Paco Dennis
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- Mid-Missouri
This is our county...an article yesterday
"This week saw a total of 1,589 new COVID-19 cases, the highest number recorded by Columbia/Boone County Public Health and Human Services throughout the pandemic.
Cases have been increasing rapidly through the end of December and early January, leading to the record numbers reported this week. Thursday there were 1,874 active cases, the highest number of active COVID-19 cases reported by the county.
On Wednesday, the Missourian reported the highest number of new COVID-19 cases Boone County had reported in a single day. That record has since been topped by the 427 new cases reported Thursday.
The Health Department reported three COVID-19 deaths in the past week, including a person in the 80+ age range who died Dec. 26 and two people in the 70-74 age range who died Dec. 27 and 29. These deaths bring the total number of COVID-19 deaths in Boone County to 192.
The week’s high numbers follow several important announcements made the prior week. Gov. Mike Parson announced last Thursday that Missouri’s State of Emergency, which was declared March 13, 2020, and has been in place since, would not be renewed.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reduced the recommended quarantine period from 10 days to five days Dec. 27.
Columbia Public Schools had 81 students out of school with positive cases and 47 students in quarantine Thursday. They also had 32 teachers out of school with positive cases and two in quarantine, according to the district’s COVID-19 dashboard. The district returned to classes after winter break Tuesday. While Columbia Public Schools encourages masks, they are not required.
Among schools taking action due to the increase in COVID-19 cases, Stephens College will be remote for the first two weeks of their spring semester. The University of Missouri System has not announced any changes to its academic calendar in response to the increase in cases. Columbia College will begin classes in a hybrid-remote model, with in-person labs and hands-on classes.
Hospitals have remained under yellow status, meaning hospitals continue to operate within standard capacity but delay non-emergency patient transfers and non-urgent procedures.
There are currently 132 people hospitalized in county hospitals due to COVID-19. There were 100 hospitalizations last week and 95 the week before.
Of the patients currently hospitalized, 12 are Boone County residents, 36 are in the ICU and 17 are on hospital ventilators. The total number of hospitalizations has gone up, but the number of Boone County residents hospitalized has been between 11 and 13 since last week and is the lowest since early November.
MU Health Care said last Thursday it would be limiting testing to only those who are symptomatic due to the high demand for tests before travel.
Vaccination numbers in Boone County have continued their steady climb, with 63.9% of eligible people having received one dose and 56.2% being fully vaccinated.
To find vaccination clinics, go to vaccines.gov to search by zip code. To find COVID-19 tests — swab, PCR or antigen — call or check with pharmacies online for availability.
If using an at-home self testing kit, report positive tests to the Health Department to help ensure accurate weekly and daily case numbers."
https://www.columbiamissourian.com/... Update&utm_medium=Email&utm_content=headline
"This week saw a total of 1,589 new COVID-19 cases, the highest number recorded by Columbia/Boone County Public Health and Human Services throughout the pandemic.
Cases have been increasing rapidly through the end of December and early January, leading to the record numbers reported this week. Thursday there were 1,874 active cases, the highest number of active COVID-19 cases reported by the county.
On Wednesday, the Missourian reported the highest number of new COVID-19 cases Boone County had reported in a single day. That record has since been topped by the 427 new cases reported Thursday.
The Health Department reported three COVID-19 deaths in the past week, including a person in the 80+ age range who died Dec. 26 and two people in the 70-74 age range who died Dec. 27 and 29. These deaths bring the total number of COVID-19 deaths in Boone County to 192.
The week’s high numbers follow several important announcements made the prior week. Gov. Mike Parson announced last Thursday that Missouri’s State of Emergency, which was declared March 13, 2020, and has been in place since, would not be renewed.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reduced the recommended quarantine period from 10 days to five days Dec. 27.
Columbia Public Schools had 81 students out of school with positive cases and 47 students in quarantine Thursday. They also had 32 teachers out of school with positive cases and two in quarantine, according to the district’s COVID-19 dashboard. The district returned to classes after winter break Tuesday. While Columbia Public Schools encourages masks, they are not required.
Among schools taking action due to the increase in COVID-19 cases, Stephens College will be remote for the first two weeks of their spring semester. The University of Missouri System has not announced any changes to its academic calendar in response to the increase in cases. Columbia College will begin classes in a hybrid-remote model, with in-person labs and hands-on classes.
Hospitals have remained under yellow status, meaning hospitals continue to operate within standard capacity but delay non-emergency patient transfers and non-urgent procedures.
There are currently 132 people hospitalized in county hospitals due to COVID-19. There were 100 hospitalizations last week and 95 the week before.
Of the patients currently hospitalized, 12 are Boone County residents, 36 are in the ICU and 17 are on hospital ventilators. The total number of hospitalizations has gone up, but the number of Boone County residents hospitalized has been between 11 and 13 since last week and is the lowest since early November.
MU Health Care said last Thursday it would be limiting testing to only those who are symptomatic due to the high demand for tests before travel.
Vaccination numbers in Boone County have continued their steady climb, with 63.9% of eligible people having received one dose and 56.2% being fully vaccinated.
To find vaccination clinics, go to vaccines.gov to search by zip code. To find COVID-19 tests — swab, PCR or antigen — call or check with pharmacies online for availability.
If using an at-home self testing kit, report positive tests to the Health Department to help ensure accurate weekly and daily case numbers."
https://www.columbiamissourian.com/... Update&utm_medium=Email&utm_content=headline