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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Aug 20 2020

Full Issue

California Limps Through Week Of Heat, Fires, Blackouts And COVID

Ash is raining from the sky in the Bay Area as wildfires rage. Meanwhile, a group that handles crisis calls in San Francisco says calls for high-risk suicide situations rose 25% on average from May through July 2020 compared to February through April.

Northern Californians were confronted with multiple threats as wildfires, unhealthy smoky air, extreme heat, the looming possibility of power outages and an ongoing pandemic forced many to weigh the risks of staying indoors or going outside. Ash sprinkled the ground and smoke from several wildfires cast an eerie glow over much of the San Francisco Bay Area on Wednesday, creating unhealthy air quality and heightening concerns about people most prone to respiratory illnesses. (Nguyen and Borenstein, 8/20)

How many things can go wrong at once? On Wednesday millions of California residents were smothered by smoke-filled skies as dozens of wildfires raged out of control. They braced for triple-digit temperatures, the sixth day of a punishing heat wave that included a recent reading of 130 degrees in Death Valley. They braced for possible power outages because the state鈥檚 grid is overloaded, the latest sign of an energy crisis. And they continued to fight a virus that is killing 130 Californians a day. Even for a state accustomed to disaster, August has been a terrible month. (Fuller, 8/19)

Kaiser Health News: COVID Plans Put To Test As Firefighters Crowd Camps For Peak Wildfire Season聽

Jon Paul was leery entering his first wildfire camp of the year late last month to fight three lightning-caused fires scorching parts of a Northern California forest that hadn鈥檛 burned in 40 years. The 54-year-old engine captain from southern Oregon knew from experience that these crowded, grimy camps can be breeding grounds for norovirus and a respiratory illness that firefighters call the 鈥渃amp crud鈥 in a normal year. He wondered what the coronavirus would do in the tent cities where hundreds of men and women eat, sleep, wash and spend their downtime between shifts. (Volz, 8/20)

In other California news 鈥

A coronavirus outbreak at Folsom State Prison has more than doubled in size in the past week, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, now representing the largest current outbreak among the state鈥檚 nearly three dozen prisons. Folsom had 223 inmates with active COVID-19 infections in its custody as of Wednesday afternoon, according to a COVID-19 tracker on the CDCR website. All tested positive in the past two weeks. (McGough, 8/19)

Two California corrections officers should have been fired for beating a mentally ill inmate and then lying about it later, according to a new report released by a state watchdog. The Office of the Inspector General released a report Wednesday that criticized the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation鈥檚 handling of the incident, as well as the department鈥檚 refusal to allow video of the incident to be released to the public with the new report. (Sheeler, 8/19)

As the coronavirus collides with San Francisco鈥檚 existing homelessness, mental health and drug crises, Edwards鈥 story highlights the intractability of dealing with everything at once. Not only has the pandemic disrupted the city鈥檚 already fragile ecosystem of social services, but experts say the increased use of stronger opioids, along with loneliness and isolation also have resulted in more overdoses among the city鈥檚 most vulnerable. (Thadani, 8/19)

In San Francisco, calls for high-risk suicide situations rose 25% on average from May through July 2020 compared to February through April, according to data from the Felton Institute-SF Suicide Prevention, a nonprofit that handles crisis calls for the city. Behavioral health calls doubled in that same period, with more than 5,500 callers expressing mental health concerns from May through July, according to the same report. (Kramer, 8/19)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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