake Washington School District – September 1
  • Bellevue School District – September 1, 1st through 12th, September 3, kindergarten
  • Northshore School District – September 1, 1st through 12th, September 1 or September 2 for kindergarten on a staggered start

The Lake Washington School District is reporting 1,500 students have moved to remote learning after opening up registration again in mid-August. The Bellevue School District is accepting applications for remote learning through midnight tonight as demand surges across the Puget Sound region.

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

No update

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University Cumulitaive Case Tracker had not been updated at press time. The United States held steady with 101,000 hospitalized with COVID, equal to last week.

Mask usage is increasing in the United States with 69% of residents reporting they are wearing a mask at some or all of the time outside of the home. Fifty-four percent of American businesses are requiring masks, and almost 20% have some form of vaccination or testing mandate in place.

The Biden Administration is working with oxygen suppliers, home health agencies, trade groups, and hospital systems as facilities in Florida, South Carolina, Texas, and Louisiana are reporting oxygen shortages.

Under normal conditions, a hospital would have a 3 to 5 days supply of oxygen onsite, and the tanks would be refilled once or twice a week. In the hardest-hit areas, hospitals are dropping to a 12 to 24 hour supply, and only getting enough to last 2 or 3 days at each refill.

During the January 2021 peak, the industrial use of oxygen in restaurants, welding, and manufacturing was curtailed due to national shutdowns. Suppliers are being hit with a perfect storm of record medical grade and industrial demand, a trucking shortage, and state officials refusing to make emergency declarations.

After the story broke and started to spread, Amazon added a notice to searches for “ivermectin for humans” and “ivermectin covid.”

Big tech is pushing Ivermectin unchecked across their platforms

CNBC reported today that Amazon is directing users to the anti-parasitic drug Ivermectin for animals. The Amazon search algorithm was displaying results for ivermectin after typing just “iv” into the search box, including ivermectin for horses, ivermectin paste, ivermectin pills, and ivermectin injectable.

User reviews made references to dosing information for “horse families” and false claims of being a cure for COVID (there is no cure, for COVID, only therapeutics).

Amazon isn’t alone. Yesterday there were reports that MSN, the 37th most visited web property in the United States with almost 900M monthly visitors, was running ads and paid content for “horse dewormer” on its homepage.

MSN displaying paid content for horse wormers on its homepage on August 30, 2021

A search for “COVID” on Google News has highlighted a debunked editorial in the Wall Street Journal for a month under the “For Context” section called, Why is the FDA Attacking a Safe, Effective Drug? We featured that editorial in our misinformation section earlier this month.

Searches on Twitter, Tik Tok, Instagram, and Facebook for “ivermectin” easily bring users to groups and creators information on alleged dosing information, where to buy, and how to treat. Calls in Florida to poison control have increased 700%, and people are reporting in online groups finding what they describe as “rope worms” in their feces. Intestinal parasites are exceptionally rare in the United States, and health officials are reporting that people are destroying their intestinal linings. You can do some Google image searches, but we wouldn’t recommend it if you’re stomach is weak.

Arkansas

New cases continue to decline as hospitalizations and ventilator use grows. Arkansas set a new record with 388 residents on ventilators out of 531 in the ICU – that’s a staggering 73% of all ICU patients. Outcomes for patients who go on ventilators improved dramatically in the second half of 2020, as doctors learned more about COVID. The ground gained has been lost due to patients showing up sicker than before, and the Delta variant being more virulent.

Arizona

School started in Arizona a month ago, and pediatric cases are exploding. Children under 15 years old now represent 25% of all new COVID cases, and parents are becoming increasingly frustrated with only 30% of the state’s 215 school districts providing some form of daily update.

Dr. Chris Beyrer, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said having a “more systematic,” more transparent strategy for preventing and tracking school-based cases would go a long way toward curbing the spread of the virus. 

“What we have is a patchwork — a great deal of variability in policies and practices,” Beyrer said. “While local nuances are important, there’s nothing like rational statewide and national planning to get this right. And we’re just not there.”

Parents have turned to crowd-sourcing information on social media to paint a picture on what is going on within their home districts.

California

Governor Gavin Newsome reported that 80% of all age-eligible residents in the state have received at least one dose of the COVID vaccine. This is a major milestone for the state of almost 40 million residents, with a number of rural counties with continued low uptake of the vaccine. It is worth noting for the states west of the Rockies, California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington, California is the only state that isn’t at or near crisis mode.

Nurse Davy Macias (she/her) was hospitalized with COVID in early August while 7 months pregnant with her fifth child. The hospital did an emergency delivery as her conditioned worried, and Marcias passed on August 26. She was unvaccinated and was holding off until after her pregnancy was complete. Other officials are reporting that the Delta variant is hitting pregnant women particularly hard across the United States. The FDA gave full approval to the Pfizer vaccine to people over 16, including pregnant women.

Georgia

Officials in Georgia are sounding the alarm as some hospitals are now rationing care and growing concern over looming hospital system collapse at a regional level. The state’s official count of COVID-19 patients in Georgia’s hospitals on Tuesday was just below the January peak number, but at times it has swelled past it. And every hospital across Georgia is now full to the point of overflowing. Georgia reported that hospitals had 5,656 COVID patients, about50 patients below the January peak of 5,709. But at some hours in recent days, according to the Georgia Hospital Association, the number has topped 5,900. The drop from the peak hasn’t been driven by discharges, but fatalities from COVID and those waiting for non-COVID-related treatment.

“I don’t mean to sound super doomsday-ish, but I think that if this growth continues, that we’re going to be risking regional hospital system collapse,” said Amber Schmidtke, a health care data researcher, who tracks Georgia’s COVID-19 trends.

“I know that that will scare people,” Schmidtke said. “But I think that that is what we’re risking. I’ve had M.D.s that are on the ground tell me the same thing: ‘This is unsustainable. We’re already at a point where we’re having to sort of triage care and decide who gets what based on limited resources and personnel.”

Anecdotal data on ICU nurse burnout continues across the country. Nurse Amber Rampy walked away from The Northeast Georgia Medical Center after 20 months on the front lines.

“I just left on Friday because I can’t do it anymore. I just can’t,” Rampy said.

“Although I’m used to people dying, I’m just not used to this many,” Rampy said.

75 have died at the North Georgia hospital where she worked during the first 30 days in August, and the hospital has 248 patients with COVID in the ICU.

Deaths in the state included a 13-year-old who was found dead of COVID by his parents Monday morning. The child was reported to have no medical conditions, and no information was provided on why the parents hadn’t sought medical treatment.

“A number of young people are being hospitalized, particularly between the ages of 5 and 17. There is a doubling of that in Georgia,” said Dr. Gary Voccio, northwest district director for the Georgia Department of Public Health.

Floyd Medical Center, like many across the state, is struggling to cope with a tidal wave of COVID patients — at least 90% of whom are unvaccinated.

“(There are) No beds at any of the hospitals,” Voccio said. “The physicians are exhausted, the nurses are exhausted and it’s just time to get the vaccine. We are imploring, begging people to get vaccinated It could save your life.”

Governor Brian Kemp issued an executive order to allot more weight in transportation, allowing for more equipment to get to hospitals and fuel to get to gas stations across the state. 

Kemp said the decision comes after receiving reports that healthcare systems have had trouble accessing necessary supplies, including reports of some rural acute care hospitals running out of oxygen.

Gov. Kemp also touched on his previous executive order, which deployed 105 medically trained National Guard members to 10 hospitals across the state. Over the weekend, he said an additional 75 guard members were deployed, bringing the total number up to 180.

Kemp said that while many hospital systems have requested guardsmen, they are limited in the number of those who are medically trained. However, his new executive order would also allow for the deployment of up to 2,500 National Guard members, should they be needed.

Police Capitan Joe Manning of the Wayne County Sheriff Department, who was a vocal critic of vaccinations and posted frequently on social media about ivermectin, died of COVID on August 25. On his Facebook post, Captain Manning complained about Facebook “disciplining him” and how we was taking ivermectin daily as a COVID preventative.

Florida

Governor Ron DeSantis stayed true to his promise and cut the funding to Alachua and Broward counties over their implementation of school mask mandates. This is despite a Florida court ruling against the government over the ban. The United States Department of Education has already reached out to both districts and had previously promised to cover any gaps in funding. The counties of Orange, Duval, Miami-Dade, Hillsborough, Sarasota, Palm Beach, Indian River, and Leon also have mask mandates in place, but the governor has not taken further action at this time.

While the debate over masks and schools rages, Florida set a record for the number of pediatric patients with COVID in the hospital on Tuesday with 72 new admissions and 230 total patients. With the debate raging, parents chose violence in Lee County where tempers boiled over outside a school board meeting on Sunday.

The governor is under fire from multiple directions with allegations of trying to artificially lower the number of COVID deaths in how data is reported, and a lawsuit over public information on COVID within the state. Representative Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando, and the Florida Center for Government Accountability filed the lawsuit late Monday in Leon County circuit court after the department rebuffed requests for information.

The state until early June posted on its website daily reports that provided extensive data about issues such as cases and deaths, with information also broken down by county. But Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration halted the daily reports in June and shifted to posting weekly information that is far less detailed.

The lawsuit alleges that the Department of Health and Surgeon General Scott Rivkees, the department’s secretary, have violated public-records laws at a time when the delta variant of the coronavirus has caused cases, hospitalizations, and deaths to surge in Florida.

“Due to the highly contagious nature of COVID-19 and its ‘continuing threat’ to Floridians, records revealing information about its impact, prevalence, and fatality is of obvious public importance,” the lawsuit said.

The Maimi Herald reported that Florida created an “artificial decline” in COVID deaths by altering the way they reported fatalities beginning on August 10.

Until three weeks ago, according to the Herald, data collected by Florida and then posted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) tallied deaths by the date they were recorded, which is reportedly common practice for showing daily statistics in many states.

On Aug. 10, however, the state changed its methodology and started counting daily new deaths by the date the person died instead of the day the death was registered. A handful of other states have also reportedly switched to such a process.

When recording COVID-19 deaths with the new method, which focuses on date of death, the numbers will generally appear to be on a recent downward slope, even during the current surge, the Herald reported, because it takes a certain amount of time to evaluate deaths and process death certificates.

The Herald laid out an example of the discrepancy between the two methods: the state’s death data would have exhibited an average of 262 deaths reported to the CDC in the previous week if the health department used the original reporting system, according to the newspaper’s analysis.

Instead, however, the new reporting system only tracked 46 new daily deaths over the last seven days. The change came one day after the state was criticized for showing inaccurate information on its COVID dashboard. Weesam Khoury, a spokesperson for the Florida state Department of Health, said they were working with the CDC to adjust the discrepancies.

Hospitalizations have declined in Florida, while the numbers in ICU continue to grow. Some are crediting the 10% reduction in hospitalizations to the opening of monoclonal antibody treatment centers in the state. The state has reported treating over 30,000 people since the centers were opened earlier in the month.

Hawaii

Hawaii is another state sounding the alarm over an oxygen shortage. Hawaii Pacific Health President and CEO Ray Vara recently directed staff in an internal memo to conserve the oxygen supply and “avoid using oxygen for anything that is elective.”

“We will therefore need to cancel all elective procedures in operating rooms and elsewhere, including outpatient settings, where oxygen may be needed. Any cases that can be deferred safely should be deferred until the oxygen supply solutions are clearer,” he wrote. “At each HPH facility, surgical and facility leaders will be activating review processes to help with these decisions.”

Lt. Gov. Josh Green said the situation is all the more concerning given that cases continue to soar. The remote location of the island and the dependency on ships to supplement the supply creates additional challenges. State officials say they are working with the federal government.

Idaho

Kootenai Health in Coeur de Alene is getting additional support from a 20 person Department of Defense team, delaying a potential move to “crisis standards of care.” In a press conference today Idaho Governor Brad Little activated the national guard, deploying up to 150 servicemembers to provide support for medical facilities, performing screenings, lab work, and other logistical duties that can help lift the burden on nurses and doctors. An additional 200 medical and administrative personnel will be made available to Idaho through a contract with the U.S. General Services Administration.

The governor described the activation of the National Guard as a last-ditch effort to avoid hospitals reaching crisis standards of care, where ventilators, hospital beds, and other resources will be allocated to those most likely to survive. 

“On a daily call with hospitals this morning, we heard there are only four standard adult ICU beds available in the entire state. Where hospitals have converted other spaces to be used as contingency ICU beds, those are filling up too,” Governor Little said. “We are dangerously close to activating statewide crisis standards of care – a historic step that means Idahoans in need of healthcare could receive a lesser standard of care or may be turned away altogether. In essence, someone would have to decide who can be treated and who cannot. This affects all of us, not just patients with COVID-19.”

“Idaho hospitals are beyond constrained. Our healthcare system is designed to deal with the everyday realities of life. Our healthcare system is not designed to withstand the prolonged strain caused by a global pandemic. It is simply not sustainable. Please choose to receive the vaccine now to support your fellow Idahoans who need you,” Governor Little said.

Hospital officials asked to move to crisis care standards over the weekend, and the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare has a briefing scheduled for tomorrow at 1:30 PM Seattle time.

Louisiana

There isn’t much news coming out of Louisiana specific to COVID as the Gulf state reels from the sucker punch Hurricane Ida delivered. Officials were able to relocate patients from damaged hospitals and nursing homes, and there were no fatalities reported related to that activity.

Thousands are in shelters without electricity or air conditioning and a limited water supply. In some good news officials now believe that power can be restored to 90% of people within three weeks, and some power should come back on in New Orleans tomorrow. So far, reports are favorable of people remaining patient, respecting curfews, limited crime, and good mask wear within shelters.

Ohio

Ohio University has joined more than 800 colleges and universities across the United States mandating vaccination for faculty and staff.

Ohio University President Hugh Sherman wrote, “All Ohio students, faculty, and staff at all locations are required to be vaccinated against COVID-19 by November 15, 2021. For vaccines that require two doses, both doses must be completed by this date. This applies to all employees, including those working remotely and all students except those enrolled exclusively in fully online programs and coursework who will not access University facilities on any campus in person.”

“It’s important to note, there will be an opportunity to apply for an exemption of the vaccine requirement for medical reasons or for reasons of conscience, including ethical and moral beliefs or sincerely held religious beliefs.”

Like other states seeing a spike in cases, hospitals in Ohio are starting to cancel elective procedures. On Tuesday, Ohio reported the largest number of new cases in a single day since January 2021.

New Jersey

Jasmine Clifford, better known by her Instagram handled of “AntiVaxMomma” was arrested for selling 250 fake vaccination cards. Clifford, from Lyndhurst, New Jersey, was charged with multiple felonies on Tuesday with offering a false instrument, criminal possession of a forged instrument, and conspiracy. 

Nadayza Barkley, of Bellport, Long Island was also charged with falsifying information in the COVID database. Clifford sold fake vaccination cards through her Instagram account for $200, and for another $250 Barkley would enter bogus data into the New York state vaccination database.

Prosecutors say Barkley entered more than 10 names into the state’s vaccine database while working at a Patchogue medical clinic and received payments for her work from Clifford through the services Zelle and CashApp.

Additional charges were also filed Monday against 15 people involved in the fake vaccination card scheme, including 13 frontline healthcare workers. The workers employed at hospitals and nursing homes are facing one count each of criminal possession of a forged instrument in the second degree, a felony. A conviction would be career-ending for the 13 offenders.

Facebook, which owns Instagram defended its apparent lack of oversight, stating they removed the Instagram account in August.

South Dakota

Governor Kristi Noem has activated the national guard and not for border duty in Mexico, but to support straining hospitals in the Black Hills.

The governor’s office confirmed Tuesday morning soldiers are in the Black Hills conducting COVID-19 testing, and Gov. Noem later in the day said in a statement she authorized the deployment at the request of Rapid City-based Monument Health.

“This past week, I had conversations with all three South Dakota hospital systems and asked them what they needed as cases start to rise again,” the governor said. “Monument asked for the National Guard to assist them in their testing efforts, and we are happy to help.”

New cases in the state have exploded in the three weeks after Sturgis, reaching levels last seen in January 2021. The state positivity rate has jumped to 30%, which indicates major under testing and unchecked spread of COVID. Just four counties, Pennington, the home of the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, Meade, Lawrence and Custer are responsible for half of all reported COVID cases in the state.

Monument Health reported at the start of August they had less than 10 COVID patients system-wide – they now have 110.

Misinformation

Glyphosate. If you read that and think to yourself, “isn’t that part of the herbicides in RoundUp,” you would be correct. You will also likely be stunned that in some of the darker corners of the Internet, people are advocating drinking Glyphosate as a preventative for COVID.

Pure Glyphosate is a herbicide invented in 1974, and in its pure form has a reputation of being relatively safe and not readily absorbed through the skin when used properly, However, if intentionally ingested, it can cause increased saliva, burns in the mouth and throat, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.

Most commercial products contain other ingredients beyond Glyphosate (such as RoundUp) and can make people extremely sick, or cause death if consumed. No, Glyphosate does not cure or prevent COVID, nor is it indicated to treat any illness in humans or animals.

Washington is in crisis – local and national COVID update for August 30, 2021

Knowledge is the best tool to fight against fear. A wise person chooses to be informed so they can make sound decisions. To join the fight against COVID misinformation, you can share this update through your social media platform of choice.

[KING COUNTY, Wash.] – (MTN) Washington State Hospital Association CEO Cassie Sauer along with several state healthcare leaders sounded the alarm today, describing the situation in Washington’s hospitals as, “untenable.” The Washington Department of Health has retired the Washington Ready/Risk Assessment Dashboard today, reducing visibility into granular county and Health Region data.

Misinformation about Ivermectin is spinning out of control as the drug flies off of farm store shelves and calls into poison control centers skyrocket. The CDC releases a new report that indicates that breakthrough cases for Delta are growing at a significant number among people who are over 75 years old and the European Union is restricting travel for U.S. citizens again.

The situation to our east and our south is worse with Idaho hospitals formally applying for permission to go to “crisis standards of care” and Oregon requesting mobile morgues.

The only good news tonight is the statewide vaccination rate increased significantly from last week and we are seeing the strongest indication yet that new cases in Washington state are reaching a plateau.

This update uses the latest data from the Washington State Department of Health released on August 30, 2021.


vaccinationhospitalsschoolslocalnationalmisinformation

Washington State Update for August 30, 2021

Washington state COVID update

The state of Washington has retired the Governor’s Risk Assessment Dashboard, which was providing visuals for county and Hospital Region level data. Losing the ability to see acute care and ICU use at a regional level is a disservice to the residents of the state of Washington. We urge the Department of Health to make some of the previous dashboards available to provide better transparency.

We cannot provide insight into the epidemiological curve for new cases compared to last week because the data today is through August 18, 2021. Our report on Friday was from data through August 19, 2021.

Through August 18, the statewide 14 day rolling average for Washington was 514.0 COVID cases per 100K. Columbia (1,147.0 per 100K), Douglas (1,101.1 per 100K), Franklin (1,066.6 per 100K), and Grant (1,002.7) are reporting an extreme number of new cases. Asotin, Benton, Chelan, Cowlitz, Lewis, Lincoln, and Yakima counties are not far behind. Benton and Cowlitz county have shown improvement over the weekend (possibly) and may have hit peaks.

The Washington State Department of Health reports a data backlog for test positivity, with the published number 14 days old. According to Johns Hopkins University Medicine, the positivity rate for the last 30 days is 13.53%, and over the previous 7 days, 13.07%. These numbers indicate continued widespread community transmission driven by the unvaccinated and under testing of the population. The fastest-growing age group for positive tests is now 20 to 34-year-olds.

The USA Today COVID Tracker reported 36 COVID-related deaths in Washington on Friday.

Hundreds protest vaccine mandates in Olympia

On Saturday, hundreds of people gathered at the Washington state Capitol Campus to protest vaccine mandates for a variety of employees. Liberty, at All Hazards, organized the event to demand vaccine mandates issued by state officials be revoked.

“From prisons, to hospitals, to First Responders of all types, from firefighters, to police, to EMS personnel, to ferry workers, to teachers, coaches, and school volunteers, bus drivers, sanitation workers, and so on — the Governor is unnecessarily threatening the genuine safety and well-being of the citizens of Washington if he forces his mandate to stand,” the group said in a press release.

The Constitutionality of vaccine mandates at a state level was reviewed by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case Jacobson vs. Massachusetts in 1905. In that case, it was determined that citizens did not a fundamental First Amendment right against vaccination when weighed against the public good. The case has been challenged multiple times in the last 116 years.

Washington State Hospital Association calls for canceling of the Washington State Fair

In a press conference today, Washington State Hospital Association CEO Cassie Sauer and Chief Physician Officer with MultiCare Health System Dr. Dave Carlson called for the cancelation of the Washington State Fair. “I think it is a very bad idea,” Carlson stated as he expressed deep concern about dwindling hospital resources across the state. Dr. Carlson added, “our state has no capacity to deal with a mass casualty event.”

“The hospital’s full, and we are over the course of the next three weeks likely going to bring in an additional million people to that community. And I am very, very concerned about the stress that that will put on our emergency room and about the stress that will put on our systems.”

Area Doctor pleas for youth to get the COVID vaccine before starting school

Dr. Susanna Block, a pediatric hospitalist at Kaiser Permanente in Seattle appealed for parents to get their age-eligible children vaccinated before the start of school. She reported that over the last few weeks, 20% of all new COVID cases have been children. In other states where classes have already started, tens of thousands of students and faculty have become infected or landed in quarantine, disrupting school and in some cases forcing an emergency transition back to remote learning.

Skagit County reopens testing and vaccination site as COVID cases soar

Starting Monday, Aug. 30, you can get COVID-19 testing and vaccinations at the Skagit County Fairgrounds. Tests and vaccinations will be free at the site, which is now opening Monday through Friday from 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

In August, King County Health Officer Dr. Jeff Duchin mentioned the N95 Project as a trusted source for N95 masks. A check on the website showed that a 50 count box of United States manufactured N95 masks are available for $40.00. We recommend wearing N95 masks indoors as they provide the best protection against COVID when properly fitted.

No promotional consideration has been given, or requested from the n95 project or any manufacturer of masks

Vaccination

Reflecting the increase in vaccination rates, the Washington state Department of Health is reporting that 73.3% of state residents 12 and up have received at least one dose of COVID vaccine. That is up almost a full percentage point from last week. Almost 4.8 million age-eligible Washingtonians have received at least one dose, but 1.75 million remain unvaccinated.

Vaccination effectiveness for preventing hospitalizations drops for oldest residents

New data presented on Monday indicates that the effectiveness of COVID vaccines against hospitalizations drops over time among adults over 75. This mirrors other studies indicating that effectiveness has dropped from 97%, based on data from the original and Alpha strains, to about 81% for the Delta strain. Officials admitted that it’s hard to read the data and determine cause and correlation.

“It actually may be very difficult for us to disentangle time, since vaccination and the impact of the Delta variant, especially in some populations that we know were vaccinated earlier in the time course. So if we see waning in the last couple of months, it could be really difficult,” Dr. Sara Oliver, a key CDC vaccine official, told the panel.

CDC breaks with the Biden Administration on COVID booster shots

A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advisory panel on Monday indicated it could take a substantially different approach to booster doses of COVID-19 vaccines than the one proposed by the Biden administration.

Members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) said the evidence on boosters is not clear and indicated it would likely consider a risk-based approach that would prioritize residents of long-term care facilities and health workers rather than all eligible Americans at once. 

The panel is recommending prioritizing healthcare workers, people over 65 or 75 years old, and those who are immunocompromised and in other high-risk groups.

Washington doctor says vaccination rates statewide need to reach 85% to 90% to stop COVID

Dr. Mark D. Johnson of Confluence-Health, an infectious disease specialty, said the state vaccination rate will have to get much higher to beat COVID.

“Delta has changed the game,” Johnson said. “Unfortunately, the math keeps changing. And that’s because this virus does what RNA respiratory viruses do: it mutates. It just wants to infect us.”

King County, Washington is reporting over 83% of age eligible residents are vaccinated with at least one dose. The highest rates of positivity are in areas with low vaccination rates statewide. The FDA has provided full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for anyone 16 and over.

COVID vaccines are free for anyone over 12 years old, and no appointment is necessary at most locations. Lyft and Hopelink provide free transportation, and KinderCare, the Learning Care Group, and the YMCA offer free childcare during vaccination appointments or recuperation.

For information on getting a vaccination in King County, you can visit the King County Department of Public Health website.

Malcontent News

Hospital Status

The Washington state Department of Health is no longer providing data on total acute care and ICU beds within Washington state. According to the DoH COVID Dashboard, 17% of all acute care patients hospitalized in Washington have COVID, the highest level ever recorded. ICUs are at 88.5% of capacity statewide with 33.4% of ICU patients with COVID.

The new hospital admission rate for COVID patients is 164 per day, also a record and far exceeding the January 2021 peak. On August 29, there were 1,440 patients hospitalized with COVID and 182 on ventilators. In contrast, the Washington Hospital Association reported a total of 1,570 COVID patients statewide and 188 on ventilators. We have a request into the Department of Health to explain the variance and are awaiting a response.

Data for pediatric patients for acute care and PICU is not available.

Hospital administrators painted a grim picture for medical resources, reporting shortages of life support equipment, exhausted and demoralized staff, and packed hospitals. Dr. Mark D. Johnson of Confluence-Health reported that none of the ICU patients at their Wenatchee facility are vaccinated, and 40% of their hospitalized patients are under 40 years old.

Chief Physician Officer with MultiCare Health System Dr. Dave Carlson said, “I have not ever in my career been concerned like I am now about the very real possibility that we are on the edge of not being able to care for people in our community.” He reported there were 275 COVID patients across the MultiCare Health System, 80 in Spokane alone. He echoed other leaders indicating that 96% of all hospitalized patients are unvaccinated.

“We have canceled almost all inpatient surgery. If you need a joint replaced, that is canceled. We are canceling everything we can,” Dr. Carlson continued. “This is frankly the most severe restrictions we have had to put in place.” He went on to explain that their hospital in Puyallup is full and currently treating 100 COVID patients.

The Washington Hospital Association also reported a serious shortage of BIPAP machines. The equipment is the last line of defense before going on a ventilator. Patients on ventilators have exceptionally poor outcomes with the Delta variant and require additional support. At one point this weekend, there was only one available BIPAP machine in the state.

Patients that move out of ICU are brought into step-down units, but the leaders expressed that these essentially require ICU levels of care. MultiCare Health System reported they had COVID patients in their Post-Anesthesia Care Units (PACU), which exacerbates the ability to provide surgical care to non-COVID patients.

EvergreenHealth provided their patient update on Monday reporting 44 COVID patients at the Kirkland facility and none in Monroe. This is an increase of 4 patients between the two facilities from last week.

Back to School

It is reported that since the Lake Washington School District reopened enrollment into virtual learning, over 800 students will be starting school on Wednesday doing remote learning.

First day of school for area districts:

  • Lake Washington School District – September 1
  • Bellevue School District – September 1, 1st through 12th, September 3, kindergarten
  • Northshore School District – September 1, 1st through 12th, September 1 or September 2 for kindergarten on a staggered start

The next board meeting for the Lake Washington School District is September 13, 2021, at 7:00 PM and will be remote only.

Kirkland-Bellevue-Woodinville

The number of people seeking COVID tests in the area is exploding, with reports of two-hour waits past scheduled appointment times in Bellevue, Washington. Dozens of cars snaked through a parking lot with occupants awaiting their turn to get a COVID test.

National Round-Up

Johns Hopkins University reported over 36,383 new cases and 277 deaths today. Most states do not report data over the weekend, so the number does not indicate a sudden improvement in new cases in the United States.

The European Union has dropped U.S. travelers from the EU safe list as COVID surges amid the unvaccinated. The 27 member states recommended that Americans should be banned from nonessential travel, including the nations of France, Italy, and Germany. The same guidance also applies to Israel, Lebanon, Kosovo, Montenegro, and the Republic of North Macedonia. The decision is non-binding and for EU member states, leaving each country to decide what is in their best interests.

Also today, the CDC added seven destinations to the “very high” COVID travel risk list. The seven destinations were moved up from the Level 3 – COVID high risk to level 4; Azerbaijan, Estonia, Guam, North Macedonia, Puerto Rico, Saint Lucia, and Switzerland.

Ten other destinations were moved from to Level 3; Bermuda, Canada, Germany, Moldova, Bahrain, Indonesia, Namibia, Oman, Rwanda, and Zimbabwe. The CDC continues to recommend avoiding international travel if you are unvaccinated.

Robert David Steele, a former CIA agent and one of the first adherents of the QAnon conspiracy died of COVID over the weekend. Steele was one of the first people to declare on programs such as Infowars that COVID was a “hoax.” Steele continued to publish conspiracy theories and misinformation from his hospital bed before being placed on a ventilator.

On August 17, we wrote his final blog post declaring, “I will not take the vaccination, though I did test positive for whatever they’re calling ‘COVID’ today, but the bottom line is that my lungs are not functioning.”

Despite stating he was lucky to have gotten into a “trusted” hospital in Florida, a friend who reported his death, Mark Tassi, stated that Steele had been forced onto a ventilator against his will because “they” wanted to make Florida and Governor Ron DeSantis look bad.

Arkansas

Total hospitalizations continue to decline in Arkansas but the number of patients requiring the ICU and ventilators continues to climb. Data indicates that Arkansas has hit a peak for cases, but the 361 patients on ventilators is a new record, along with 533 in the ICU.

Arizona

Arizona became the 13th state to have more than one million COVID cases as hospitalizations surged 400% in the last eight weeks. Hospitalizations, ICU utilization, and new cases have reached February 2020 levels and almost all of the critically ill are unvaccinated.

The plateau may be at risk. After the first four days of classes at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, 105 active COVID cases have been reported. This exceeds the prior record set in January 2021.

California

Much like Arkansas, new cases have plateaued but hospitalizations continue to hover at near-record levels. There are 8,679 Californians in the hospital on Monday, just 30 short of the old record.

Rural areas in Northern California continue to deal with a huge surge of cases. In Crescent City, the mortuary is filled beyond capacity and officials have asked for a mobile morgue.

Florida

Florida officials have reported 4,900 COVID-related deaths in the last four weeks as Delta continues to tear through the state. After dipping for four days straight, hospitalizations increased again, with officials telling residents not to read into daily fluctuations. The state has 15,788 COVID patients in the hospital, 3,526 in the ICU, representing 53% of all ICU patients statewide.

Tampa Bay radio host Marc Bernier, who dubbed himself “Mr. Anti-Vax,” died of COVID over the weekend in a Florida hospital. He became sick three weeks ago and passed at the age of 65.

Hawaii

Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi announced the new Safe Access Oahu program on Monday. Starting on September 13, patrons entering restaurants, bars, gyms, and other establishments will need to show proof of vaccination or a negative COVID test taken within the last 48 hours. The program is scheduled to last 60 days. Children under 12 will be exempt from the program.

State officials are also pushing back on rumors of pending lockdown, but are also requesting residents cancel their Labor Day Weekend plans.

“The reality is [the pandemic] is still here, and we right now in Hawaii, are going through the most severe part of the pandemic in almost this two-year period,” said Hilton Raethel, Healthcare Association of Hawaii president and CEO.  

Idaho

Kootenai Health in Coeur de Alene formally requested permission to go to “crisis standards of care” on Sunday night. The hospital has been hinting since Wednesday it would make the request, and on Thursday evening, Idaho narrowly missed making a statewide declaration. Under “crisis standards of care,” resources are rationed to the people with the highest chance of survival, and so-called “black tag triage” could be employed. Patients who are not expected to survive would be moved into a category called, “expectant,” and would be given comfort care. If more resources became available they would be moved into a priority group for treatment.

In a worrying sign, Idaho Governor Brad Little has scheduled a press conference for Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. New cases remain below the January 2021 records, but Idaho can’t send COVID patients to neighboring states with Washington and Oregon in crisis.

Louisiana

On Friday I wrote about my concern that Hurricane Ida could be pulverizing blow to an overtaxed Louisiana healthcare system. By Sunday night it was apparent the sum of all fears had come true.

For the first time in modern history, the power went out for all of Orleans Parish, knocking out power, impacting water, sewer, and communications. At least six hospitals reported significant damage including a 174 bed Level II trauma center and a 194-bed acute care facility. At one hospital backup generators failed, forcing staff to scramble to hand bag ICU patients to keep them alive. After two hours power was partially restored, with COVID patients moved into hallways and the Post-Anesthesia Care Unit. One hospital reported losing oxygen when the delivery tank became damaged.

Almost 200 patients were transferred from hard-hit hospitals in southern and central Louisiana to facilities in Baton Rouge, Morgan City, and New Orleans. Officials are reporting there were no injuries among patients or staffers during the peak of hurricane Ida, and that hospitals on generator power can run for another nine days.

The collapse of a major steel truss tower into the Mississippi River plunged the city into darkness and could take 3 to 6 weeks to rebuild.

Officials are concerned about people huddled in shelters spreading COVID, but so far reports are indicating that people are wearing masks. It is likely that data on COVID and hospitalizations will be hard to process for the next couple of weeks.

Ohio

Judge Gregory Howard ordered a Cincinnati area hospital to allow Dr. Fred Wagshul to treat a 53-year old COVID patient on life support with Ivermectin. Dr. Wagushul is part of the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, a group that touts Ivermectin as both a treatment and preventative for COVID. The doctor originally prescribed the medication and the hospital refused to administer it, with the judge intervening on the behest of his wife. The man tested positive on July 9 and was admitted to the hospital on July 15 where he received monoclonal treatment, plasma, and steroids. He was placed on a ventilator on August 1 and his condition has deteriorated since.

Dr. Leanne Chrisman-Khawam, a physician and professor at the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, called the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance  “snake oil salesmen.”

She reviewed the association’s research on the drug’s uses and said there are some serious problems with its cited studies: many of them don’t show positive results, and those that do bear design flaws like small control groups, unaccounted for variables, nonblinded studies, not accounting for mitigations like vaccines and masking practices, and others.

Oregon

Two Oregon counties, Tillamook and Josephine, requested mobile morgues over the weekend. In Tillamook County, the one mortuary in the county is past capacity and so many staffers are sick with COVID, they can’t transfer bodies. Tillamook County had more COVID deaths last week than the prior 18 months combined.

In Josephine County, the hospital system is completely overwhelmed by low vaccination rates and rampant misinformation through the rural county. You can read more about it in this story we published over the weekend.

The city of Portland announced that 6,800 city workers will need to be fully vaccinated by October 18 or obtain an exemption to maintain employment.

Misinformation

Taking the day off