Wyandotte County prepares to move into ‘red zone’ of restart plan as COVID-19 cases reach 1,000

The 2:15 p.m. Friday UG COVID-19 report showed 1,000 positive cases in Wyandotte County, an increase from Thursday. The number of deaths, 64, and hospitalizations, 40, stayed the same as Thursday. (From UG COVID-19 webpage)
The UG Health Department now is looking at a rolling 14-day average of positive cases in Wyandotte County. This graph at the Thursday night UG Commission meeting showed a slight increase in cases in recent days. The rolling averages for deaths showed a decline. (From UG Commission meeting)

As Wyandotte County reached 1,000 positive COVID-19 cases on Friday, Wyandotte County is looking at moving from the “stay-at-home” order it is currently under, into the “red zone” of the Restart WyCo plan on Monday, May 11.

Terrie Garrison, interim director of the Unified Government Health Department, at Thursday night’s UG Commission meeting said Wyandotte County’s case rate per 100,000 is about four times as much as any of the state or of Johnson County and Kansas City, Missouri.

Juliann Van Liew, who manages operations in the Health Department, said they are now looking at “rolling averages” of cases and mortality numbers. These reflect an average each day of the previous 14 days.

Most recently, the rolling averages chart reflected an increase of cases over the past few days, she said. The rolling averages for deaths is down, she added, over the past few weeks.

The Health Department now has testing in the community five days a week from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays at the Health Department parking lot, with pop-up testing, also. The Walmart in Bonner Springs and in Piper will be starting pop-up testing on May 15, she said. There also are talks to have pop-up testing at the George Meyn Center in Wyandotte County Park, Bonner Springs.

Dr. Allen Greiner, chief medical officer for Wyandotte County, said a lot of work went into the ReStart WyCo plan announced last week, and they are working to clarify items and to have frequently asked questions and answers for businesses on the website and 311 phone line.

On midnight, May 10, the current stay-at-home order expires, he said, and they will go into the “red zone” on Monday. They will wait a full 14-day period before deciding whether to make the transition from the red to yellow zone, he added.

Dr. Greiner said the plan is to monitor trends of cases, hospitalizations and deaths.

There are some differences between the “stay-at-home” order and the “red zone,” he said.

He said Mayor David Alvey led a faith community phone call on Thursday morning, requesting the faith community’s help in keeping things safe among faith communities. There were clusters a long time ago in faith communities, and they also will work hard with nursing homes and other clusters, he added.

There is a continued highest caution for vulnerable populations, which will be asked to stay home, he said.

There is no change for essential businesses and nursing homes. The requirements they are requesting nursing homes to stick with are the same, he said.

Some nonessential businesses will be allowed to open if they can have physical distancing, while encouraging work from home.

Retail stores that are not essential can be open for curbside pickup and delivery, he said. People will be allowed to pick up items that they called in to purchase in-store, but social distancing and mask use will be promoted, he said.

Dr. Erin Corriveau, deputy health officer for Wyandotte County, said there will not be dine-in service at restaurants in the “red zone” phase, but carryout and delivery will be allowed. Hotels are asked to limit their capacity to 25 percent if possible, she said.

There will be no change to child care and education guidelines, there is hope children will stay with the same children they’re with on a daily basis, and that distance education continues, she said.

No personal services are allowed, so people have to wait a little longer for a haircut, she added.

Churches may operate at 10 percent capacity with social distancing during the “red zone,” or have drive-up services, she said. The Health Department is recommending to stay online as much as possible, she added.

Sports teams may practice and hold games, without fans, she said.

Outdoor activities are still encouraged, she said. People may be in groups of 10 or less with social distancing in outdoor activities.

In looking at when to change zones, the Health Department is considering hospitalizations, deaths and the positive rate when testing for COVID-19, over a 14-day period, she said. They are especially looking at rolling averages, making sure they have capacity and contact tracers, with personal protective equipment available, she said.

So far, the Health Department had completed about 4,000 tests by Thursday, with a positive rate of about 23 percent, according to local officials.

Commissioner Gayle Townsend said it’s still a challenge for citizens who can’t see the COVID-19 website on the internet, and she wanted to know how else the Health Department is notifying residents.

Dr. Corriveau said any resident may call the 311 phone line to ask any COVID-19 question and be connected to resources. Also, businesses may call 311 with questions about businesses reopening, she said. They have been working on mailers, and will do video clips, she said. They are trying many approaches at once.

In answer to a question from Commissioner Jane Philbrook, Dr. Greiner said it will continue to be a tough decision on when to change from one zone to another, and when to hold on or backtrack. They will continue to put as much information out as how they are analyzing things, he said. But it is hard for people to know they can’t give a particular number.

They want stability of numbers, if not declining numbers, he said. Deaths, hospitalizations, availability of personal protective equipment, outbreaks and a number of factors are involved. When they do a diagnosis, they have to weigh a number of different things and it isn’t always clear-cut, but there are a number of factors that get them there, he said.

“It’s a little bit of an art and science approach, but to some extent that’s medicine and that’s public health,” he said.

Wyandotte County positive COVID-19 cases reached 1,000 at the 2:15 p.m. May 8 UG COVID-19 webpage report, an increase of about 61 cases. Wyandotte County reported 939 cases on Thursday morning.

The number of deaths was the same, at 64, as Thursday, and the number of patients hospitalized also was the same, at 40, according to the UG COVID-19 webpage. There were 189 recoveries reported.

The number of COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Health System declined by two today, to 24, with more patients released.

On the UG Health Department’s outbreak map, 40 patients at the Life Care Center of Kansas City were identified as positive for COVID-19, a slight increase from earlier this week. Other outbreaks did not show an increase. (https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/)

More information about the “red zone” rules is online at the ReStart WyCo hub at https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/restartwyco.

The ReStart WyCo plan is at https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/RestartWYCOGuidanceDocument043020.pdf.

Several Wyandotte County pop-up testing sites are listed at https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19.

To view the Thursday night UG Commission special session, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHutbMMTFN8.

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

The Kansas COVID-19 website is at https://covid.ks.gov/.

The Kansas COVID-19 resource page is at https://govstatus.egov.com/coronavirus

Information from the CDC is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/.

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