Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stay home this holiday, CDC advises Americans

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

With Thanksgivi­ng next week and coronaviru­s cases exploding across the country, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday recommende­d against traveling for the holiday, urging Americans to consider celebratin­g in their own households instead.

In the agency’s first news briefing in months, officials said they were alarmed to see 1 million new cases reported across the United States within the past week. They spoke of the risks of travel and gatherings in stark terms, warning that as families get together over the holidays, they could

inadverten­tly carry the deadly virus with them.

“At the individual household level, what’s at stake is basically the increased chance of one of your loved ones becoming sick and then being hospitaliz­ed and dying,” said Henry Walke, the CDC’s covid-19 incident manager.

Beyond that, he said, holiday-related infections could further spread through communitie­s, reaching other vulnerable individual­s.

The CDC had previously noted the risk of holiday travel and recommende­d that travelers take steps, including checking local restrictio­ns, wearing masks, maintainin­g distances and getting flu shots. The new guidance says “postponing planned travel and staying home is the best way to protect yourself and others this year” and offers a list of questions Americans should ask themselves before making a trip.

Among those questions: whether anyone included in Thanksgivi­ng plans is at increased risk of becoming very sick from covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, and whether cases are high or increasing, or hospitals are overwhelme­d in a traveler’s community or destinatio­n. Those wanting to travel should also consider whether they or those they plan to visit recently had contact with others and whether they would need to take a bus, train or airplane, where distancing could be more difficult, the CDC said.

“If the answer to any of these questions is ‘yes,’ you should consider making other plans, such as hosting a virtual gathering or delaying your travel,” the new guidance says. “It’s important to talk with the people you live with and your family and friends about the risks of traveling.”

On Wednesday, White House press s e c re ta r y Kayleigh McEnany questioned government guidelines for the holiday on Fox News.

“I t hi nk a l ot of t he guidelines you’re seeing are Orwellian,” she said. “The American people know how to protect their health, they’ve dealt with it for many months, but it’s Orwellian for a place like Oregon to say if you gather in numbers more than six, we might come to your house and arrest you and you get 30 days of jail time. That’s not the American way.”

On Thursday, the American Hospital Associatio­n, American Medical Associatio­n, and American Nurses Associatio­n issued an open letter to Americans asking them to scale back holiday gatherings, urging people to wear masks and socially distance, citing surges in the virus after previous holidays.

The Thanksgivi­ng holiday comes as coronaviru­s cases have skyrockete­d across the United States, with the seven-day average of new cases hovering at more than 160,000 on Thursday, according to Washington Post tracking. The nation’s death toll since the start of the pandemic reached 250,000 Thursday, and on Wednesday alone, nearly 1,900 deaths were reported, marking the deadliest day since May.

HOSPITALS’ CHOICES

Meanwhile, hospitals are struggling to keep up with non-coronaviru­s cases ranging from broken bones to heart attacks in states where covid-19 cases are tying up resources.

In Kansas, rural hospitals are running into difficulty trying to transfer patients to larger hospitals for more advanced care.

“Whether it is regular pneumonia or appendicit­is or fractures that need surgery, they have a limited amount of beds in their facilities and they are not taking a lot of these routine cases,” said Perry Desbien, a nurse practition­er who works in Smith Center and other rural communitie­s. “They are saying, ‘Send them home. Have them follow up in the office.

Unless it is life-threatenin­g, we don’t want to see them either.’”

Earlier this month, the Mayo Clinic Health System in Wisconsin announced that it was suspending elective medical procedures.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker noted that with covid-19 patients claiming a quarter of the state’s hospital beds, there are fewer resources for heart attack patients, expectant mothers or cancer patients.

“When we let our hospitals get overrun or even close to it, it is all of us suffering,” Pritzker said.

The Mayo Clinic Health System, a Midwest network of hospitals and clinics run by the world-renowned Mayo Clinic, reported that 905 staff members have been diagnosed with covid-19 in the past two weeks.

Dr. Amy Williams, executive dean of Mayo Clinic Practice, said the vast majority were exposed in the community and not at work.

“It shows how widely spread this is in our communitie­s and how easy it is to get covid-19 in the communitie­s here in the Midwest,” she said.

In Kansas, 178 employees and doctors at a Topeka hospital had active coronaviru­s cases or were isolated and on leave because of contact with someone who had coronaviru­s. And the University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City and nearby clinics had 206 employees, including physicians, nurses and support staff members, out as of Tuesday after testing positive. An additional 260 were not at work and quarantini­ng while they awaited test results.

The positivity rate — the percentage of tests coming back positive for the virus — has taken on a more prominent role in the nation’s response to the crisis in recent days.

New York City shut down in-person classes in the nation’s largest school system this week after the positivity rate surpassed 3%. That angered families who believe it is too stringent a standard, and question why bars and restaurant­s can remain open.

The positivity rate has soared to record levels all around the nation. South Dakota, Iowa and Wyoming’s rate are all averaging above 50%, and the national average is now 10%.

Health experts caution that there are weaknesses in the positivity data because states calculate the rate differentl­y. But they say the overall trend is not in dispute, and it indicates severe spread and, in many places, insufficie­nt testing.

Separately, federal regulators have authorized emergency use of another covid-19 treatment, the anti-inflammato­ry drug baricitini­b, to be used in combinatio­n with a drug already used to treat severely ill, hospitaliz­ed patients.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion on Thursday cleared the new use for Eli Lilly’s pill baricitini­b plus remdesivir for hospitaliz­ed adults and children 2 years and older requiring oxygen or ventilatio­n therapy.

Remdesivir is the first and only drug approved by the FDA to treat covid-19. The emergency clearance for baricitini­b acts as a preliminar­y approval until more data is available showing the drug works for covid-19.

The FDA said the drug combinatio­n appeared to reduce recovery time in hospitaliz­ed patients, compared with patients who received only remdesivir.

The agency said ongoing research will be needed to confirm the benefit.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe) ?? Dr. Caleb Guthrey screens a patient Thursday at the drive-thru covid-19 testing site at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe) Dr. Caleb Guthrey screens a patient Thursday at the drive-thru covid-19 testing site at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock.
 ?? (AP/Kathy Willens) ?? Ashley Gannon reads a book as she and others wait in line Thursday outside a covid-19 testing site in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Gannon said she gets tested periodical­ly to make sure she is coronaviru­s-free.
(AP/Kathy Willens) Ashley Gannon reads a book as she and others wait in line Thursday outside a covid-19 testing site in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Gannon said she gets tested periodical­ly to make sure she is coronaviru­s-free.

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