Floyd County’s confirmed COVID-19 cases soar past 700
♦ Georgia is tracing a smaller share of infections.
The number of Floyd County residents testing positive for COVID-19 rose to 745 Monday — an increase of 52 cases since Friday.
The Floyd County Sheriff’s Office announced Monday it would once again halt fingerprint services and in-person jail visitation, effective July 20, to protect staff, inmates and visitors from the recent spike.
No new deaths have been reported since the end of May, however, and the hospitalization rate is lower than the state average of 14%. Since tracking by the Georgia Department of Health began, 60 local residents have required in-patient medical care — an overall rate of 8% of those infected.
Local hospitals are treating 29 patients with symptoms connected to the new coronavirus, although they are not necessarily from Rome and Floyd County.
Meanwhile, Georgia public health investigators are reaching a smaller share of people who may be infected as the number of COVID-19 cases rise statewide, according to an analysis by The Atlanta Journalconstitution.
The newspaper finds that contact tracers interviewed 37% of people diagnosed with COVID-19 between June 23 and July 8, down from 60% between May 15 and June 22.
With the number of coronavirus infections soaring in Georgia, it may be impossible to keep up, said Dr. Harry Heiman, a public health professor at Georgia State University.
“When there’s this degree of community spread going on, there’s no way to execute a containment strategy,” Heiman said.
Georgia was reporting 120,569 infections and 3,026 COVID-19 deaths as of Monday. More than 2,500 people were in the hospital.
Contact tracers try to interview people infected with the respiratory illness and ask them who they have been in close contact with. The investigators then try to reach those close contacts to warn them to
self-quarantine or seek testing. The idea is to squelch the chain of infection to keep cases from spreading.
The state Department of Public Health says it has 1,225 contact tracers as of July 1, exceeding a 1,000-person goal set earlier by Public Health Commissioner Kathleen Toomey.
“As the cases of COVID-19 increase daily by the thousands, it becomes harder and harder to keep up with contact tracing,” Toomey said in a statement. “Our work is further hampered by the fact that it’s taking longer to get test results from commercial labs that are recently backed up due to the volume of testing. By the time we get test results, many contacts are already outside the risk period.”
State officials have also voiced concerns that people aren’t answering calls from contact tracers, because they don’t know who’s calling or because some people are posing as contact tracers to try to steal personal information.
“In some cases, the contacts actually hang up the phone on the contact tracers when they try to identify themselves,” said Dr. Otto J. Ike, chief epidemiologist for the Dekalb County Board of Health.
Public health officials emphasize they don’t collect Social Security numbers, immigration status or Bluetooth data. But tracers sometimes have to call repeatedly or send letters.
Public health workers in Georgia have avoided inperson visits, a method used to trace contacts for other diseases. Officials have also avoided legal threats, although people are legally obligated to cooperate.
Toomey said authorities reserve the right to issue subpoenas or citations, but would like to avoid those steps.
One case where people didn’t immediately cooperate involved an outbreak among recent graduates of The Lovett School, when some parents and the school didn’t immediately respond to inquiries.
“We lost a lot of time with the runaround,” said Dr. Lynn Paxton of the Fulton County Board of Health.