{"id":74392,"date":"2021-08-19T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-08-20T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/city-takes-action-to-slow-spread-calls-for-community-support\/"},"modified":"2021-08-23T11:59:27","modified_gmt":"2021-08-23T19:59:27","slug":"city-takes-action-to-slow-spread-calls-for-community-support","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/city-takes-action-to-slow-spread-calls-for-community-support\/","title":{"rendered":"City takes action to slow spread; calls for community support"},"content":{"rendered":"
This article has been updated to include new information. <\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n As the delta variant of COVID-19 continues to sweep through Alaska, local officials are taking action.<\/p>\n In a Friday morning news conference to address Juneau’s quickly escalating COVID-19 infection rate, city and hospital officials called for residents to do their part to prevent the spread of the virus, keep schools open for in-person learning and keep the economy moving.<\/p>\n At 5 p.m. on Friday, enhanced mitigation measures take effect, raising the overall community alert to Level 3, with full community mitigation strategies in place.<\/p>\n “We are hoping the restrictions are short-lived,” said Mila Cosgrove, incident commander for the City and Borough of Juneau Emergency Operations Center. “Delta burns bright but it burns quickly.”<\/p>\n Cosgrove said that CBJ will likely modify some city services, such as library hours, to redeploy staff for emergency purposes starting on Monday. However, officials said they don’t expect to issue a full hunker-down order.<\/p>\n “It may feel like we are back at the beginning, but we aren’t. We have well-developed tools and we know what works,” she said.<\/p>\n Local business owners prepare to pivot<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n Bartlett staff asks for help<\/p>\n “I urge each one of you to renew your commitment,” said Rose Lawhorne, CEO of Bartlett Regional Hospital.<\/p>\n She encouraged residents to get vaccinated, wear masks, get tested when needed, and isolate if the test comes back positive.<\/p>\n “Please get vaccinated,” she said.<\/p>\n In addition, Cosgrove asked residents to keep their social bubbles small. She asked that anyone receiving a positive test result call the Public Health Department at (907)465-3353 to report it, as contract tracing efforts have slowed.<\/p>\n She also encouraged people with positive tests to reach out to anyone they have had contact with over the last 48 hours to let them know about the exposure.<\/p>\n Lawhorne said that the staff at Bartlett is feeling the strain.<\/p>\n “Like all community members, our health care teams are tired. But, we know there’s strength in numbers. We are doing our part and ask the community to join us,” she said.<\/p>\n While Bartlett Regional Hospital is not over patient capacity, according to the city, it is contending with staffing shortages and nationwide healthcare supply chain issues that will make it difficult if hospitalizations increase.<\/p>\n Lawhorne said that the hospital is closely examining elective procedures to see if some can be postponed to preserve in-patient capacity. She noted that delaying elective surgeries does place a burden on some community members but that the hospital needs to protect resources.<\/p>\n In a news release issued later Friday, hospital officials announced that they are evaluating all surgeries with predictable inpatient post-op stays to determine the level of urgency. In addition, they announced they will postpone elective lower-acuity cases that will need inpatient care. According to the hospital, the situation will be assessed weekly, with exceptions made on a case-by-case basis.<\/p>\n Additionally, the news release shared new visitor policies. Admitted patients are allowed two designated visitors and patients at the hospital on an outpatient basis may have one visitor. However, obstetrics patients are allowed one primary support person and one additional support person. No visitors are allowed in the Emergency Department except under certain circumstances, the release said.<\/p>\n Dunleavy adds bill for PFD to session agenda<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n Vaccine updates <\/strong><\/p>\n In a phone interview on Thursday, Cosgrove said that the city is seeing an uptick in new vaccinations this week.<\/p>\n Cosgrove encouraged residents to start or complete their vaccination series during the news conference and said that certain people may need a third dose now.<\/p>\n