State Still Tracking COVID-19, Despite Reduced Testing

On June 2, Gov. Jim Justice announced that West Virginia would significantly scale back COVID-19 community testing programs. This led to concerns both in the general public and in the medical community that the next wave of COVID-19 cases would catch the state by surprise. But even with the rise of the highly infectious BA.5 variant, that hasn’t been the case.

On June 2, Gov. Jim Justice announced that West Virginia would significantly scale back COVID-19 community testing programs. This led to concerns both in the general public and in the medical community that the next wave of COVID-19 cases would catch the state by surprise. But even with the rise of the highly infectious BA.5 variant, that hasn’t been the case.

The start of the COVID-19 pandemic in March of 2020 was a hectic time.

“It was just baptism by fire,” said Regional Epidemiologist for Northeast West Virginia Dr. Lucas Moore.

“And at that point there, we didn’t have the vaccines and it was really scary,” he said. “It was all hands on deck. It didn’t matter what your role was at the health department. We had a job to do.”

Moore is based out of the Monongalia County Health Department offices in Morgantown. He said that at its peak, the county’s program would test 1,000 people on a single day.

“Lot of people came in and they wanted to know, ‘I’m going to be around family,’ or just for personal awareness if they were positive or not,” Moore said. “But there were a lot of people that were visibly ill and to be put in that situation.”

Data from the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources COVID-19 dashboard shows that more than 25,000 individual tests were administered across the state on single days during the pandemic’s peaks in January 2021 and again in January 2022.

At $25 per testing kit and at least another $70 for lab processing, that single day would have cost close to $2.4 million, before factoring in the labor cost. As Moore said, it was an all hands on deck situation, and health departments still had to complete their other, regular duties.

Since then, things have changed significantly. Vaccines are readily available, and other mitigation processes like quarantining and mask-wearing have become ubiquitous. The biggest change, however, is the availability of at-home testing. All of this drove a steep drop in engagement with community testing events.

Moore said he and other public health officials always understood community testing had to end at some point, but Justice’s announcement at the start of June still came as a surprise.

Moore said calculating daily rates gave him and his community a clear path forward. Now, he’s left with some doubts. First, at-home tests are antigen tests, which, while quick, are not as accurate as the PCR tests administered by health departments and doctors.

Second, unless someone chooses to call into their local health department to report a positive test, which some do, there is no way for that data to reach epidemiologists.

“My concern, I think it’s a shared concern at our health department, is we, with at-home tests so prevalent, that we’re under-reporting what our true infection rate is, our true how many cases per day,” Moore said.

To be clear, PCR testing in West Virginia has not ended completely. Tests are still available at more select locations like pharmacies and other healthcare providers.

Dr. Abir Rahman is the director of Epidemiology at the Huntington Health Department. He and his team secured grant funding to continue PCR testing, but he is realistic about diminishing data.

“We knew that we are not getting the whole scenario,” Rahman said. “But we knew that regardless, the numbers we’re getting, it was somewhat proportional to the actual number.”

Even with reduced testing, Rahman said other tracking tools like wastewater management have allowed public health to keep track of COVID-19. He also points to the use of existing data from across the country and even the world that is used to extrapolate local levels.

Almost exactly a month after the end of community testing in West Virginia, the opportunity to put these new tracking methods to a true test came in the form of the latest variant: BA.5.

Despite reduced testing, Rahman said in an email that, “from the very beginning we have been monitoring the spread of BA.5 and other variants/subvariants through CDC Nowcast. Doing so allowed us to stay informed and communicate with our partners early to take preventive measures. Also, it helped us be prepared for the increase in case numbers and outbreaks.”

As the pandemic has evolved, the goals of public health have evolved as well.

“These few things, in addition to some other things, obviously change the whole environment,” Rahman said. “Initially, of course, the numbers are really important, and it still is now. But right now, the main focus is more towards preventing severe disease and preventing healthcare strain.”

Ultimately, community testing at the scale West Virginia was conducting was no longer an efficient way to address the virus.

“When you go from events that have hundreds of people showing up, down to less than 10, or, in some cases, nobody showed, they became less of an efficient and effective way for us to get data that we need,” said retired Maj. Gen. James Hoyer.

He is the director of the governor’s Joint Interagency Task Force. He coordinates the response to COVID-19 between the federal and state government, as well as hospitals, universities, and other private entities.

Hoyer said the end of community testing signals a new phase in the pandemic, but is quick to clarify that we are very much still in it.

“I wish I could say that we were at the endemic phase right now,” he said. “But I think Dr. Marsh and the rest of the team would say, we’re not sure we’re quite there yet.”

Using all the tools available to them, Hoyer is confident the state can move forward without the large amounts of information (data) community testing provided. But, he said, the most important tool of them all is one many West Virginians still haven’t used: the COVID-19 vaccine.

With a new type of vaccine approved by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week, Hoyer and others are hopeful to see the state’s vaccine uptake increase.

Unlike existing vaccines from Pfizer or Moderna that use mRNA technology to immunize against COVID-19, the Novavax vaccine uses more traditional protein-based technology.

“Folks need to remember where we’re at now, with variants changing, the vaccine is not about keeping you from getting COVID,” Hoyer said. “The vaccine is about lessening your possibility of getting seriously ill or dying from COVID.”

Moore, Rahman and Hoyer all agree that the pandemic is still not over, but the resources available have made it manageable.

“COVID, you think about the past two plus years, has taken a lot of things from people,” Moore said. “Live your life. Take appropriate precautions. You’re going to have to roll with the punches. Public Health, we’re going to do our very best to keep the community safe, wherever that might be.”

W.Va. Summer Camps Receive COVID-19 Test Kits

Summer camps across the state are set to receive free COVID-19 test kits to help prepare for the busy season.

Summer camps across the state are set to receive free COVID-19 test kits to help prepare for the busy season.

As of Friday, the state’s Center for Threat Preparedness has given more than 18,000 rapid test kits to 32 camps.

“We actually had an inquiry from one of the camps here in West Virginia about what they can do to be a little safer when you’re bringing camp members and staff members into their camp this year,” said Tim Priddy, the center’s director. “Through a discussion between myself and the state epidemiologist, we took a look at what we can do to best serve our camps, campers and staff members.”

Priddy says the decision to distribute the tests came about as more programs reopen their doors to campers.

“Letting them socialize and interact with each other was important,” Priddy said. “And seeing the camps were willing to go on this year where some did not last year and the summer previous, we wanted to make sure that we did our part to help do that safely.”

Priddy says the center is willing to send more kits to camps as needed.

“The arrangements that we made with the camps were that they were to request all of the test kits that they would need to test every camper and every staff member,” Priddy said.

He also reminds campers to follow COVID-19 guidelines as best as possible.

Summer camps interested in receiving test kits can contact their local health department.

Active Virus Cases In W.Va. Dip To Lowest Levels In 13 Months

Active coronavirus cases in West Virginia have dipped to their lowest levels in 13 months, health officials said Monday.

There were 1,467 active COVID-19 cases statewide as of Sunday, dipping below 1,500 for the first time since May 18, 2020, the Department of Health and Human Resources said in a daily update.

According to the state COVID-19 dashboard, the number of confirmed daily cases has surpassed 100 once since May 29 and only once above 50 confirmed cases since June 16.

About 63% of residents ages 12 and up have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine and about 53% are fully vaccinated.

The state also reported there have been nearly 2,500 total cases involving variants of the virus, including 492 cases in Berkeley and 163 in Jefferson counties in the Eastern Panhandle not far from Washington, D.C. Monongalia County, home of West Virginia University, has seen 370 such cases.

Viruses constantly mutate, and most changes aren’t concerning. There is a worry that some variants might evolve enough to be more contagious, cause more severe illness or evade the protection that vaccines provide.

The virus has caused 2,878 deaths in West Virginia, including two reported on Monday.

With Fall Semester A Success, State Universities Begin Vaccinations, Hope For A Safer Spring Term

Coronavirus cases among college students, faculty and staff in West Virginia remained low this fall. By the end of the semester, both public and private schools averaged a cumulative positivity rate of just 2 percent at all four-year institutions after holding a 1 percent cumulative positivity rate for several months.

To put that into perspective, West Virginia University saw a little more than 1,000 students and just 95 faculty and staff members test positive for the virus since July. At Marshall University, just 413 people on campus, both student and employee, have tested positive for the virus since the school began tracking.

Additionally, amid the entire higher education system, there were only four hospitalizations, according to Sarah Armstrong Tucker, chancellor of both the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission and the Community and Technical College System.

Tucker said students were the ones who really stepped up to keep campuses safe.

“I was very pleasantly surprised by how many students, without prompting from the institutions, came to move-in days with masks on, [and they] didn’t have to be asked to put a mask on,” Tucker said. “They’ve just consistently been a big part of our puzzle to keep things safe. They’ve done a really good job.”

Tucker said students and staff did well keeping things sanitized, engaging in social distancing and enforcing quarantines as soon as outbreaks started.

Classes at higher education institutions are set to resume on Tuesday, Jan. 19, but not before campuswide testing occurs at all schools. Some campus populations are also starting to get vaccinated.

Gov. Jim Justice announced in his Dec. 30, 2020 virtual press briefing that all students, faculty and staff at every higher education institution would be tested for the coronavirus before returning to campus in the spring.

“We’re going to test everyone coming back to our colleges and universities just like we did at the beginning of the year in the fall,” Justice said.

He also announced that surveillance testing would continue when students and staff return to campus. During the fall, 10 percent of the student and staff campus populations were randomly tested for the coronavirus each week. The West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, or HEPC, reported that surveillance testing yielded a total of 381 positive cases of the virus among students and employees throughout the semester.

Higher education institutions began vaccinating certain pockets of campus populations last week. Twenty-eight of the state’s 43 public and private higher education institutions have started administering vaccinations. The HEPC reports that the initial allocation of vaccines for the higher education system was 1,000 total doses, to be given last week. Additionally, 1,000 more doses were received by the higher education system on Tuesday, Jan. 5, to be given this week. Second doses will be provided per manufacturer’s recommendations.

The first wave of vaccines at colleges included individuals over 50 years old and working on campus, or those in high-risk positions such as health sciences faculty or campus security.

All 43 of the state’s higher education institutions are eligible to distribute vaccines to their campus employees, but some may not meet the criteria yet to begin distribution. The HEPC said distribution has been based on whether campuses are open, whether they have people who are eligible to be vaccinated and are available, and whether they have at least 10 people who fit the criteria.

To speed up the vaccine distribution statewide, Tucker said there are discussions happening to get nursing students involved, but nothing has been announced at this time.

Beyond testing and vaccine distribution, officials also hope to improve in some key areas this spring, including student mental health.

The fall 2020 semester was tough on a lot of college students. Those starting the college experience for the first time had to do so in a pandemic. For upperclassmen, they had to come back to a very different campus.

“I was a little bit nervous, because of the online learning factor. That scared me a little bit,” said Shepherd University senior Amanda Barber, a communications major and student-journalist.

Barber said online learning was a concern at first for her and many of her peers. She said it was an adjustment, and it wasn’t always easy to stay organized. There was also some fear, she said, about coming back to in-person classes.

“I understand that there were people who were afraid that coming back to Shepherd was going to be kind of a super-spreader event,” Barber said. “Luckily, that didn’t seem to be the case.”

And she’s right, that didn’t happen, as was cited above.

There were four challenges, though, that Chancellor Tucker said became glaringly apparent in the fall: mental health, food insecurity, broadband access issues, and high school seniors not filling out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA.

“We are down 1,700 FAFSA applications for high school seniors. We’re down 4,500 PROMISE applications,” Tucker said. “So, we’ll be spending a lot of time on that in the spring.”

Tucker said the dip in applications for FAFSA and the PROMISE scholarship has been due to the lack of in-person events that she and her staff would hold in a typical year.

While those events were scrapped because of the pandemic, Tucker said they’re already starting to hold online events to encourage filling out the applications.

But mental health and student well-being were the highest concerns.

“We’re definitely going to be looking at student mental health this spring and trying to make sure that our institutions have the resources that they need in order to provide, not just students, but their faculty and staff with the mental health care that they need,” Tucker said.

Isolation brought on by virtual instruction, social distancing or students opting to complete the semester fully online contributed to a lot of those concerns. Students also had anxieties about getting infected with the virus.

Barber, the Shepherd student, said she had to figure out ways to stay on top of her mental well-being.

“What I did to combat that was just staying in touch with people, making daily calls to my friends, checking in with them every day, having FaceTimes and things like that,” she said. “Another thing that really helped with my mental health was getting up each day and making my bed. It’s a small thing. But it’s a really great start to the day, and it puts me in a productive mindset as well as getting up and putting on clothes other than sweats or pajamas.”

As for the other two concerns — food insecurity and broadband — Tucker said many food banks reopened halfway through the semester to ensure students who were in need had access to food. She also said universities would also help students who might be quarantining to get food.

Broadband access continues to be a problem in many areas of the state, but Tucker pointed to the Kids Connect Initiative, which created 1,000 WiFi hotspots around the state, as one temporary solution. She said more needs to be done, but wasn’t aware of any new initiatives being discussed at this time with the governor’s office.

Barber, from a student perspective, said she thinks higher education officials did a good job overall in the fall semester. She’s looking forward to finishing her final semester and graduating in the spring. She does have one concern though, and that’s walking at graduation.

“I just hope that this year the higher education officials really work to make graduation special if it is going to be something that has to be less than the norm because of the pandemic,” she said.

Many college and high school graduations were canceled or altered last spring as the coronavirus pandemic was just starting to ramp up in the United States.

Barber said she hopes no graduation ceremony this year has to be virtual.

“I’m just really hopeful that [this] semester, the numbers with COVID-19 will have gone down,” she said. “Hopefully with this vaccine coming out, our higher education officials are going to be quick in requiring us to get those vaccines so that we can really work to make the next semester as normal as possible for our students.”

State No Longer Offering At-Home Vault Tests For Coronavirus

West Virginia health officials say they will no longer offer in-home testing kits for the coronavirus.

The state began offering these kits to residents last week.

Participants were able to request a kit, which was mailed to them from medical company Vault. The self-administered process involved spitting saliva in a tube, with a health professional monitoring that over a video call. Participants then mailed the kit back to Vault for processing.

Department of Health and Human Resources Secretary Bill Crouch said Friday this process resulted in a significant five-day lag for many, which made contact-tracing more difficult.

The governor says the state will continue looking for easier, more accessible testing methods.

As W.Va.’s Virus Numbers Trend Upward, Officials Make No Moves Toward Shut Down

As ballot-counting continues nationwide to determine the outcome of the presidential election, new cases of the coronavirus continue to surge. More than 100,000 new cases were counted in the U.S. in just a single day this week – a record. And in West Virginia, 540 new cases of the virus were counted in the past 24 hours.

Gov. Jim Justice said in his latest virtual press briefing that West Virginia has passed the three percent cumulative positivity rate of virus spread. Jump back to the end of April, as the governor announced the state’s reopening plan, 3 percent mark was a determining factor, in which the governor said he would close down the state again.

“Everybody right now is on super-high alert,” Justice said. “Our number of 3 percent that we came up with a long time ago, there’s lots of stuff that has changed since that point in time. And this shouldn’t be a line in the sand that says, you know, this is what we’re going to do, if we cross this, we’re gonna shut down the whole universe … but everybody is awfully concerned.”

Justice did not say if he would shut the state down soon, but noted that he and his team of experts are watching things closely.

West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources Secretary Dr. Bill Crouch explained the determining model has been adjusted based on how much testing is going on. Officials say the focus now is to encourage people to get tested to find asymptomatic carriers.

“We’ve said all along that we have to learn more about this disease as we go forward,” Crouch said. “And we have to change our approach to the disease based upon what we’ve learned … As we learned that the incentive to test was less, looking at just the infection rate, we realized we had to change the system … to get people to test.”

State officials continue to urge West Virginians to practice social distancing, wear masks and take advantage of free testing opportunities around the state to lower the risk of spread.

Meanwhile, 15 more people have died from COVID-19-related causes in the state since Wednesday. There have been more than 500 new cases in the past day, and 280 West Virginians are in the hospital with the potentially deadly virus. Of that figure, 93 are in the ICU and 31 are on ventilators.

These numbers, according to DHHR’s COVID-19 dashboard, have either been climbing in recent weeks or holding steady.

There are also more than 90 confirmed cases in West Virginia’s public schools, which equates to 19 outbreaks. Justice insists these are manageable numbers but also says he is concerned.

Nearly 60 outbreaks have been reported in the state’s long-term care facilities and 17 outbreaks in churches.

There are more than 6,100 active cases of the virus as of Friday afternoon, up by more than 1,200 since Friday of last week.

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