Wisconsin Convent Grapples With Outbreak That Killed Nuns Struggling With Dementia; Minorities Hard Hit In Chicago Area With Low Density Rate
Media outlets report on news from Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Louisiana, Kansas, Michigan, Indiana, Virginia, Florida, Texas, New York, Massachusetts, Georgia, Nevada, and Ohio.
Our Lady of the Angels Convent was designed as a haven of peace and prayer in a suburb of Milwaukee, a place where aging, frail nuns could rest after spending their lives taking care of others. Songbirds chirped in the sitting area. A courtyard invited morning prayers and strolls for the several dozen nuns who lived in the facility, a low-slung cream-colored building with a turret. The quiet convent has become the site of a deadly cluster of the coronavirus. Four staff members have tested positive, a health official said. Since April 6, five nuns have died from the virus. (Bosman, 4/30)
Asiaha Butler was disturbed when coronavirus cases started to climb in her neighborhood, but she wasn鈥檛 surprised. A longtime housing advocate in Englewood, she knew the area was at high risk, even though it鈥檚 sparsely populated. Vacant lots and empty houses dot the neighborhood, leaving homes spaced farther from one another than in other parts of the city. 鈥淧eople I talk to say, 鈥榃ell, Englewood looks no different after the shelter-in-place order,鈥欌 said Butler, executive director of the Resident Association of Greater Englewood, or RAGE. (Coryne, 4/30)
River Road hugs the curves of the Mississippi River, past sugar-cane fields and chemical plants, on the way to this semirural community 50 miles upstream from New Orleans. Epidemiologists believe the coronavirus quietly made this journey after taking root in the city during Mardi Gras in late February. St. John Parish confirmed its first case of covid-19 鈥 the disease caused by the novel coronavirus 鈥 on March 13, four days after a New Orleans hospital reported Louisiana鈥檚 initial patient. Officials tried to act quickly. (Montgomery, 4/30)
Louisiana physicians faced a troubling scenario in early March when coronavirus patients started appearing in the state鈥檚 intensive care units: no one could say for sure how best to treat them. Now, nearly two months after the state confirmed its first positive case, they鈥檝e re-examined drugs and protocols once considered the best bets for saving the lives of seriously ill patients. (Gallo and Woodruff, 4/30)
The coronavirus that has infected more than a million Americans is increasingly moving into rural areas in search of new victims, as nearly one-third of the nation鈥檚 counties experienced widespread transmission over the last week. A new analysis by the Brookings Institute聽demographer William Frey shows the virus spreading to new areas in almost every state in the country. But its spread is now more concentrated in smaller towns, rural areas and exurban areas that had previously been untouched. (Wilson, 4/30)
Mark Levine, a member of the New York City Council and chairman of its health committee, dismissed early anxieties as "fear mongering." Then he and his wife fell ill. In the weeks since their recovery from covid-19, Levine (D) has become one of the city鈥檚 most outspoken and occasionally polarizing figures, seizing on his newfound spotlight to make one of the most ambitious proposals in New York鈥檚 recent history: creation of a $1 billion Public Works Administration 鈥 but for public health. (Morgan, 4/29)
Gov. Charlie Baker signed a bill into law Wednesday afternoon directing the Department of Public Health to "develop a set of minimum standards for foundational public health services for the commonwealth," and to establish a "state action for public health excellence program" that is intended to encourage local boards of health to adopt certain practices. The state is expected provide funding to local boards through a competitive grant program. (Young, 4/30)
As the coronavirus pandemic stretches into a third month, state health leaders are reclassifying the way they count COVID-19 cases, a change that鈥檚 sure to lead to an increase in the number of reported victims and have a profound effect on our understanding of the devastating impact of the disease in Massachusetts. The Massachusetts state health department last week issued new directives on what counts as COVID-19 to hundreds of local health boards based on guidance from a low-profile, but influential national group of disease trackers. (Lazar and Ryan, 4/30)
It鈥檚 been quite the baptism for John 鈥淛ack鈥 Dempsey as head of the city鈥檚 fire department. He assumed the mantle of Boston fire commissioner on an interim basis on the same day the president declared a national emergency, the Boston Marathon was postponed for the first time in its storied history, and the city鈥檚 school district, the largest in the state, was closed. All because of the COVID-19 pandemic. .By the time his interim title was removed last Friday, life in the city remained significantly altered by the coronavirus outbreak. (McDonald, 4/30)
The marijuana reform group NORML is leading an effort to encourage states to 鈥渄eprioritize鈥 the enforcement of marijuana prohibition amid the coronavirus pandemic. So far, more than 4,000 constituents across the country have participated in the organization鈥檚 action campaign launched Wednesday by sending messages to their governors, urging them to take steps to minimize the spread of the virus by avoiding unnecessary marijuana arrests. (Jaeger, 4/30)
The coronavirus pandemic in Georgia is far from over: Infected patients are still flowing into hospitals, and health workers are still reusing masks to conserve supplies. But slowly, hospitals in the state are trying to focus beyond COVID-19 and to open their doors, once again, to non-emergency patients. (Hart, 4/30)
A patient at a state hospital in DeKalb County that provides mental health care has died from the disease caused by the coronavirus, according to new聽data聽released Thursday by the Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities. The agency did not identify the Georgia Regional Hospital-Atlanta patient or say when and where that person died, citing privacy laws. (Redmon, 4/30)
Another 88 cases of COVID-19 and six new fatalities were reported in Clark County over the past 24 hours, pushing the county death toll from the disease to 202, data published Thursday indicated. The new cases reported by the Southern Nevada Health District on its coronavirus webpage 鈥 which brought the total cases reported in the county to 3,979 鈥 was slightly below the average of 91 cases reported over the past seven days. (Brunker, 4/30)
Gov. Mike DeWine said Thursday that he would extend Ohio鈥檚 stay-at-home order, which is set to expire at 11:59 p.m. Friday.But the governor鈥檚 office declined to say when the new order would end. The extension would include exceptions for businesses reopening, such as office work restarting Monday and retail reopening on May 12.聽(Borchardt, 4/30)
Oakland County聽has announced an effort聽to conduct widespread COVID-19 testing at independent senior living facilities. County Executive David聽Coulter said at a news conference Thursday that the county is partnering with local EMS to address the need and that testing had already begun in some locations. (Kaufman, 4/30)