The Nome Nugget

COVID cases in region continue to fall

- By Peter Loewi

One million Americans have died due to COVID-19. This number is roughly the same as San Jose, California, the tenth largest city in the nation. In the year 2020, COVID-19 was the third leading cause of death in this country, after heart disease and cancer, after having been detected in humans only in 2019.

William Hanage, an epidemiolo­gist at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health told National Public Radio that “It’s shocking to me that so many people have accepted a million dead. This is not a trivial number. That’s a million human beings, and the fact that we have taken this appalling toll, and folks are so keen to move on from there – and not examine how we got there – is deeply depressing.”

In this region, six people have died of COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic.

Nationwide, cases have risen roughly 60 percent in the last two weeks. The Alaska Department of Health and Social Services only updates their numbers once a week, but as of May 11, case rates, hospitaliz­ations and deaths, had all risen over the previous week.

While Omicron is said to be less severe than previous variants and has led to fewer deaths for now, the way the virus manifests itself is now showing to cause unique complicati­ons for small children. Unlike the wildtype and subsequent variants, which attacked the lower respirator­y system, Omicron and its subvariant­s attack the upper respirator­y system. According to a new paper released in Pediatrics, “The relatively smaller upper respirator­y tract in children compared to adults has been thought to predispose them to more severe clinical presentati­ons resembling laryngotra­cheobronch­itis, or croup.” The study, though still small, showed that over 80 percent of children admitted to Boston Children’s Hospital with COVID-19 had croup caused by the Omicron variant.

Similar to the millions of Americans who suffer from Long COVID, the long term complicati­ons of this croup is still unknown.

As cases risen, driven by an Omicron subvariant, the federal government is again offering free at-home tests via COVIDtests.gov. According to the website, USPS will deliver

eight test kits to any household that

orders tests. The White House has been pushing Congress to disperse more COVID funds for things such as testing and overseas vaccinatio­ns, but Republican­s have repeatedly refused.

The week in numbers: On Tuesday, May 10, Norton Sound Health Corporatio­n identified one new case of COVID-19, in Unalakleet. There were five active cases in the region: two in White Mountain, one in Nome, one in Shishmaref, and one in Unalakleet.

No new cases were identified on Wednesday, May 11 or Thursday, May 12.

Over the weekend from Friday May 13 to Sunday, May 15, NSHC identified two new cases, both in Nome.

On Monday, May 16, another two cases were identified in Nome.

There are currently four known active cases of COVID-19 in the region, all in Nome.

The USA has had 82,695,491 officially reported cases of COVID-19, and 1,000,068 associated deaths.

Alaska, which only updates case numbers, hospitaliz­ations and deaths once a week now, has had at least 247,865 cases, 3,754 hospitaliz­ations, and 1,235 deaths. There are currently 41 people hospitaliz­ed, a steady increase over the last several weeks.

The Nome, Bering Strait and Norton Sound region has had at least 5,989 cases of COVID-19, 44 hospitaliz­ations and six deaths.

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