THIS: It's a little late, but here is the final White House Coronavirus Task Force report from the Trump administration. It features some lessons learned from the federal officials on the panel, many that speak directly to the situation in Georgia.
- Georgia is back to 6th in the country for new cases in the week leading up to 1.17 (not long ago we were doing better than nearly every other state)
- 5th in the country for test positivity
- 97 percent of all counties in the state in the "red zone"
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It's the recommendations that are the most interesting (we know things are bad here).
"Mask mandates work," it reads. "Any indoor space where masks cannot be worn ... must be substantially curtailed or closed."
This rec has been here before, but not so bluntly.
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"This virus can be mitigated and community spread can be curtailed, but action needs to be taken before an increase in hospitalizations is seen," it continues. " it needs to be more comprehensive and longer than the summer mitigation actions."
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Then, finally: "Georgia is still experiencing widespread community spread and needs to accelerate mitigation to prevent ongoing fatalities."
This final one is a message that we've seen before, too, though again, not in so direct terms.
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In Georgia, state officials have declined to put new orders in place to slow the spread for months, especially in advance of any rise in hospitalizations. Heck, we reached levels never seen before and all that was done was to ask people to follow public health rules.
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I get how there is only so much you can order people to do when it comes to public health, you need people to have buy in.
But these recommendations aren't coming from some group of amateurs, regardless of what you thought of the previous administration.
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And the politics of it? Well, that's beyond me. It would seem that state leaders would have some political cover to take recommendations from people in their same party, but that's not my area.
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What that portends for recommendations coming from the new administration, not of the same political persuasion, I can only imagine.
And we've seen in the recent weeks why all this matters: people are dying.
821 in the week leading up to 1.17 per the report.
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Those are 821 Georgians with families and people who loved them. There is a solid chance you know someone who's died. I know I do.
I spend so much time looking at numbers, that its easy to forget that each one has a name and a story.
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Reporters have asked state leaders about the recommendations in these reports SO MANY TIMES, but they don't have to hear about them from us. Leaders in Georgia and all the other states have been getting these directly for months.
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It's not clear if the Biden administration will continue to issue them, but I hope they do, even better if they're widely shared.
We're far from out of the woods, and they've been good signposts for where we actually are in this whole mess of a situation.
12/end
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YES, ANOTHER THREAD: @GovKemp says more COVID-19 shots will be made available to the general public. Georgia's weekly allocation will go from 80k > 120k doses because already shots have been set aside for long-term care facilities.
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@GovKemp Kemp stressed, in a presser that just wrapped, that there will still be much more demand than supply, eve with the bumped up allocation. He says the state isn't ready to move into later vaccine phases, which would open up vaccination to other groups.
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@GovKemp Kemp says the state's 120k shot a week allocation hasn't changed and it's not clear if it will with the new administration. He says he will provide that info as quickly as he can if things change.
So far, about .5m Georgians have been vaccinated, with about 2m total in 1a+
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More health budget hearings happening this morning at the Georgia Capitol and by Zoom. First up, @GADCH which oversees Medicare and Medicaid and regulates LTC facilities in Georgia, which have been hit hard by the pandemic.
INBOX: @RWalensky, the new head of @CDCgov promises a "comprehensive review of all existing guidance related to COVID-19" and that "comprehensive review of all existing guidance related to COVID-19."
Full statement below.
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@RWalensky@CDCgov The press release came just a few hours after Biden was sworn in.
There was lots of meddling from Trump administration officials in the CDC's previous pandemic guidance, which we learned from folks like @apoorva_nyc@ddiamond@Pien_Huang and others.
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Two numbers from my conversation with @GNRHealth's director, Dr. Arona, I can't stop thinking about.
Number 1: Last week, her department, which serves Gwinnett, Newton, and Rockdale got 1200 vaccine doses.
There are close to 1m people in Gwinnett county, alone.
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@GNRHealth Sure, they don't all qualify for the current phase of vaccination (and other non-public providers are also getting shots).
Even so, that doesn't strike me as a lot of doses for a district that includes one of the state's most populous counties.
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@GNRHealth Number 2: In the early days of vaccination, as many as 75% of the shots the district handed out were to people who DID NOT live in Gwinnett, Newton, or Rockdale.
Even if that was just, like, one day of appointments, that's very few actual locals getting shots.
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@GaDPH And it looks, from Toomey's slides, that there isn't really a request for more state money to supplement that.
Some state money goes to matching federal grants, Toomey says, but needing to have that money has made them careful about what grants to take.
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@GaDPH So, in the middle of a pandemic that's not under control, in the middle of a vaccine rollout that's not going all that smoothly, Georgia looks like it will continue to rely on the feds to fund their response.
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Georgia is back in the "red zone" for new COVID-19 cases, says the latest report from the WH Coronavirus Task Force, obtained by @wabenews.
Some context: the state is in the highest threat level, the 40th highest infection rate in the country. (Yikes!)
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@wabenews The report says Georgia is seeing an uptick in cases with stable test positivity (generally matching state #s).
Report says "there is increasing
community spread, especially silent asymptomatic spread that will result in further increases in cases and hospitalizations."
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@wabenews This week's recommendations are where things get really interesting (lines are mine).
A real strong push for proactive testing, including the call for many counties to start testing 18-40 year olds. Report says that's the way to stop "silent community spread).