Ohio Valley ReSource Adds Important Measures To West Virginia COVID Data Tracker

The Ohio Valley ReSource has expanded its COVID Data Tracker to include more measures to help you better understand the spread of coronavirus in West Virginia, including the number of people hospitalized due to the virus and the amount of coronavirus testing being done.

The data tracker we launched in April provided daily updates on the number of positive cases and deaths, a 7-day average trend line on cases, and a snapshot of each county’s cases along with the key health measures of a county that can make people more vulnerable to the worst effects of the virus. That is still available at this site.

The new data tracker adds to that by providing new interactive graphics, including this one on hospitalizations and people in intensive care units due to COVID-19.

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We have also added a measure of the coronavirus testing being conducted and the positivity rate from those tests, which shows the percentage of tests that bring a positive result.

A high positivity rate can indicate rapid spread in an area, and a need for more testing.

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We have also added a graphic to show the incidence of positive tests per 100,000 people, another important measure that can show how the virus is spreading.

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Data Trackers are also available for neighboring states Ohio and Kentucky. We’ll continue to bring you the most reliable and up-to-date information on coronavirus. You can find all the tracker tools and all ReSource stories on the coronavirus pandemic at YourCovidReSource.org.

Tracking COVID-19 In West Virginia

These graphs show key measures of COVID-19: daily positive tests, the number of daily tests, the rate of positive tests, deaths, and hospitalizations.

We use data provided by the COVID Tracking Project, the West Virginia Department of Health & Human Resources and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Daily Cases And Tests

Positive tests mean the number of tests that come back positive while daily tests are the number of tests administered per day. Daily tests might include duplicate entries that create unavoidable variations.

Seven-day moving averages reduce variations in data and present a clearer picture of the spread.

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Positivity Rate

Positivity rate is defined as the percent of total tests that are positive. We calculated the seven-day average positivity rate by dividing averages of cases and tests.

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Incidence Rate

Incidence rate is defined as the number of positive tests per 100,000 people. This is one of the main indicators showing the spread of the virus.
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Deaths And Hospitalizations

Deaths include cases that were confirmed by testing as well as those in which the death certificate mentions COVID-19 or equivalent as cause of death.

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Eight W.Va. Counties Will Be Remote, Virtual School This Week

The West Virginia Department of Education announced that eight counties will be remote learning-only for the week of Oct. 26. State officials rolled out updated data Saturday, Oct. 24 at 5 p.m.

Berkeley, Boone, Braxton, Mingo, Monroe, Wayne and Wirt counties, which were in the orange zone on the state’s color-coded map, will not be open for in-person instruction this week.

Wyoming was the only county in the red category, and will also be required to teach students virtually this week.

Some counties also shifted in their color zones, according to the state’s COVID-19 Data Review Panel. They included:

  • Doddridge County: Moved from orange to gold due to data validation as a result of lab updates with correct county of residence.
  • Kanawha County: Moved from yellow to gold due to four cases updated to confirmed status and lab updates with correct county of residence.
  • Lewis County: Moved from green to yellow due to data validation as a result of lab updates with correct county of residence.
  • Wirt County: Moved from gold to orange due to data validation as a result of lab updates with correct county of residence.

Red (Substantial Community Transmission): Remote-only learning mode. No extracurricular competitions or practices are permitted. Staff may report to their schools, as determined by the county. Essential support services, including special education and meals, will continue. Counties in red include: Wyoming

Orange (Heightened Community Transmission): Remote-only learning mode. Extracurricular practices may occur, however, competitions may not. Staff may report to their schools, as determined by the county. Essential support services, including special education and meals, will continue. Counties in orange include: Berkeley, Boone, Braxton, Mingo, Monroe, Wayne, Wirt

Gold (Elevated Community Transmission): In-person instruction is permitted with restrictions, including face coverings at all times for grades 3-12. Extracurricular activities are permitted. Competitions can take place against schools within the same county as well as schools in other gold counties. Counties in gold include: Doddridge, Jackson, Kanawha, Logan, Morgan, Pendleton, Webster

Yellow (Increased Community Transmission): School may be held for in-person instruction. Extracurricular practices and competitions may occur. Health and safety precautions include, at a minimum, face coverings at all times for grades six and above. Please refer to your county for specific face covering requirements. Counties in yellow include: Cabell, Clay, Jefferson, Lewis, Lincoln, Mercer, Ritchie, Roane, Summers

Green (Minimal Community Transmission): School may be held for in-person instruction. Extracurricular practices and competitions may occur. Health and safety precautions include, at a minimum, face coverings in grades three and above when students are outside of core groups and in congregant settings and on school buses. Please refer to your county for specific face covering requirements. Counties in green include: Barbour, Brooke, Calhoun, Fayette, Gilmer, Grant, Greenbrier, Hampshire, Hancock, Hardy, Harrison, Marion, Marshall, Mason, McDowell, Mineral, Monongalia, Nicholas, Ohio, Pleasants, Pocahontas, Preston, Putnam, Raleigh, Randolph, Taylor, Tucker, Tyler, Upshur, Wetzel, Wood

All schools, both public and private, are expected to adhere to the WVDE’s re-entry map to guide in-person instruction and extracurricular activities.

Updates to the map are announced each Saturday at 5 p.m. and will be in effect until the following Saturday at the same time, according to the WVDE. The only exception would be if a county turns red during the week.

If this happens, the change would be made immediately to the map, according to the WVDE, and all in-person instruction and extracurricular and athletic activities would be suspended.

As of Saturday morning, the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources reports 21,712 total cases of the virus and 422 deaths. 4,712 cases are considered active, according to DHHR.

Surging Coronavirus Cases Threaten To Derail Reopening In Ohio Valley

 

At the Community Farmers Market in Bowling Green, Kentucky, vendors and shoppers are adjusting to the new normal during the coronavirus pandemic. That includes wearing face coverings, maintaining distance, and taking other precautions to avoid spreading the virus.

 
Market manager Susan Warrell said their first days under the state’s recent mask mandate were a challenge, but shoppers have been understanding.

“We had just a couple of people that came without masks. And I just stopped them and explained,” she said. “And they put the mask on and shopped at the market.”

 

Credit Becca Schimmel / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Masks in use at the community farmers market in Bowling Green, KY.

 

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear’s order to mandate masks in public places is one of the latest moves around the Ohio Valley to reverse the recent trend of rising case numbers after the states started to reopen economic activity.

Warrell says she understands that public health orders have been politically divisive. But she’s prepared to enforce them for the sake of the local farmers and local food supply.

“We need to do what we need to do to stay open. We need to keep farmers farming. We need to keep local food available for our customers,” she said.

 

Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia have seen a surge in cases in July, bringing the daily numbers of confirmed cases to all-time highs in the region. 

This has led to some grim milestones for these states that had avoided the worst of the pandemic until recently. Kentucky has now passed 20,000 total COVID-19 cases; Ohio has topped 3,000 total deaths; and on Friday West Virginia reached its 100th fatality. 

The mounting toll has public health officials and community leaders rethinking what reopening the Ohio Valley looks like, and what can be done to reverse the rising numbers.

By The Numbers

On Sunday Kentucky announced its highest single-day total of coronavirus cases, with 979 new positive test results. Both Ohio and West Virginia also recently posted their highest single-day totals.The Ohio Valley ReSource’s COVID Data Tracker includes a 7-day average trend line to add context to the daily reports of coronavirus cases around the region. While daily cases fluctuate greatly, the 7-day average of daily cases is a good indicator of how things are trending in a state, and for the Ohio Valley region that trend through July has been steadily upward. 

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Coronavirus in KY, July 18.

Kentucky’s 7-day average of cases has grown from under 200 in mid-June to more than 450 by mid-July. In Ohio the 7-day average was roughly 500 in mid-June; by mid-July it was 1,370. Before July, West Virginia’s 7-day average was never above 50. By July 18th it had more than doubled. 

As of July 15 Kentucky and West Virginia were among nine states in the country with the fastest growth in cases, according to data tracked by the New York Times. 

The surge in positive cases is not, as some have claimed, merely a result of additional coronavirus testing. The rate of positive test results on July 18 stood at about 6% in both Kentucky and Ohio, according to the COVID Tracking Project. And while those states have increased the number of tests, the growth in the rate of new cases outpaces the growth in testing. 

The situation in the Ohio Valley is not as dire as that in large parts of the southeast and southwest, where 18 states were in the “red zone” of uncontrolled spread of the virus as of July 18. However, the recent surge in cases in Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia is sufficiently alarming to lead the governors and health officials in the three states to issue new mandates on masks and some restrictions on public gatherings and business activities.

 

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Coronavirus in OH, July 18.

“We have failed” 

Dr. Gerald Keusch directs the Collaborative Research Core at Boston University’s National Emerging Infectious Disease Laboratory. 

In a remarkably blunt interview with the Ohio Valley ReSource, Keusch pointed to failures in political leadership that have contributed to the rise in cases nationally and created a polarized atmosphere that makes it harder to contain the pandemic.

“We have failed, at the highest levels of this government, to impose a common message. We have diminished the reliability of information and we’ve empowered people who don’t know what the hell they’re talking about, like academic advisers to the president, to capture the agenda,” Keusch said, referring to a recent opinion piece in USA Today, in which White House economic advisor Peter Navarro made false attacks on Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. USA Today’s editorial page editor later said Navarro’s piece “did not meet USA Today’s fact-checking standards.”

Credit Courtesy Boston University
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Dr. Gerald Keusch of Boston University’s National Emerging Infectious Disease Laboratory.

Keusch also criticized Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul for his factually flawed attacks on Dr. Fauci during Senate hearings on the coronavirus pandemic response.  

“That was the most unintelligent stream of consciousness that I have ever witnessed,” Keusch said of Paul’s performance. 

The result of all this rhetoric, Keusch said, is mixed messages on the pandemic that make it difficult for public health officials to get a handle on surging cases. Now, he warned, that threatens to delay or derail altogether attempts to send children back to school this fall. 

“There is no firm yes or no when it comes to school reopening,” Keusch said. “It’s all about, ‘Can you do it right?’’ 

He cited a new report from the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine on the importance of in-person learning for the youngest students. Keusch recommends an approach that prioritizes young children and those with disabilities and special needs, because virtual learning may be more difficult for them. 

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Coronavirus in WV, July 18.

“In part, it’s a matter of resources,” he said. “It’s also a matter of rational thinking, and resolve.”

One of the best tools right now to lower case numbers and work toward normalcy is mask wearing. Information about how exactly masks slow the spread of coronavirus was limited when the pandemic began. But Keusch says now the science is clear.

“It protects you and it protects others,” he said. “And there’s a moral responsibility to your community to do this one thing.” 

“Time to get control”

The implementation of mask mandates is a patchwork across the Ohio Valley.

West Virginia was the first to issue a face covering order on July 6. But Republican Gov. Jim Justice said the state will leave enforcement up to businesses. 

Kentucky followed with its order on July 9. Democratic Gov. Beshear said the 30-day order would be enforced by local health departments. 

Kentucky’s Republican Attorney General, Daniel Cameron, has challenged Beshear’s emergency orders on coronavirus health measures as unconstitutional, and won a circuit court ruling that would have stopped the mask mandate. On Friday, the Kentucky Supreme Court pre-empted that ruling, meaning the mask order will remain in effect at least until the high court can hear the case.

Beshear predicted he will prevail, and called Cameron’s challenge “dangerous.”

“I’m just going to do the right thing,” he said. “If they won’t, that’s okay, I’ll do it for them.”

Credit Ohio Department of Health
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Ohio’s alert system for coronavirus health emergencies.

In Ohio, Republican Gov. Mike DeWine has left mask mandates up to local governments and business, with certain exceptions for counties with high rates of spread and exposure. The state has a Public Health Advisory System with a set of measures that alert local governments to the potential need for new measures to limit the spread of the virus. 

And some city governments have taken action.

The city council in Athens, Ohio, on July 13 approved a face covering ordinance that applies to public spaces and where social distancing is not possible.

Athens Mayor Steve Patterson says the ordinance — which includes a $100 penalty for non-compliance — is necessary.

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Coronavirus in Athens Co., OH.

“I knew since we had gone for roughly six weeks with only three cases, and then it started creeping up, I kept thinking, something needs to be done,” he said.

Athens County had 250 total confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Friday with most coming in just the past two weeks. In the first two weeks of July the small, mostly rural county of just about 66,000 people had more confirmed COVID-19 cases than it had during the rest of the pandemic combined.

It’s one of the highest rates of spread per capita in Ohio, largely driven by cases among people under the age of 29

And shortly after the Athens ordinance, Athens County was upgraded to Level 3 on the Ohio Public Health Advisory System.

Gov. DeWine mandated that any county at Level 3 has a high risk of spread and exposure to coronavirus, and will be under a mandatory mask order.

Credit Jeff Young / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
A Kentucky home displays green lights in memory of those lost to COVID-19.

In a press briefing Thursday, DeWine said he was concerned because the county is at risk of reaching Level 4. And the virus is spreading there in July, just a few weeks before Ohio University students are scheduled to return, doubling the Athens City population.

“Now it’s time for us to get control of that,” DeWine said. “It’s time to get control of the situation because you’re going to have tens of thousands of students coming back in the fall.” 

ReSource staff Sydney Boles, Becca Schimmel and Jeff Young and WOUB’s Tom Hodson contributed to this story. Alexandra Kanik developed the ReSource COVID Data Tracker.

 

Masking Questions: How Pandemic Health Measures Became Politicized

Health officials and researchers say the science is clear: face maskscan help reduce the spread of the coronavirus. Yet in the Ohio Valley, not all elected officials are in agreement on whether to mandate measures such as the use of face masks in public places. 

 

In April, Republican Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine initially announced the mandatory use of face masks in retail settings, only towalk back the mandate during the next day’s press conference to say it was only a recommendation. West Virginia Republican Gov. Jim Justice recently said that mandatory use of face masks would be impossible to enforce and would “divide us.” Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, a Democrat,ordered face mask use in public, but people who don’t wear one won’t be fined, though businesses that require masks can turn away customers who aren’t wearing one.

As of July 1 daily coronavirus case numbers were approaching a high point in KY.

Officials in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, arecalling on Justice to require face mask use in the state, and other Ohio cities arepassing resolutions and ordinances to require face mask use, implementing local enforcement while state authority has dithered. On Thursday, Justicewarned he may mandate mask use while inside public buildings.

The renewed discussion about masks comes as the nation hit a new high for daily COVID-19 cases, driven by rapidly increasing infection rates in parts of the South and West, especially Florida, Arizona, and Texas forcingnew shutdown orders.   

In the Ohio Valley, average cases per day have slowly risen over the last weeks of June, with daily totals now approaching levels last seen during the region’s earlier peak of the pandemic. Many rural outbreaks in the region have beenlinked to meatpacking plants, prisons, and nursing homes.

 

Ohio’s daily cases are approaching levels last seen in April.

The Ohio Valley ReSource spoke with Dr.Richard Besser, the current President and CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a philanthropy that provides hundreds of millions of dollars in grants advancing public health initiatives. Besser also served as acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2009,overseeing press conferences during an outbreak of swine flu in North America. 

Besser addressed the politicization of public health measures, the high vulnerability to COVID-19 in the Ohio Valley, and what these factors mean for the future amid record high numbers of daily coronavirus cases in the country. This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

Liam Niemeyer: Should states mandate face mask use?

Richard Besser: This is a really challenging issue. I’m very concerned about mixed messaging. Every public health leader in America is out there saying it’s so critically important that we take all the steps we can to protect our health and the health of those around us. These are the early days in the pandemic, and what we do truly matters. So, that means wearing face masks when you’re outside and you’re going to be within six feet of other people. It means washing your hands frequently, staying home if you’re sick. But we are hearing mixed messages. I am hearing some Republican governors saying this as well. The Ohio Governor [Mike DeWine] was one of theearly governors to shut things down in the state. I haven’t heard his messages about masks. But it’s very confusing to the public, and it’s very damaging to the nation when you see divisions along political lines around public health measures. When I ranEmergency Preparedness Response at the CDC, we did everything we could to try and not create a partisan divide around what we were recommending. And early on, you saw that here at the federal level with theC.A.R.E.S. Act, which was passed with almost unanimous support from both parties, providing supplemental unemployment insurance and eviction protection, and payment to small businesses, to keep them afloat.

COVID-19 cases in WV rose in late June.

And since then, we’ve seen incredible partisanship, and it’s really damaging, especially as we’re starting to try and reopen the economy, get people back to work. Because if people aren’t taking these measures to protect their health and the health of those around them, we’re going to see healthcare systems overwhelmed. Again, we’re going to see states having toslide back and reimpose stricter measures. And no one wants to see that. I’m trying as hard as I can to understand why some people don’t want to wear masks, and what that means to them when they’re wearing a mask. And I want to have those conversations. I understand that because I think that it’s a really important thing to do to protect the health of people around you. And when it becomes a political symbol, then I think we’re in a really difficult position.

Niemeyer: You mentioned the messaging regarding the Ohio governor. In April, Mike DeWine originally announced a face mask mandate for retail settings. But the next day during his press conference, he went back to say it would only be a recommendation. And West Virginia Governor Jim Justice has said recently he thinks face mask use will divide people. 

Besser: Yeah, from my perspective, there are real equity issues here. When you look at the impact of the pandemic so far, every community’s been hit, but some groups have been hit hardest: Black Americans, Latino Americans, Native Americans, lower income Americans, people in general who don’t have the choice about whether they’re going to work or not. And I think it’s our responsibility to do everything we can to protect people who must be in the workplace. So for me, if I’m going to the grocery store to get some groceries, I just think it’s a respectful thing to be wearing a mask so that the person who’s in that grocery store stocking the shelves next to me, who’s being exposed to hundreds of people every day, that I’m doing everything possible to protect that person’s health. If we can unify around that and say it’s the ‘American way’ to be, this idea of looking out for each other, it strikes me that there’s a core value there that spans across humanity.

Credit Courtesy RWJF
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Richard Besser, MD, is president and CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the former acting director for the CDC.

Niemeyer: Moving to a related topic, a Kaiser Family Foundation study from April estimated how vulnerable populations in each state were to severe illness from COVID-19 due to pre-existing health conditions. The Ohio Valley had the highest rates of vulnerability in the country, with abouthalf of all West Virginians at risk for severe illness. How does that vulnerability relate to still rising case numbers right now in rural America?

Besser: It’s hard to paint rural America with broad brushstrokes because of the incredible diversity and richness of cultures, but there’s some things that you can say: there are higher rates of people who live in multi generational households. So, if one person is out working as an essential worker, and gets the illness and they’re young and they’re healthy, they’re going to be fine. But they may bring it home to somebody else who is elderly, or or somebody who has heart disease, lung disease or diabetes. There are very high rates of diabetes in Appalachia. So, from a medical side, there’s high risk. There are real challenges in terms of access to health care, as we’ve seen a lot ofrural health facilities closing around the country. You see a high proportion of low income workers who don’t have the opportunity to work remotely from home…so these factors all combine to increase the risks in many parts of rural America, and the solutions for those problems may be different. We put togetherfive principles for equitable restart of the economy for state, local officials. One of those is the importance of working with communities and understanding communities and what the needs are. 

Niemeyer: There was anotherrecent report by NPR that showed Kentucky and Ohio didn’t have enoughcontact tracers needed for their populations. What are the implications of this?

Besser: Contact tracing is a critical piece as we move from lock down to opening up because when you switch and say ‘okay, we’re no longer gonna be operating on this idea that everyone stays home except essential workers.’ What you have to have happen is what’s happened, you know, the approach that’s used in many other countries where you identify cases quickly. So, testing available in every community and you’re doing, you’re looking at the numbers to make sure no communities are being left out on that testing. And then once you find someone who’s infected, you can very quickly identify who all the people they’ve had contact with close contact with. So those people can be aware and they can be provided with services. So they can be under quarantine, in case they get sick. You know, it’s a simple model, but each one of those pieces requires resources. And, you know, we’ve yet to see any of the states that have really seen their numbers come all the way down, make the transition over to this yet…and it’s not just having the number of contact tracers. That’s really important. But you want those contact tracersto be from the communities in which they’re operating, so there’s a level of trust. What we’re seeing in some places is that people don’t want to tell the contact tracers who their contacts were.

Click here to explore our Local COVID-19 Tracker.

Niemeyer: What general advantages do regions like the Ohio Valley and Appalachia have in regards to this pandemic — isolation and sparse populations — and is that necessarily enough to dissuade more outbreaks in this region going forward? 

Besser: There’s a real benefit from being in a rural setting where we’re learning more and more about this virus — and outdoor activities are relatively safe. So, being able to go outdoors is great for physical health, it’s great for emotional health. it’s an activity you can do with your family. And when you’re outdoors and you’re more than six feet away from people, you don’t have to have a mask on. There’s nothing that’s going to be happening out there that you need to have that mask on. And it feels good. I think the strength of community, the value of looking out for each other — again, you can’t paint every community with broad brushstrokes — but it’s something that you tend to see in rural America. And there’s real value in that, because this is when you look at unemployment rates and areas being hit hard. A lot of rural America has been under-invested in chronically and is getting hit hard during this pandemic. And so you want to see that as there’s directed efforts to rebuild the economy that rural America is part of that conversation. I see a way forward where we have a stronger social contract. So, imagine what this would look like if you’re at the start of this pandemic, everyone in America had health insurance instead of 28 million people without it. What would that look like? What would it look like if everyone in America had unemployment insurance, and everyone in America had sick leave, family leave so we could take care of our relatives? What would it look like if the poorest people in America weren’t at the greatest risk of eviction, weren’t being forced to pay over half of their income on rent, if we truly cared about essential workers, and we’re paying everybody a living wage so that people could take care of the basic needs and save something so that they have a cushion when there’s a crisis. So, I think that shining a light on these things through the lens of a pandemic could lead us down the road towards a much stronger society, one that truly provides opportunity for everyone to have health and well being.

Niemeyer: We have a couple of questions submitted by listeners to the Ohio Valley Resource through its member stations. This one was submitted by Paula Gill to West Virginia Public Broadcasting: how often do you need to change a mask if it’s only worn once every two weeks for an hour? So, how often do you need to sanitize a mask? 

Besser: When I looked at the recommendations on that from CDC and others, their recommendation is if it’s a cloth mask, It’s a good idea to have more than one and to throw it in the laundry and and wash it after each time of use. And you’ll be able to see online recommended ways of taking off and putting on a mask so you’re taking off a mask and you if you throw it in the laundry with your wash. That’s a good time to wash your hands because you’ve touched this mask that may now be contaminated.

Niemeyer: Another question from a listener in west Kentucky, submitted to WKMS Public Radio. This listener says they’re practicing social distancing, out less than two hours a week. How likely is this listener to get this virus? 

Besser: Not very. Those activities that you’re doing are very safe. You know, the nice thing about being outdoors, you know, if you’re outdoors and six feet away from people, it’s a really safe way to be, and it feels good. So I think your risk is very low.

Besser said individual decisions like wearing a mask can dramatically impact how many people will become sick or how many vulnerable people could die. He said wearing a face mask is ultimately about protecting one another, a small step that can make a big difference.

Have a question regarding COVID-19 in the Ohio Valley? VisitYourCovidResource.org to submit a question, and our team will look into it for you.

Our West Virginia COVID-19 Tracker Gives You County-Level Data On The Coronavirus

West Virginia Official Information on Coronavirus/COVID-19   

Updated information on testing and confirmed cases of coronavirus in West Virginia, as well as actions to limit the spread of the virus, resources for services and economic support, and a hotline number for those who think they may have been exposed.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Information on Coronavirus

 

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