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Community News

The Buncombe County COVID-19 Weekly Update: Low Community Level & new boosters

November 17, 2022 by Richard Needleman

 

ASHEVILLE, NC – November 16, 2022 – The CDC reports that the community level for Buncombe County is low for the week ending November 7th. Most of the counties in North Carolina are low and 2 of 100 counties are at a high community level. Most of the counties in the U.S. are at a low level with less than 3% of the counties at a high level. For a county at a low community level, the CDC recommends:

  • You may choose to wear a mask at any time as an additional precaution to protect yourself and others.
  • If you are at high risk for severe illness, consider wearing a mask indoors in public and take additional precautions.

The Buncombe County COVID-19 metrics are on the North Carolina COVID Dashboard. Data from the week ending on November 9th indicate:

  • The data from the last 2 weeks is incomplete. With the best available data, last week’s total cases are 208 down 22% from 266 the previous week.
  • 67% of the total population have received their primary vaccination series. Unchanged over the past 13 weeks.
  • 23% of people with their primary vaccination series have had the new bivalent booster up 2% from last week.
  • The seven-day daily average of COVID-19 hospitalizations is 43 and has increased by 2 since last week, and of ICU patients is 5 and is unchanged from the previous week.

The Department of Health and Human Services recommends:

  • Stay up-to-date with COVID-19 vaccines and boosters.
  • People with any COVID symptoms should get tested
  • People who are positive for COVID-19 or do not feel well should stay home

Vaccination sites and testing sites can be located through the North Carolina and Buncombe County Department of Health and Human Services.

An updated COVID-19 booster is now available for eligible persons 5 years and older. This new booster targets 2 versions of the COVID virus, the original virus and the new dominant BA.4 and BA.5 variants. It will replace the previous booster shot that had targeted only the original version of the virus. Eligible persons must be at least 2 months after any prior COVID-19 shots and have had the primary vaccination series. The CDC advises that people who recently had COVID consider delaying their boosters until 3 months after their symptoms started or after a positive COVID test if they were asymptomatic. Booster shots are available at the Department of Public Health Coxe Avenue vaccination clinic, pharmacies, community health centers and rural health clinics.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/COVID-update_11.16.22.mp3

 

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


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

Southern Reckoning – do you know about the Southern Oral History Project?

November 14, 2022 by Patricia Furnish

If you missed it, here’s my interview with the founder, Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, and the director, Seth Kotch, both historians at UNC Chapel Hill


More Posts for Show: Southern Reckoning

Filed Under: Community News, Podcast, Show Posts

Asheville FM News Hour – 11.9.22 – if you missed it, check it out here!

November 10, 2022 by Patricia Furnish

On the Asheville FM News Hour, we aired the headlines, the Civic Roundup on the elections, the Healthy Asheville Report, and an interview from guest contributor Julia Haverstock, who interviewed local writer and collaborator, Ami Worthen, on Stumptown and the Montford neighborhood

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Asheville-News-Hour-11.9.22_minus-ads-final-compress.mp3

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Filed Under: Community News, Show Posts

This weekend marks the return to standard time: Time to ponder how Daylight Saving Time can harm your health

November 10, 2022 by Richard Needleman

 

UNITED STATES – November 6, 2022 – Daylight Savings Time (DST) can stress our bodies for weeks by upsetting our natural biologic clock that is affected by light and darkness. Health groups have pointed out that fatigue and health problems can occur from sleep loss after the ‘Spring forward’ time change. There are more hospital admissions due to heart attacks, strokes and irregular heartbeat. Other health problems are more car accidents including more fatalities, mood swings and seasonal depression. Christopher Barnes, a sleep researcher, told Mattress Clarity, an organization that reviews sleep products and promotes sleep health, “We’ve discovered that people have about 40 minutes less sleep. Because we’re already short on sleep to begin with, the effects of even 40 minutes are noticeable.”

As a result of the longer daylight hours during the summer months, beginning in 1966, Congress moved the clocks forward by one hour so we can wake up in the morning when the sun rises and have an extra hour of daylight for outdoor leisure activities after the traditional workday. Most countries in North America and Europe have adopted DST during the summer months. Sunday morning November 6 at 2 AM is the time to ‘Fall back’ by setting the clocks back one hour and return to standard time. DST will start on Sunday, March 12, 2023 and ‘Spring forward’ by advancing our clocks one hour. This is the bi-annual ritual of the ‘changing of the clocks.’

According to a recent 2022 poll by YouGov, more than two-thirds of Americans want to stop changing the clocks. A recent study in the journal Current Biology reported that eliminating time changes with year-round DST could prevent 33 human deaths, over 2 thousand human injuries and save over $1 billion in collision costs each year. The Senate passed a bipartisan bill last March to make DST permanent throughout the United States. The bill hasn’t been voted on by the House. 19 states have already enacted legislation or passed resolutions for year-round DST. However, federal law prohibits states from adopting year-round DST unless it is approved by Congress. Therefore, states can move to year-round standard time. Hawaii, Arizona and U.S. territories have year-round standard time.

Sleep experts feel that having standard time year-round would be much better for a person’s health than year-round DST. Changing the clocks doesn’t change the amount of sunlight during the day. However, adopting permanent standard time allows for sunlight to be present at the right time of the day and the sun would be at its highest point in the sky at 12 noon. In contrast, a shift to permanent DST would also wreak havoc on our natural biologic clock in the winter as it does in the summer. The sun wouldn’t rise until after many people were awake and at work or school so people would be at a higher risk for seasonal depression and car accidents.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/DST_11.09.22.mp3

 

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


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

Federal funds will help local farmers provide healthy meals for North Carolina students

November 10, 2022 by Richard Needleman

 

DURHAM, NC – October 11, 2022 – On October 11th, Governor Cooper signed an agreement to provide funding to purchase food from North Carolina’s underserved farmers and producers and to distribute it to local communities and schools. The agreement was between the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the North Carolina Department of Agriculture. USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs Mae Wu, North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper and North Carolina Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services Chief Deputy Commissioner David Smith announced the agreement in Durham, N.C.

Deputy Under Secretary Wu said that the “USDA is excited to partner with North Carolina to promote economic opportunities for farmers and producers and to increase access to locally sourced, fresh, healthy, and nutritious food in underserved communities and in schools.”

The federal government will allocate over $5.6 million for schools to purchase food from disadvantaged farmers and ranchers for the benefit of students and communities. Serving local foods in North Carolina schools will further support the state’s Farm to School program. This will help North Carolina’s schools improve child nutrition through the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs. Funding for the agreement comes from the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (also known as the COVID-19 Stimulation Package) and from the Commodity Credit Corporation (a US government corporation that was created in 1933 to support farm income and prices).

Governor Roy Cooper said that “It’s great to see this collaboration between state and federal government connecting farmers with schools to get students the healthy meals they need.”

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Healthy-meals-for-students_11.09.22.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: Low Community Level & new boosters

November 10, 2022 by Richard Needleman

 

ASHEVILLE, NC – November 9, 2022 – The CDC reports that the community level for Buncombe County is low for the week ending October 31st. Most of the counties in North Carolina are low and no counties are at a high transmission level. Most of the counties in the U.S. are at a low level with less than 3% of the counties at a high level. For a community at a low community level, the CDC recommends:

  • You may choose to wear a mask at any time as an additional precaution to protect yourself and others.
  • If you are at high risk for severe illness, consider wearing a mask indoors in public and take additional precautions.

The Buncombe County COVID-19 metrics are on the North Carolina COVID Dashboard. Data from the week ending on October 29th indicate:

  • There have been 91 cases per 100,000 residents in the last 7 days up 21% from 75 the previous week.
  • 67% of the total population have received their primary vaccination series. Unchanged over the past 12 weeks.
  • 21% of people with their primary vaccination series have had the new bivalent booster up from 18% from last week.
  • The seven-day daily average of COVID-19 hospitalizations is 41 and has decreased by 2 since last week, and of ICU patients is 5 and has decreased by 1 from the previous week.

The Department of Health and Human Services recommends:

  • Stay up-to-date with COVID-19 vaccines and boosters.
  • People with any COVID symptoms should get tested
  • People who are positive for COVID-19 or do not feel well should stay home

Vaccination sites and testing sites can be located through the North Carolina and Buncombe County Department of Health and Human Services.

An updated COVID-19 booster is now available for eligible persons 5 years and older. This new booster targets 2 versions of the COVID virus, the original virus and the new dominant BA.4 and BA.5 variants. It will replace the previous booster shot that had targeted only the original version of the virus. Eligible persons must be at least 2 months after any prior COVID-19 shots and have had the primary vaccination series. The CDC advises that people who recently had COVID consider delaying their boosters until 3 months after their symptoms started or after a positive COVID test if they were asymptomatic. Booster shots are available at the Department of Public Health Coxe Avenue vaccination clinic, pharmacies, community health centers and rural health clinics.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/COVID-update_11.09.22.mp3

 

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


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

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