Department for Public Health map, labeled by Kentucky Health News; for a larger version, click on it. |
Kentucky Health News
“I know how much we all want to see our families and friends for this holiday, but for one year, we need to prioritize making sure every person we care about is around to celebrate with us next year,” said Beshear. “We have already lost so many Kentuckians, and I don’t want that loss to be even greater. It will be if we have a spike in cases.”
Counties with more than 10 new cases Friday were Jefferson, 249; Fayette, 56; Pulaski, 36; Daviess, 26; Madison, 23; Warren, 22; Union, 21; Henderson, 20; Laurel, 16; Boone, 15; Greenup, 14; Kenton, 14; Grayson, 13; Bullitt, 12; Nelson, 12; Hardin, 11; and Shelby, 11.
Hospitalizations for covid-19 in Kentucky remained stable, at 574, with 132 of them in intensive care. Each figure was up six from Thursday.
In long-term-care facilities, 51 more residents and four more employees were found to be infected. At least 310 facilities statewide have had at least one case, and there active cases among 585 residents and 352 employees.
In K-12 schools, the daily report showed 27 new cases among students, raising the active-case total to 300. Seven more employees were added to the case list, making 109 active cases. The total cases reported so far are 459 students and 128 employees.
At Kentucky colleges and universities, the state added 51 more students and four more employees to its list, making active-case totals of 710 and 27, respectively. The report was incomplete, or not up to date, or both; for example, no new cases were reported at the University of Kentucky, but the Lexington-Fayette County Health Department, which reports on a different schedule, reported 111 new cases, 50 of them at UK. The state report said UK has 390 active cases, but UK's own site, which had date through Tuesday, Sept. 1, said it had 459 active cases.
UK has started testing wastewater from dormitories to detect infection by the virus. "Increasing levels in wastewater could be an early indicator of an outbreak or increased prevalence," UK President Eli Capilouto said in a campus-wide email.
In other covid-19 news Friday:
- The Christian County Board of Education voted 4-1 to approve Supt. Chris Brentzel's recommendation that in-person classes begin Tuesday, while allowing students to opt out of it, Hoptown Chronicle reports: "Elementary school students will be on a traditional schedule and attend in-person classes five days a week. Middle- and high-schoolers will be on a hybrid schedule. They will be in class two days and have virtual learning the remainder of the week."
- "The pandemic has heightened stress and upset routines" so much that "physicians and researchers are seeing signs it is doing deep damage to people’s sleep," The Washington Post reports. “Coronasomnia,” as some experts call it, could "have profound public-health ramifications — creating a massive new population of chronic insomniacs grappling with declines in productivity, shorter fuses and increased risks of hypertension, depression and other health problems."
- The Louisville Courier Journal reports on what happens to public health when a city has "uncontrolled spread" of the coronavirus. Dr. Sarah Moyer, the city's chief health officer, told Grace Schneider that like a wildfire, extinguishing the spread is nearly impossible "after we have the wildfire going." Louisville Metro's public health officials encourage people who have tested positive for the virus to go ahead and do their own contact tracing by alerting those they were within six feet of for at least 15 minutes in the days before they began to feel symptoms.
- The Courier Journal's Deborah Yetter tells the story of covid-19 from the perspective of people who have recovered: the administrator of a nursing home that had a big covid-19 outbreak in May that resulted in the loss of 16 residents and one staff member to the disease; a nurse who works on a covid-19 ward; and a physician. Dr. Briones-Prior of U of L Health told Yetter that she is seeing whole families affected by the disease, instead of just the frail and elderly: "It gets into the household, and the whole household gets it."
- University of Louisville Physicians offer tips on how to increase your activity during the pandemic, saying that adding an extra 2,000 steps a day and reducing calories by 100 a day will help you achieve an energy balance that can stop weight gain.
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