Balancing Public Health Needs In The Age Of Coronavirus

 

The coronavirus pandemic continues to be the top public health concern in the nation.

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources reported early Thursday morning 12 new cases, bringing the total positive case count in West Virginia to 51.

But what about other public health needs?

“We can’t forget about treatment of everything else, because most of what people are going to die from is not the coronavirus, it’s other problems,” said Dr. Terrence Reidy, health officer for the Berkeley-Morgan County Health Department and the Jefferson County Health Department in the Eastern Panhandle. “Whether it’s heart attacks or appendicitis or regular old pneumonia.”

But balancing responding to the coronavirus and addressing ongoing public health needs such as family planning or the opioid epidemic will be a challenge, Reidy said.

“Most of my conversations on this matter have been recognizing that this coronavirus is going to outstrip all other phone calls and all other requests for services. So, many of our basic things are being put on hold,” he said. “We’re having to prioritize by what things can’t wait.”

Things like certain vaccinations or elective surgeries. 

But he said things like emergency care, STD treatments or family planning needs still have to be prioritized. 

However, the state’s rural geography may play a pivotal role in helping stop the spread of coronavirus.

“People are not as clustered [here],” he said. “So there are people who are able to pretty much stay away from crowds.”

But he also noted our hospitals, several of which have closed in recent years, may not be ready for a swarm of coronavirus cases.

“It’s hard in a rural area to have experts in some medical areas nearby. Recognizing the problems could be difficult.”

Reidy said the best thing to do is to treat everyone with respect, be patient, stay calm and stay home.

“We need to be civil and forgiving of each other. Not the blame game of why wasn’t this done and why wasn’t this done. Just look around; the whole world is suffering from this. So we need to treat each other properly.”

Keep up with West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s latest coronavirus coverage here.

“A Failure Of Public Health.” Sexually Transmitted Diseases Rise As Health Budgets Fall

Health officials are tracking record-breaking rates of sexually transmitted disease, including a resurgence of some infections which had been considered rare, such as gonorrhea and syphilis. These STDs are on the rise amid cuts to public health budgets dedicated to testing, prevention, and public outreach.

In the Ohio Valley, for example, a review of state and federal government data shows some communities in Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia have seen chlamydia infections rise by more than 200 percent between 2011 and 2017. And in four counties in Kentucky and West Virginia, reported cases of gonorrhea jumped by an astonishing 1,000 percent or more in that period.

Matt Prior is the spokesperson for the non-profit National Coalition of STD Directors. They are the folks on the front lines. Prior says STDs now represent a public health crisis, especially in parts of Appalachia already struggling with an opioid epidemic.

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Officials are concerned about antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea.

“We are seeing an increasing number of syphilis and other STD outbreaks associated with the opioid crisis,” he said. “States that are particularly hard hit by the opioid crisis are states that are particularly hard hit by the STD epidemic.”

As rates go up, Prior said, funding has gone down. So while STDs have increased by 30 percent in the last five years to reach an all-time high, the amount of federal money for prevention and education has consistently gone down since 2003. Prior says that federal funding is critical for states like Kentucky, West Virginia and Ohio.

“The federal STD prevention line is the only line or funding streams these states have so it is really the first and last line of defense,” he said.

Generational Risks

Prior said a recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report was especially troubling. The report showed a rise in infant deaths as more newborns contract syphilis from their mothers during birth.

According to the report, the number of babies born with syphilis rose from 362 in 2013 to 918 in 2017. The cases were primarily found in Western and Southern states. In the report, Dr. Jonathan Mermin, director of CDC’s National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, said syphilis can result “in miscarriage, newborn death, and severe lifelong physical and mental health problems.”

Syphilis during pregnancy is easily cured with the right antibiotics. However, if left untreated, a pregnant woman with syphilis has up to an 80 percent chance of passing it on to her baby, the report said.

Prior said the mortality rate among those infected infants is high. His coalition is encouraging syphilis screening as a mandatory test during a woman’s first prenatal visit. He said this outbreak shows the depth of the need for access to preventative care and prenatal care.

“It is essentially a failure of the public health system and a failure for our nation because we should not see mothers and children, children dying for very easily treatable and identifiable diseases,” he said.

“It’s Frightening”

Jim Thacker is the spokesperson for the Health Department in Madison County, Kentucky. He said public health officials expect spikes in infectious disease. Adapting to the changes and responding to them is the core mission of public health.

But, he said, the recent resurgence of diseases such as chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis is something different. Overall the CDC reported 2.4 million new cases of those diseases in 2017. Thacker said a handful of cases in Madison County reflected a 300 percent jump in syphilis.

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Jim Thacker of the Madison Co. Health Dept

“It’s frightening any time you see something come back that you thought you had under control,” he said. Syphilis, he said, was essentially eradicated for more than 50 years.

Thacker added that discussing sexually transmitted disease makes people uncomfortable. “It’s not something people want to talk about,” he said.

In recent months he increased his efforts to speak to middle, high school, and college students about STDs. Thacker said part of the increase in STDs could be linked to a lack of fear of HIV among people born after the AIDS epidemic. That and effective, long-term birth control makes condom use seem less urgent to teens and young adults.

If provided with the correct information, Thacker said, people can change their minds. If they get tested they can avoid the most serious consequences of the diseases.

Thacker said many younger people know very little about some of the STDs that are now resurgent, including the symptoms. He said by the time they are diagnosed significant damage can occur. Untreated syphilis, for example, can cause serious neurological disease. And untreated gonorrhea can cause serious health problems, particularly for women, including chronic pelvic pain, life-threatening ectopic pregnancy and infertility.

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource

Thacker said health officials are also concerned about the possibility that gonorrhea is becoming drug resistant. According to the CDC gonorrhea has become resistant to a series of drugs, beginning with penicillin.

Get Tested

People between the ages of 15 and 25 have the highest rates of STDs, representing 40 percent of the new cases, according to the CDC.

Eastern Kentucky University student Priscillana Cawood is also working to educate her peers. She takes STDs seriously.

Credit Mary Meehan / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Priscillana Cawood is majoring in infectious diseases at Eastern Kentucky University.

“On my personal social media, I follow the CDC and various health departments. I like to keep up to date,” she said.

Cawood’s major focus of study is infectious disease and she’s the daughter of a straight-talking nurse. That combination could explain why she has long been “the friend.” She’s the one among her peers that friends turn to for information about STDs. It’s a role she’s played since middle school. She understands it’s common for young people to push their sexual boundaries. But she tries to help people know there can be consequences.

Especially when first at college or out on their own, people can be reckless, she said.

“Some people take extreme advantage of that and they end up with a disease that they don’t want or never intended to get because A) they didn’t know all the facts, B) they were careless,” she said.

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource

Cawood is also an intern at the Lexington-Fayette County Health Department where she sometimes assists with testing. She understands there can be a mental block to getting tested.

“Sometimes you need just need to know the answer but you don’t want to know it,” she said.

She still encourages everyone to get tested on a regular basis.

For information on STD testing check with your primary care doctor, on-campus clinic or local public health department.

New Project to Study Prevention & Treatment of Opioid Abuse

Over $1 million in federal funding has been awarded to a project aimed at addressing the opioid crisis in West Virginia.

The project is based in southern West Virginia, and it’s spearheaded by West Virginia University. The goal is to develop comprehensive ways to prevent and treat the consequences of opioid abuse, such as overdose, HIV, hepatitis, and sexually transmitted diseases.

The project will be supported by a two-year $1 million grant from the National Institute of Drug Abuse, the Appalachian Regional Commission, and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

The WVU team will work with state and local communities to develop the best practice responses that could be implemented by public health systems in the country’s rural regions.

President Donald Trump recently declared the opioid epidemic as a national crisis.

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