Ex-W.Va. Health Chief: Cuts Hurt Virus Response

The former West Virginia public health leader forced out by the governor says decades-old computer systems and cuts to staff over a period of years had made a challenging job even harder during a once-in-a-century pandemic.

Republican Gov. Jim Justice demanded Dr. Cathy Slemp’s resignation on June 24. He complained about discrepancies in the number of active cases and accused Slemp of not doing her job. He has refused to elaborate.

 
In her first comments about what happened, Slemp declined in a series of interviews to directly discuss the governor’s decision, saying she wanted to focus on improving the public health system. She defended how the data was handled and she detailed how money dwindled over the years. That meant fewer staff, and they were hobbled by outdated technology that slowed their everyday work and their focus on the coronavirus.

 
Among the challenges: a computer network so slow that people would sometimes lose their work when it timed out; the public’s demand for real-time data; and a struggle to feed information into systems designed when faxes were considered high-speed communication.

 
“We are driving a great aunt’s Pinto when what you need is to be driving a Ferrari,” Slemp said.

 
A joint investigation published this month by The Associated Press and KHN, also known as Kaiser Health News, detailed how state and local public health departments across the country have been starved for decades, leaving them underfunded and without adequate resources to confront the pandemic.

 
In West Virginia, spending on public health fell by 27% from 2010 to 2018, according to an AP/KHN analysis of data provided by the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials. Full-time jobs in the state health department dropped from 875 in 2007 to 620 in 2019, according to the group.

 
Slemp said the staffing numbers were even worse than that when the pandemic hit because between 20% to 25% of all health department jobs were vacant. In epidemiology, the vacancy rate was 30%.

 
Those kinds of cuts “absolutely” had an effect on the department’s operations, she said.

 
At the beginning of the pandemic, Slemp said workers received stacks of faxed lab reports that had to be entered manually, even though they had spent two decades trying to persuade some hospital and commercial labs to send their results electronically. After her department required it, she said, 37 labs started filing electronically within a week.

 
“There was a political will and a societal will to say we need to fix this,” Slemp said.

 
Public health staff had to come up with time-consuming workarounds, such as entering information about disease outbreaks onto paper forms because their computer systems weren’t designed for such work. That was the source of Justice’s complaints, which centered on exactly how many active cases of COVID-19 were in a prison, she said.

 
In Randolph County, where the prison is, a top local health official said confusion about how many cases were at the facility emerged because the state’s cumbersome electronic reporting system required thorough information on an infected person’s contacts before a case could be deemed cleared.

 
In an email, Bonnie Woodrum of the Randolph-Elkins Health Department said it “hurt a little to be singled out as reporting inaccurate numbers” but that “it’s just a case of a small health department attempting to use an electronic reporting system that has never been easy to use.”

 
The problem had no impact on the ability to track new diseases in the state, Slemp said. Indeed, she said, the disputed data from the prison outbreak was being tracked, but it wasn’t getting entered as quickly as the more critical data for new cases, which they prioritized.

 
“Because that’s where the public health action is most critical,” Slemp said.

 
Slemp’s forced resignation drew criticism from leading national figures in public health, including Tom Inglesby of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Inglesby, who serves with Slemp on the board of scientific counselors at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, praised Slemp’s management of the coronavirus in West Virginia.

 
He said the issue appeared to be a clerical error that was easily fixed.

 
“It’s a little like shooting the messenger,” Inglesby said.

 
Slemp said the governor never discussed his complaints with her before he demanded her resignation.
She said it’s challenging to be a public health leader “in a world that wants immediate information and definitive answers, when reality is, there are nuances,” she said. ”Sometimes political expediency can conflict with public health practice.”

 
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This story is a collaboration between The Associated Press and Kaiser Health News, which is a nonprofit, editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation. KHN is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
 

Gov. Justice Defends Decision To Oust Public Health Chief

Gov. Jim Justice is defending his decision to oust the state commissioner of public health after pointing to inaccurate reporting of coronavirus cases. 

In a Monday virtual news briefing, Justice fielded questions from reporters about the resignation of Dr. Cathy Slemp, who stepped down last week from her position as West Virginia’s top public health official. 

Justice has said other incidents led to him losing confidence in Slemp, but he has not elaborated on those situations. 

He said Monday that the data discrepancy that led to Slemp’s ouster — which stems from an error reporting cases at Huttonsville Correctional Center — did not cause resources to be misdirected or unnecessarily used. However, he said those inaccurate reports set off a false alarm to the public.

“While we have been the beacon of the nation, those wrong numbers are inputted directly to the federal government and really and truly, then, we are showing up on every national broadcast and everything else that our numbers are off the chart,” Justice said. “That’s not good for us, either. “

Justice added that there is “more work to do” in looking into the data reporting error at Huttonsville Correctional Center. 

He also disputed that Slemp was removed because of her comments about the rise of cases in the state.

On Wednesday — and just hours after relaying that the state had overreported coronavirus case numbers at Huttonsville — Justice announced that Department of Health and Human Services Sec. Bill Crouch asked for Slemp to step down. 

In a letter announcing her resignation, Slemp urged Crouch and others to “stay true to science.”

Faculty members at Johns Hopkins University — an institution from which Slemp is a graduate — say they were “stunned and troubled” by Slemp’s resignation and that the country needs public health officials “speaking honestly” about the ongoing pandemic.

According to an analysis of state testing data, West Virginia has seen an 89 percent increase in its positive test rate over the last 14 days.

Health Officer Urges Slow Reopening As Coronavirus Cases Persist In Berkeley County

Coronavirus cases are on the rise in the Eastern Panhandle. Berkeley County has counted 22 confirmed positive COVID-19 cases in the past three days. 

Berkeley County’s total number of positive cases, as of Friday morning, is 325 with 14 probable cases, according to the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources, and it has the highest number of positive cases in the state. 

Speaking at a press briefing Thursday, Gov. Jim Justice said state officials are closely watching the situation in the Eastern Panhandle. 

“Berkeley, Jefferson, and Morgan Counties are counties that we are watching nonstop,” Justice said. “You know, they’re probably the most exposed counties from the standpoint of all the stuff from DC to Virginia.” 

State health officer Dr. Cathy Slemp said while the numbers are higher in Berkeley County, the percent positivity of cases is staying fairly consistent.

“What we’re looking at … is both the level of disease and trends, or changes in disease,” Slemp explained. “So, we’re seeing higher levels of disease, but it’s been staying kind of steady along that path.”

But despite higher levels in the Eastern Panhandle, the state is moving forward with reopening plans. On Friday, casinos and movie theaters are set to reopen statewide.

Health officer for the Berkeley-Morgan County Health Department and the Jefferson County Health Department Dr. Terrence Reidy said in an interview over Skype that for the past few weeks, Berkeley County on average, sees about 25 new cases each week — but recently that’s increased to between 40 and 50 a week.

The region has also recently increased access to coronavirus testing. 

“The hope had been that people would have understood by this point what they need to do to decrease the risk of infection,” Reidy said. “And we’re seeing that that’s not happening. We’re seeing it both in the numbers of the rising cases and the activities of people getting together and not doing the social distancing or wearing masks; the simple things that do make a difference.”

He cautions entities and residents in the Eastern Panhandle to slow down as things reopen and be mindful. He said just because reopening can happen doesn’t necessarily mean it should yet, and businesses should not operate in the same way as they did prior to the virus outbreak. 

He adds that residents should take all necessary precautions, such as wearing a mask in public spaces and to still consider using curbside options at restaurants, grocery stores and other businesses when possible.

The governor’s office hasn’t said whether it will slow reopening in the Eastern Panhandle region. 

At least 82 people in West Virginia have died from the virus, and 2,113 have tested positive, according to state health officials Friday morning.

Coronavirus Testing Is Limited in W.Va., Its Population Is High-Risk. That's Why We Should Distance

Check back here for the latest coverage on the coronavirus.

One of the reasons coronavirus is so scary is that it is possible to be a carrier for the disease and not know it. Some people are asymptomatic and some people have mild symptoms. But as of Monday, West Virginia has only tested 84 people for coronavirus – out of a state of 1.8 million. Critics say that’s not nearly enough.

If you wanted to check to see if you had coronavirus so you could make sure you’re in the clear before going to visit an elderly relative – could you? 

The short answer? No – not in West Virginia, at least.

“So currently, I have enough tests and supplies of everything else for maybe 500 people,” state commissioner for public health Dr. Cathy Slemp said at a Monday news conference. 

Slemp said West Virginia has that many coronavirus testing kits only because she was able to make use of resources that would have normally been dedicated otherwise.

“I borrowed extraction kits from my flu testing to fill in to expand my capacity,” she said.

West Virginians aren’t getting widely tested because there simply are not enough supplies to test people — even nationwide. The state has put in an order for more kits, but supplies are on backorder with no sense of when the order will be fulfilled.

“I’m not stopping flu testing,” Slemp said. “In fact, it’s actually really helpful for this because we try to exclude flu before we do COVID testing.”

If someone has the flu, she says it’s highly unlikely they also have coronavirus. But, because supplies are in high demand, for now, the only people who will be tested are those who meet a strict criteria. 

In a press release Monday, the DHHR specified tests would be reserved for really sick people already hospitalized with symptoms of coronavirus or people at risk of complications including the elderly and those with preexisting health conditions or people at high risk of having been infected, which includes someone who has been to a current epicenter recently or who has been in contact with an infected person. 

The DHHR says that their approach is similar to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines on testing. 

But the CDC guidelines have been a point of controversy, with other major public health groups like the World Health Organization saying the U.S. has not gone far enough. 

“South Korea, as a country, they tested very broadly,” WVU Health Sciences Vice President and Executive Dean Dr. Clay Marsh said.

Marsh spoke last week with West Virginia Public Broadcasting and explained different approaches — and outcomes — with testing.

“And part of the way that they started to control the infection is — instead of just asking everybody to self-quarantine, if you’ve had any potential exposure — they started to test a ton of their population. So they actually knew who was infected and who wasn’t,” Marsh said.  

“And, optimally, you find that out and you quarantine the people that are infected. You don’t quarantine the people who aren’t. So that’s really a step that we’re moving toward, which will allow us, I think, to be much smarter about how we’re approaching this from a public health protection standpoint.”

As Marsh points out, South Korea has been lauded for its efficient testing. They made testing free and fast — residents can pull up in their vehicle, get swabbed and then get results usually the next day via text. 

South Korea’s death rate is 0.9 percent. In the United States, the rate is 1.7 percent – nearly double. 

It’s not just testing supplies that are the problem – it’s that the labs don’t have the technology necessary to test. West Virginia’s state lab wasn’t set up until Saturday, March 7th (tests were sent instead to the CDC in Atlanta) and commercial labs didn’t get going until this week. Some hospitals are also hoping to be able to run their own tests soon but for now are having to send them off to external agencies. 

But with supplies on backorder, and few labs to test in, state health agencies say they must focus on testing just those with the highest risk. Even though they believe coronavirus to already be in West Virginia. And, when it comes, it could be catastrophic.

Slemp said West Virginia has a high-risk population because the disease seems to target the elderly and those with preexisting health conditions. A report from the Kaiser Family Foundation shows West Virginia is the most at-risk state, with more than half of adults over 18 at risk of contracting the coronavirus. 

She said now is the time to act to prevent a disaster. But that West Virginia likely will not be prioritized to receive supplies because other states have more cases. 

“You need to be prioritizing states, not just on numbers of cases — but on risk. We have a high-risk population. If we don’t have a lot right here now that’s great. If you send them now, we act now, give a chance to really, really reduce it much more,” Slemp said. “If you’re going to just where it’s already happening you’ll be too late.”

If you can’t test everyone, Slemp said, the only other option is to isolate everyone, reducing risk through contact.

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

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