COVID surge prompts multiple state responses
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[January 13, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A continuing sharp spike in
COVID-19 cases being driven by the omicron variant has pushed the
state’s hospital capacity to its limits and is prompting the state to
bring in additional health care workers from other states and countries.
Gov. JB Pritzker said Wednesday that more than 2,000 additional health
care workers have been deployed throughout the state, including 919 in
hospitals hit hard by the surge, with another 552 scheduled to arrive
within the next several days.
“This current wave of COVID is causing more people to get sick than ever
before in the pandemic,” Pritzker said. “And the vast majority of the
serious illnesses and deaths are among the unvaccinated.”
As of Wednesday, the Illinois Department of Public Health was reporting
7,219 people hospitalized with COVID-19 in the state, down slightly from
the record 7,353 who were hospitalized on Tuesday. Another 271 people in
the state had died of the disease just since Monday.
“We have never had this many COVID patients in the hospital at any point
in the pandemic. Not in spring of 2020; not in the winter of 2020,” IDPH
Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike said, noting that the previous pandemic record
was 6,175, set in November 2020.
Over the past seven days, more than 227,000 new cases have been
confirmed in Illinois out of 1.9 million tests performed, for a
seven-day case positivity rate of 12 percent.
“But as difficult as this moment is, there will be an end to it,”
Pritzker said. “We have all the necessary tools for prevention, and we
are nearer than ever to having everything we need to detect and treat
the disease to keep even the most vulnerable people alive. I can't say
enough about how extraordinary our hospitals and our health care heroes
have been throughout this pandemic.”
Pritzker said the state was taking several actions to bolster its health
care workforce, such as allowing out-of-state health care providers to
continue practicing in Illinois with expanded permissions to care for
all patients, not just COVID-19 patients.
In addition, doctors trained in other countries have been given
permission to provide assistance to licensed physicians in Illinois. And
out-of-state providers, including physicians, nurses and mental health
providers, are being allowed to provide telehealth services to patients
in Illinois if they have a pre-existing provider-patient relationship.
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Gov. JB Pritzker gives an update on the surge in
COVID-19 cases during a news conference Wednesday in Chicago.
(Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
Meanwhile, Pritzker issued an executive order late Tuesday spelling out
protocols that schools now need to follow whenever a student or school
employee tests positive for COVID-19.
Consistant with the latest guidance from the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, the order requires infected individuals, regardless of
their vaccination status, to be excluded from school premises for a
minimum of five days and a maximum of 10 days following the onset of
symptoms or the date of their test.
Schools also must exclude students or employees who come in close
contact with an infected person for a minimum of five days after their
exposure, and those individuals must continue to wear a mask at all
times around others, including when outdoors, for an additional five
days after they return to school.
The surge in COVID-19 cases has also resulted in other state actions.
House and Senate leaders in the General Assembly announced Wednesday
that they were canceling in-person session days next week, although
committees will continue to meet remotely.
“Given the recent COVID-19 numbers, this is not the time to bring
hundreds of people together inside the Capitol,” Senate President Don
Harmon, D-Oak Park, said in a statement. “Through our remote committee
process we have proven that we can get work done, protect people’s
health and at the same time expand the legislative process to people who
might want to testify but wouldn’t have the time or resources to come to
Springfield.”
And the Illinois Department of Corrections announced that it was pausing
all inmate transfers into state facilities from county jails as it
responds to COVID-19 outbreaks in IDOC facilities.
“Congregate living facilities present unique infection control
challenges due to the lack of quarantine and isolation space,” IDOC
Director Rob Jeffreys said in a statement Wednesday. “The Department
recognizes the hardships county jails face when we cannot accept
admissions, but we must take aggressive action to keep the community and
everyone who lives and works in our facilities safe and healthy.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service
covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |