Free cancer screenings and vaccinations to be Oct. 2 in Bonner Springs

Free cancer screenings and COVID-19 vaccinations will be offered from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 2, at the Bonner Springs Library, 201 N. Nettleton Ave., Bonner Springs.

Free mammograms and breast examinations will be offered for women age 40 and over, and free colorectal cancer kits will be available for adults ages 45 and over.

COVID-19 vaccinations will be available for those age 12 and over.

Those who live in Wyandotte County and are getting their first COVID-19 vaccine will receive a $50 gift card.

Those who have health insurance should bring their insurance cards for the cancer screenings. Those over 40 without health insurance may call toll-free 1-877-277-1368 to see if they qualify for a free mammogram.

The program is sponsored by the Unified Government Health Department.

KCK schools studying three options for employee vaccination and testing

The Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools Board of Education discussed three options for employee COVID vaccination and testing at a board meeting Tuesday night.

No decision was made on requiring employee vaccinations or testing at this time. The options are examples of possible policies, according to administrators.

The first option presented Tuesday night was to require all eligible staff to get vaccinated on or before Nov. 19. Those who do not have proof on file with the district on or before Nov. 19 would be required to take weekly COVID tests. Under the first option, those who provide proof of COVID vaccination would receive five additional sick leave days for the 2021-2022 school year.

Option 2 was similar to the first, except it “highly encourages,” not requires, eligible staff to get vaccinated on or before Nov. 19. Weekly testing would be required of those who do not have vaccinations on file. All staff who provide proof of vaccination would get five additional sick leave days for the 2021-2022 school year.

The third option also would “highly encourage” staff to get vaccinated on or before Nov. 19. Those without proof of full vaccination on file by Nov. 19 would be required to participate in weekly COVID testing. If a staff member tests positive for COVID and has provided proof of vaccination prior to testing positive, the staff member would not have to use personal sick leave time under the third option.

According to Stephen Linkous, the district’s chief of staff, it would take about 45 days to begin the processes for this policy. Up to three health data specialists would be hired to track students and staff who would test at district sites, he said.

Linkous said an employee survey was taken that showed 1,902 out of 2,128 persons who responded were fully vaccinated, or 89 percent of those who took the survey. About 50 percent of the employees filled out the survey.

Linkous estimated that there would probably be a minimum of about 1,000 persons who would test weekly if a policy was adopted. The district would need staff members specifically to test employees, he said.

If the vaccination policy is adopted, the district would also begin weekly surveillance testing for athletes, as they do not wear masks while actively participating in sports, he said. Then the number of persons tested each week might be up to 2,000.

The benefits of expanded testing, according to Linkous, include that higher numbers of vaccinated staff and students would lead to a reduction in variants; would lead to fewer quarantines and less transmission; would help unvaccinated persons to know if they are COVID positive; would allow employees who are unable to be vaccinated to continue employment; and those who were asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic would be identified.

The challenges of expanded testing are that initial numbers of staff and students would be quarantined, with an initial spike followed by a downward trend; a health testing coordinator would have to lead on-site testing, if that is approved; and they would have to coordinate pickup times of test kits at participating sites.

Board member Wanda Paige said the proposed policies need to go out to all employees, and she had heard from some who hadn’t seen them, or had questions.

Dr. Anna Stubblefield, superintendent, said the policies are examples of what other districts are looking at. She said they are subject to change by the board. The current process at the KCK district is that those who are quarantined or test positive, if it is work-related, are not charged to disability leave. Other districts do not necessarily incentivize through additional sick leave days, or do not all allow staff to be unvaccinated.

The board asked about how the five days of leave would work in different situations.

Dr. Stacy Yeager, a board member, said her biggest concern would be that it might be another barrier to hiring. Employees who did not like the policy could walk to another district, according to Dr. Yeager.

Dr. Stubblefield said these examples did not require vaccinations, but gave the option of vaccination or testing. The Kansas City, Missouri, district has a policy requiring vaccinations or testing, according to Linkous.

Other districts are starting to engage in the conversation about vaccinations, Dr. Stubblefield said. Some of them are waiting to see guidelines following the President’s announcement.

Board Vice President Yolanda Clark said last year, some of the staff members were not able to take their vacation time. If the district gives additional days because of vaccinations, then it should ensure the staff is able to use it, she said.

In answer to a question from Dr. Valdenia Winn, board member, Linkous said a little over 50 percent of the district’s 4,100 employees responded to the survey. He will be doing some more research with the surveys, he said. More than 60 percent of the responses were from certified staff. He will meet with directors to see if there is another mechanism to engage employees to get more data, he said.

For the week ending Sept. 3, the school district had 283 students and 27 staff members quarantined, with 78 confirmed student cases and 15 confirmed staff cases, according to the district’s COVID dashboard.

The district currently requires masking and distancing, and those measures would continue if a new vaccination policy were adopted, according to Linkous.

The employees of Head Start, a federally funded program, are mandated by the President to be vaccinated. The President also is asking states to require vaccinations for school employees, Linkous said.

The school district’s COVID dashboard has figures from the week ending Sept. 3, when there were 283 students quarantined and 27 staff quarantined. There were 78 confirmed student cases and 15 confirmed staff cases then. However, this information should be updated later on Wednesday, Sept. 15, according to Linkous.

Vaccines, tests available


The former Kmart building at 7836 State Ave., a Unified Government Health Department vaccination site, will be open for testing from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday and for free COVID-19 vaccinations from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Friday. Walk-ins are accepted. There are incentives being offered for Wyandotte County residents, while supplies last. See WycoVaccines.org.
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COVID-19 testing from WellHealth will be available from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 15, at the Kansas National Guard Armory, 100 S. 20th. The site is open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday, and on Saturdays and Sundays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. To make an appointment, visit https://www.gogettested.com/kansas.

Mobile vaccines can be requested online at WycoVaccines.org or by calling 3-1-1 (913-573-5311). For more information on the Unified Government Health Department’s vaccine schedule, see WycoVaccines.org.

COVID-19 vaccines and tests are available at other locations in Wyandotte County, including some pharmacies. For locations and availability, visit www.vaccines.gov.

Free vaccinations at KU Health System are open to the public, and appointments are required. Current patients may use MyChart to make an appointment. Others may call 913-588-1227 or visit kansashealthsystem.com/vaccine to make an appointment to get vaccinated. KU Health System currently is vaccinating residents of Kansas and Missouri who are 12 or older, by appointment only. Those under 18 must be accompanied by a parent or guardian throughout the appointment.

Case numbers reported

The University of Kansas Health System reported 79 total COVID-19 patients on Tuesday, Sept. 14, a decrease of three since Monday, according to Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of infection prevention and control. Thirty-eight patients with the active virus were inpatients on Tuesday, a decrease of two since Monday. Seven of the 38 were vaccinated. There have been eight deaths from COVID since last Saturday, including two on Monday. There was a total of 30 deaths so far in September, compared to 17 for September of last year. Thirteen patients were in the intensive care unit, no change since Monday. Seven patients were on ventilators, a decrease of one since Monday. Forty-one other patients were still hospitalized from COVID, but were out of the acute infection phase, a decrease of one since Monday.

Wyandotte County reported a cumulative 23,316 cases on Tuesday, Sept. 14, an increase of 66 cases since Monday, Sept. 13, according to the Unified Government Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage. There were a cumulative total of 345 deaths on Monday, an increase of three from Monday.
On Wednesday, Sept. 8, the Unified Government Health Department reported that 47.37 percent of Wyandotte County residents had received at least one dose of vaccine. Those completing their vaccinations totaled about 40.52 percent.
The percentage of Wyandotte County residents who were age 12 and older who had received at least one dose was 58.3 percent.

The Mid-America Regional Council reported 207,657 cases on Tuesday in Greater Kansas City, a nine-county area. There were a total of 2,800 deaths. The daily average of new hospitalizations was 125.

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The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported 390,031 cumulative COVID-19 cases in Kansas on Monday, Sept. 13, an increase of 2,879 since Friday, Sept. 10. There was a total of 5,773 cumulative deaths reported statewide, an increase of seven since Sept. 10.

The KDHE reported 72,152 cumulative COVID-19 cases in Johnson County on Sept. 13, an increase of 413 since Sept. 10. Leavenworth County had 9,572 cases on Sept. 13, an increase of seven since Sept. 10. Sedgwick County (the Wichita area) reported 71,570 cases on Sept. 13, an increase of 738 since Sept. 10.

On Monday, the KHDE reported 11,022 cumulative cases in Douglas County (the Lawrence area), an increase of 69 since Sept. 10. Riley County (the Manhattan area) had 7,334 cumulative cases, an increase of 30 since Sept. 10. Shawnee County (the Topeka area) had 23,380 cumulative cases, an increase of 162 cases since Sept. 10.

On Monday night, there were a cumulative 41,364,566 COVID-19 cases in the United States, with a cumulative 663,923 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.

Links


Visit gogettested.com/Kansas and https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19 for more testing sites.

Wyandotte County residents may contact the Health Department at wycohelp.org to sign up for a test to be delivered to their home.

For more details about free COVID-19 testing offered by the UG Health Department, visit https://www.facebook.com/UGHealthDept or call 3-1-1.

To view details about the extension of the mask order in KCK until Nov. 18, visit https://www.wycokck.org/files/assets/public/health/documents/covid/ug_extendsmaskmandate_nr_09102021.pdf.

To view the resolution extending the mask order, visit https://www.wycokck.org/files/assets/public/health/documents/covid/r-62-21.pdf.

How Kansas prisons dodged a Delta COVID surge after getting hit hard early in the pandemic

Kansas prisons were hotbeds of coronavirus infections early in the pandemic, but vaccinations appear to have protected those inmates living in close quarters.

by Blaise Mesa, Kansas News Service and KCUR

Topeka, Kansas — Two out of every three Kansas inmates have had COVID-19 and Kansas saw the fifth-highest infection rate of prisoners in the country through the course of the pandemic.

But when the Delta variant began driving up cases across the state, Kansas prisons largely avoided another surge because more than three-fourths of inmates had been vaccinated — a far higher rate than the general population.

The decrease in reported cases coincides with vaccine availability for inmates. At roughly 78%, Kansas has the 11th most vaccinated inmate population in the country, according to a prisoner advocacy group. Barely 50% of all Kansans have received at least one vaccine dose.

The Prison Policy Initiative, a left-leaning policy group, compiled its “States of Emergency” report with data from The Marshall Project, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, The COVID Prison Project and UCLA’s COVID-19 Behind Bars Data Project.

The report found 6,114 COVID-19 cases from the start of the pandemic in early 2020 through March 1, 2021, at Kansas Department of Corrections facilities.

But after vaccines became available, the state prison system saw 72 cases from March through Sept. 2.

Charlie Hunt, the deputy director of the Johnson County Department of Health and Environment, said vaccinations have proven their effect in jails and prisons.

“If we can get as many people vaccinated as possible,” he said, “it’s going to provide protection for both the individual and for the community.”

Mitigation strategies like social distancing can be difficult in correctional facilities because they weren’t built to handle a pandemic, said Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

“When a vaccine holds up in a prison, that really tells you it has a lot of power to control the infections,” Adalja said. “We know in the pre-vaccine era, prisons were hotbeds of spread.”

Some prisons still struggle to manage the virus. Four correctional facilities were listed as COVID-19 clusters by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment on Friday morning. The Kansas Juvenile Correctional Complex in Topeka had 24 total cases of COVID-19 by mid-August before it reported 19 cases since then. That’s the second-highest total of any active cluster in the state behind a USD 323 middle school.

Kansans under 18 years old currently have the lowest vaccination percentage of any age group in the state, but vaccinations for children 12-18 were only approved months ago.

Wanda Bertram, spokesperson for the Prison Policy Initiative, said states should also consider reducing the prison population by releasing more inmates before the end of their sentences. She said the close quarters of jails and prisons remain a threat to foster clusters of infections, particularly when nearly a fourth of inmates have yet to get vaccinated.

“We’ve known from the beginning of the pandemic, that just as in nursing homes and in other crowded areas, this virus spreads very, very fast in prisons,” she said. “The only way to really slow it down is to let people go home.”

Bertram said prisons were already overcrowded before the pandemic. Kansas got an “F” from the States of the Emergency report, primarily because it didn’t embrace aggressive early release programs. Another 42 other states also got an “F.”

The state also received a failing grade on data availability from UCLA’s Behind Bars study, noting it couldn’t find the number of tests conducted for staff or inmates. As of Monday, the Kansas Department of Corrections still hadn’t provided the number of inmates it has tested throughout the pandemic.

“Ultimately, getting vaccination rates high enough to mitigate transmission is going to be the way out of this, particularly with variants like delta,” Hunt said. “Vaccination is going to be the most effective way to turn the pandemic.”

Blaise Mesa reports on criminal justice and social services for the Kansas News Service in Topeka. You can follow him on Twitter @Blaise_Mesa or email him at [email protected].

The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.

Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/news/2021-09-14/kansas-inmates-have-higher-vaccination-rates-and-fewer-new-covid-cases-than-the-rest-of-us.