Orange County Health Department

COVID-19 Updates: December 9, 2020

North Carolina County Alert Maps for 11/17/20, 11/23/20, and 12/08/20, showing increasing community spread throughout North Carolina. Orange County remains "yellow", indicating significant community spread.

With Key Metrics Increasing Rapidly, North Carolina to Begin Modified Stay at Home Order to Slow COVID-19 Spread

Governor Roy Cooper and North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mandy Cohen today announced that North Carolina will begin a Modified Stay at Home Order after a rapid increase in North Carolina’s key COVID-19 trends. The Order requires people to stay at home between 10 pm and 5 am and takes effect Friday, December 11 and will be in place until at least January 8, 2021. 

“We already have strong safety protocols and capacity limitations in place – including a statewide mask requirement. With this additional action beginning Friday, we hope to get these numbers down,” Governor Cooper said. “Our new modified Stay At Home order aims to limit gatherings and get people home where they are safer, especially during the holidays. It’s also a reminder that we must be vigilant the rest of the day – wearing a face mask when we are with people we don’t live with, keeping a safe distance from others and washing our hands a lot.” 

The Order requires restaurants, bars, entertainment venues, personal care businesses and more to close at 10 pm. Travel to and from work; to obtain food, medical care, fuel or social services; or to take care of a family member is exempted. Read more in the Frequently Asked Questions document. 

In the past week, North Carolina’s case count has broken single-day records on three separate days, including crossing more than 6,000 cases per day on two of those days. Just a month ago, cases were under 3,000 per day. In recent days, the percent of tests returning positive has increased to more than 10%. 

Governor Cooper was clear that further action would be taken to slow the spread of the virus if trends do not improve. This could require further limiting of restaurant dining, indoor entertainment or shopping and retail capacity restrictions, among other safety protocols. 

Dr. Cohen also provided an update on North Carolina’s COVID-19 County Alert System map. The number of red counties (critical community spread) has more than doubled since November 23, up to 48 red counties from 20 red counties. There are now 34 orange counties (substantial community spread), as compared to 42 orange counties from the previous report. With today’s report, more than 80% of the state’s counties fall into the red or orange tier. Read the update to see where each county stands and how the system was designed.

“Your actions can keep people from getting sick, save lives, and make sure our hospitals can care for people whether it’s for a heart attack or a car accident or COVID-19. Protect yourself, your loved ones, and your community now,” said NCDHHS Secretary Mandy K. Cohen, M.D.

Dr. Cohen also provided an update on North Carolina’s data and trends.

Trajectory in COVID-Like Illness (CLI) Surveillance Over 14 Days

  • North Carolina’s syndromic surveillance trend for COVID-like illness is increasing.
Trajectory of Confirmed Cases Over 14 Days
  • North Carolina’s trajectory of cases is increasing.
Trajectory in Percent of Tests Returning Positive Over 14 Days
  • North Carolina’s trajectory in percent of tests returning positive is increasing.
Trajectory in Hospitalizations Over 14 Days
  • North Carolina’s trajectory of hospitalizations is increasing.
In addition to these metrics, the state continues building capacity to adequately respond to an increase in virus spread in testing, tracing and prevention.
Testing
  • Testing capacity is high, surpassing 50,000 tests per day for much of the past week. 
Tracing Capability
  • The state is continuing to hire contact tracers to bolster the efforts of local health departments.
  • There have been more than 500,000 downloads of the exposure notification app, SlowCOVIDNC.
Personal Protective Equipment
  • North Carolina’s personal protective equipment (PPE) supplies are stable.

Read Executive Order 181.
Read a Frequently Asked Questions document about the Order. 
Read the slides from today’s briefing.

Together We Can Take Actions to Have a Better Tomorrow, Sooner.



The COVID-19 pandemic is surging. Act now to slow the spread and speed up economic recovery. Wear masks. Maintain distance/limit contacts. Avoid gatherings. Identify and isolate cases. Protect health care workers. Protect high-risk groups. Conduct contact tracing and quarantine. Postpone travel. Wash hands. Vaccinate widely. This will lead to: Lives saved, economy recovered, and community life restored. bit.ly/mmwr12420


Everyone can:

  • Wear a mask consistently and correctly.
  • Stay at least 6 feet apart from others.
  • Limit contact with others.
  • Avoid nonessential indoor spaces.
  • Wash your hands or use hand sanitizer.
  • Get tested and stay home and away from others if you have COVID-19.
  • Stay home and away from others if you've been in close contact with someone who has COVID-19.
  • Postpone travel. Those who choose to travel by plane domestically should consider getting tested before and after travel.
Communities can:
  • Enact policies to protect communities: universal use of face masks, restrictions on use of nonessential indoor spaces (e.g. bars), and increased access to testing.
  • Safeguard healthcare personnel, other essential workers, and people most at-risk for severe illness.
  • Plan for and implement vaccine distribution.
Healthcare providers can:
  • Protect themselves and their patients by following all prevention strategies.
  • Encourage patients to protect themselves from COVID-19.
  • Get the vaccine when it's available.
  • Talk to patients about COVID-19 vaccines and listen to their concerns with empathy.

COVID-19 Prioritization Survey

Covid Prioritization Survey
The following survey contains a series of strategies intended to help Orange County and its cities recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.

These strategies have been developed based on input from over 100 governmental and non-governmental organizations; more than 1,500 previous survey responses from the public; and five focus group meetings with Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) community leaders. 

To access the survey, please click the following link. 

This week is National Handwashing Awareness Week!


How to Wash Your Hands. Good hand washing practices are essential for protecting yourself and other people from the germs, chemicals, and dirt that can accumulate on your hands throughout the day. To help prevent infections, keep your hands away from your eyes, nose, and mouth. Step 1: Wash your hands. Step 2: Dispense soap in the palm of your hand. Step 3: Rub the palms of your hand together. Step 4: Vigorously wash your finger tips in the soap on the palm of each hand. Step 5: Carefully interlace your fingers, washing the surfaces between your fingers. Step 6: Cup your hands and wash around the base of the thumb on each hand. Step 7: Lather the back of each hand. Step 8: Wash around each wrist. Step 9: Rinse all surfaces of your hands until all soap and unwanted particles are gone. Step 10: If possible, when drying your hands with a paper towel, use the towel to turn the water off. Questions? 919-245-2360.

PDF in English, Español, & Chinese
Image (PNG) in English, Español, & Chinese
Audio in Arabic, Burmese, Karen, & Kinyarwanda


December 6-12, 2020 is National Handwashing Awareness Week. According to the CDC, keeping hands clean is one of the most important steps we can take to avoid getting sick and spreading germs to others - especially during the COVID-19 pandemic! Many diseases and conditions are spread by not washing hands with soap and clean, running water. The guidance for effective handwashing and use of hand sanitizer was developed based on data from a number of studies. Scrub your hands for at least 20 seconds. Need a timer? Hum the "Happy Birthday" song from beginning to end twice. 




CDC Back-to-School Planning Resources


Checklist: Planning for In-Person Classes. Accessible version: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/schools-childcare/parent-checklist.html#planning-in-person-classes


READ MORE about planning for in-person classes at: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/pdf/Back-to-School-Planning-for-In-Person-Classes.pdf


COVID-19 Testing

No-Cost COVID-19 Testing, Wednesday, December 9th, 11:00am - 3:00pm, Mt Moriah Baptist Church, 200 Buckhorn Rd, Mebane, NC 27302

Orange County Health Department hosts no-cost COVID-19 testing at locations across the county.

For the most up-to-date information on testing please visit: orangecountync.gov/testing. 
 
Daily testing will continue Monday through Saturday from 9 am to 6 pm in Chapel Hill:
R7 Parking Lot, 725 MLK Jr. Blvd. Chapel Hill, NC 27514. Pre-registration is encouraged: https://lhi.care/covidtesting. 

  • English: https://www.orangecountync.gov/DocumentCenter/View/13709/Optum_Covid19Flyer_R7_WeekdayTesting_ENG. 
  • Spanish: https://www.orangecountync.gov/DocumentCenter/View/13710/Optum_Covid19Flyer_R7_WeekdayTesting_SPA.   
Daily testing will continue Monday through Friday from 9 am to 5 pm in Hillsborough:
Whitted Human Services, 300 W. Tryon St. Hillsborough, NC 27278. Pre-registration is encouraged: https://unityphm.com/campaigns/starmed. 
  • English: https://www.orangecountync.gov/DocumentCenter/View/13350/SM_Covid19Flyer_OrangeCountyHD_WeekdayTesting_ENGLISH. 
  • Spanish: https://www.orangecountync.gov/DocumentCenter/View/13351/SM_Covid19Flyer_OrangeCountyHD_WeekdayTesting_SPANISH.
 
*****Other testing events*****

  • Wednesday, December 9th from 11 am – 3 pm at Mt. Moriah Baptist Church, 200 Buckhorn Road, Mebane, NC 27302. Pre-registration is encouraged: https://lhi.care/covidtesting
    • English Flyer: http://www.orangecountync.gov/DocumentCenter/View/13897/Optum_COVID19Flyer_MtMoriah_12_9_English
    • Spanish Flyer: http://www.orangecountync.gov/DocumentCenter/View/13898/Optum_Covid19Flyer_MtMoriah_12_9_SP




CNN: COVID-19 is taking a devastating toll on Filipino American nurses


Nurses mourning


By Catherine E. Shoichet
Updated 3:04 PM ET, Tue November 24, 2020

(CNN) Nearly a third of the nurses who've died of coronavirus in the US are Filipino, even though Filipino nurses make up just 4% of the nursing population nationwide. A recent report from the largest nurses' union in the country revealed the disproportionate number of deaths. It's a jarring statistic researchers are working to understand and a tragedy families across the US and around the world are living with every day. Jhulan Banago feels it when he visits his mom's grave site every week and when he keeps putting out a plate of food for her at the dinner table every night. Tiffany Olega felt it when she walked through the gates of Disneyland and collapsed to the ground, crying as she set foot in one of her mom's favorite places for the first time after her death. Jollene Levid feels it every morning, when she combs through health-care workers' obituaries and keeps finding Filipino names. She sees her family in their faces -- so many senseless deaths. "People always talk about it as numbers, but then when so many of the folks you know have died, and it wasn't because they weren't wearing a mask, it wasn't because they decided to eat at a restaurant. They were literally trying to keep someone alive and they caught it," Levid says.
    "You have to ask, why is this happening to our community?" she adds. "There are so many factors, but I would assert that every death was preventable, which is what makes it so much harder."

    Rosary Castro-Olega had retired after a decades-long career as a nurse in Los Angeles. But she went back to work in March when she heard help was needed. Soon afterward, she contracted coronavirus. "She was always there helping, no matter if she was feeling ill herself, or tired, or if she'd just finished a 12-hour shift," her daughter, Tiffany Olega, says.
    Zenei Cortez, co-president of National Nurses United, says the news devastates her not just as a leader of the largest nurses' union in the United States, but as a Filipino American who knows firsthand how hard nurses are working on the front lines -- often without proper protection.

    In a September report, the union found that 67 of the 213 registered nurses who'd died of Covid-19 and related complications in the United States were Filipino. Since then, Cortez says, the death toll has grown. The union's latest analysis of nurses' deaths for which race and ethnicity data was available found that 74 of 245 nurses who'd died were Filipino, or roughly 30%. The toll includes nurses who were born in the Philippines and immigrated to the United States, and Filipino American nurses born in the US. "I'm very concerned and I'm very heartbroken," Cortez says, "because these deaths are unnecessary."

    She's collecting data to honor the dead. Jollene Levid begins each day with a tragic task: searching news clippings to find the names of Filipino health care workers who've died. Her mission: working with a team of volunteers to confirm the details with multiple sources, then placing them on a website where they're compiling data and photos of those who've lost their lives in the pandemic. The site is called Kanlungan, which means shelter or refuge. Levid describes it as a memorial. It's also, in a sense, a warning.
      "We wanted to make sure that we were bringing dignity to people who have passed away saving others' lives. And we were hoping to collect data also, because people need dignity in the workplace now," she says. "If nobody was collecting the information about how many have fallen to Covid, we knew there would be no guarantee that the living would get the protection they need."

      Jollene Levid says the death of Rosary Castro-Olega, a close family friend who she knew as an aunt, inspired her to create a website memorializing healthcare workers who've died during the pandemic. While many people featured on the site are nurses, she says, they aren't the only ones who are dying. The website also includes doctors, therapists and other medical workers of Philippine ancestry who've died in the United States, the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates, Canada, the Bahamas, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Guam and the Philippines.

      "Three times as many Filipino health care workers have died here in the US than in the Philippines," she says. "So right away we know that there's something wrong."

      They're piecing together what's happening -- and why. For decades, Filipino nurses have been on the front lines when health crises surged in the US and around the world. "A number of them have worked in previous epidemics and pandemics in the United States, from AIDS to SARS to Ebola to Covid," says Catherine Ceniza Choy, a professor of ethnic studies at the University of California at Berkeley. "So this is not a new phenomenon." Choy describes it as the latest chapter in a long and complex history that dates back more than a century. Her 2003 book, "Empire of Care: Nursing and Migration in Filipino American History," traces the origins of the migration waves of Filipino nurses who came to work in the US back to the days of colonial rule in the early 20th century. At that time, she says, an Americanized nursing curriculum was brought to the Philippines as part of efforts to build a new education system under the US policy known as "benevolent assimilation."

      Decades later, when nursing shortages in the United States prompted hospitals to look abroad to help, she says, "many American hospitals turned to the Philippines because they have similar professional nursing training and they have fluency in the English language." And by the second half of the 20th century, more trained nurses came to the United States from the Philippines than from any other foreign country. Since the 1960s, Choy estimates more than 150,000 Filipino nurses have migrated to the US.

      National Nurses United placed white clog shoes outside the US Capitol in July to honor nurses who lost their lives from COVID-19. But still, Choy says, their contributions to health care here aren't often acknowledged. She hopes the pandemic may help change that -- and she's working with a team of researchers to better understand the disproportionate toll Covid-19 is taking on Filipino nurses. It's not just about data, she says.
        "Behind those statistics are people who are trying to take care of you and me and who are trying to help us survive this pandemic," she says. "The numbers are disturbing, and I would like to continue doing research about why that is."

        One possible factor, according to a research team she's working with: the places where Filipino nurses are more likely to work. "The major finding...was that Philippine-trained nurses were disproportionately in the ICUs, the emergency rooms, in long-term care facilities such as nursing homes, compared to White, US-trained nurses. They were therefore much more exposed to Covid-19," says Jennifer Nazareno, the co-founder and co-director of the Philippine Health Initiative for Research, Service, and Training at Brown University's School of Public Health. They're also more likely to live in multi-generational households, caring for more dependents. And often, she says, they're breadwinners supporting family members in the United States and the Philippines. That means they may be more likely to stay in high-stress jobs that put them more at risk. And those may not be the only reasons why more Filipino nurses are dying.

        The Filipino 'health paradox'

        Another possible cause is what Nazareno calls the "Filipino American health paradox." On the one hand, she says, Filipinos and Filipino Americans are major providers of healthcare in the United States. On the other hand, they face significant chronic health disparities themselves, including being more likely to have diabetes or heart disease. "That's what we're really looking to examine going forward," she says. "Covid-19 has really revealed this even more, and has really centered this to look at these huge disparities that are happening to the Filipino workers who are now dying."


        Cortez, the president of National Nurses United, shared another theory with CNN. She says Filipino nurses are less likely to question authority and speak up even if, for example, they fear their employers aren't providing them with adequate protective equipment. That's especially true, she says, when they've come to the United States on work visas.
          "A lot of them will not question authority so that they will not be at odds with their employer, because they're always afraid that one wrong move, the employer can revoke their work permit and send them back to the Philippines," she says. As researchers continue to study the causes, the number of deaths keeps growing. They're trying to keep their loved ones' memories alive. And for the families left behind, life is forever altered.
          Tiffany Olega says memories of her mom frequently rush into her mind. "It's been really difficult. ... Even the smallest thing will make me think of her -- driving by a Starbucks, anything with Lakers stuff, the thought of Disneyland," she says.

          When Tiffany Olega graduated from college in May, her mom wasn't there to celebrate. Intead, her family posed with a framed photo of her. Rosary Castro-Olega, a nurse, died in March after contracting coronavirus. Rosary Castro-Olega, a Filipina American who was born and raised in California, had already retired from a decades-long career as a nurse in Los Angeles. But when a cruise she'd been scheduled to take in March was canceled and she heard hospitals needed help, she had no doubt about where she was supposed to be.
          Castro-Olega headed to work. "She was always there helping, no matter if she was feeling ill herself or tired or if she just finished a 12-hour shift, she'd still go out to help somebody," says Tiffany Olega, her oldest daughter.

          Due to coronavirus restrictions, only six people were able to attend Rosary Castro-Olega's viewing after she died. When Castro-Olega died in March, she was the first health care professional to die of Covid-19 in Los Angeles County. And her name was the first added to the Kanlungan website. This year, her grieving family celebrated her birthday at home without her. They wrote messages on purple balloons and lit candles as a memorial. Next year, they plan to celebrate it at Disneyland, wearing T-shirts with her photo beside a hashtag: #FallenHeroes. Jhulan Banago says his family is also trying to keep his mother's memory alive. Celia Yap-Banago died in April, just days before she was planning to celebrate her 40-year anniversary at the Kansas City hospital where she worked.

          Jhulan Banago says this photo of his mom, Celia Yap-Banago, always makes him laugh. "I think it encompasses mom -- hardworking and joking. No one answers two phones and has two conversations at once. ... It's nice to see that mom was so happy at work."
          Since then, her family has kept fixing a plate for her at dinner and often turns the TV to her favorite channel -- The Hallmark Channel, which she'd watch as she drifted off to sleep.

          "We want to make sure that if she's watching down on us, she knows that we miss her, and we still want her to be part of our lives, and also we remember her," Banago says.

          Celia Yap-Banago, a nurse in Kansas City, died in April -- just days shy of her 40th anniversary at the hospital where she worked. Her family still leaves a plate for her at dinner every night. Yap-Banago was the first person in her family to immigrate to the United States, and her death left relatives grieving across continents. Her son says she poured love into her patients, and into her family. "To move to a new country on the other side of the world speaking a different language, to me that sounds extremely terrifying, but also I know why she did it. I know that she was very forward-thinking and...wanted to raise kids with more opportunity than she had," Banago says. Banago says he takes comfort in a message an aunt in the Philippines recently sent him after a typhoon hit. While many homes nearby dealt with flooding and major damage, their house emerged virtually unscathed. The house was built with money his mom sent from the United States.
          Even now, he says, his mom is still taking care of others -- forever a nurse.




          COVID-19 LatinX Conference Call with the Office of the Governor


          The Office of the Governor is holding their nineteenth COVID-19 Latinx conference call on December 11th at 1 pm. The Office of Public Engagement and Volunteer NC will facilitate the call. Please see attached agenda. Spanish interpretation services will be provided. Register Here

          North Carolina COVID-19 Cases


          The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) reports 404,032 COVID-19 cases, 5,605 deaths, and 2,373 hospitalizations, as of December 9, 2020. For more information regarding live updates (NCDHHS updates the site every day around noon), please visit the NCDHHS website. 

          Orange County Health Department also has a COVID-19 dashboard webpage, with information on COVID-19 data in the county. The dashboard will be updated every Tuesday and Thursday.

          There are currently 4,191 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Orange County, and 62 deaths.




          COVID-19 Community Resources

          For more information on COVID-19 community resources in the county, please visit our webpage. Resources on specific topic areas, such as food access, education, housing, and others, are all accessible on our website, or at the links below.
          Stay at Home
          Community Resources
          Multilingual Resources
          Face Coverings
          Social Distancing
          COVID-19 FAQ
          Testing
          Symptoms
          Myths and Facts
          How to Help
          Long Term Facilities
          Equity
          Places of Worship
          Pets
          OCHD Spanish Webpage




          Contact Information


          For general questions (not urgent) about 2019 Novel Coronavirus, contact NCDHHS at: ncresponse@dhhs.nc.gov or 1-866-462-3821 to address general questions about coronavirus from the public.

          If you are an individual or a medical practice with questions about COVID-19, call the Orange County Health Department at (919) 245-6111. During business hours (8:30a.m. to 5 p.m.) 

          Contact Kristin Prelipp, the Orange County Health Department’s Public Information Officer at: kprelipp@orangecountync.gov or 919-245-2462

          Orange County Health Department:
          Web: www.orangecountync.gov/coronavirus
          Phone: 919-245-2400
          Email: covid19@orangecountync.gov
          Facebook: Orange County Health Department
          Instagram: OrangeHealthNC
          Twitter: Orange Health NC
          Youtube: OCHDNC

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          300 W Tryon St, Hillsborough, NC 27278

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