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COVID-19 Update: Monday, February 9

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania’s state government as of 4:30 P.M. on Monday, February 8, 2021.

Department of Health

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • The number of new daily cases has continued to decline in the past week but remains more than twice the daily highs recorded in the spring.
  • The daily death toll remains very high, although not as high as three weeks ago.
  • For the week from January 29 through February 4 the state’s overall COVID-19 test positivity rate fell to 8.6 percent; it was 9.3 percent the week before that.  This marked the seventh consecutive week the rate fell.
  • For the first time in several months, three counties have positivity rates less than five percent and no counties have positivity rates greater than 20 percent.
  • 59 counties are currently in “substantial levels of community transmissions,” the smallest number this winter.  One county – Cameron – is in a low level of community transmission and seven are in moderate levels of community transmission:  Armstrong, Bedford, Cambria, Elk, Indiana, Westmoreland, and Wyoming.
  • The number of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19 is just 60 percent of what it was in mid-January; the number in hospital ICUs, 63 percent; and the number on ventilators, 59 percent.
  • Currently, 23 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 19 percent of medical/surgical beds, 16 percent of pediatric ICU beds, 31 percent of pediatric beds, and 35 percent of airborne isolation units.
  • As of February 8 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that 726,000 Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 287,000 have received both doses of vaccine.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.
  • The vaccine dashboard shows vaccine totals by county.

Department of State

Around the State

  • Elderly residents of rural Pennsylvania counties face challenges in getting COVID-19 vaccines.  Spotlight PA reports.
  • A bill in the state legislature proposes engaging the Pennsylvania National Guard in the effort to advance the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines in the state.  The Allentown Morning Call tells the story.
  • Alison Beam, nominated by Governor Wolf to be the state’s next Secretary of Health, met last week with the editorial board of the Harrisburg Patriot-News to discuss the state of Pennsylvania’s effort to administer COVID-19 vaccines.  Watch a video of that meeting.

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

 

 

2021-02-09T09:44:34+00:00February 9th, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Monday, February 9

CMS’s Verma Visits Western PA

COVID-19 was the primary subject on the minds of health care executives who met with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma in western Pennsylvania on Tuesday.

Among the issues discussed at a health care forum were the concerns of hospital administrators about rising COVID-19 case counts and their worries over the adequacy of supplies of available hospital beds, drugs, and personal protective equipment in the near future; steps like enhanced access to telehealth that CMS has made available for Medicare beneficiaries to help them during the pandemic; the work – and continued existence – of the Regional Response Health Collaboratives that support long-term-care facilities fighting COVID-19 outbreaks and the possibility that those collaboratives may expire in December; and more.

Learn more about Ms. Verma’s visit to Pennsylvania in the Pittsburgh Business Times article “Hospital, nursing home execs tell CMS administrator they need more help.”

2020-10-29T06:00:49+00:00October 29th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on CMS’s Verma Visits Western PA

Health Secretary Discusses Status of COVID-19 in PA

Pennsylvania Health Secretary Rachel Levine, M.D., held a news conference on Monday to discuss the status of the COVID-19 public health emergency in the state and answer questions from reporters.

During the news conference, Secretary Levine discussed the recent increase in the number of new COVID-19 cases in the state, the age groups that are seeing increases, the status of COVID-19 in schools, the state’s prospects for containing the virus’s spread, the changing nature of the virus’s impact on those who contract it, the upcoming holiday season, and more.  Read about what Secretary Levine had to say in this Pennsylvania Capital-Star article and another account of her news conference in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

2020-10-28T06:00:31+00:00October 28th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on Health Secretary Discusses Status of COVID-19 in PA
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