Ky. moves above average for nursing-home virus cases and deaths, largely because of community spread, officials say -HEALTHYLIVE

Kentucky Health News graph; case numbers are from initial, unadjusted daily reports

By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

To stop the escalating number of new coronavirus cases across the state, Gov. Andy Beshear and his lieutenants again called on Kentuckians to do their part to stop the spread of the virus in their communities, in part because this is a key contributor to the rising number of coronavirus cases and deaths in our nursing homes. 

"We're seeing an alarming increase in long-term care facilities because we're seeing an alarming increase in community spread," Health Secretary Eric Friedlander said at the daily briefing. " It's real. I've often reported to you that we've been below the median for the country, in terms of case rate in terms of deaths in facilities. We are just now passing that median, and that is because of community spread." 

As of Oct. 18, a Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services report shows Kentucky's nursing homes rank 31st for the average number of cases, with 224.8 cases per 1,000 residents, and 26th for deaths, with 42.5 deaths per 1,000 residents. 

Friedlander walked through the many protocols and programs the state has in place to slow the spread of the virus in these facilities, but said when the virus's spread is so rampant in our communities, it's going to get in. 

"And you know what we can do to stop that?" he asked while holding up a mask. "We can wear one of these. We can wash our hands. We can observe the guidelines that the governor talked about around red counties. It makes a difference. We can protect our seniors. All we have to do, all we have to do is this," he said as he put on his mask. 

On Wednesday, the long-term care daily report shows 1,017 residents  and 648 staff  had an active case of the virus, with 116 new resident and 75 new staff cases reported today. Beshear said 16 more deaths can be attributed to covid-19 in these facilities, for a total of  908 resident and six staff deaths from covid-19, or 60% of the state's covid-19 deaths.  

Beshear announced 1,653 new cases of the coronavirus on Wednesday, calling the number "way, way too many." 

Asked if he had ruled out taking any further measures to thwart the spread of the virus, Beshear said, "We haven't ruled anything out, but we have not received any public health advice either from our federal experts or our state experts that at this point has suggested any new additional measures beyond the red zone recommendations."

Those recommendations, which include things like businesses allowing their employees to work from home and asking individuals to cancel gatherings,  have been in place for three days now. Beshear said that he thinks the "vast majority of those counties" are working to follow them and that they were working to encourage those that aren't. 

He added that there are some communities who are following the recommendations who have disagreed with him over other recommendations "because the problem has gotten that significant." 

An A.P. VoteCast poll published in the New York Times found that 71% of  of Kentucky voters strongly or somewhat favor requiring people to wear masks when around other people outside of their homes. It also showed 33% of voters said they or someone in their household "lost a job or income because of the coronavirus pandemic." Today, Beshear issued an executive order to renew the state's mask mandate for another 30 days. 

Health Commissioner Steven Stack pointed out that hospitalizations have doubled since the end of September and that intensive care use has more than doubled. 

“One of the concerns we have related to hospitals is not that we will first run out of bed space but that we may not have enough health care workers to staff all those beds,” said Stack, a physician.  

Stack urged Kentuckians to follow all of the public health guidance, including wearing a mask and social distancing, because he said, the more community spread there is, the more likely you, and our health care workers, will become exposed to it. 

Kentucky had record numbers of people in the hospital and in the ICU for covid-19 on Wednesday, with 1,066 in the hospital, 286 in intensive care and 125 on a ventilator. And all of these numbers were up from yesterday. 

Stack added that Kentucky has  "an alarmingly large number of red counties," right now, which means they have at least 25 cases per 100,000 people. And some counties, he said, are reporting upwards of 91 cases per 100,000 people. What this means, he said, is that "at that level of transmission, the disease is spreading rapidly and this is a very real threat." 

The share of Kentuckians who tested positive for the virus in the past seven days continues to rise, at 6.30% today. 

Beshear said 11 more Kentuckians had died from covid-19, bringing the state's death toll to 1,514. 
The fatalities were two women, ages 79 and 96, from Hancock County; three women, ages 60, 81 and 89, and four men, ages 59, 71, 72 and 72, from Jefferson County; an 82-year-old woman from Knott County; and a 91-year-old woman from McLean County.

In other covid-19 news Wednesday: 
  • Counties with 10 or more new cases were Jefferson, 332; Fayette, 159; Kenton and Warren, 64 each; Laurel and McCracken, 56 each; Boone, 46; Campbell, Daviess and Hardin, 38 each; Christian, 34; Floyd, 31; Bullitt, 28; Henderson, 25; Caldwell, 24; Barren and Montgomery, 22 each; Graves, Grayson, Greenup and Shelby, 17 each; Lincoln and Nelson, 16 each; Franklin, 15; Madison, Monroe and Pike, 14 each; Scott, 13; Hart, Marshall, Oldham, Simpson and Spencer, 12 each; Breckinridge, Pulaski and Woodford, 10 each.
  • The K-12 public health report, with confirmed cases, shows 751 students and 363 staff tested positive for the virus in the last 14 days, with 108 students and 37 staff reported today. Click here for the K-12 dashboard. 
  • The college and university report shows 554 students and nine staff tested positive for the virus in the last 14 days, with 58 students and two staff being reported today. 
  • Beshear also signed an executive order to continue allowing pharmacists the ability to dispense 30-day refills. 
  • Beshear announced a new company is scheduled to open in Paris that will produce medical-grade gloves. The company, U.S. Medical Glove Co. LLC, is expected to help provide Kentucky and other states with its ongoing need for personal protective equipment. 
  • Norton Healthcare and Baptist Health Lexington have been chosen as partner sites for a clinical trial of the coronavirus vaccine, WDRB reports.  The Phase 3 ENSEMBLE clinical trial from Janssen is being led by the University of Kentucky's Center for Clinical and Translational Science in Lexington. Anyone interested in volunteering for the trial can click here to fill out a prescreening questionnaire. Officials told WDRB that completing the questionnaire does not obligate the person to participate in the trial and that volunteers will be compensated. 
  • Starting Monday, Norton Healthcare will begin seeing patients at a drive-thru location at the corner of Breckenridge Lane and Taylorsville Road, Lexie Ratterman reports for WDRB. The Express Services facility has two drive-thru bays that will offer diagnostics testing, vaccinations, and lab work seven days a week with a Norton doctor referral, she reports. The hospital's CEO told WDRB that the idea stemmed from an effort to find innovative ways to keep patients out a waiting rooms, while providing full access to healthcare. 
  • A review of 36 published studies on the coronavirus that include thousands of patients found that 18% of patients had gastrointestinal symptoms, such as loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and stomach pain, along with some other more common symptoms, like fever, cough, fatigue and labored breathing. And about 16% of the patients had only gastrointestinal symptoms and nothing else, reports the Lexington Herald-Leader. 
  • An analysis of about 400,000 women aged 15-44 diagnosed with covid-19 found that compared to non-pregnant women,  those who were pregnant were more frequently admitted to intensive care, to be put on a ventilator, and to receive extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, a process by which blood is pumped outside the body to a machine that removes the carbon dioxide and then sends the oxygen-filled blood back to the body, bypassing the heart and lungs, allowing them time to rest and heal. The study also found that the pregnant women had a 70% increased risk of dying, compared to those who were not pregnant, according to a weekly report published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The Herald-Leader reports on this study. 
  • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued an alert on Nov. 3 warning that the rapid antigen test, like the ones provided by the federal government, can produce incorrect positive results. The alert says problems are more likely in populations with low prevalence of infection, or when the test is improperly performed. This comes after Louisiana officials recommend against using the rapid test for asymptomatic people and that anyone who gets one of these tests  be informed of its limitations, Crain's New York Business reports
  • The U.S. for the first time surpassed 100,000 new coronavirus cases in a single day, reports The Washington Post. 






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