Children’s hospital at capacity

Children’s Mercy Hospital is at capacity, according to doctors.

Dr. Barbara Pahud, director of research for infectious diseases at Children’s Mercy, said Monday morning that more children with COVID need care because those under 12 can’t be vaccinated yet. Also, more children are getting childhood diseases such as RSV, which is usually a disease seen in the winter.

Last year at this time, everyone was in quarantine and wearing masks, which is not happening now. Dr. Pahud said reinstating mask mandates may not be the popular choice, but it is the right choice to save lives, since not enough people are vaccinated.

She urged parents to get their children who are 12 and older vaccinated now so they will have full protection when school starts.

“It’s kind of sad, in my opinion, to see that we of course want to put a priority into the economy, reopening everything, restaurants everywhere you go right now around the city, everything’s open, no masks required,” Dr. Pahud said. “But when we’re talking about children and knowing what’s the right thing for them and how to bring them back to school, we really push back on the masks. But it’s important to keep the kids in school.”

She said kids have become comfortable with masks and warns they can still transmit the virus to each other.

She also says public misinformation about the vaccine is a big problem. The most common myth is it causes infertility. Past vaccines have had clinical trials with only 30,000 to 40,000 people, but she stressed with more than 3 billion doses administered around the world, there is more safety information on this vaccine than any other vaccine ever in the history of the world. She saod you are more likely to be hit by lightning than to have a serious adverse reaction.

She anticipated full approval for the adult vaccine in September and for kids 12 and older by the end of the year. Clinical trials for young children are in progress. Dr. Pahud reminded everyone the mRNA vaccines do not carry a live virus, and therefore are extremely unlikely to have any long-term effects, just the short-term reactions that go away.

Dr. Nathan Bahr, infectious disease physician at the University of Kansas Health System, reminded those getting vaccinated that it isn’t a free pass to hang out in a crowd of 100 without masks before the vaccine takes full effect. He’s frustrated that the guidance of asking those unvaccinated people to wear a mask is not working.

“I’m not worried about a downside to a mask mandate. I’m worried about people dying in the meantime,” Dr. Bahr said.

To those who believe masks are dangerous due to a buildup of CO2, he said emphatically, “That’s not true.” He explained it’s been studied, and the evidence is overwhelming that does not happen.

“If masks were causing CO2 buildup, think about all the healthcare workers that would have been passing out in the operating room in eight-hour surgeries.”

He said right now if you test positive for COVID, it’s safe to say it’s the Delta variant. He said if you or your children feel sick or think you have symptoms, you should get tested, rather than trying to be tough and going to work, putting your coworkers at risk. He said there are no long-term concerns from the vaccines, but there are long term concerns from COVID.

Free vaccines available

Harmon High School will be the site of a community vaccination event from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 27, at 2400 Steele Road.

Vaccines will be available, free for those 12 and older. There also will be a backpack giveaway, free food boxes, mobile dental truck, meal tickets for newly vaccinated participants and free ice cream, as well as music provided.
In addition there will be prizes for teens who get the vaccine. Those who get a vaccine can sign up to win one of five $100 Visa gift cards, and two grand prize winners will get a $500 Visa gift card, if more than 75 people get vaccinated.
Masks will be required at the event. The event is sponsored by the Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools.

Free COVID-19 vaccines will be available from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Friday at the Kmart vaccination site, 7836 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. Vaccines are free for people ages 12 and older. There are gifts available, as supplies last.


The Unified Government Health Department has announced there will be free COVID-19 vaccinations at a Sporting KC home match at 7:30 p.m. July 31. Vaccines will be available for ticketholders attending the games, who are 12 and older. People who get vaccinated will receive a free Sporting KC scarf.

For more information on the Unified Government Health Department’s vaccine schedule, see WycoVaccines.org.

Mobile vaccines can still be requested online at WycoVaccines.org or by calling 3-1-1 (913-573-5311).

Other sites available for vaccinations

Free vaccinations at KU Health System are open to the public. 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.

There are also pharmacies giving free COVID-19 vaccinations in Wyandotte County by appointment, when available. These include Price Chopper and Hen House pharmacies, which are now also accepting walk-in vaccinations or appointments, and are starting vaccinations for age 12 and up at those pharmacies that are giving Pfizer vaccine (see https://www.ballsfoodspharmacy.com/).

CVS has announced walk-in appointments for COVID-19 vaccine at some of its stores. Those interested in getting a vaccination at a CVS pharmacy are asked to visit a CVS website in order to make sure there is vaccine available. The website is at www.cvs.com/. Walgreens and Walmart also were listed on www.vaccines.gov as giving vaccinations.

Other pharmacies and sites giving vaccines are listed at www.vaccines.gov. The website also tells whether vaccines are in stock at the locations.

Case numbers reported

Steady numbers in COVID-19 patients were reported Monday morning at the University of Kansas Health System. There were 34 active COVID-19 patients on Monday morning, an increase of one from Friday, according to Dr. Nathan Bahr, infectious disease doctor. Sixteen patients were in the intensive care unit, an increase of four since Friday. Nine were on ventilators, an increase of two. Another 22 patients were hospitalized because of COVID-19 but were out of the acute infection phase, no change. There were 56 total COVID patients, the same number as Friday.

Wyandotte County reported a cumulative 19,838 cases on Monday, an increase of 112 since Friday, according to the Unified Government Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage. There was a cumulative total of 306 deaths reported, an increase of four since Friday.
On Wednesday, July 21, the Unified Government Health Department reported that 38.1 percent of Wyandotte County residents had received at least one dose of vaccine. Those completing their vaccinations totaled about 33 percent.
The percentage of Wyandotte County residents who were age 12 and older who had received at least one dose was 46.9 percent.


The Mid-America Regional Council’s COVID-19 dashboard reported 171,327 cumulative COVID-19 cases on Monday in the Kansas City region. The daily average of new hospitalizations was 91.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported 328,755 cumulative COVID-19 cases in Kansas on Monday, July 26, an increase of 1,488 since Friday, July 23. There was a total of 5,243 cumulative deaths reported statewide, an increase of four since July 23.

The KDHE reported 62,244 cumulative COVID-19 cases in Johnson County on July 26, an increase of 257 since July 23. Leavenworth County had 7757 cases, an increase of 82 since July 23. Sedgwick County (the Wichita area) reported 59,410 cases, an increase of 210 since July 23.

The Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 dashboard on Monday night reported 34,533,058 COVID-19 cases in the United States, with 610,951 total deaths reported nationwide. There were 15,711 new cases nationwide.

Countries with new cases rising were India, 39,361; Indonesia, 38,679; United Kingdom, 28,937; Iran, 27,146; and U.S, 15,711, according to Johns Hopkins information.

Vaccine doses reported administered in the United States Monday, 778,996. Fifty percent of the U.S. population was fully vaccinated.

Vaccines administered: Florida, 138.200; Texas, 132,230; California, 104,730; New York, 23,506; and Pennsylvania, 22,500.

Global vaccination progress: Japan, 3.756 million; India, 2.036 million; Mexico, 978,300; U.S., 779,000; and Turkey, 931,600.

Free testing available

Free COVID-19 testing is available from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday at the UG Health Department’s central location, the former Kmart, 7836 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. Free gift cards are available to those who get a test, while supplies last.

Besides Health Department sites, COVID-19 testing is available at several locations in Wyandotte County.

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 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://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19, https://www.facebook.com/UGHealthDept or call 3-1-1.

The Health Department’s general contact page is at https://www.wycokck.org/Health/Contact.aspx. The department’s Facebook page is at https://www.facebook.com/UGHealthDept.

Testing sites are at https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19. There are more test sites listed on this page.

The University of Kansas Health System’s media update is at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/290929062789750.

The University of Kansas Health System COVID-19 update page is at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/330310795391910.

The KDHE’s COVID-19 webpage is at https://www.coronavirus.kdheks.gov/.

The KC Region COVID-19 Hub dashboard is at https://marc2.org/covidhub/.

The Wyandotte County page on the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 website is at https://bao.arcgis.com/covid-19/jhu/county/20209.html.

The Johns Hopkins Data in Motion, a presentation on critical COVID-19 data in the past 24 hours, is at https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/covid-19-daily-video.

Delta variant has changed the COVID-19 picture, doctor says

The Delta variant has changed the COVID-19 picture, according to doctors at the University of Kansas Health System.

Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer, said when the CDC lifted the mask mandates, the Delta variant was not widespread as it is now.


“The Delta variant has changed the story because it is so much more transmissible,” Dr. Stites said.

The Delta variant is a game-changer and they have to respond to it, he said. Otherwise, unvaccinated people are at risk, he said.

He encouraged people to get vaccinated and wear masks.

Dr. Kevin Ault, a gynecologist at KU Health System who is a member of the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, said the committee heard a report Thursday that there could be full vaccine approval sometime in the next few months.

There is a lot of existing safety data for the COVID-19 vaccines, Dr. Ault said. They are definitely not experimental, since tens of millions have now received doses, he added.

The doctors are seeing case numbers rising, and hospitals filling up. Dr. Stites said masks are needed because people are now under siege by the Delta variant.

Dr. Stites said vaccinated people who are around other vaccinated people are probably fine. But vaccinated people who are around unvaccinated people have a chance of getting the Delta variant and they might transmit it to others.

“The risk of death once you’ve been vaccinated has dropped dramatically,” Dr. Stites said. Nationally only about 1 percent of the deaths are in vaccinated patients, he said. Only 3 to 5 percent of those hospitalized have been vaccinated, he added.

The right thing to do is be on the defensive, wear masks, get vaccinated and break the curve, Dr. Stites said.

Dr. Ault said the committee on Thursday looked into reports about side effects such as Guillain Barre Syndrome from the Johnson and Johnson vaccine. The committee found it was extremely rare, about 7.8 cases per million doses in the J and J vaccine.

He also said there is more of a chance people can get the syndrome from COVID-19 itself than from the vaccine. He said people should go ahead and get vaccinated, and if there are any serious side effects, to call their doctors.

The committee also looked at whether a booster should be recommended for immunocompromised people. It will be a few more months before the vaccines will get full approval and doctors can recommend booster shots for immunocompromised persons, he said. The vaccines are not as effective in some immunocompromised persons.

In the meantime, if you have a family member who is immunocompromised, you should get vaccinated to protect them, he said. Masking and social distancing is important in large groups where there could be an immunocompromised person, he added.

“Help us break the curve, get vaccinated and wear a mask,” Dr. Stites said. For more information from this update, visit https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/179523447540956.

Free vaccines available

Central Middle School, 925 Ivandale, will be the site of free COVID-19 vaccines from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, July 24. Those 12 and older may be vaccinated, with ages 12 to 17 needing consent from their mother and father. The event is sponsored by El Centro with assistance from Heart to Heart International. Walk-ins are welcome, and appointments are accepted. The resource fair will include haircuts for kids, school supplies and information tables.

A community COVID vaccine event will take place from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 27, at Harmon High School, 2400 Steele Road, Kansas City, Kansas. The vaccines are for those 12 and up. There also will be a backpack giveaway, free food boxes, mobile dental truck, meal tickets for newly vaccinated participants, free ice cream and music. There will be prizes for teens getting the vaccine. There will be an opportunity to enter a drawing for more prizes.


Free COVID-19 vaccines will be available from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Friday at the Kmart vaccination site, 7836 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. Vaccines are free for people ages 12 and older. There are gifts available, as supplies last.

The Unified Government Health Department has announced there will be free COVID-19 vaccinations at a Sporting KC home match at 7:30 p.m. July 31.

Vaccines will be available for ticketholders attending the games, who are 12 and older. People who get vaccinated will receive a free Sporting KC scarf.


For more information on the Unified Government Health Department’s vaccine schedule, see WycoVaccines.org.


Mobile vaccines can still be requested online at WycoVaccines.org or by calling 3-1-1 (913-573-5311).

Other sites available for vaccinations

Free vaccinations at KU Health System are open to the public. 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.

There are also pharmacies giving free COVID-19 vaccinations in Wyandotte County by appointment, when available. These include Price Chopper and Hen House pharmacies, which are now also accepting walk-in vaccinations or appointments, and are starting vaccinations for age 12 and up at those pharmacies that are giving Pfizer vaccine (see https://www.ballsfoodspharmacy.com/).

CVS has announced walk-in appointments for COVID-19 vaccine at some of its stores. Those interested in getting a vaccination at a CVS pharmacy are asked to visit a CVS website in order to make sure there is vaccine available. The website is at www.cvs.com/. Walgreens and Walmart also were listed on www.vaccines.gov as giving vaccinations.


Other pharmacies and sites giving vaccines are listed at www.vaccines.gov. The website also tells whether vaccines are in stock at the locations.

Case numbers reported

A slight decrease in the COVID-19 patients was reported Friday morning at the University of Kansas Health System. There were 33 active COVID-19 patients on Friday morning, a decrease of four from Thursday, according to Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer. Twelve patients were in the intensive care unit, the same as Thursday. Seven were on ventilators, an increase of one. Another 23 patients were hospitalized because of COVID-19 but were out of the acute infection phase, no change. There were 56 total COVID patients, a decrease of four since Thursday.

Wyandotte County reported a cumulative 19,726 cases on Friday, an increase of 54 since Thursday, according to the Unified Government Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage. There was a cumulative total of 302 deaths reported, the same as Thursday.

On Wednesday, July 21, the Unified Government Health Department reported that 38.1 percent of Wyandotte County residents had received at least one dose of vaccine. Those completing their vaccinations totaled about 33 percent.
The percentage of Wyandotte County residents who were age 12 and older who had received at least one dose was 46.9 percent.

The Mid-America Regional Council’s COVID-19 dashboard reported 170,528 cumulative COVID-19 cases on Friday in the Kansas City region. The daily average of new hospitalizations was 95.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported 327,267 cumulative COVID-19 cases in Kansas on Friday, July 23, an increase of 1,539 since Wednesday, July 21. There was a total of 5,239 cumulative deaths reported statewide, an increase of 21 since July 21.

The KDHE reported 61,987cumulative COVID-19 cases in Johnson County on July 23, an increase of 332 since July 21. Leavenworth County had 7,675 cases, an increase of 57 since July 21. Sedgwick County (the Wichita area) reported 59,200 cases, an increase of 221 since July 21.

The Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 dashboard on Friday night reported 34,400,655 COVID-19 cases in the United States, with 610,720 total deaths reported nationwide. There were 55,058 new cases nationwide.
Countries with new cases rising were U.S., 55,058; Brazil, 49,757; Indonesia, 49,509; United Kingdom, 40,029; and India, 35,342, according to Johns Hopkins information.


Vaccine doses reported administered in the United States Thursday, 660,898. Forty-nine percent of the U.S. population was fully vaccinated.
Vaccines administered: California, 84,404; Texas, 72,451; North Carolina, 61,029; Florida, 57,161; New York, 43,208.
Global vaccination progress: China, 28.102 million; India, 5.566 million; Brazil, 1.956 million; France, 1.662 million; and U.S., 660,900.

Free testing available

Free COVID-19 testing is available from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday at the UG Health Department’s central location, the former Kmart, 7836 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. Free gift cards are available to those who get a test, while supplies last.

Besides Health Department sites, free COVID-19 testing is available at several locations in Wyandotte County.

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 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://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19, https://www.facebook.com/UGHealthDept or call 3-1-1.


The Health Department’s general contact page is at https://www.wycokck.org/Health/Contact.aspx. The department’s Facebook page is at https://www.facebook.com/UGHealthDept.


Testing sites are at https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19. There are more test sites listed on this page.


The University of Kansas Health System’s media update is at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/179523447540956.


The University of Kansas Health System COVID-19 update page is at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/330310795391910.


The KDHE’s COVID-19 webpage is at https://www.coronavirus.kdheks.gov/.


The KC Region COVID-19 Hub dashboard is at https://marc2.org/covidhub/.


The Wyandotte County page on the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 website is at https://bao.arcgis.com/covid-19/jhu/county/20209.html.


The Johns Hopkins Data in Motion, a presentation on critical COVID-19 data in the past 24 hours, is at
https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/covid-19-daily-video.

Doctor says KC area at the epicenter of COVID third wave outbreak

The Kansas City area now is past the tipping point and is in trouble, Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer at the University of Kansas Health System, said during a Thursday morning medical media update.

“What we have to recognize is Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas is now the epicenter of this third wave outbreak in the United States,” Dr. Stites said.

The outbreak has moved north from Springfield, Missouri, to the Kansas City area, as well as moved south to Arkansas, Oklahoma and other areas, he said.

He said he thinks the chief medical officers in the Kansas City area will call for a return to the mask mandates and social distancing. Several CMOs discussed the issue in a telephone call Thursday morning and are all in favor of it, he said.

“We’re in trouble in hospitals. Bed capacity is past its limits,” Dr. Stites said. They are now putting patients in alternative care areas, having to turn down transfers, and they have a lot of sick patients.

The difference between now and the fall is there weren’t as many people then sick with routine things from the community, he said. There are a lot of patients sick now, he said, and it will continue.

Infection control guidelines could help shut off the flow of some of those patients, and open beds, he said.

If they delay surgeries, they would be delaying some things that are really urgent, he said. Most elective surgeries now are outpatient procedures, he said. There is a severe shortage of inpatient beds currently throughout the community, he added.

It has been since late November and December that they have seen these kinds of numbers at the hospitals here, he said. Today, there are well over 300 COVID-19 positive patients in six large hospitals in the Greater Kansas City area, he said.

What’s different between now and last fall is the bed crisis is worse now in the Kansas City area, he said. Influenza, RSV and other illnesses are out there, with COVID numbers continuing to rise.

“We are not vaccinated like we need to be, and people have just gone back to trying to live life as normal, when in reality, we live in abnormal times,” Dr. Stites said. “What we should be fearful of is that we won’t be able to give care to people who need it.”

The shortage of beds could affect not only COVID patients, but also heart patients, cancer patients and all other patients, according to Dr. Stites.

In Springfield, they tried to put a field hospital up, and possibly, they may be getting close to discussing that here, he said.

Also, hospitals don’t have enough staff to meet a surge, he said. Staff are getting sick again, and staff need some time off, he said.

The Kansas City area now has to take the leadership position, as it is the epicenter, he said.

Dr. Stites said he applauded school districts that are going to mask mandates in the fall.

“The storm is here,” he said. “Take shelter from the storm.”

The rules of infection prevention and control will keep people safe, he said. Those need to be reinstated, and people need to get vaccinated, he said.

“This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated,” he said. Less than 10 percent of the people currently in the hospital with COVID-19 are vaccinated, he said.

“It is overwhelming our systems, it is overwhelming our ability to care for people, and it is time for us to take action,” Dr. Stites said.

Dr. Barbara Pahud, research director of pediatric infectious diseases at Children’s Mercy Hospital, said there are more cases of respiratory illnesses, and Children’s Mercy Hospital also is short of beds.

What makes the situation different from last year is there is a vaccine now that could prevent COVID-19, she said.

“You cannot go back and open the world up without social distancing, masks and vaccines and expect life to go back to normal,” she said. “COVID is still here, the pandemic is still here, we can make it go away if we vaccinate. If we don’t, we’re still facing the same problems.”

Dr. Stephen Lauer, a pediatrician, said they know masking and distancing work. They didn’t have colds and flu during the regular flu season this year, and now they are seeing RSV and flu in the summer.

As students prepare to go back to school, masking will have to play a role to keep the schools safe this fall, especially as vaccines are not available yet for children under 12, Dr. Lauer said.

Dr. Pahud said the earliest vaccines could be available for children under 12 would probably be November, but it is more likely to be January. Vaccines will not be ready by the time school starts, she believes.

The worst thing that can happen is to reopen schools without a mask mandate while the pandemic is still going, Dr. Stites said. They would have to close the schools again, he added.

Dr. Pahud said that as long as there are unvaccinated people, the virus can mutate, and if you think the Delta variant is scary, the next variant could be much worse. Every unvaccinated person is like a natural lab for mutations to develop, and the next mutation could make the vaccine worthless, she added.

Free vaccines available

Free COVID-19 vaccines will be available from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Friday at the Kmart vaccination site, 7836 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. Vaccines are free for people ages 12 and older. There are gifts available, as supplies last.

Central Middle School, 925 Ivandale, will be the site of free COVID-19 vaccines from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, July 24. Those 12 and older may be vaccinated, with ages 12 to 17 needing consent from their mother and father. The event is sponsored by El Centro with assistance from Heart to Heart International. Walk-ins are welcome, and appointments are accepted. The resource fair will include haircuts for kids, school supplies and information tables.
A community COVID vaccine event will take place from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 27, at Harmon High School, 2400 Steele Road, Kansas City, Kansas. The vaccines are for those 12 and up. There also will be a backpack giveaway, free food boxes, mobile dental truck, meal tickets for newly vaccinated participants, free ice cream and music. There will be prizes for teens getting the vaccine. There will be an opportunity to enter a drawing for more prizes.

The Unified Government Health Department has announced there will be free COVID-19 vaccinations at a Sporting KC home match at 7:30 p.m. July 31. Vaccines will be available for ticketholders attending the games, who are 12 and older. People who get vaccinated will receive a free Sporting KC scarf.

For more information on the Unified Government Health Department’s vaccine schedule, see WycoVaccines.org.

Mobile vaccines can still be requested online at WycoVaccines.org or by calling 3-1-1 (913-573-5311).

Other sites available for vaccinations

Free vaccinations at KU Health System are open to the public. 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.

There are also pharmacies giving free COVID-19 vaccinations in Wyandotte County by appointment, when available. These include Price Chopper and Hen House pharmacies, which are now also accepting walk-in vaccinations or appointments, and are starting vaccinations for age 12 and up at those pharmacies that are giving Pfizer vaccine (see https://www.ballsfoodspharmacy.com/).

CVS has announced walk-in appointments for COVID-19 vaccine at some of its stores. Those interested in getting a vaccination at a CVS pharmacy are asked to visit a CVS website in order to make sure there is vaccine available. The website is at www.cvs.com/. Walgreens and Walmart also were listed on www.vaccines.gov as giving vaccinations.

Other pharmacies and sites giving vaccines are listed at www.vaccines.gov. The website also tells whether vaccines are in stock at the locations.

Case numbers reported

There were 33 active COVID-19 patients on Thursday morning at the University of Kansas Health System, an increase of two from Wednesday, according to Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer. Twelve patients were in the intensive care unit, an increase of one from Wednesday. Six were on ventilators, the same as Wednesday. Another 27 patients were hospitalized because of COVID-19 but were out of the acute infection phase, an increase of two from Wednesday. There were 60 total COVID patients, an increase of four since Wednesday.

Wyandotte County reported a cumulative 19,672 cases on Thursday, an increase of 90 since Wednesday, according to the Unified Government Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage. There was a cumulative total of 302 deaths reported, an increase of one since Wednesday.
On Wednesday, July 21, the Unified Government Health Department reported that 38.1 percent of Wyandotte County residents had received at least one dose of vaccine. Those completing their vaccinations totaled about 33 percent.
The percentage of Wyandotte County residents who were age 12 and older who had received at least one dose was 46.9 percent.

The Mid-America Regional Council’s COVID-19 dashboard reported 182,924 cumulative COVID-19 cases on Thursday in the Kansas City region. The daily average of new hospitalizations was 94.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported 325,728 cumulative COVID-19 cases in Kansas on Wednesday, July 21, an increase of 1,541 since Monday, July 19. There was a total of 5,218 cumulative deaths reported statewide, an increase of 20 since July 19.

The KDHE reported 61,655 cumulative COVID-19 cases in Johnson County on July 21, an increase of 350 since July 19. Leavenworth County had 7,618 cases, an increase of 52 since July 19. Sedgwick County (the Wichita area) reported 58,979 cases, an increase of 201 since July 19.

The Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 dashboard on Thursday night reported 34,281,864 COVID-19 cases in the United States, with 610,177 total deaths reported nationwide. There were 52,032 new cases nationwide.

Countries with new cases rising were Brazil, 54,517; U.S., 52,032; United Kingdom, 44,081; India, 41,383; and Indonesia, 33,772, according to Johns Hopkins information.

Vaccine doses reported administered in the United States Wednesday, 611,493. Forty-nine percent of the U.S. population was fully vaccinated.
Vaccines administered: California, 77,043; Texas, 69,730; Florida, 43,701; North Carolina, 43,029; and New York, 36,942.
Global vaccination progress: India, 2.379 million; Uzbekistan, 2.262 million; Brazil, 2.202 million; Japan, 2.05 million; U.S., 611,500.

Free testing available

Free COVID-19 testing is available from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday, July 23, at the UG Health Department’s central location, the former Kmart, 7836 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. Free gift cards are available to those who get a test, while supplies last.

Besides Health Department sites, free COVID-19 testing is available at several locations in Wyandotte County.

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 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://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19, https://www.facebook.com/UGHealthDept or call 3-1-1.

The Health Department’s general contact page is at https://www.wycokck.org/Health/Contact.aspx. The department’s Facebook page is at https://www.facebook.com/UGHealthDept.

Testing sites are at https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19. There are more test sites listed on this page.

The University of Kansas Health System’s media update is at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/783265045690933.

The University of Kansas Health System COVID-19 update page is at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/330310795391910.

The KDHE’s COVID-19 webpage is at https://www.coronavirus.kdheks.gov/.

The KC Region COVID-19 Hub dashboard is at https://marc2.org/covidhub/.

The Wyandotte County page on the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 website is at https://bao.arcgis.com/covid-19/jhu/county/20209.html.

The Johns Hopkins Data in Motion, a presentation on critical COVID-19 data in the past 24 hours, is at https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/covid-19-daily-video.