Holcomb begins by announcing he's cutting back the briefings to every other day, rather than daily. Next one will be Wednesday.
.@StateHealthIN Commissioner Kris Box notes a new high in daily testing, with nearly 6,700 reported yesterday.
ISDH is beginning expanded contact tracing today, and more tests will mean more tracing.
325 of planned 500 contact tracers have been added to ISDH; hundreds more have applied. (Contact tracing is normally done by local health depts; ISDH is centralizing it because of the scope of the #pandemic.)
For third straight briefing, Box strongly urging anyone with symptoms, or anyone in a high-risk group, to get tested.
Also a recurring theme: don't ignore it if you're sick with something other than #coronavirus symptoms, and don't put off key screenings like mammograms, colonoscopies, etc. Box says doctors are taking precautions in waiting rooms. #CheckIt4Andretti
Indiana American Academy of Pediatrics president Tony GiaQuinta (nephew of House Minority Leader @PhilGiaQuinta) is joining the briefing to talk about the safety of doctor's offices. He warns vaccination rates have dropped 30-40%.
Holcomb, asked about #CurtisHill suspension, notes he called for Hill to resign back in 2018 when allegations came to light. He says he's seeking answers from his legal team on implications of ruling, presumably including whether Hill still qualifies as eligible to serve as AG.
Holcomb: "There's no good news in any of this." He says this is the fourth inquiry to concur the four women who accused Hill were truthful (inspector general, hearing officer in disciplinary case, special prosecutor, though prosecutor declined to bring charges).
Back on #coronavirus: Holcomb reminds "This is not going to be, 4th of July, boom, it's over." Everyone needs to continue practicing handwashing and social distancing, and businesses who don't feel safe reopening, shouldn't.
Governor's counsel Joe Heerens says last week, the state issued its 1st cease-and-desist order in seven weeks of lockdown to a business defying orders on who can open. He says that business, in Benton County, came into compliance over weekend.
Heerens says 137 other complaints have been found to be valid, but successfully resolved through verbal warnings.
Back on Hill: Holcomb says his legal team didn't discuss whether Hill remains eligible to serve as AG w/ suspended license because he didn't know whether the Supreme Court would address that issue. He stresses he didn't ask the court to address it, or indeed contact them at all.
Holcomb notes #INLegis had bill which would have made clear AG is disqualified if suspended for more than 30 days, but Senate killed it. So it's up to the lawyers to figure out what existing law says.
Box: 30 new testing sites on track to open Wednesday. "We've got a lot of testing out there; we just need people to go and do it."
That's not counting @FSPH_IUPUI study, which has tested nearly 5,000 so far; Box expects to report results at Wednesday's briefing.
Box: we knew #longtermcare would be at greatest risk; "We've messaged that from Day 1." She says those facilities have been high priority for testing -- but testing everyone would be 100,000 people. The message has been, if you live or work there, and have symptoms, get tested.
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Halls outside the Senate chamber where #abortion hearing is taking place are jammed with protesters. Chanting is audible in chamber.
Sen. Sue Glick (R-LaGrange) predicts amendments and discussion of possible criminal penalties. Abortion opponents have objected to the lack of enforcement provisions.
Testimony has begun. First witness is a woman raped twice as a teenager, urging legislators not to minimize the trauma accompanying sexual assault.
Nearly all of the 40 #INLegis Democrats are meeting with @VP at the Indiana State Library to discuss the #abortion bill. First Senate hearing is this afternoon.
.@VP Harris: #INLegis “on the front lines of one of the most critical issues in America today.”
Harris: Dobbs ruling “has already created a health care crisis in America….We are seeing many states attempting to criminalize heath care providers.”
2,839 new Indiana #coronavirus cases, with 9.4% of today's batch of tests positive. The 7-day positivity rate, which runs a week behind, continues a two-week plunge to 18.3%, still in @StateHealthIN's high-risk zone but lowest since Jan 3. Cases are down 60% from last week.
108 newly reported Indiana #coronavirus deaths, half from the last week but with five dating back to 2021. The death toll rises to 21,299. IDH has also identified one more presumptive #COVID19 death, for a total toll of 22,137.
Indiana #COVID19 hospitalizations drop below 2,000 for the first time since Nov 27 (and lowest since two days before that), at 1,932, down 104 from yesterday. Of those, 392 are in intensive care, 25 fewer than yesterday and fewest since Nov 21. The state has 300 open ICU beds.
All 92 counties are now rated red (high risk) on @StateHealthIN's weekly risk score.
16,502 new Indiana #coronavirus cases, 2nd-highest total ever, but 3rd week-over-week drop in 5 days.
24.3% of today's batch of tests were positive. The 7-day positivity rate, which runs a week behind, holds steady at a record 30%. It's the 1st time since Dec 26 it hasn't risen.
118 newly reported Indiana #COVID19 deaths, all but 13 in the last five days (but with one late report from 2021), push the death toll to 19,761. IDH has retracted three presumptive #COVID deaths, for a total toll of 20,500.
Debate begins in Indiana House on final vote on bill limiting employer #vaccinemandates.
House Majority Leader Matt Lehman: "This bill is not about the vaccine itself; it's about the people affected" by mandates. #INLegis
Lehman points to nurses who testified they fear getting fired for being unvaxed, after working for 9 months of pandemic before #vaccine became available.
Last week's #SCOTUS ruling means those nurses aren't affected by this bill; they're still required to get vaxed or get fired.
710 Hoosiers are in ICU with #COVID19, one fewer than yesterday and the fourth straight drop, but a jump in non-#COVID patients drops the number of open Indiana ICU beds to 218. Overall, 3,460 Hoosiers are hospitalized with COVID, 97 more than yesterday after a three-day decline.
12,126 new Indiana #coronavirus cases, with 25% of today's batch of tests coming back positive. The 7-day positivity rate, which runs a week behind, sets a 15th straight record at 30%.
77 newly reported Indiana #coronavirus deaths, all in the last week; this is the first @StateHealthIN report with no belated reports from 2021 (though there could be more later). The 2-year death toll rises to 19,643; counting presumptive #COVID19 deaths, the total is 20,385.