KDHE to adopt recommendation for booster shots for residents 16 and 17

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment will adopt the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) new booster recommendation and has authorized all COVID-19 vaccine providers to begin administering Pfizer-BioNTech booster shots to eligible adolescents ages 16 and 17.

“The vaccine is safe, effective and free and remains the best way to protect yourself from serious illness,” Janet Stanek, acting secretary said. “With the rise in COVID-19 cases across the state and the rise of the Omicron variant, we encourage all eligible Kansans to receive the COVID-19 vaccine and booster shot.”

Kansans who are at least 16 years old and have met the 6-month time period following the primary vaccination series for the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine, or who had their Johnson and Johnson vaccine at least two months ago, are now eligible to get the COVID-19 booster dose.

Available data show that all three of the COVID-19 vaccines approved or authorized in the United States continue to be highly effective in reducing risk of severe disease, hospitalization, and death, according to KDHE. Vaccination remains the best way to protect yourself and reduce the spread of the virus and help prevent new variants from emerging, a spokesman stated.

To find a COVID-19 vaccine clinic visit Vaccines.gov.

State Finance Council approves $14.9 million in additional funds for Kansas COVID-19 testing

by Noah Taborda, Kansas News Service

Topeka — Kansas legislative leaders and the governor Thursday approved $14.9 million to extend state testing programs through the end of the year.

With COVID-19 cases rising in Kansas and the omicron variant looming, the Strengthening People and Revitalizing Kansas Executive Committee requested the funds last month to maintain testing capacity across the state. The surge of cases from the delta variant sapped the budget, said Lt. Gov. David Toland, chairman of the SPARK executive committee.

Toland reaffirmed to the State Finance Council the importance of maintaining testing during a time when case numbers are climbing.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment’s “employer and community testing programs, which were set up early in the pandemic response, are really critical to ensuring our management of the pandemic,” Toland said. “It’s especially important to continue this testing and make sure that it’s available across our state, both for those who are experiencing symptoms or those that have potential exposures to COVID-19 in their communities.”

The finance council — made up of Senate and House leadership, as well as Gov. Laura Kelly — moved unanimously to approve the additional funds. The money would come from recouped COVID-19 relief funds and maintain testing through Dec. 31.

Senate Minority Leader Dinah Sykes, a Lenexa Democrat, raised concerns she had heard from some Kansans about accessing affordable testing.

“I know we had different places where residents could go, and some of those are charging like $120 for testing,” Sykes said. “Will that offset that cost, so people are not having to pay that much?”

Myron Gunsalus, director of KDHE labs, said some sites that previously were using funds from KDHE labs to provide free testing may have added fees. While the newly allocated funds will not provide expanded testing capacity, it would ensure free community testing continues.

Businesses previously participating in the testing program would also be eligible for testing.

“This does extend free testing across Kansas, either through antigen testing with our community partners or through our community site testing sites,” Gunsalus said. “That includes about eight to 10 mass testing sites, basically like a drive up or a walk-up site that (KDHE) will actually man as one of the ways to save some money and yet maintain a public-facing free testing option.”

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2021/12/09/state-finance-council-approves-14-9-million-in-additional-funds-for-kansas-covid-19-testing/.

Kansas hospitals, health officials prepare for omicron variant’s arrival

by Noah Taborda, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — As confirmed cases of the omicron variant of COVID-19 begin to pop up across the country, Kansas health officials and hospitals are preparing for the variant’s arrival in the state.

On Wednesday, the California and San Francisco Departments of Public Health confirmed a recent COVID-19 case caused by omicron in a resident who had just returned from South Africa, where the variant was first identified. The first confirmed case was followed on Thursday with reports that the variant had been identified in COVID cases in Minnesota and Colorado.

With the arrival of omicron in the U.S., concerns about the efficacy of vaccines and treatment options, like monoclonal antibodies, against the variant have arisen. Matt Shoemaker, an infectious disease expert with the University of Kansas Health System, said omicron is still largely an unknown.

“I think we’ll have to kind of see how these patterns play out,” Shoemaker said during a briefing on Tuesday. “We don’t know about the severity of illness, just like we don’t know about the effectiveness of vaccines and monoclonal antibodies. So, at this point, unfortunately it’s watchful waiting.”

The World Health Organization has labeled omicron “a variant of concern” and it is thought to be more infectious than the delta variant. According to a KU Health System medical expert in reporting from the Kansas City Star, there is a small chance the omicron variant is already in the Kansas City area and, if not, will arrive in the coming weeks.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment is already on the lookout for the omicron variant, said spokesman Matthew Lara. The department routinely works with lab partners to obtain positive COVID-19 samples for additional genomic sequencing tests to identify variants.

Lara said omicron is different from delta because it has what is known as an “s-gene dropout.”

“All positive samples will be run a second time using this test to look for s-gene dropout,” Lara said. “All samples that are missing the s-gene on the second test will then be prioritized for genomic sequencing to determine if it is the omicron variant.”

In the meantime, Kansas hospitals are still focusing on balancing everyday health emergencies with caring for patients with the delta variant, which has packed hospitals, said Cindy Samuelson, spokesperson for the Kansas Hospital Association. KDHE reported Wednesday the state has had 4,477 new cases, 19 new deaths and 133 new hospitalizations since Monday.

Samuelson said hospital officials are urging Kansans to take steps to keep themselves healthy and reduce the burden on health care staff.

“Right now, we’re continuing to really urge community members to get vaccinated. If they are vaccinated and they can get a booster then they should do that,” Samuelson said, adding that, “washing your hands, wearing a mask and keeping a safe distance are also essentially important during this time.”

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2021/12/02/kansas-hospitals-health-officials-prepare-for-omicron-variants-arrival/.