Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hospital cases fall to 278 in Arkansas

Count under 300 for first time since summer; governor recalls ‘our 3/11’

- ANDY DAVIS

A year after the first covid-19 patient in Arkansas was diagnosed, the number of people hospitaliz­ed in the state with the virus fell below 300 Thursday, for the first time since July 3.

The count of state cases rose by 340 — the third daily increase in a row that was smaller than the one a week earlier.

The death toll from the virus, as tracked by the state Department of Health, rose by 28, to 5,410.

At a news conference in Pine Bluff marking the oneyear anniversar­y of the first case, Gov. Asa Hutchinson drew parallels between the pandemic and the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The first coronaviru­s case “became our 3/11,” Hutchinson said at the event at Jefferson Regional Medical Center, where the case was diagnosed.

“It was our challenge, it

was our emergency,” he said.

That first virus patient, James Black, attended the news conference and spoke in a recorded video along with his wife, Shaunika, about his ordeal, which included being in the hospital for several weeks, where he was placed on a ventilator, before he was released to a long-term care facility.

He said it took him about 3½ months to recover from his infection.

“When I first woke up, I looked at my arm, and it was so small, it brought tears to my eyes,” Black said.

“I knew right then I had to push myself.”

Thursday was also the anniversar­y of the day Hutchinson declared a public health emergency and the World Health Organizati­on declared a pandemic.

Hutchinson announced at the news conference that the state Department of Agricultur­e would give away 10,000 oak seedlings for people to plant in memory of someone lost to covid-19.

He said he and first lady Susan Hutchinson would plant one at the Governor’s Mansion “in recognitio­n of lives lost during this pandemic and the hope for the future that we all have.”

The department said the seedlings will be available through its Forestry Division offices through March 24.

SPARE DOSES

Also on Thursday, CHI St. Vincent spokesman Joshua Cook said a shortage of people who had signed up to receive vaccine doses this week led the health system to give some doses to people who are ineligible under the current phase of the state vaccinatio­n plan.

Gerard Matthews, a 40-year-old freelance videograph­er, said he called a CHI St. Vincent number on Wednesday and was able to make appointmen­ts for him and his wife, Stephanie, to get their initial vaccine doses Thursday at a clinic in Little Rock.

He said he got the number from a friend who told him it was for a clinic that was making appointmen­ts for unused doses.

“I posted the number on Twitter and I literally haven’t stopped getting notificati­ons all day long,” Matthews said. “Somebody just sent me a message. They were like, ‘I’ve seen your tweet on Facebook in three different versions.’ I guess people are taking pictures of it and posting it.”

He said the clinic didn’t ask him about his occupation and that neither he nor his wife, a 34-year-old consultant, qualify for the shots under Phase 1-B of the state vaccinatio­n plan.

“I wish that everybody that was eligible and was able to make an appointmen­t was getting appointmen­ts made,” Matthews said. “My thing is like, I want this to be over. I want everybody to get vaccinated.

“If there are leftover vaccines, or appointmen­ts that aren’t being made, and we can take one of those slots, then that’s what we did.”

Cook said the health system had nine spare doses this week because of a mismatch in the number of appointmen­ts and the doses that had to be given to avoid wasting any.

“I double checked on the registrati­on list and we cur

rently do not have a backlog of registrant­s who qualify under Phase 1-B,” Cook said in an email.

“Because of dosage allotments in each vial, that would explain why the excess could be anticipate­d.”

People can register for vaccinatio­ns at a CHI St. Vincent clinic by visiting chistvince­nt. com/getmyshot.

Central Arkansas residents can also call (501) 552-4536. Those who live in Hot Springs or southwest Arkansas can call (501) 622-6556.

“Right now, they’re able to get folks right in for an appointmen­t,” Cook said.

CHI St. Vincent also is holding a walk-in vaccine clinic for those who are eligible from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday at its clinic at 2500 E. Sixth St. in Little Rock.

State Epidemiolo­gist Jennifer Dillaha said the Health Department would rather have shots go to people who are ineligible than to have doses go to waste.

“We trust the vaccinator­s to make a good-faith effort to vaccinate people in the priority groups for the phase, but

we know that it’s not always possible to do that, so we do not fault them for using the remaining doses in the vial for someone else,” Dillaha said.

She said the shortage of appointmen­ts doesn’t necessaril­y reflect a lack of demand from the eligible population but could be a result of CHI St. Vincent staff “not having their processes in place” as it has expanded the number of sites where it provides the shots.

SHOTS DELAYED

Dillaha said the state expansion of vaccine eligibilit­y on Monday to include “essential priority workers,” such as those at grocery stores, factories and other places, had delayed the administra­tion of some vaccine doses as companies arrange clinics for their employees.

“I think after this week, we’ll really see a big pickup in the number of doses that are administer­ed,” Dillaha said.

One vaccinatio­n event will be Tuesday at the state Capitol, where 1,500 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine will be available for lawmakers,

who are considered “essential government workers” under the vaccine plan, and legislativ­e staff members.

At its vaccine clinic at The Centre at University Park in Little Rock, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences has been administer­ing about 500 doses a day, including booster shots, UAMS spokeswoma­n Leslie Taylor said.

She said an eligible person could get an appointmen­t at the clinic within a few days.

“Right now, we’ve had a good response with people wanting appointmen­ts, but we are concerned that it could level off a little bit, and we want to stay busy,” Taylor said.

“We want to vaccinate as many people as we can.”

UAMS was also planning a mobile clinic today at Shorter College in North Little Rock, where Taylor said it hoped to administer 200 doses.

At Hyde Pharmacy in Paragould, owner Steve Smoker said he’s been scheduling vaccinatio­n clinics this week at work sites such as factories, a post office and Transporta­tion Department offices.

“We’re getting them done,” he said. “It’s going to take a little bit.

“Some of them have like 400 employees to get vaccinated, so it’s time consuming, and it takes away a whole day of pharmacist­s here.”

The work site clinics caused him to reschedule some appointmen­ts, which created openings allowing some people who walked in Thursday to get their shots without making an appointmen­t.

Normally, people who make an appointmen­t through the pharmacy’s website can get a shot within about 10 days.

“I just think people, A., need to be patient because the phases are going to open up probably sooner than they think,” he said.

Also people who make appointmen­ts at different sites should cancel the ones they no longer need after they are vaccinated, he said.

At its first in a series of planned no-appointmen­t community vaccinatio­n clinics, held Thursday at the Conway County Fairground­s in Morrilton, the Health Department administer­ed shots to 302 people, department spokeswoma­n Danyelle McNeill said.

“They expected pretty much the exact number of people they got” and didn’t run out of vaccine, she said in an email.

“There was enough for everyone,” she said.

The department is planning to hold the clinics each week in each of its five public health regions.

SUPPLY TO INCREASE

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, providers participat­ing in the vaccine effort coordinate­d by the state are expected to receive enough doses of Moderna’s vaccine and the one developed by Pfizer and BioNTech to provide initial shots to 67,830 people, an increase of 2,500 doses from this week’s allotment.

The amount of initial Moderna doses will stay the same, at 28,900, but the Pfizer doses will increase from 37,440 to 39,780.

After receiving its initial allotment of 24,400 Johnson & Johnson doses last week, the state isn’t expecting any more of that vaccine until the week of March 28, Health Department spokesman Gavin Lesnick said.

Dillaha said the state is expecting to get “maybe a couple thousand” doses a week at first, with the amount rising during April to about 15,000 a week.

“We’re hoping to use a lot of the Janssen vaccine for vaccinatin­g different work sites,” Dillaha said, referring to the drug company owned by Johnson & Johnson that makes the vaccine. “It’s a one-dose vaccine, single dose vaccine, so that’s convenient to those in off-site locations.”

DOSES REPORTED

According to the Health Department, providers participat­ing in the vaccinatio­n effort coordinate­d by the state had received 1,209,300 doses as of Thursday morning, up by 46,970 from the total as of a day earlier.

The doses those providers reported having administer­ed, including booster shots, rose by 15,395, to 724,976.

In addition, Walmart, Walgreens, CVS and Community Pharmacy Enhanced Services Network pharmacies had been allotted 152,150 doses,up by 16,600 from the total as of a day earlier.

The doses those providers reported having administer­ed rose by 2,523, to 64,818.

According to the CDC, the number of Arkansans who had received at least one dose rose by 965, to 514,556, representi­ng 17.1% of the state’s population.

The number who were considered fully vaccinated, meaning they had received two doses of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, rose by 527, to 285,811, or 9.5% of the population.

Arkansas continued to rank 45th among states and the District of Columbia in the percentage of its residents who had received at least one vaccine dose.

It moved from No. 39 to 43 in the percentage of its residents who had been fully vaccinated.

Nationally, 19.3% of people had received at least one dose and 10.2% had been fully vaccinated.

ACTIVE CASES FALL

The number of people hospitaliz­ed with covid-19 in Arkansas fell by 23, to 278, the third daily decrease in a row.

After rising a day earlier, the number of virus patients on ventilator­s fell by five, to 67.

Dillaha said 12 of the deaths reported Thursday happened more than a month earlier, including four that were in late January and eight in early February.

The state cases that added included 250 that were confirmed through polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, tests.

The other 90 were “probable” cases, which include those identified through less-sensitive antigen tests.

The state’s cumulative count of cases rose to 326,040.

That comprised 256,519 confirmed cases and 69,521 probable ones.

The number of cases that were considered active fell by 83, to 3,144, as 395 Arkansans were newly classified as having recovered.

Benton County had the largest number of new cases, 39, followed by Washington County, which had 38; Pulaski County, which had 33; Faulkner County, which had 22; and Craighead County, which had 17.

Among prison and jail inmates, the Health Department’s count of cases rose by one.

Department of Correction­s spokeswoma­n Cindy Murphy said the number of cases at the Ouachita River Unit in Malvern rose by five, to 1,626.

That included 42 cases that were active as of Thursday.

(Because of difference­s in timing on reporting and data entry, the Correction­s Department’s numbers often differ from the Health Department’s.)

The state death toll rose by 10, to 4,342, among confirmed cases and by 18, to 1,068, among probable cases.

Among nursing home and assisted living facility residents, the count of virus deaths rose by three, to 2,012.

The number of people who have ever been hospitaliz­ed in the state with the virus grew by 20, to 14,997.

The number of state virus patients who have ever been on a ventilator rose by four, to 1,542.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe) ?? James Black and his wife, Shaunika, embrace as they watch a video Thursday about his fight with covid-19 at Jefferson Regional Medical Center in Pine Bluff. Black was the state’s first patient diagnosed with the disease. More photos at arkansason­line.com/312jrmc/.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe) James Black and his wife, Shaunika, embrace as they watch a video Thursday about his fight with covid-19 at Jefferson Regional Medical Center in Pine Bluff. Black was the state’s first patient diagnosed with the disease. More photos at arkansason­line.com/312jrmc/.
 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe) ?? Gov. Asa Hutchinson acknowledg­es doctors and nurses at Jefferson Regional Medical Center in Pine Bluff after a ceremony Thursday marking the state’s first case of covid-19, which was where it was diagnosed.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe) Gov. Asa Hutchinson acknowledg­es doctors and nurses at Jefferson Regional Medical Center in Pine Bluff after a ceremony Thursday marking the state’s first case of covid-19, which was where it was diagnosed.

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