Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Money allotted for rural hospitals

Governor redirects $10 million; state virus cases now at 1,777

- TONY HOLT

Twenty-seven rural hospitals across the state will receive $10 million worth of financial assistance to provide more services for more patients during the coronaviru­s pandemic, Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Saturday.

The money will come from a grant normally used for community revitaliza­tion projects and will give hospitals a “big shot in the arm” at a time when they’ve been strained at unpreceden­ted levels, said Dr. Cam Patterson, chancellor of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.

On Saturday, the number of positive coronaviru­s cases across the state since the start of the emergency was 1,777. Hutchinson also announced that the virus had caused 38 deaths in Arkansas, a day-to-day increase of one.

Saturday’s number of infections marked a relatively modest daily increase of 44, but Hutchinson pointed out that the latest total did not include the 230 or so positive cases among inmates at the Cummins Unit, one of the state’s highest-capacity prisons.

Tests are still being administer­ed to prisoners at the Lincoln County facility, and the results will remain

separate from the statewide figures because such a surge of positive results from a single facility would “skew” the reporting, Hutchinson said.

Dr. Jennifer Dillaha, an infectious-diseases specialist for the Arkansas Department of Health, who joined Hutchinson during the news conference Saturday, said all of the positive cases were among inmates and that all of the unit’s employees have tested negative so far.

“I think there is a good handle on the situation there,” she said, adding that the warden and his staff have followed all of the recommende­d guidelines.

Hutchinson also announced that he had signed an executive order to form the Arkansas Economic Recovery Task Force. The 27-member body will be chaired by Steuart Walton, who sits on the Walmart board of directors, and will include three Cabinet chiefs — Agricultur­e Secretary Wes Ward, Commerce Secretary Mike Preston and parks director Stacy Hurst.

Hutchinson had announced Friday and reiterated Saturday that he had set May 4 as the goal to reopen portions of the economy and “lift some of those restrictio­ns” that were put into place when the coronaviru­s emergency was declared.

He said the task force would look for ways to help “put this economy in higher gear, but do it in a way that’s consistent with public-health requiremen­ts.”

The committee’s first meeting likely will take place next week, the governor said.

HELP TO HOSPITALS

In all, each of the selected Arkansas hospitals will receive from $250,000 to $500,000 from the $10 million slice from the Community Developmen­t Block Grant program, Hutchinson said.

Many of Hutchinson’s statements Saturday cen- tered on bolstering health care capabiliti­es in rural areas.

Another portion of that $10 million — $500,000 — will be used by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences to enhance its telemedici­ne program across the state, Patterson said. Telemedici­ne allows for more doctor-patient interactio­n and care via the internet.

Hutchinson also held up an Abbott machine during Saturday’s news conference. The machine, roughly the size of a bread-maker, has the capability to provide test results in a matter of minutes.

Abbott received an emergency

use authorizat­ion from the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion so that the machines can be distribute­d quickly, according to the company’s website.

Hutchinson said the machine requires testing kits, and there is an effort across the state and across the country to “improve the supply chain.”

While on the subject of more-accessible testing, Patterson said a UAMS mobile

unit has visited — and will continue to visit — some of the state’s less-populated areas to provide more coronaviru­s tests to more patients.

Patterson said the mobile unit makes stops at three communitie­s per week. Most recently, it stopped in Texarkana and Forrest City. Next week, it is headed to Marianna, Camden and McGehee, he said.

The mobile unit has so far screened 431 people and tested 183 of them. Of those 183 patients, only one tested positive in those smaller communitie­s, Patterson said.

“This is a great way for the state of Arkansas to provide surveillan­ce for covid-19 infection for individual­s no

matter where [they] live,” he said.

CLOSER LOOK

Dillaha said of the 1,739 positive cases reported Saturday afternoon, 998 of them were still active. She said 703 of those cases resulted in full recoveries, which included 110 recoveries from the previous 24 hours.

She also said 86 patients remain hospitaliz­ed. Since the start of the pandemic, 291 Arkansans have been hospitaliz­ed with 57 of them put on ventilator­s, according to statistics.

As of Saturday, 22 patients remained on ventilator­s, down from 23 the previous day, Dillaha said.

Nationwide, there have been more than 726,000 cumulative cases reported and about 38,000 deaths, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The national death rate from covid-19 is 5.2%. By comparison, Arkansas’ death rate from the virus is less than 2.2%, according to CDC numbers.

On Saturday, 23 health workers from UAMS and Arkansas Children’s hospital flew to New York to assist health care workers during the pandemic. They said they volunteere­d to go where infections are the most rampant.

New York had more than 135,000 confirmed cases and more than 13,000 deaths as of Saturday.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) ?? Gov. Asa Hutchinson holds a quick-testing device made by Abbott during Saturday’s news conference. The machine reportedly can provide covid-19 test results in about 15 minutes.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) Gov. Asa Hutchinson holds a quick-testing device made by Abbott during Saturday’s news conference. The machine reportedly can provide covid-19 test results in about 15 minutes.
 ??  ?? Dr. Jennifer Dillaha, an infectious diseases specialist for the Arkansas Department of Health, waits to speak Saturday during the coronaviru­s briefing at the state Capitol. Dillaha gave a report on the number of positive cases among inmates at Cummins prison and said no prison employees had tested positive so far.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford)
Dr. Jennifer Dillaha, an infectious diseases specialist for the Arkansas Department of Health, waits to speak Saturday during the coronaviru­s briefing at the state Capitol. Dillaha gave a report on the number of positive cases among inmates at Cummins prison and said no prison employees had tested positive so far. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford)
 ??  ?? Gov. Asa Hutchinson puts on his mask Saturday after completing the daily update on Arkansas’ response to the coronaviru­s. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford)
Gov. Asa Hutchinson puts on his mask Saturday after completing the daily update on Arkansas’ response to the coronaviru­s. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford)

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