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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Aug 11 2020

Full Issue

New York's Nursing Home Fatality Numbers Suspect; Anchorage Braces For 'COVID Storm'

Media outlets report on news from New York, Alaska, Connecticut, Georgia, Texas, Arizona, Washington, California, and Michigan, as well.

Riverdale Nursing Home in the Bronx appears, on paper, to have escaped the worst of the coronavirus pandemic, with an official state count of just four deaths in its 146-bed facility. The truth, according to the home, is far worse: 21 dead, most transported to hospitals before they succumbed. (Condon, Sedensky and Hoyer, 8/11)

Alaska鈥檚 distance from the U.S. mainland delayed its pandemic pain -- but hasn't prevented it. Indeed, the mayor of Anchorage recently described the situation there as a coming 鈥淐OVID storm.鈥 New emergency orders restricting businesses and gatherings are being implemented as cases rise and the economy reels from major blows to the fishing and tourism industries. (Sy, Jackson and Kuhn, 8/10)

The Connecticut Department of Public Health issued its first $1,000 fines on Monday to two individuals who Gov. Ned Lamont said failed to comply with the travel advisory for residents who return home from states with high COVID-19 infection rates. The Democrat said the two unnamed people had flown back to Connecticut from Louisiana and Florida and neither filled out a health form that鈥檚 required from anyone entering from any state with a 10% or higher positive rate over a seven-day rolling average or a new daily positive test rate higher than 10 per 100,000 residents. (Haigh, 8/10)

Having a baby can be the most wondrous and joyous time in a person鈥檚 life. It can also be one of the most stressful, especially during a worldwide pandemic. Pregnant women might have an increased risk of severe illness or birth complications due to coronavirus, according to the CDC. In addition, social distancing might prevent new parents from getting support from family and friends. (Clanton, 8/10)

COVID-19鈥瞫 consequences have fallen hard on the vulnerable women 鈥 many already without a shred of hope 鈥 who walk Harry Hines Boulevard and other Dallas prostitution hot spots to line the pockets of sex traffickers. Even when police officers made arrests this year, the Dallas County District Attorney鈥檚 Office rejected case after case in order to keep the jail population down and reduce the chance of a coronavirus outbreak behind bars. (Grigsby, 8/10)

Gyms, bars and water parks in Arizona that were ordered closed six weeks ago by Gov. Doug Ducey due to the pandemic will be able to reopen at a limited capacity and with health precautions once the spread of the virus within their county is downgraded to moderate or minimal, state officials said Monday. The Ducey administration unveiled the standards as the state鈥檚 coronavirus outbreak has slowed and it faces a Tuesday deadline for creating an application process for reopening gyms. (8/10)

New guidelines for fitness centers and gyms will go into effect Monday in Washington state in an attempt to slow the spread of the coronavirus. KING TV reports under the updated guidelines, gyms and fitness facilities will need to nearly triple the minimum distance required for patrons exercising indoors, except for those practicing certain team sports. (8/10)

Gov. Gavin Newsom took responsibility Monday for California's coronavirus test data problems and hinted that the abrupt departure late Sunday of his state public health officer was related to the information blunder. "At the end of the day, the buck stops with me. I'm accountable," Newsom said. "And I recognize that as governor of the state of California as it relates to my responsibility, it extends to my team and it extends to our efforts to keep you safe, to keep you healthy and to mitigate the spread of this disease." (Yamamura and Colliver, 8/10)

In news from Michigan 鈥

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Monday vetoed Republican-sponsored legislation that would have given additional health providers and facilities legal protection from lawsuits in any state-declared emergency and have continued the immunity for longer during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. The governor, a Democrat, said she would have considered signing the bill if it only had attempted to 鈥渕op up鈥 an issued created when the GOP-led Legislature refused to lengthen her declared COVID-19 emergency. The measure goes 鈥渕uch further,鈥 however, she wrote in a letter to senators. (Eggert, 8/10)

With unemployment at historic highs聽in Michigan and across the country, economic protections for people impacted by COVID-19 are expiring聽as the pandemic continues to flare. Those聽safeguards, put in place to soften the impact of job losses and other issues related to the coronavirus,聽 include eviction moratoriums, utility shutoff protections聽and an extra $600 in federal unemployment aid. (Rahman, 8/11)

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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