Unified Government offers online tools to help residents cope with COVID-19 outbreak

The Unified Government of Wyandotte County – Kansas City, Kansas unveiled several new interactive tools on Thursday that let residents track new cases of COVID-19, request food, volunteer, or donate vital goods to help the community.

All of these tools are available on the Unified Government’s dedicated COVID-19 webpage at www.wycokck.org/COVID-19. These tools include:

• A statistical dashboard updated daily that displays the number of confirmed cases, how many COVID-19 patients have been hospitalized, and other relevant data. To access the dashboard, click on the COVID-19 Dashboard tab.

• A food needs request form (click on the Food Needs Request tab). This allows residents to request food if they’re in need, such as residents who are in quarantine or isolation and cannot leave their homes to get food.

• Residents who want to help out can also volunteer for several activities needed during this pandemic or apply to donate items through the site. Just click on the “volunteer and donate” tab on the webpage.

“We’re trying to find ways to help our residents cope with the COVID-19 situation,” Mayor David Alvey said in a news release. “Whether they want information, or need food, or want to contribute to relief efforts by volunteering or donating, we’re dedicated to giving them tools to do that.”

About the dashboard

Other features of the dashboard include a map showing the zip codes with 5 or more confirmed cases, a chart tracking the number of cases day by day, and the total number of deaths caused by COVID-19 in Wyandotte County. The creation of the dashboard was a joint effort between the Unified Government Public Health Department and the Unified Government Knowledge Department.

Requesting needed food

If in need of food, residents can go to www.wycokck.org/COVID-19 and click the Food Needs Request tab. They’ll answer a few simple questions and provide their contact information. Their contact info will not be shared. It will only be used to address the food request The Unified Government Public Health Department is fielding these requests and partnering with Cross-Lines Community Outreach, which will deliver groceries to residents. If residents don’t have internet access, they can call 2-1-1 to request food.

Volunteering or donating

Residents who want to help other community members by volunteering or donating can click the Volunteer or Donate tab on the webpage. This takes them through a short questionnaire that collects information on how to contact them, their availability if they want to volunteer, or gathers information on what they’d like to donate. This information goes to the Unified Government Public Health Department, and residents will be contacted by a project coordinator with further instructions about how they can help.

While these new tools serve a variety of needs within the community during the COVID-19 outbreak, Mayor Alvey stressed that it’s still critically important that everyone continues to comply with the Stay At Home Order issued by Dr. Allen Greiner for Wyandotte County on March 21.

“One of the most effective ways we can slow the spread of COVID-19 is to practice social distancing, and comply with the Stay at Home Order, which instructs citizens to only leave their homes to conduct the business they need for their essential, day to day existence,” Alvey said. “It’s vitally important that our citizens understand what an important role they play in slowing the spread of COVID-19, to avoid overwhelming our healthcare system.”

For more information about these new tools, how to comply with the Stay At Home Order, and other actions the Unified Government is taking to slow the spread of COVID-19, visit www.wycokck.org/COVID-19.

Fourth COVID-19 death reported in Wyandotte County

A chart on the UG’s COVID-19 website showed the number of positive cases increasing in Wyandotte County. (Chart from UG COVID-19 website)

A fourth COVID-19 death was reported Sunday in Wyandotte County, according to an update on the Unified Government’s website.

The UG’s COVID-19 website listed 52 confirmed cases on Sunday morning, with four deaths and 23 patients hospitalized. At 12:15 p.m. Saturday, the UG’s COVID-19 website reported 47 confirmed cases.

An additional 38 persons were listed on Sunday as probable cases who had self-reported their information with the UG Health Department. In all the UG Health Department had 102 responses to its self-reporting effort.

Wyandotte County is currently under a stay-home order until April 23. On Saturday, Gov. Laura Kelly announced a stay-home order for the state of Kansas from Monday, March 30, until April 19.

Cases in the state of Kansas rose to 319 on Sunday, compared with 261 on Saturday, according to a statistical report from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

The state now has six total deaths associated with COVID-19, according to KDHE, with two in Johnson County. Also, Shawnee County has reported a death.

Of the state’s 319 positive cases on Sunday, 101 cases were reported in Johnson County; 42 cases in Sedgwick County, which includes the Wichita area; 23 in Douglas County, which includes the Lawrence area; 17 in Leavenworth County; and 13 in Shawnee County, which includes the Topeka area. Statewide, there have been 55 hospitalizations for COVID-19 to date.

Thirty-five counties in Kansas now are reporting positive COVID-19 cases. The state also reported 4,914 negative cases in Kansas. Positive cases were 5.3 percent of all those tested.

In Wyandotte County, a UG COVID-19 map showed that the 66104 Zip Code area had 13 positive cases; ; the 66109 area had 13 positive cases; the 66112 area had 8 positive cases; the 66102 area had 7 positive cases; and the 66106 area had 5 positive cases. The other Zip Code areas in Wyandotte County each had fewer than 5 cases, and so numbers were not reported for them.

There were more than 2,400 deaths from COVID-19 in the United States, according to the KDHE website.

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

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

COVID-19 information from the CDC is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html.


For more information about Gov. Kelly’s stay-home order, visit https://governor.kansas.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/EO-20-15-Executed.pdf
and https://governor.kansas.gov/keff/.

A map showed growth of positive cases by ZIP Codes in Wyandotte County. Some Zip Code areas had fewer than 5 cases and so were not reported. The 66104 Zip Code area had 13 positive cases; ; the 66109 area had 13 positive cases; the 66112 area had 8 positive cases; the 66102 area had 7 positive cases; and the 66106 area had 5 positive cases. (Map from UG’s COVID-19 website)
COVID-19 cases by county in Kansas. (Chart from KDHE)
The number of positive COVID-19 cases in Kansas rose by 58 from Saturday to Sunday, according to the KDHE. (KDHE graphic)

Positive COVID-19 cases increase to 261 in Kansas

A map showed the spread of positive COVID-19 cases in Kansas. (KDHE map)

The number of positive COVID-19 cases in Kansas increased to 261 on Saturday morning, and in Wyandotte County, to 53, according to figures from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

The numbers include five deaths in the state of Kansas, three of which were in Wyandotte County. Two deaths have been reported in Johnson County, which had 80 COVID-19 cases on Saturday, according to the KDHE website.

On Friday, KDHE reported 202 positive cases, showing an increase of 59 cases in one day. Fifty of the positive COVID-19 patients have been hospitalized since the start of this pandemic. The age range statewide is 7 to 95, with a median age of 53.

The Wyandotte County COVID-19 website is reporting 47 positive cases on Saturday, with an additional 38 possible self-reported cases. Twenty-three Wyandotte County patients are hospitalized with COVID-19, according to the website report.

Gov. Laura Kelly earlier on Saturday announced a statewide “stay-at-home” order starting Monday and continuing through April 19. It will be similar to a “stay-at-home” order that started Tuesday in Wyandotte County and continues through April 23.

Private labs have tested 183 of the positive cases in Kansas, while the state’s Kansas Health and Environmental Lab has tested 78 of the cases. Total negative cases for Kansas are at 3,671. It is a positive test rate of 6.6 percent, which is higher than the earlier 4.5 percent test rate.

Other counties with five or more cases include Coffey, 5; Douglas (Lawrence area), 23; Franklin, 6; Leavenworth, 15; Reno, 5; Sedgwick (Wichita area), 33; and Shawnee (Topeka area), 7.

Also on Saturday, the KDHE added two states, Louisiana and Colorado, to the travel quarantine list. Anyone who has traveled there and is returning today, March 27, will need to quarantine for 14 days, according to KDHE. Previously only some counties in Colorado were included.

The quarantine list that was previously announced included anyone who traveled to California, Florida, New York and Washington state on or after March 15; anyone who traveled to Illinois or New Jersey on or after March 23; anyone who traveled on a cruise ship or river cruise on or after March 15; and anyone who traveled internationally on or after March 15.

Those who had close contact with a positive COVID-19 case have been quarantined for 14 days.

The quarantines do not apply to public health, hospital and clinic workers and those who are in “critical infrastructure sectors.”

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


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


COVID-19 information from the CDC is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html.

The KDHE list of positive COVID-19 cases in Kansas counties. (KDHE chart)
A graph on the Unified Government COVID-19 website showed the increase of positive cases here. (UG COVID-19 website)