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Community News

New annual COVID vaccine for 2023

September 21, 2023 by Richard Needleman

 

ATLANTA, GA –  September 12, 2023 – The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has recommended an updated COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer and Moderna on September 11th. The vaccine has been approved for adults and children starting at 6 months of age.

The shots target a recent XBB omicron subvariant which was the dominant variant during the spring and early summer months. It appears to work against many of the currently circulating variants that are closely related to the XBB strain. This COVID shot was developed over the summer in order to rev up protection against the latest strains. The new vaccine will be available as soon as next week at pharmacies, health centers, and some doctor offices.

Respiratory viral infections, like COVID-19 and the flu, traditionally peak in the fall and winter months. The FDA’s intent is to treat updates of the COVID vaccine every fall like the annual flu shot. Both vaccines can be administered at the same visit. Not only will this be convenient, but Americans who regularly get their updated annual flu shot will be encouraged to get their updated COVID vaccine at the same time.

The following day, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended that eligible Americans ages 6 months and older get the shot because it gives added protection against severe disease and death. The shot will be covered by most health insurance including Medicare and Medicaid; however, people without health insurance or who are underinsured may have to pay between $110-130. The CDC is working with health departments, clinics and some pharmacies to provide free shots.

Data from the CDC shows that COVID-19 infections have been increasing since early July. Hospitalizations and deaths have increased almost 16% and 17%, respectfully, between the week that ended on September 7th to the previous week. These numbers are well below the peak numbers during the pandemic due to some lasting immunity from prior vaccinations and infections and less virulent recent strains. However, with each passing month, the COVID immunity protection level falls and new strains continue to evolve.

Dr Peter Marks, the FDA vaccine chief, said in a statement “Vaccination remains critical to public health and continued protection against serious consequences of COVID-19, including hospitalization and death.”

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/COVID-vax_9.20.23.mp3

 

Contact: Dr. Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

Medicaid expansion is stalled over gambling

September 21, 2023 by Richard Needleman

 

RALEIGH, NC – September 12, 2023 – North Carolina cannot expand Medicaid until the Republican-dominated General Assembly decides upon the 2023-24 state budget. The House and Senate have been negotiating over the budget for months. The Republicans in the House and the Senate cannot agree upon a budget proposal due to an impasse over casinos. Neither chamber voted on a budget this week when they realized that the versions were different. The Senate version would legalize nontribal casinos. The House did not include this provision.

A state Medicaid expansion (ME) bill was passed by the General Assembly and was signed by the Governor in March. However, the bill is tied directly to agreeing upon the 2023-24 state budget. When the General Assembly agrees upon the budget, six hundred thousand under-resourced North Carolinians will have access to health care, including almost 17 thousand people from Buncombe County. ME and the Healthcare Access and Stabilization Program (HASP) will bring 8 billion dollars annually to the state and almost 2 billion dollars to support behavioral health, public safety, and rural health care. If the ME program is begun this year, North Carolina will receive an almost 2 billion dollar incentive of additional HASP payments. By delaying ME, the HHS estimates that 9 thousand North Carolinians a month are losing their Medicaid coverage who would otherwise be eligible for Medicaid expansion.

Robert Reives, the House Democratic leader from Chatham County, said that the Republican leadership has not asked for Democrat support for nontribal casinos. He added, “I can’t even comment on the budget. Because, the problem is, we’ve not been involved in any part of the process.”

The issue that is holding up this year’s state budget is gambling. The General Assembly may be ‘gambling’ away the health of 600 thousand North Carolinians and billions of dollars of additional federal funding by not making the casino provision a separate bill.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/ME-update_9.20.23.mp3

 

Contact: Dr. Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

The Buncombe County COVID-19 weekly update: Hospital admissions are increasing in North Carolina & Buncombe County

September 21, 2023 by Richard Needleman

 

ASHEVILLE, NC –  September 20, 2023 – The COVID-19 metrics are on the CDC’s COVID Dashboard.

  • For the week ending on September 9th, hospital admissions levels are low in 94 of 100 counties in North Carolina, including Buncombe County, and almost 88% of the counties in the U.S. However, they have increased in North Carolina and Buncombe County from the previous week.
  • For the week ending on September 9th, between 2-4% of the deaths in North Carolina were due to COVID, the 3rd lowest level of 6 groups. This is higher than the previous week.
  • Emergency room visits for COVID-19 are moderate in North Carolina for the week ending on September 9th. This represents about 3-4% of all ER visits, the middle of 5 levels and unchanged from last week.

Wastewater monitoring can be used to provide early warning for COVID outbreaks. The Buncombe & Henderson counties wastewater data for the week ending on September 6th is on the North Carolina COVID Dashboard.

  • The number of viral gene copies in each water sample is at a red level representing the highest level of 5 groups, currently between the 80th and 100th percentile relative to the past level measured at the same site.
  • The 15-day rate of change of the number of viral gene copies in each water sample is decreasing from the previous week, between -99 and -10%, the largest of the 2 groups for a negative rate of change.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services wants everyone to know that:

  • COVID-19 can affect people differently. Some people have mild symptoms like a cold and others have more severe symptoms like a bad case of the flu. Some effects can be long-lasting.
  • Older adults and immunocompromised people are at a higher risk of developing severe illness and being hospitalized.

The Department of Health and Human Services recommends:

  • Stay up-to-date with COVID-19 vaccines
  • For extra protection, wear an efficient medical grade mask
  • People who are positive for COVID-19 or do not feel well should stay home
  • People with any COVID symptoms should get tested
  • If you test positive, your doctor may recommend medical treatment

Buncombe County residents can pick up free COVID-19 home test kits in the Buncombe County Health and Human Services Building at 40 Coxe Avenue, Asheville during regular business hours.

If you get COVID, here’s the latest CDC guidelines:

  • Isolate for 5 days provided the fever has resolved for at least 24 hours without taking any fever-reducing medicine. (Day 0 is the day that symptoms first appear. If there are no symptoms but a positive test, then day 0 is the day the test was positive.) Isolation means staying home and away from others.
  • Wear a high-quality mask around others at home and in public for the next 5 days
  • Masking can stop earlier with 2 negative antigen tests taken 48 hours apart

More and more Americans have developed some immunity to COVID-19 from immunizations and previous infection. New variants continue to infect people with the most at-risk groups more susceptible to severe illness.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/COVID-update_9.20.23.mp3

 

Contact: Dr. Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

Vaccine hesitancy & the growing anti-science movement

September 14, 2023 by Richard Needleman

 

PHILADELPHIA, PA – August 26, 2023 – With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, vaccination and medical science has been politicized and attacked by various individuals and groups. Critics have spread misinformation that the COVID-19 vaccine is dangerous and ineffective in spite of strong evidence to the contrary. COVID-19 public health mandates like masking, vaccination and lockdowns have met with strong resistance and backlash about the loss of individual freedoms. These finding are consistent with a decrease in the childhood vaccination rate since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to data from the CDC and the American Medical Association.

Vaccination has markedly reduced the spread and even eliminated many harmful communicable viral diseases. Polio, smallpox, and rabies have almost been eliminated while common childhood illnesses like measles, mumps, and rubella are very rare nowadays in America. The high rate of vaccination of children has contributed to ‘herd immunity’ where the whole community is protected because person-to-person spread becomes unlikely. Most public schools require all children to be vaccinated against many common contagious diseases unless there is a medical or a religious exemption. Up until the COVID pandemic, a very small percentage of students filed for these exemptions, preserving a high vaccination rate and population immunity to these diseases.

A study from the University of Pennsylvania was published in the journal Vaccine on August 26 about how Americans feel about getting routine vaccinations for their pet dogs. 22 hundred people were specifically chosen for a nationally representative survey. More than one-half of the people surveyed believe that dog vaccination is either unsafe, unnecessary or ineffective. The paper concluded that the recent COVID-19 pandemic has changed how Americans feel about vaccination in general. People who are skeptical about vaccination in humans are more likely to be hesitant about vaccinating their dogs. The authors opine that vaccines work so well that people no longer have any experience with the diseases that they protect against. One good example of a rare health problem in dogs and humans is rabies, a disease that is almost always fatal. Most dogs in America have been vaccinated against rabies, so there has not been much spread of this disease in dogs or to humans from dog bites. According to the CDC, only 60-70 dogs develop rabies annually in the U.S. There are only 1-3 human cases of rabies annually.

Dr. Peter Hotez, pediatrician, vaccine researcher, and Dean for the National School of Tropical Medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine, and whose appearances on many news networks during the COVID pandemic earned him the distinction of being one of the most trusted public health officials, has written a soon-to-be published book entitled “The Deadly Rise of Anti-Science.” He describes how the anti-vaccine movement has become a political tool that has been promoted by some elected officials and news media. According to Hotez, the anti-vaccine movement has joined forces with the anti-science movement resulting in a backlash against COVID-19 prevention, diagnosis and treatment. He reports that a lot of severe illness and many deaths from COVID could have been prevented by following the science.

Vaccine hesitancy has become a major political controversy. It has led to a lower vaccination rate in humans and a change in attitude toward vaccinating pet dogs. The solution to this anti-science attitude is through positive messaging. Good information will provide increased transparency about the few risks and overwhelming benefits of vaccination in order to restore American’s trust in science and the reduction of communicable disease through vaccines. Understanding why people are vaccine hesitant will enable an issue-focused approach to achieving vaccine buy-in.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Anti-vax.mp3

 

Contact: Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

The Buncombe County COVID-19 weekly update: Hospital admissions are increasing in North Carolina & Buncombe County

September 14, 2023 by Richard Needleman

 

ASHEVILLE, NC –  September 13, 2023 – The COVID-19 metrics are on the CDC’s COVID Dashboard.

  • For the week ending on August 26th, hospital admissions levels are low in 96 of 100 counties in North Carolina, including Buncombe County, and almost 93% of the counties in the U.S. However, they have increased in North Carolina and Buncombe County from the previous week.
  • For the week ending on September 2nd, between 1-9 deaths in North Carolina were due to COVID, the lowest level of 6 groups.
  • Emergency room visits for COVID-19 are low in North Carolina for the week ending on September 2nd. This represents about 2% of all ER visits, the 2nd lowest of 5 levels and is unchanged from last week.

Wastewater monitoring can be used to provide early warning for COVID outbreaks. The Buncombe & Henderson counties wastewater data for the week ending on August 30th is on the North Carolina COVID Dashboard.

  • The number of viral gene copies in each water sample is at a red level representing the highest level of 5 groups, currently between the 80th and 100th percentile relative to the past level measured at the same site.
  • The 15-day rate of change of the number of viral gene copies in each water sample is increasing from the previous week, at 100% or greater, the highest of the 3 groups for a positive rate of change.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services wants everyone to know that:

  • COVID-19 can affect people differently. Some people have mild symptoms like a cold and others have more severe symptoms like a bad case of the flu. Some effects can be long-lasting.
  • Older adults and immunocompromised people are at a higher risk of developing severe illness and being hospitalized.

The FDA has recommended an updated COVID-19 booster from Pfizer and Moderna on Monday. The shots target one of the XBB omicron subvariants and appear to work against many others of the currently circulating variants. The following day, the CDC recommended that eligible Americans ages 6 months and older get the booster because it gives added protection against severe disease and death. The shot will be available as soon as next week

The Department of Health and Human Services recommends:

  • Stay up-to-date with COVID-19 vaccines
  • For extra protection, wear an efficient medical grade mask
  • People who are positive for COVID-19 or do not feel well should stay home
  • People with any COVID symptoms should get tested
  • If you test positive, your doctor may recommend medical treatment

Buncombe County residents can pick up free COVID-19 home test kits in the Buncombe County Health and Human Services Building at 40 Coxe Avenue, Asheville during regular business hours.

If you get COVID, here’s the latest CDC guidelines:

  • Isolate for 5 days provided the fever has resolved for at least 24 hours without taking any fever-reducing medicine. (Day 0 is the day that symptoms first appear. If there are no symptoms but a positive test, then day 0 is the day the test was positive.) Isolation means staying home and away from others.
  • Wear a high-quality mask around others at home and in public for the next 5 days
  • Masking can stop earlier with 2 negative antigen tests taken 48 hours apart

More and more Americans have developed some immunity to COVID-19 from immunizations and previous infection. New variants continue to infect people with the most at-risk groups more susceptible to severe illness.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/COVID-update.mp3

 

Contact: Dr. Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

Civic Roundup for 9-13-23 covers Early Childhood grants, ARPA funding

September 12, 2023 by Mark West

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/civic-roundup-9-13-23-mastered.mp3

The Civic Roundup for September 13, 2023 has Mark West reporting on the Buncombe County Commissioners meeting of last Tuesday. At that meeting, the Early Childhood Education Committee provided an annual update on the Early Childhood Education and Development Fund. This year $3.82 million is available in the fund. The committee reviewed grant applications and made recommendations on funding 35 community partner projects and 14 county department projects across Buncombe County. The commissioners also approved a budget amendment ordinance to carry forward unspent funds from fiscal year 2023 to 2024 totaling $4.9 million. Additional carry forwards for other funds total $509,274.  Hear all about it on this week’s Civic Roundup!


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News, Show Posts

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