Kansas COVID-19 cases rising faster

Wyandotte County at 1 p.m. Tuesday reported 1,899 total cumulative positive COVID-19 cases. It was an increase of 23 cases since 1 p.m. Monday. Hospitalizations were up in Wyandotte County. The number of deaths was the same as Monday. (UG COVID-19 website)

Dr. Lee Norman, Kansas health secretary, said COVID-19 cases are increasing in a more accelerated rate.

“We’re on a bit of a banana peel,” Dr. Norman said during a news conference Tuesday morning sponsored by the University of Kansas Health System.

The state’s case number is now over 12,000, with seven more deaths since Friday, he said..

The state has dealt with outbreaks in nursing homes, congregate living situations, work places and social gatherings, he said. A few cases have been seen from gatherings such as protests and party cove gatherings, according to Dr. Norman.

In Kansas, three small funerals have resulted in 40 to 50 positive COVID-19 cases and one death so far, Dr. Norman said.

“I just have a problem with gatherings,” he said. Nobody is protected in mass gatherings, he added. It’s one of the reasons the governor recommended on Monday that the state should stay in Phase 3 of the Ad Astra reopening plan.

Also, when there are less than 45 people in a gathering, people still need to social distance, he said.

The doctors at KU Health System have recommended avoiding large gatherings, and also have recommended both social distancing and wearing masks at gatherings.

Dr. Norman said it doesn’t make sense that mask-wearing has been politicized.

“Masks work, it’s not a new discovery,” he said. It’s been known for a long time, he added.

He said any time he can’t control his environment, such as when he steps outside of his office, he wears a mask.

Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer at KU Health System, said he has seen people inside restaurants not wearing masks.

He asked, if a person is going to have open heart surgery, would they want the surgeon to operate without a mask?

It shows the mindset, “I’m protecting me but I don’t care as much about you,” Dr. Norman said.

“COVID is not a hoax, mask wearing is not a crime. Taking care of your friends is the right thing to do,” Dr. Stites said.


Kansas this week added Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas and Maryland to the quarantine list. Anyone who travels there must quarantine when coming back to Kansas, currently.

Dr. Norman said it has been based on new data on case rate growth.

The states that are joining the list have per capita new case rates of three to five times greater than the rate in Kansas, he said. The states are put on the quarantine list in two-week increments. When the rate declines to below the Kansas rate, the KDHE will take those states off the list.

Dr. Norman also said the state is trying hard not to shut down education and business. The state is currently working on a plan to reopen schools safely.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has been working closely with the Kansas Department of Education, and the Department of Education will roll out recommendations after meeting with the school superintendents’ association, he said. It is the local school boards that will determine when school will open, he added. The state health department will provide guidance.

He said the state now has trained about 400 contact tracers to help with tracking COVID-19 cases. He said it will be helpful to have the contact tracers in place as school opens, and he thinks 400 will be enough. He doesn’t believe they need more than 400.

With more tests available, protective gear and contact tracing, the state is in pretty good shape for being able to respond better, he said. With significant increased testing, the state and local health departments can reach large numbers of people during outbreaks. People who have been exposed or who test positive can then be quarantined.

He said the state recently was able to assist at two large outbreaks, one in a county jail and the other at a plant in southeast Kansas. They were able to go in the same day, assess the situation, gather test samples and get test results back by the end of the next day, he said. Seven days later they can repeat the tests.

“I think our resiliency is much better than it was,” Dr. Norman said. “We’re very much loath to close anything down if we don’t have to.”

Dr. Norman said he thinks they’re still on an 18-to-24-month slide through this. Dr. Stites said he was more optimistic and would guess 12 months.

Dr. Stites said it’s his opinion that it’s not the health care offices that people should fear, it’s the bars. People are close together, yell and discharge droplets into the air at bars, Dr. Norman said.

That might be why COVID-19 has been affecting more 20-30 year-olds, and that age group has been increasing among patients at the hospital, Dr. Stites said.

The doctors said they believe there has been no significant difference in the virus itself, but the wearing of masks and other health measures such as hand-washing and social distancing have been working.

Dr. Stites said that while it is true that the older COVID-19 patients have been hit harder by the disease as a group, it is also true that patients in any age group can die. The risk goes down significantly in the younger patients, though.

Also at the news conference was Chelsey Smith, representing the Greater Kansas City Community Blood Center.

She said blood donations went up a little after she was on the program recently, but the blood supply is still low. It’s currently under a three-day supply, when they usually have a seven-day supply, she said.

She encouraged everyone to go to a blood center and donate blood now if they are healthy. The centers are safe, temperatures are being checked at the door, people are wearing masks and there is social distancing, she added.

The University of Kansas Health System will hold a blood drive from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday to Friday in the Health Education Building. For more information or to make an appointment to give blood, visit esavealifenow.com.

Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of infection prevention and control at KU Health System, said KU Health System had 24 COVID-19 patients in the hospital on Tuesday morning. There were 21 patients on Monday. Seven were critically ill and six were on the ventilator.

“We are starting to see the numbers creep up a little bit,” he said, adding they don’t want that.

Wyandotte County at 1 p.m. Tuesday reported 1,899 total cumulative positive COVID-19 cases. It was an increase of 23 cases since 1 p.m. Monday. There were 78 total deaths, the same number as Monday. Hospitalizations went up to 29, according to the Unified Government’s COVID-19 website. There were 602 recoveries.

Mercy and Truth clinic at 721 N. 31st, Kansas City, Kansas, will be the site for the new KDHE mobile testing van on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., according to a clinic spokesman. There will be free COVID-19 testing and also 200 free food boxes. Translators will be available in five languages.

To see the KU doctors’ news conference, visit
https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/.

COVID-19 test sites in Wyandotte County are listed at https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19

The state’s COVID-19 test page is at https://www.coronavirus.kdheks.gov/280/COVID-19-Testing

Residents may visit the UG COVID-19 website at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information or call 311 for more information.


The UG’s COVID-19 information page is at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information.


Wyandotte County is currently under Phase 3. See covid.ks.gov.


The state plan’s frequently asked questions page is at https://covid.ks.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Reopening-FAQ_5.19.2020_Final.pdf.

The CDC’s COVID-19 web page is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html.

KCKPS explores options for reopening schools in the fall

The Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools released a framework today for reopening schools in the 2020-2021 academic year.

In early June, the district established a Reopening of Schools Task Force to begin the vital planning work amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The administration presented three instructional options to the Board of Education for consideration and approval later.

The options explored included:
• Option A – All students return to campus with safety modifications in place.
• Option B – Most students return with some students participating in a continuous learning environment.
• Option C- All students participate in a continuous learning environment.

These options represent different yet important routes for learning that will require all of those involved to think deeply about what can be most effective and why, according to district officials.

“I am grateful for the diligence of task force members who have spent numerous hours they have put into developing this comprehensive plan. I’m confident that each of these options has great potential to help us meet the operational challenges we face returning to a different normal,” said Dr. Charles Foust, superintendent.

The Task Force consists of more than 50 members, representing the Board of Education, teachers, principals, parents, KCKPS police, and other personnel from various levels of operations throughout the school district. Surveys were also distributed to generate valuable feedback from parents and staff. The feedback was paramount in the district’s efforts to devise the best comprehensive framework to address the various needs of our diverse school community when the district reopens schools this fall.

The district’s plan focuses on these areas:
• high-quality instruction
• educational inequities created by COVID-19
• health and safety protocols
• social-emotional support systems
• family and community engagement
• transportation
• athletics

KCKPS has partnered with school districts and school leadership in Wyandotte County to develop an Education ReStart plan with guidance from the Unified Government Public Health Department. The plan provides an overview of a phased-in approach to reopening schools and serves as an addendum to the ReStart WyCo Plan and a complement to the Kansas Ad Astra reopening plan. Additional guidance will be forthcoming from the Kansas State Department of Education mid-July.

“As school leaders in Wyandotte County, we aim to ensure that all of our plans are consistent with and closely aligned to local and state guidelines and recommendations,” Dr. Foust said. “The classroom and school building setting will undoubtedly look a little different when students, teachers, and other professionals return to school campuses. Ultimately, safety is a top concern for reopening in August and we are committed to implementing those safeguards for everyone.”

There are more details to come as the Kansas State Department of Education will provide additional recommendations and guidance when they release their reopening plan in mid-July. Additional information will also be available online at www.kckps.org.

The first day of school is planned for Tuesday, Aug. 12.

The KCKPS Care Line at 913-954-0219 is available to provide support to students and their families and staff that need assistance during this time of the pandemic, civil unrest or behavioral health, such as depression, anxiety or suicidal thoughts.

The education reopening guidance and additional information and resources on COVID-19 in Wyandotte County can be found at wycokck.org/COVID-19 or by calling 3-1-1.

  • Story from Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools

Ramp closures planned Wednesday on Turner Diagonal and I-635

Ramp closures are planned Wednesday in Wyandotte County. (KDOT map)

Ramp closures are planned on Wednesday in Wyandotte County, weather permitting, according to the Kansas Department of Transportation.

The ramp closures will be on the Turner Diagonal and off I-635, according to KDOT.

Traffic on the projects will be diverted using mobile lane closures, signs and traffic cones, the spokesman stated.

For grading work, the closures include:
• The following ramps, southbound Turner Diagonal to westbound I-70, and eastbound I-70 to southbound Turner Diagonal. Work will occur from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday, June 24.

For pavement patching, as part of the I-635 overlay project, the closures include:
• Northbound off ramp to Metropolitan Avenue and the northbound on ramp from Metropolitan Avenue, from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. Wednesday, June 24.

A KDOT spokesman urged all motorists to be alert and obey the warning signs when approaching and driving through a highway work zone. To stay aware of all road construction projects across Kansas go to www.kandrive.org or call 5-1-1. Motorists should drive safely and always wear their seat belts, the spokesman stated.