COVID-19 cases topped 10,000 in Wyandotte County on Saturday, increasing by 141 from Friday to Saturday, according to the Unified Government COVID-19 webpage.
There was no increase in deaths reported, remaining at 177.
In the nine-county Greater Kansas City area, there was a cumulative total of 80,112 cases on Saturday, with 1,020 cumulative deaths, according to the MARC Kansas City Region COVID-19 resource hub. There was a seven-day average of 6 deaths per day, an increase of 2.4 per day since last week.
There were an average of 753 COVID-19 patients in the hospital per day, an average of 185 COVID-19 patients in the intensive care unit per day and an average of 96 daily on ventilators. The average daily new hospitalizations of COVID-19 patients was 174.
The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center Dashboard reported 12,089,440 COVID-19 cases in the United States on Saturday, with 255,899 deaths.
This week, the Food and Drug Administration reminded people on the front lines of growing, processing, preparing, selling and delivering food to get their flu shot.
The flu vaccine will protect people by reducing their risk of flu illness and hospitalization, and may reduce the stress on hospitals, conserving resources for others with medical needs.
The best time to get a flu shot is now before the flu begins spreading in your community, according to the FDA. It takes about two weeks after getting a vaccine for antibodies to develop in the body and provide protection.
The same factors that contribute to workplace and community spread of COVID-19 — including prolonged close contact with coworkers, congregate housing, shared transportation, and frequent community contact among workers — likely contribute to the spread of the flu.
When an essential worker gets a flu shot, they protect themselves, their families, co-workers, and their communities. Healthy workers help to ensure the availability of a safe and nutritious food supply.
To learn more about how and where to get a flu shot, contact your employer, the Unified Government Health Department or visit https://www.cdc.gov/flu/.
Seems that the community hasn’t been good enough, because Santa Claus isn’t coming to town – at least not in the old way of kids being able to sit on Santa’s lap at the lighting festivals. There are different ways to enjoy the holidays, though.
In Wyandotte County, changes in events that normally would gather thousands of people together are being seen today because of the risk of COVID-19.
The Mayor’s Christmas Tree Lighting event tonight has gone drive-through, with residents able to drive by the holiday tree at City Hall, and kids able to receive a goodie bag while wearing a mask and staying in their cars.
At this drive-through event, people will not be able to gather in groups, or stand around. The event will be from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 20, and the drive-through line starts at 6th and Ann.
While it’s different this year, kids may be able to see some of the holiday preparations, however, with a view of Santa Claus and other characters from the windows.
At the Legends Outlets in Kansas City, Kansas, according to a spokesman, there will be no gathering for a holiday tree lighting event today.
Instead, the lights went on earlier today on the holiday tree in the courtyard without a gathering, and will remain on for the holiday season, according to the spokesman.
Kids won’t get to sit on Santa Claus’s lap this year at The Legends – Santa will not be at the center, but there will be a table for kids to drop off letters to Santa at a site near the AMC Theater entrance in the courtyard. It would be too hard to keep kids away from Santa, according to the spokesman.
Some other holiday characters will appear walking around at The Legends, but there will be no hugs this year. There will be no person-to-person contact, according to the spokesman, and visitors to the center will have to socially distance.
Characters’ appearance dates at The Legends include: o Nov. 21: Leo the Lion, Chase from Paw Patrol and Breena the Mini Pony o Nov. 27: The Grinch, Olaf and more o Nov. 28: Buddy the Elf o Dec. 5: The Grinch o Dec. 12: Frozen characters
Parents can take kids’ pictures standing by a sleigh near the Legends Lawn, during center hours. The spokesman said masks and distancing are required at each store.
The new restaurant hours in this week’s health order won’t have too much effect on the restaurants there, as many of them closed before 10 p.m. anyway.
At the Legends Outlets, according to a spokesman, there will be smaller activities than in years past, but visitors can still see the Christmas tree lights on their own, socially distanced.
The Legends also will offer holiday movies on the lawn, socially distanced, and text-to-win giveaways. The movie schedule is at www.legendsshopping.com/all-events/.
The Legends will be closed on Thanksgiving Day. The shopping center usually is open until only 8 p.m. The holiday hours are listed on the website as 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. most days, but on Black Friday the hours will be 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., and on Saturday, Nov. 28, hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. On Sunday, Nov. 29, hours will be 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. before going back to 11 a.m. to 8 a.m. on Nov. 30. (Holiday hours are at https://legendsshopping.com/special-holiday-hours/)
The Legends plans more photo ops for kids and parents later in the holiday season.
A new Centers for Disease Control study out today said that masks worked in Kansas counties that adopted mask orders.
Dr. Lee Norman, Kansas secretary of health, said researchers studied COVID-19 rates in Kansas, comparing counties that had mask mandates to counties that did not have mask mandates. The governor issued the mask mandate in early July, but most counties decided to opt out of it.
The study showed a decrease in COVID-19 rates in counties that had mask mandates, he said.
Secretary Norman made his comments during a remote meeting on Friday morning with county and city leaders across Kansas. He said Kansas added 5,939 cases statewide since Wednesday, for a cumulative 134,533, and an additional 84 deaths statewide, for a cumulative 1,410.
He said Kansas hospitals are under a tremendous amount of strain, especially where staffing is concerned. A lot of empty hospital beds in Kansas are unstaffed beds.
Dr. Norman said they are working to help increase staffing through agency staff. They also will use an existing program that will allow hospitals to find beds with one phone call, instead of spending hours on it, which should help small hospitals.
Kansas is in the red zone, Dr. Norman said, and has the fifth highest rate in the country in terms of positivity. It is the 11th highest for new cases. He said they are following the White House Task Force recommendations for universal mask use and increased testing.
“What we must do is push down the number of new cases,” he said.
They continue to prepare for distribution of vaccines, and will do a distribution trial before the vaccines arrive, he said. The state has a plan on the KDHE website for distribution.
Expanded testing has begun with CARES relief funds, he said. Sampling and transportation has been the most challenging part of the process, and the state has contracted with three entities to help guide people to testing sites, he said. The program has a goal of less than 36 hours for test results.
Wyandotte County was one of the counties that adopted mask orders early, and one is still in effect here. With the mask and distancing orders still in effect, Wyandotte County added a new limit on gatherings of 10 persons starting today, and also a new 10 p.m. curfew on restaurants and bars starting today.
Gov. Laura Kelly earlier this week issued a new mask mandate for all of Kansas, that will give local counties the option of designing their own mask ordinances within the next week.
At the meeting with local officials today, Gov. Kelly said she was resuming regular calls with local leaders because COVID-19 is spreading in the state at an alarming level.
Increases in cases are the worst seen since the pandemic began, she said. Hospitals are overwhelmed with COVID-19 cases.
With her new mask order, cities or counties can adopt their own local ordinances, and the individual cities can decide how to enforce them, she said.
She discussed her new unified testing strategy, and also a partnership with the Kansas Leadership Center in Wichita to mobilize leaders for nonpartisan groups to encourage support for efforts that will flatten the curve.
So far, more than 30 communities have created their own local mask ordinances or adopted the state order, she said. The governor said face coverings do not limit what people can do or where they can go, but just the opposite, they help keep businesses open, the schools open and the economy open.
The county commissioners and local leaders also heard from Pete Meitzner, a Sedgwick County commissioner, who said Wichita area hospitals have had escalating COVID-19 rates for the past few weeks.
No matter how much they limit size gatherings and hours of operations at bars in Sedgwick County, they still have an impact from neighboring county residents that don’t have an awareness of the problem in their county, he said.
He has reached out to the officials in surrounding counties asking them to to help.
For some reason they’re not coming together to help manage this hospital crisis in the way they usually handle problems, he said. He said they can’t do this by themselves.
“Just know what you’re doing in your own county may be having a large, large positive or negative impact in places like Sedgwick and Johnson County, which are large economic engines for the state,” he said.
At the University of Kansas Health System in Kansas City, Kansas, today, Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of infection prevention and control reported similar COVID-19 case numbers to Thursday. The hospital had its highest number of COVID-19 cases ever this week.
There were 78 active COVID-19 patients hospitalized, an increase of one from Thursday; with 34 patients in the intensive care unit, a decrease from 36 on Thursday, he said. The number of ICU patients on ventilators went up to 21 today, an increase of eight, which is the largest percentage recently.
There were an additional 47 COVID-19 patients at the hospital who were out of the acute infection phase, an increase of two from Thursday. In all, there was a total of 125 patients, an increase from 122 on Thursday.
There were two additional deaths at the hospital since Thursday, with the cumulative number of deaths at 119 since the beginning of the pandemic.
HaysMed at Hays, Kansas, reported 35 COVID-19 inpatients, with two in the recovery phase, a decrease of one since Thursday. There was one COVID-19 death reported at HaysMed.
Doctors support mask-wearing
At a news conference Friday morning at the University of Kansas Health System, Dr. David Wild, vice president of performance improvement, said that anything that can increase adherence to masking across the state will be beneficial to everyone.
The mask order appears to give everyone the opportunity to decide what is best for their community, he said. Dr. Wild said he was supportive of counties adopting measures similar to the governor’s recommendations, based on the effect those interventions will have on the community.
Dr. Hawkinson said no one likes to wear masks, but they are safe and they do not make people weak. Most of the general population can wear masks, with a few medical exceptions, he said.
Colorado adopted a mask-wearing rule early because it needed to keep its tourism industry going, and it went very well, Dr. Hawkinson said.
Mitigation strategies such as masking and distancing, help to reduce hospitalizations and deaths, he said. Infection is widespread in Kansas right now, and in the Midwest, and it is important to continue to enact mask mandates in order for businesses to stay open, he said.
Amanda Gartner, director of quality, safety and infection prevention and control, said, “We know it works, we know it prevents the disease.”
The doctors also discussed front-line medical workers who are sometimes facing tiredness and exhaustion.
“Everyone’s working really hard right now and everyone’s tired,” Dr. Wild said. “Everyone has the desire to provide the best care possible for anyone who needs it.”
“People are tired, but feeling that together we can tackle this,” he said. “We will continue to do our absolute best.”
According to Dr. Wild, if the case numbers are high today, it will affect hospitalizations in the next three to four weeks.
Wyandotte County reported a cumulative 9,958 COVID-19 cases on Friday, an increase of 140 cases since Thursday, according to the Unified Government COVID-19 webpage. There were 177 deaths reported, an increase of six deaths since Thursday.
Free COVID-19 testing available on Saturday
Free COVID-19 testing will be available from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, Nov. 21, at the Beatrice Lee Community Center, 1310 N. 10th St., Kansas City, Kansas.
The test is for anyone who lives or works in Wyandotte County. No registration is required. Free flu shots also will be available.
The pop-up test is through Vibrant Health and the Wyandotte County Health Equity Task Force.
Those who get a COVID-19 test or a flu shot at the Beatrice Lee Center also will get a free turkey or chicken, while supplies last.
The Unified Government Health Department has moved its COVID-19 testing from the 6th and Ann location to the former Kmart at 78th and State Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. The hours are 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday. Tests are free for those who live or work in Wyandotte County. The tests are now saliva COVID-19 tests.
The tests now are open to asymptomatic people as well as those who have symptoms or have been exposed to COVID-19. Check with the UG Health Department’s Facebook page to see if there have been any changes in the schedule. Bring something that shows that you live or work in Wyandotte County, such as a utility bill.