Lane County Department of Public Health reported 37 more cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, bringing the county total to 1,276.
There are 189 cases in the county that are infectious, 10 more than reported on Monday and only 11 cases hesitate to conform to last week’s local registry. The infectious case count measures the number of others within 10 days of the onset of your condition. symptoms and are through the government to be able to transmit the virus.
To date, 18 Lane County citizens have died of COVID-19-related fitness and 10 have been hospitalized.
The University of Oregon reported 8 new cases on the university network on Tuesday. OUS numbers are from the county in general; OUS has registered a total of 136 instances since June 1.
Also Tuesday, Oregon’s fitness authority reported 299 new instances of COVID-19 shown and suspected across the state, including 8 new deaths.
The death toll in Oregon is 555 and the total number of COVID-19s in the state is now 33,291.
New cases shown and suspected COVID-19 reported are found in the following counties: Baker (1), Benton (8), Clackamas (28), Clatsop (2), Columbia (3), Coos (1), Crook (1), Deschutes (7), Douglas (7), Jackson (11), Jefferson (4), Josephine (5), Klamath (10), Lane (32), Linn (4), Malheur (9), Marion (49), Morrow (4), Multnomah (52), Polk (3), Umatilla (11), Wallowa (1), Washington (41) and Yamhill (5).
In the nine months since the first cases were reported in central China, more than a million more people have died internationally from COVID-19.
The news comes at a time when countries around the world are at very other stages in epidemic control: some European countries are enduing some restrictions for fear of a momentary wave. Cases in the United States are declining after a summer peak that followed. through new restrictions and then a decline. India’s instances have soared in recent weeks and it is imaginable that the country will soon become the most inflamed country. New Zealand turns out to have a triumph over a momentary instance organization. And South Korea is experiencing its lowest case count since it re-set some blocking measures during a resurgence of the virus
Meanwhile, researchers around the world continue to advance clinical trials of vaccine candidates, but mass vaccinations may not take place until at least mid-2021, a World Health Organization official said Sunday.
– USA TODAY
Springfield Public Schools announced that they would move all categories remotely starting Thursday in a slight increase in COVID-19 instances in Lane County.
The district announced the change Monday night in an email to families and said that since the most recent knowledge of the Oregon Health Authority published Monday night showed that Lane County had more than double last week’s case rate, it would be equivalent to distance learning for all students.
This includes kindergarten and first grade students, who were brought back face-to-face last week.
Read the story here.
Governor Kate Brown has issued a new moratorium to postpone residential evictions for non-payment and other unresolved evictions until December 31, 2020.
The resolution was taken into consideration as “the current COVID-19 pandemic and the widespread devastation caused by wildfires,” a press release from the governor’s workplace said Monday.
The moratorium on Brown’s deportation originally scheduled to expire this week.
Read the story here.
Wheeler County, in north-central Oregon, is the kind of position other people think of when they think of the American West.
Breeders paint the land and boost the economy through hills and rocky canyons. Geological wonders attract visitors in search of wide open spaces.
And in Oregon, it’s an anomaly: the county has shown no instances of COVID-19 and is one of only six in the United States to remain in 0 instances.
Read the story here.
Lane County Department of Public Health reported 75 more positive cases of COVID-19 over the weekend, bringing the total number of cases in the county to 1,239, which make up those reported Friday afternoon, Saturday, and Sunday.
Last week, an initial accumulation in cases of small social gatherings led to the accumulation of propagation and accumulation of records in cases, as well as the total number of infectious cases.
The number of infectious cases in the county fell over the weekend from 200 to 179, good news, but a fall too small for citizens to take down their guards now, according to Jason Davis, spokesman for Lane County Public Health.
So far, Oregon communities have been able to keep the spread of the virus low for a variety of reasons. As the pandemic continues, county officials are discovering that some are improving their cautious behavior in the past.
Find out here.
Another died of COVID-19 in Oregon, which raised the death toll in the state to 547, the Oregon Health Authority announced Sunday.
The firm reported 242 new cases shown and suspected of COVID-19, bringing the state total to 32,820. OHA has known 24 new cases in Lane County.
Lane County Department of Public Health reported 202 infectious cases in the county no later than Sunday afternoon and ten others were hospitalized.
Other new ones reported Sunday through the OHA were in the following counties: Benton (1), Clackamas (10), Clatsop (8), Columbia (6), Coos (1), Deschutes (15), Douglas (5), Grant ( 1), Jackson (9), Jefferson (5), Lake (1), Lincoln (1), Linn (3), Malheur (10), Marion (26), Morrow (1), Multnomah (72), Polk ( 1), Tillamook (1), Umatilla (14), Wallowa (1), Wasco (3), Washington (23).
The 547th death of COVID-19 in Oregon, an 81-year-old woman in Multnomah County who had underlying conditions.
Trump management plans to distribute 150 million tests
President Donald Trump, under increasing pressure from a national build-up of coronavirus cases and tax reports, announced Monday a plan to distribute 150 million immediate COVID-19 evidence “in the coming weeks. “
At least one expert said it too little and too late.
Trump’s management last August announced a $760 million deal with Abbott Laboratories to provide antigen-based testing, which is faster but not as reliable as commonly used PCR testing. Trump said $100 million of Abbott’s tests would be sent to states and territories to reopen their economies and schools, and the rest to establishments serving vulnerable communities, adding nursing homes.
The United States has the highest cases of coronavirus (7. 14 million) and deaths (205,000) in any country in the world. According to the New York Times, the United States recorded a 23% increase in cases over the following week. until mid-September.
Dr. William Haseltine, a former Professor at Harvard Medical School known for his paintings on HIV/AIDS, told CNN that India has been tracking its population to the fullest with immediate testing for 2-3 months, and that a much richer country like the United States has done the same.
“It’s much more defeated than anything, but it’s not enough, even at its present point,” Haseltine said. “It has to be 10 times, 20 times that point to start making a genuine difference by putting a limit on this pandemic. “
– USA TODAY
Survey: 1 in 3 parents say they don’t vaccinate their children against the flu this year
Public fitness experts are concerned that winter will carry seasonal influenza above the coronavirus pandemic, and a national survey shows that one in three parents say they are going to vaccinate their children against the flu this year.
“The pandemic seems to replace parents’ perspectives on the importance of the flu vaccine,” the survey’s research concluded. “This may be a double flu season this year, as the country already faces a deadly viral disease with near-dual symptoms. “
The survey, published Monday through Michigan Medicine’s CS Children’s Hospital. Mott in Ann Arbor, also revealed that 14% of parents said they would not seek the flu vaccine because they kept young people away from fitness centers due to the threat of coronavirus exposure. Others may not receive reminders to get vaccinated against the flu because child care providers have limited the number of patients reported for personal visits.
– USA TODAY
WHO plans to distribute 120 million immediate evidence to less wealthy countries
The World Health Organization intends to distribute 120 million coronavirus diagnostic tests to low- and middle-income countries, according to a plan that still lacks full funding. WHO, which passed the emergency tests last week, said it had accepted the program with its partners on Monday.
The antigen-based check costs $5 each, and the $600 million program, which can start in October, provides greater access in spaces where it is more difficult to get the most accurate PCR controls commonly used in many countries. . WHO controls can result in 15 to 30 minutes.
– USA TODAY
Trials of Inovio vaccine candidates suspended amid FDA questions
Clinical trials of a VACCINE opposed to COVID-19 are pending, and the Food and Drug Administration asks the manufacturer for more information about their device of administration.
Pharmaceutical company Inovio said Monday that its complex, mid-level trials for its candidate vaccine were “in partial clinical suspension,” as it answers FDA and company questions. prospective vaccine at the first level of your trial.
The company’s candidate vaccine is based on its Cellectra device, which uses small electric pulses to open the pores of the skin that allow DNA to enter the body. The company said it would answer questions in October and that the FDA will have 30 days to respond. .
– USA TODAY
Swedish Health Minister: 1 million deaths internationally is a ”pretty small number’
Sweden’s fitness minister, the country’s technical architect to keep much of the country open amid the coronavirus pandemic, said Monday that the overall death toll of 1 million “is a small number compared to many other diseases that cause death. “
Anders Tegnell commented on the radio and added that “let’s not kid ourselves into thinking this is the only challenge we have in the world in terms of global health. “
Sweden, unlike many of its European neighbours, kept restaurants, gymnasiums, schools and other businesses and facilities open as the pandemic spread across the continent. While those who oppose closing orders see Sweden as a success, the country has done worse than its Nordic Neighbours.
– USA TODAY
Florida schools went up, but a buildup of coronavirus followed
Many teachers and families feared an increase in COVID-19 cases when Florida caused controversy to reopen schools in August with face-to-face teaching.
But research by USA TODAY shows that the number of positive cases in the state among young people between the age of five and 17 decreased until the end of September after a peak in July. Among the counties that recorded increases in all cases were college elders: not school-age children, who were the best, according to research.
The first effects in Florida show good luck dressing up in a serious mask, social esttachment, touches of isolation and immediate contact search if necessary, fitness experts said, but experts warn that the fact that schools were early doesn’t mean long-term problems are the source. And they warned that they opposed reading knowledge as an explanation of why to reopen all schools or abandon security measures.
– USA TODAY
Mall Santas may lose concerts in the first holiday season of the pandemic
In a year like no other, even Santa can finish a job.
A trip to the mall on the lap of the cheerful old elf would possibly be some other culture eliminated through COVID-19, while suspicious parents keep their children at home and, while this is bad news for young people, it can be worse for everyone. Santas who rely on concerts at decomposition retail stores and Workplace Christmas components to earn additional money or, in some cases, a giant component of their annual income.
“I have between 20 and 30 reservations, and now I have two,” said Mike Hadrych, 72, from Canoga Park, California, who made up to 70 appearances as Santa Claus in a year without being married.
– USA TODAY
Florida exceeds 700,000 boxes and bars reopen at full capacity
Two days after Gov. Ron DeSantis ordered counties to allow restaurants and bars to re-open at full capacity, the number of COVID-19 cases in Florida exceeded 700,000 on Sunday, and the death toll reached 14,202.
State knowledge showed the new level in 700, 564, approximately 10% of the national total of more than 7 million. While Florida remains one of the country’s hot spots, the number of new diagnoses increased from a peak of one month from 24864 in the week ended September 5 to 18227 recorded last week.
DeSantis said the pandemic is far from over and that there may be a momentary wave of cases, but said the state has a lot of hospital beds available if that happens. Closing the economy and leaving other people out of work, he said. said, it won’t prevent the virus. ” I don’t think it’s viable. I don’t think it’s acceptable,” he said.
– Tony Doris, Palm Beach (Florida)
Prince Charles: Students may want urgent assistance to overcome the long-term pandemic
Prince Charles warned that up to 1 million young people in Britain might want “urgent help” for their long havoc on the COVID-19 pandemic, while politicians debated whether to prevent British academics from returning home at Christmas.
The Prince of Wales said the social and economic crisis created by the coronavirus recalls the ups and downs of the 1970s, when young people performed one of the urgent up disorders facing British society.
“There has never been a time as complicated as the present, when the pandemic has perhaps left another million young people in an urgent need for assistance for their future,” he wrote in the Sunday Telegraph. “The task ahead of us is undeniably vast, but it is not second to none. “
Comments come when COVID-19 is accelerating across the UK, which led the government to impose new restrictions.
– USA TODAY
In numbers: COVID-19 in Oregon
Reported through the Oregon Health Authority, updated at 12:00 p. m. Monday.
Case investigations
32994: total number of instances shown and presumed
547: total number of deaths
31390: tests
642,035: tests
673,425: total number of tests performed
Case through the age group
0 to 9: 1549 (5%)
10 to 19 years: 3,445 (10%)
20 to 29 years old: 7,149 (22%), 2 deaths
30 to 39 years old: 5,831 (18%), deaths
40 to 49 years old: 5,366 (16%), thirteen deaths
50 to years: 4,184 (13%), 37 deaths
60 to 69 years old: 2,638 (8%), deaths
70 to years: 1,611 (5%), 144 deaths
80 and up: 1205 (4%), 264 deaths
Not available: (0%)
Sex
Women: 17044 (52%), 234 deaths (43%)
Men: 15847 (48%), 313 deaths (57%)
Non-binary: 3 (0%), 0 deaths
Not available: one hundred instances (0%), 0 deaths
Hospitalized
Hospitalized: 2538 (8%)
Non-hospitalized: 27189 (82%)
Not provided: 3267 (10%)
Source: Oregon Health Authority
Local business directories are opened, adding delivery directories, to take
The Eugene and Springfield Chambers of Commerce are compiling lists of local businesses that are open and the changed tactics in which they offer their products and facilities to allow others while they stay home.
Read the full story, links to the lists, here.