Health Care Leaders Look Back On Four Years Of COVID-19

On March 17, 2020, West Virginia became the last state in the U.S. to test positive for COVID-19.

Time passes differently from each person’s perspective. The COVID-19 pandemic may seem like decades ago to some, and just like yesterday to others. In actuality, it has been four years since the world as we knew it came to a grinding halt.

The current Secretary of the West Virginia Department of Health, Dr. Sherri Young, was working as the health officer and executive director for the Kanawha-Charleston Health Department when the virus arrived in the state.

“We were the 50th state to have, or announce, our first case,” Young said. “And so it seems like from those waiting points, things accelerated very quickly to having more and more cases, and kind of evolving from all the responses that we had to do.”

Dr. Clay Marsh was eventually appointed by Gov. Jim Justice as West Virginia’s COVID-19 czar, the person who coordinated the federal, state and local agencies, health officials, researchers and other agencies aiding in the state’s response to the virus.

However, at the beginning of the pandemic, Marsh was making decisions for West Virginia University (WVU), as its executive dean for health sciences. He said he watched news reports of how the virus was spreading around the world and made decisions based on the most up-to-date information.

“Seeing that coming toward us in the U.S., we decided, you know, right before spring break, that instead of bringing the students back after spring break, we would actually close the university to classes, of course, taking care of the students that were at the university, international students, people, who didn’t have other places to go,” Marsh said. “But otherwise, then we took a big step and went online after that.”

Marsh said West Virginia’s rural demographics protected it from the virus for so long, with no large urban areas for COVID-19 to spread.

“We had the benefit of waiting until COVID came through the rest of the world and part of the rest of the country, and the urban centers to be able to respond,” Marsh said. “And so I think that was a tremendous advantage for us.”

Young said the first year of the pandemic was spent making hard decisions to limit the spread of COVID-19 and casualties from it. 

“We knew that there was very limited testing, we were using repurposed PCR testing that we changed the calibration for what we’d use for a flu test or other types of coronaviruses that we had to develop testing,” Young said. “So I remember sitting at the Kanawha-Charleston Health Department with 10 swabs, knowing that there were more people exposed in one patient than I could possibly test at that time.”

Young said one of the defining steps in mitigating the risk was the development of testing and distribution.

“One of the things that Gov. Justice did that was so great for us at the local health level, was making that testing available to everyone, once we had that capability,” Young said.

Marsh said a big milestone in the COVID-19 pandemic was understanding how it was communicated.

“I think that going from not understanding how COVID was transmitted, to understanding that COVID was really transmitted by respiratory exchange, and breathing, exchange, cough and exchange, sneezing exchange, and it was airborne, is really, really a huge advantage,” Marsh said.

Of course, both Young and Marsh agree, the invention of the COVID-19 vaccine was a turning point in fighting the virus.

“The next big evolution within the COVID pandemic, when we finally got that vaccine, that was life-altering, life-changing, I will forever remember the minute that I got to get the first dose from the health department,” Young said.

Marsh said not only was the invention of the vaccine a turning point, but a revolutionary moment in medicine.

“Coming up with the new vaccines, particularly the messenger RNA vaccines, were really a turning point in the pandemic and allowed us to protect the most vulnerable first, the aged, the older you are, the more likely COVID will have severe consequences, people that are immunocompromised, and then of course, eventually, you know, people who are first responders who are medical caregivers, and then everyone,” Marsh said.

Young agreed, remembering how exciting it was for the elderly to be allowed to visit with their loved ones again, without fear or worry.

“For some of the older adults, especially those 65 and older, and one of the most gratifying things getting to stand in those clinics, or even doing house calls, which we had done from the Kanawha-Charleston perspective, with the gratitude and being able to be open to being back around folks,” Young said. “So at the initiation of the vaccine, the uptake was good, and the response was good.”

Marsh said the world is not done with COVID-19, as it continues to mutate and with some patients still suffering from Long COVID.

“We still are not done with COVID, particularly related to the impact of Long COVID, the extended problems that people can suffer including brain fog and a variety of other problems,” Marsh said. “And we’re learning more and more about Long COVID. But that’s certainly still something that is impacting people in the U.S. and across the globe every day.”

Young encouraged people to speak with their physicians about what vaccination is appropriate.

“Well, fortunately, people, I think, were very well attuned at the beginning, but we don’t talk about COVID a lot,” Young said. “I think where we need to have that conversation is just realizing that it is something that we have to live with. It’s now endemic in our society, we will forever be dealing with it just like we deal with the flu, just like we deal with RSV and other diseases.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Americans 65 and older should receive an additional dose of the latest COVID-19 vaccine this spring.

According to West Virginia’s Pan Respiratory Dashboard, just 36 percent of West Virginians over the age of 61 are up-to-date on COVID-19 vaccines. The dashboard shows that of the more than 100 West Virginians who died from COVID-19 in the past year, the average age was 73.

“As the data consistently shows, those who are older and immunocompromised are the most vulnerable to the severe effects of COVID-19,” said Young in a press release. “It is for this reason we encourage those individuals to strongly consider getting an additional dose.”

Under current recommendations, those 65 and older can receive an additional dose of the vaccine at least four months after the previous shot. The updated vaccine targets both the original strain of the virus and newer variants, offering broader protection. 

To find updated COVID-19 information and the nearest vaccination location, visit COVID-19 Vaccine.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

COVID-19 Still A Threat To Elderly W.Va. Population

In a weekly update, the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reported six additional deaths attributed to the virus in the past week bringing the total number to 8,155.

Since the end of the Public Health Emergency on May 11, West Virginia has continued to lose lives to COVID-19.

In this week’s update, the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reported six additional deaths attributed to the virus in the past week bringing the total number to 8,155.

In the past week, 99 new cases of COVID-19 were reported in the state, according to the Coronavirus Disease Dashboard. This places West Virginia’s incidence rate at 3.74 percent, a nearly 2 percent drop in infections since the previous update. An incidence rate is used to measure the frequency of occurrence of new cases of infection within a defined population during a specified time frame.

According to the DHHR, West Virginians ages six months and older are recommended to stay up-to-date with COVID-19 vaccination.

Those 65 years and older, and those who are moderately to severely immunocompromised, are eligible for at least one additional Omicron COVID-19 shot for updated protection. 

Since March of this year, the average age of persons testing positive for COVID-19 is above 50 years of age. Persons 71 years of age and older account for 40 percent of all positive cases reported in the past seven days.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as of June 11, there were 14 cases of COVID-19 in long-term care facilities in West Virginia with an infection rate of 1.6 percent.

In the West Virginia Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation, there are 34 inmates who have tested positive and one staff member.

Visit the WV COVID-19 Vaccination Due Date Calculator to determine when you may be due for a COVID-19 shot.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

Justice Briefing Touches On COVID, Narcan

COVID-19 cases are trending down nationally, but state health officials are still advocating for vaccination, and the governor discusses over the counter Narcan.

COVID-19 cases are trending down nationally, but state health officials are still advocating for vaccination. 

In a prerecorded message presented during Gov. Jim Justice’s press briefing Wednesday, state Coronavirus Czar Dr. Clay Marsh said that despite a downward trend in COVID-19 deaths nationally, West Virginians over the age of 65 should still seek out an updated Omicron vaccine booster.  

“Ninety percent of deaths that we’re still seeing are in Americans over 90 years old, and about 70 percent in Americans over 75 years old. That really also has mirrored the data that we see in West Virginia,” Marsh said. “So it’s important that anybody who has not gotten their bivalent booster vaccine, who is over 65 years old or who is immunocompromised and is still eligible, please go ahead and update that booster to the new omicron booster.”

He said the average daily death rate nationwide is down to about 250 people, compared to about 400 people a day in previous weeks.

“That’s still more people that die during a bad flu season per day,” Marsh said. “So it’s not to be ignored, but it does demonstrate the benefit of the immunity that we know that people in our country and our state are getting, and they’re getting that both from the vaccines and recovery from infection.”

Marsh also stressed the symptoms of long COVID, including brain fog, that have kept millions of Americans out of the workforce. 

“When we think about long COVID, we now know that about four million people are not working, which represents about $190 billion a year in loss of revenue from these people,” he said. 

Guidance has not changed, and Marsh reiterated the importance of preventing infection, as well as testing to ensure early interventions that can help avoid serious illness and long COVID.

Naloxone Over The Counter

Wednesday morning, the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) approved the overdose-reversing nasal spray Narcan for over-the-counter, nonprescription, use. 

It is the first naloxone product approved for use without a prescription.

Later in the briefing, Justice was asked if he would support any action to increase the availability of the treatment in West Virginia, such as a law requiring it to be in schools and public buildings.

“I don’t know a lot of the details right yet and everything but without any question I would support,” Justice said. “It is a question for the legislature but to make this more available, more present in schools or wherever it may be, churches or whatever, this just saves lives. That’s all there is to it. Anything that we can possibly do to make things better and save lives for the people we need to be out doing it.”

W.Va. COVID-19 Deaths Pass 8,000 Mark

That number is higher than the population of eight counties in the state, according to U.S. Census data. That includes Wirt, Pendleton, Calhoun, Tucker, Gilmour, Pleasants, Doddridge and Pocahontas counties. CDC data indicates more than 2,600 people in the state have died from the virus on average per year.

More than 8,000 West Virginians have now died from COVID-19. 

Twenty-nine deaths were announced statewide Wednesday morning by the Department of Health and Human Resources’ COVID-19 dashboard. That brings the total number of deaths to 8,005.

That number is higher than the population of eight counties in the state, according to U.S. Census data. That includes Wirt, Pendleton, Calhoun, Tucker, Gilmer, Pleasants, Doddridge and Pocahontas counties. CDC data indicates more than 2,600 people in the state have died from the virus on average per year. 

For comparison, the CDC said there were 1,330 drug overdose deaths in the state in 2020. There were 1,485 fatal overdoses from March 2021 to March 2022, according to the state Office of Drug Control Policy.

Reported cases have dropped significantly since last week’s update, with 165 cases statewide compared to last week’s 707. More than a quarter of the reported cases are people older than 70. 

“We still want our vulnerable population to remember today that about 90 percent of people who die of COVID-19 are over 65 years old and over 70 percent of people that died of COVID-19 are over 75 years old,” state Coronavirus Czar Clay Marsh said during Gov. Jim Justice’s regular media briefing Wednesday.

“We still want our most vulnerable population and our immunocompromised population to pay particular attention and care to make sure that you stay up to date with your vaccinations, that if you develop symptoms and you’re around somebody who is infected, that you get tested, so that you can call your care provider.”

The DHHR recently switched to weekly COVID-19 updates, keeping in line with the response at the federal level. The federal public health emergency is set to end May 11.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

With More Deaths Reported, State Approaches Another Grim Pandemic Milestone

Ret. Maj. Gen. James A. Hoyer, who has helped lead the state’s pandemic response, noted that the state will soon hit another grim milestone.

As he has since the beginning of the pandemic, Gov. Jim Justice began his COVID-19 press conference Tuesday reading a list of names of the most recent deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 7,590.

Ret. Maj. Gen. James A. Hoyer, who has helped lead the state’s pandemic response, noted that the state will soon hit another grim milestone.

“In 11 more lost citizens in our state, we will have lost the equivalent of Pleasants County, West Virginia, to omicron deaths — primarily older West Virginians,” Hoyer said. “We’ve got to continue to press, as the governor points out, to get our older West Virginians that omicron booster.”

State Coronavirus Czar Clay Marsh noted that, nationwide, 29 percent of the people 65 and older have gotten the most recent booster shot.

The state’s COVID-19 cases have continued to decline, but Marsh said the newest COVID-19 variant is 175 times more infectious than the original COVID-19 virus. He said the newest variant is likely to be the dominant variant in West Virginia in the coming weeks.

“We are very concerned about the potential impact of this new variant coming to West Virginia,” Marsh said. “This is a time to act and avoid having really serious manifestations, particularly with the holidays coming up.”

State leaders urged residents to use the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources’ online vaccine calculator to stay up to date on vaccinations.

Latest COVID Spike Passes, But Pandemic Remains

It’s possible the latest coronavirus surge has already passed us by, but that doesn’t mean things are over.

It’s possible the latest coronavirus surge has already passed us by, but that doesn’t mean things are over.

During Friday’s COVID-19 press conference, coronavirus czar Dr. Clay Marsh said that a reduction in the number of cases suggests the peak of the BA.5 omicron variant surge has passed in the state.

However, he echoed warnings from Gov. Jim Justice that the pandemic is far from over. Marsh advised West Virginians to get vaccinated and boosted against COVID-19, calling the current death rate unacceptable.

“This to me is an opportunity moment for us, in West Virginia, to continue to see our deaths go down,” Marsh said. “We still are seeing too many people in West Virginia and the United States die every day from a preventable, treatable disease.”

Marsh also advised West Virginians to get their flu shots, saying the flu had the potential to be a “significant issue” this year.

There continues to be lingering confusion in the state about who, when and most recently where the omicron bivalent boosters can be accessed. Marsh clarified that anyone who meets the requirements can receive either Moderna or Pfizer boosters.

“Now one caveat here is that we will see at least immediately more Pfizer omicron booster shots than Moderna,” he said. “Moderna did have some production issues, some supply chain issues. So the federal government is providing more Pfizer omicron booster shots than Moderna immediately. That should even up over a short period of time, but we know that it’s safe to mix and match.”

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