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			Logan County Department of Public 
			Health tracking and preventing spread of COVID-19   Send a link to a friend
 
            
            [September 11, 2020]  
             As Logan County and Illinois experience more 
			cases of infections from COVID-19, it is urged that the community 
			continues to follow prevention measures which includes wearing a 
			mask in public, maintaining social distancing and following all 
			recommended safety precautions.  | 
        
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			 As more people are becoming less compliant with 
			these practices, more people are becoming infected which is a major 
			threat to the entire community. Currently 60 individuals from Logan 
			County have tested positive. 
 Until a preventative treatment measure or vaccine is available, the 
			Logan County Department of Public Health (LCDPH) nursing staff is 
			working hard to keep you, your family, and your community safe to 
			prevent the spread of COVID-19 through a public health process 
			called “Contact Tracing.” Contact tracing is an effective method 
			that has been employed for years by public health to control the 
			spread of infectious diseases such as Ebola, HIV/AIDs and sexually 
			transmitted infections.
 
 
			
			 
			
			COVID-19 presents many challenges for LCDPH/public health contact 
			tracing efforts as the virus is dealt with on a large scale and can 
			be spread from person to person without visible symptoms. The 
			process of contact tracing for COVID-19 involves identifying and 
			contacting individuals who have tested positive. Once infected 
			individuals are contacted by LCDPH, the nurses will then interview 
			and attempt to identify people who have been in close contact with 
			them as they may have been exposed to the virus. People who are 
			known to be infected will be asked to isolate by staying home in one 
			room away from other individuals and pets. People who have been 
			identified as contacts with known infected individuals will be asked 
			to quarantine to prevent spreading the infection if they are in fact 
			infected.
 
 Contact tracing is a difficult and time consuming process that more 
			specifically involves interviewing infected individuals and their 
			contacts, notifying contacts of their potential exposure, referring 
			contacts for testing, monitoring contacts (daily) for signs and 
			symptoms, and connecting contacts to the services they need so they 
			can remain at home during the self-quarantine process.
 
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            It is vital during this voluntary quarantine that 
			people potentially infected (contacts) stay at home and maintain a 
			social distance of at least 6 feet from others until 14 days after 
			their exposure to the person with COVID-19. During this period, 
			people in quarantine will be asked to monitor themselves by checking 
			their temperatures twice daily and watching for symptoms such as 
			cough, fever or shortness of breath.
 Regardless whether an infected individual is isolated or a contact 
			is in quarantine, the process is not convenient, but it is vital to 
			cooperate and follow all instructions provided by the LCDPH nursing 
			staff to prevent further spread of infection within the community. 
			People who are known to be infected will remain anonymous to the 
			public and their contacts.
 
 Don Cavi, Public Health Administrator at LCDPH stated, “The nursing 
			staff at LCDPH are true heroes and deserve much credit as they work 
			long hours with infected individuals and their contacts to prevent 
			further spread of COVID-19.” Cavi adds, “The community can be just 
			as big a hero if everyone, including those in isolation and 
			quarantine, follows through with their responsibilities to prevent 
			further spread of the COVID-19 virus.”
 
 For more information, please contact the Logan County Department of 
			Public Health at 217-735-2317. The department hours of operation are 
			Monday-Friday, 7:30-4:30. For information regarding LCDPH services 
			and for the latest COVID-19 county statistics, you can log onto 
			their website at WWW.LCDPH.
 ORG.
 
            [Don Cavi, MS, LEHPPublic Health Administrator
 Logan County Department of Public Health]
 
            
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