Ask The Doc! Fighting Off Covid-19

Community, Lifestyle
Ask The Doc! Recovery Process Of Covid-19

This morning, The doctors address a comment left on one of the Ask The Doc Segments. What drugs are good for fighting off Covid-19 or do we just wait on a vaccine? The Doctors also address the President and first lady testing positive for Covid-19. What do the Doctors have to say about testing positive with no symptoms? When could he have contracted the virus? How long has he had it? All this and more on Ask The Doc!

 

Agricultural Businesses Awarded Coronavirus Relief Funds

Featured Stories
agricultural relief

NASHVILLE – Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, the Financial Stimulus Accountability Group, and the Tennessee Department of Agriculture (TDA)  announced Coronavirus Agricultural and Forestry Business (CAFB) Fund awards to farm and forestry businesses. TDA established the CAFB Fund with CARES Act resources to help ensure stability of the food supply chain and agribusiness economy during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Just like all sectors of our economy, the agribusiness economy was hit hard by the pandemic,” said Governor Lee. “The CAFB Fund assistance for ag-related businesses will provide immediate aid to those who work in Tennessee’s number one industry of ag and forestry, and the funds will have a wide-reaching and long-lasting impact on Tennessee’s economic recovery.”

“The coronavirus has touched every sector of our economy. Among the hardest hit was our agriculture community. The pandemic fundamentally altered the supply chain our farmers relied on to make their living,” said Lieutenant Governor Randy McNally (R-Oak Ridge). “I am grateful these dollars will be made available to help those in agriculture who have struggled mightily in these trying times.”

“The CAFB Fund further strengthens the state’s supply chain to ensure our farmers can continue to deliver to Tennesseans and their families during the ongoing pandemic,” said House Speaker Cameron Sexton (R-Crossville). “We have always supported a strong business climate that drives farming, agribusiness and forestry in Tennessee, and this solution maintains this strong climate, which will ensure our local and statewide economies continue their successful recovery.”

CAFB Fund provides financial assistance to agricultural, food, forestry, and nonprofit agricultural entities in Tennessee. Recipients were awarded based on four categories relative to COVID-19 impact and response: business disruption, pandemic response, supply chain enhancement, and increased meat processing capacity. Applicants who had not received COVID-19 relief funding from other available programs were given priority.

“There was a tremendous response to the agricultural and forestry business relief opportunity,” Commissioner Charlie Hatcher, D.V.M. said. “We appreciate the support from Governor Lee and our state leaders who designated the financial relief program and who continue working to preserve these businesses. We made an effort to spread these dollars statewide fairly and equitably, and 60 percent of fund recipients were small businesses with an annual revenue of less than $1 million per year. Our TDA Business Development team worked in conjunction with the Department of Finance and Administration (F&A) to allocate the money fairly and equitably.”

TDA reports that more than 1,000 applications with more than $335 million in requests were received. CAFB Fund relief will fund approximately 80 percent of applications. Approximately 40 percent of the funds were awarded to resolve supply chain issues and 60 percent to cover COVID-19 losses and expenses. Priority areas of the relief funding were meat processors, forestry businesses, milk processors, and agricultural fairs. TDA will continue working with F&A on management of funds that will be distributed on a reimbursement basis.

Gov. Lee unveils plan to reopen Tennessee schools

Featured Stories
reopen schools plan

Nashville, Tenn. – Tennessee Governor Bill Lee announced today the State of Tennessee’s recommendations to reopen schools for the 2020-2021 school year.

“Providing parents a choice in their children’s education is incredibly important,” said Gov. Lee. “In-person learning is the medically sound, preferred option. Our state is doing everything we can to work with local school districts and ensure that in-person learning is made available in a way that protects the health and safety of our students and educators, and this plan helps us accomplish that goal.”

“Leading health organizations, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, American Academy of Pediatrics, and National Academies of Sciences, Mathematics, and Engineering, have all stressed the importance of in-person learning for students,” said Tennessee Commissioner of Health Dr. Lisa Piercey. “The Department of Health has worked with Department of Education to establish a protocol to keep school buildings open safely and cause minimal disruption when positive cases occur.”

“Tennessee is prioritizing health and safety of our school communities,” said Tennessee Commissioner of Education Penny Schwinn. “Ensuring schools, teachers, families, and students have the critical resources and supports they need to start the new school year strong is paramount, and I am thankful to Governor Lee for continuing to support education in Tennessee as schools reopen across the state.”

The recommendations from the Department of Health and the Department of Education are below:

Health

When to Test & Quarantine

10-Day Sick Window

Anyone testing positive for COVID-19 must isolate themselves at home for 10 days from the onset of their symptoms or 10 days from the date their test was done if they never developed symptoms. Fever must be gone and they must be feeling better for at least 24 hours.

14-Day Quarantine

Anyone who has been within 6 feet of someone who has COVID-19 for 10 minutes or more must quarantine themselves at home for 14 days from the last time they were with that person. These time periods do not change with a doctor’s note or with a negative test.

Contact Tracing

Keeping schools open for in-person instruction depends upon our ability to quickly isolate people who are sick and quarantine their close contacts.

If a child is ill, parents should not send them to school where they could infect others. If a child is diagnosed with COVID-19, parents are asked to assist the Department of Health by contacting the child’s close contacts so those individuals can quarantine at home.

If a parent is notified that their child has been in close contact of someone with COVID-19, please follow the guidelines and quarantine them at home for 14 days.

Texting Platform

Schools may be able to assist with notifying families of the need to quarantine through text messaging services. If parents receive a message from their child’s school informing you that your child needs to stay at home for 14 days, please follow those instructions.

Immunizations

School entry immunizations have not changed. Even if students are learning online, they still need the required immunizations to register for school. COVID-19 has had a significant impact on immunization rates: 43 percent fewer immunizations were reported during April 2020 compared to April 2019.

It is critical that children receive regular check-ups and have their immunizations up to date. Immunizations mitigate outbreaks of preventable diseases, such as the measles and whooping cough.

COVID-19 Impact on Vaccinations 0-19 years old

Supporting Child Wellbeing

In response to the pandemic’s long-term effects on Tennessee’s school districts and students, Gov. Lee charged Commissioner Schwinn with convening the 38-member COVID-19 Child Wellbeing Task Force. The findings of the taskforce’s Initial COVID-19 Impact Summary include:

  • Reports of suspected child abuse dropped by 27% during peak stay-at-home orders in Tennessee;
  • 75 percent of students nationally receive mental health care in a school setting;
  • In 2019, approx. 45,000 school-aged children were served for mental health through the community-based system;
  • Approximately half of districts were able to address or check on wellness and safety of students during spring closures;
  • Nearly 14 million students across the country go hungry when school is not in session, so resumption of in-person learning is critical to ensure access to nutrition.

Academics

Empowering Parents

Whether it be in-person or virtual, we want parents to have a choice in their child’s education. For those who choose the virtual option, the State will provide free resources to supplement their district’s school-based services. The resources include:

  • Early Literacy Resource: A free resource for students pre-K through 2nd grade to build foundational skills and support early literacy;
  • PBS Learning Series: Complete lessons for  1st– 9th grade students in both math and ELA taught by Tennessee teachers;
  • STE(A)M Resource Hub: Three challenges per week to spark creative thinking, design, and career exploration from the home;
  • Start of the Year Checkpoint: A free and optional assessment to measure student performance at the beginning of the year and help inform educators about student readiness for the year ahead;

Advocating for Students

Technology and Continuity of Operations

Devices and connectivity will be critical resources to ensure quality remote learning this school year. The $50 million grant initiative to support district technology purchases is now available and is intended to increase student access to one-to-one instructional devices such as laptops or tablets.

The Department of Education is supporting districts, schools and teachers through additional WiFi and technology supports, including 250,000 devices.

Meal Supports & Food Accessibility

The school meal finder will continue to be provided to ensure parents know where to go for school meal programs should a school building be closed.

Financial assistance is available for families who qualify for free or reduced school lunches, through the Department of Human Services’ Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) program.

Supporting Teachers

Safety Equipment for Teachers

The State is providing no-cost PPE, including face masks for any school stakeholder who wants or needs one, thermometers for every school, and face shields for every staff member. This includes 298,000 cloth reusable masks for teachers, and 27 million disposable masks for students distributed by the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency.

Every classroom teacher will have a full-year classroom disinfecting kit to use so no teacher pays for these materials out of their own pockets. The kits include hand sanitizer, disinfecting wipes, gloves and masks.

School nurses will be provided with surgical masks, gloves, protective gowns, and face shields.

Professional Development Resources

The Department of Education will offer free professional development classes on remote teaching that will cover relationship-building, using instructional materials, and system set-up. These resources have extended through August 31.

Principals and assistant principals will have access to remote education professional       development through UT-Knoxville, and teachers have access through Trevecca Nazarene University.

The Department also announced the Special Education Additional Endorsement Grant, which will enable every public school district to provide at least one teacher with a special education endorsement (SPED) for free. Eight SPED Additional Endorsement Grants, totaling $1 million, have been awarded to Educator Preparation Programs (EPPs) to deliver courses in a virtual environment.

Assisting Districts

Decision-Making Protocol

The Department of Education will provide district leaders with a decision-tree that includes recommendations on how to keep school buildings open safely when a case or cases are confirmed among students or staff, developed in collaboration with the Department of Health and School & District Action Teams.

Recruiting Additional Personnel

job board for educators and substitute teachers has been created so districts can use remote resources to ensure they are staffed for the start of the year and can fill vacancies more quickly. More than 1,000 educators have already utilized the job board, showing the strong teaching workforce present in Tennessee.

Funding

Ensuring districts have the resources they need to implement remote learning with fidelity is paramount. The $11 million grant program to bolster programmatic supports and implementation will be released to districts soon.

The Department of Education is establishing a criteria list for potential district partners to ensure supports are well-versed in the academic programming needs to successfully implement district Continuous Learning Plans (CLPs).

As districts finalize their CLPs and build team capacity to effectively implement them, this grant program will provide funding for supports such as:

  • Training educators on effective instructional practices in virtual classroom environments;
  • Integrating the use of high-quality instructional materials in virtual instruction;
  • Supporting operational aspects of virtual instruction, including IT support for students, families, and staff.

Tennessee will continue to ensure parents, teachers, and school leaders are equipped with the appropriate information to provide a high-quality education for all students.

Contact Sports

Gov. Lee will issue Executive Order No. 55 to allow for contact sports to resume, provided they follow the requirements of TSSAA. Non-TSSAA schools must follow equivalent guidelines, and non-school-sponsored athletics should follow the Tennessee Pledge guidelines. An update to the Pledge guidelines will be forthcoming.

Tennessee lifting restaurants and retail capacity restrictions

Announcements, Community, Press Release
Economic recovery

Nashville, Tenn. – As Tennessee continues to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, the state’s Economic Recovery Group announced today it will lift capacity restrictions on restaurants and retail to instead focus on social distancing best practices effective May 22 and issue guidelines to facilitate the safe reopening of larger, non-contact attractions on or after May 22. New Tennessee Pledge guidelines will be released this week. Six counties – Shelby, Madison, Davidson, Hamilton, Knox, and Sullivan – may continue to follow individual, county-specific reopening plans created in consultation with State and local health departments.

“Tennesseans have worked incredibly hard to do their part and help slow the spread of COVID-19 so that our state can begin to reopen. Thanks to their continued efforts, we’re able to allow restaurants and retail businesses to operate at greater capacity and large attractions to open in a safe and thoughtful way,” said Governor Bill Lee. “Our state continues to see downward trends in case growth and meets the White House criteria for a phased reopening. This progress has been hard-won, and we can build upon it by reopening while also maintaining common-sense safety measures like mask-wearing and good hygiene. By taking the Tennessee Pledge, our businesses can reopen in a way that protects the health of their customers and employees, and protects the livelihoods of hard-working Tennesseans.”

Gov. Bill Lee

The new Large Attractions guidance applies to those businesses that can effectively practice social distancing with strong measures to protect both employees and customers, including racetracks, amusement parks, waterparks, theaters and dinner theaters, auditoriums, large museums and more. Restrictions on social gatherings of more than 10 people remain in place for the time being. Updates to Restaurant Guidance will include a lift on capacity restrictions, allowing for increased service as long as social distancing guidelines are adhered to, including 6 feet between tables.

The updated guidelines come as Tennessee continues to meet the White House state gating criteria for phased reopening. The gating criteria include:

Symptoms

  •  Downward trajectory of influenza-like illnesses (ILI) reported within a 14-day period; AND
  •  Downward trajectory of COVID-like syndromic (CLI) cases reported within a 14-day period

Cases

  • Downward trajectory of documented cases within a 14-day period; OR
  • Downward trajectory of positive tests as a percent of total tests within a 14-day period (flat or increasing volume of tests)

Hospitals

  • Treat all patients without crisis care; AND
  • Robust testing program in place for at-risk healthcare workers, including emerging antibody testing

Hospital capacity remains sufficient to meet the needs of patients, while the state continues to meet the goal of testing 2 percent of the population per month.

The Economic Recovery Group (ERG), composed of 30 leaders from the public and private sector, is crafting guidance to assist businesses in a safe reopening. The industry representatives participating in the ERG collectively represent over 140,000 Tennessee businesses that employ over 2.5M Tennesseans. More information about ERG is available here.

Graphs are available here.

16,370 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Tennessee, 8,624 recovered

Health
confirmed cases

In an effort to keep our readers, up to date with the latest number of cases confirmed in Tenn., Fetch Your News will continually be updating this article with the most recent updates from Tenn. Department of Health (TDH).

As of May 13, 2020, TDH reported 16,370 cases statewide, 273 deaths, and 8,624 recovered. The highest concentration is in Davidson with 3,623 cases, 37 deaths, and 1,950 recovered. TDH reported that 283,924 tests have been completed in the state.

Out of the positive cases around 8 percent have required hospitalization and 52 percent have recovered from home. Information about hospitalization status is gathered at the time of diagnosis, therefore this information may be incomplete. This number indicates the number of patients that were ever hospitalized during their illness, it does not indicate the number of patients currently hospitalized.

49 percent of cases have fully recovered from the virus. TDH defines “recovered” as people who (1) have been confirmed to be asymptomatic by their local or regional health department and have completed their required isolation period or (2)are at least 21 days beyond the first test confirming their illness.

Up to date map of COVID-19 spread in Tenn.

County Breakdown

3,623 Davidson

37 deaths, 24,120 negative

3,475 Shelby

75 deaths, 32,822 negative

1,381 Trousdale

deaths, 1,646 negative

780 Rutherford

20 deaths, 7,911 negative

714 Sumner

40 deaths, 5,240 negative

603 Bledsoe

deaths, 3,144 negative

453 Williamson

10 deaths, 7,012 negative

400 Tipton

deaths, 2,495 negative

309 Wilson

deaths, 3,671 negative

300 Lake

deaths, 1,156 negative

295 Knox

deaths, 10,339 negative

286 Hamilton

13 deaths, 4,600 negative

246 Bedford

deaths, 1,860 negative

245 Robertson

deaths, 2,398 negative

191 Montgomery

deaths, 5,058 negative

190 Putnam

deaths, 2,812 negative

177 Hardeman

deaths, 3,327 negative

156 Madison

deaths, 3,820 negative

123 McMinn

deaths, 2,013 negative

88 Dickson

deaths, 1,543 negative

87 Cumberland

deaths, 2,600 negative

85 Fayette

deaths, 1,638 negative

78 Cheatham

deaths, 1,306 negative

75 Bradley

deaths, 1,708 negative

74 Blount

deaths, 2,261 negative

71 Macon

deaths, 1,017 negative

65 Sevier

deaths, 2,768 negative

64 Washington

deaths, 2,437 negative

58 Maury

deaths, 2,118 negative

57 Gibson

deaths, 1,740 negative

56 Coffee

deaths, 1,576 negative

54 Sullivan

deaths, 2,545 negative

52 Hickman

deaths, 716 negative

47 Greene

deaths, 1,399 negative

46 Loudon

deaths, 1,075 negative

44 Dyer

deaths, 1,048 negative

41 Franklin

deaths, 1,576 negative

40 Lauderdale

deaths, 2,749 negative

35 Anderson

deaths, 3,149 negative

33 Monroe

deaths, 644 negative

31 Hawkins

deaths, 1,145 negative

30 Grundy

deaths, 381 negative

29 Marion

deaths, 645 negative

28 DeKalb

deaths, 934 negative

28 Haywood

deaths, 552 negative

26 Jefferson

deaths, 1,269 negative

25 Hamblen

deaths, 1,729 negative

24 Marshall

deaths, 794 negative

24 Smith

deaths, 638 negative

24 Weakley

deaths, 776 negative

22 Carroll

deaths, 849 negative

22 Meigs

deaths, 357 negative

21 Lawrence

deaths, 1,109 negative

19 Cocke

deaths, 709 negative

18 Carter

deaths, 1,058 negative

17 Campbell

deaths, 1,050 negative

17 White

deaths, 974 negative

16 Lincoln

deaths, 912 negative

16 Obion

deaths, 636 negative

15 Henry

deaths, 927 negative

15 Johnson

deaths, 1,781 negative

14 Overton

deaths, 829 negative

13 Cannon

deaths, 373 negative

13 Perry

deaths, 116 negative

13 Warren

deaths, 1,303 negative

12 Chester

deaths, 406 negative

12 Crockett

deaths, 387 negative

12 Humphreys

deaths, 449 negative

12 McNairy

deaths, 550 negative

12 Morgan

deaths, 2,721 negative

12 Polk

deaths, 380 negative

11 Scott

deaths, 461 negative

10 Henderson

deaths, 759 negative

10 Jackson

deaths, 487 negative

9 Giles

deaths, 720 negative

8 Hardin

deaths, 1,032 negative

8 Roane

deaths, 2,245 negative

7 Claiborne

deaths, 493 negative

7 Sequatchie

deaths, 762 negative

7 Stewart

deaths, 257 negative

6 Benton

deaths, 634 negative

6 Clay

deaths, 305 negative

6 Fentress

deaths, 495 negative

6 Grainger

deaths, 427 negative

6 Houston

deaths, 217 negative

6 Rhea

deaths, 819 negative

4 Decatur

deaths, 232 negative

4 Union

deaths, 361 negative

3 Moore

deaths, 224 negative

3 Unicoi

deaths, 358 negative

3 Wayne

deaths, 320 negative

2 Lewis

deaths, 200 negative

2 Van Buren

deaths, 278 negative

1 Pickett

deaths, 201 negative

0 Hancock

deaths, 101 negative

14,768 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Tennessee, 7,369 recovered

Health
confirmed cases

In an effort to keep our readers, up to date with the latest number of cases confirmed in Tenn., Fetch Your News will continually be updating this article with the most recent updates from Tenn. Department of Health (TDH).

As of May 9, 2020 at 5:35 p.m., TDH reported 14,768 cases statewide, 242 deaths, and 7,369 recovered. The highest concentration is in Davidson with 3,401 cases, 31 deaths, and 1,758 recovered. TDH reported that 243,578 tests have been completed in the state.

Out of the positive cases around 9 percent have required hospitalization and 54 percent have recovered from home. Information about hospitalization status is gathered at the time of diagnosis, therefore this information may be incomplete. This number indicates the number of patients that were ever hospitalized during their illness, it does not indicate the number of patients currently hospitalized.

49 percent of cases have fully recovered from the virus. TDH defines “recovered” as people who (1) have been confirmed to be asymptomatic by their local or regional health department and have completed their required isolation period or (2)are at least 21 days beyond the first test confirming their illness.

Up to date map of COVID-19 spread in Tenn.

County Breakdown

3,401  Davidson

31 deaths, 22,338 negative

3,260  Shelby

68 deaths, 29,083 negative

1,357  Trousdale

2 deaths, 1,611 negative

725  Rutherford

14 deaths, 7,226 negative

698  Sumner

38 deaths, 4,897 negative

604  Bledsoe

0 deaths, 3,112 negative

443  Williamson

10 deaths, 6,372 negative

300  Wilson

6 deaths, 3,461 negative

263  Knox

5 deaths, 9,357 negative

237  Bedford

3 deaths, 1,740 negative

233  Hamilton

13 deaths, 4,339 negative

218  Robertson

0 deaths, 2,173 negative

175  Putnam

5 deaths, 2,713 negative

174  Montgomery

2 deaths, 4,521 negative

159  Tipton

2 deaths, 1,834 negative

151  Hardeman

0 deaths, 2,136 negative

151  Madison

1 deaths, 3,571 negative

117  McMinn

5 deaths, 1,901 negative

86  Dickson

0 deaths, 1,439 negative

85  Cumberland

1 deaths, 2,289 negative

79  Fayette

1 deaths, 1,481 negative

71  Blount

3 deaths, 1,984 negative

69  Bradley

1 deaths, 1,524 negative

65  Sevier

2 deaths, 2,364 negative

63  Cheatham

0 deaths, 1,191 negative

61  Washington

0 deaths, 2,254 negative

59  Lake

0 deaths, 1,138 negative

58  Macon

3 deaths, 941 negative

55  Maury

0 deaths, 1,986 negative

54  Gibson

1 deaths, 1,553 negative

54  Sullivan

1 deaths, 2,282 negative

53  Coffee

0 deaths, 1,437 negative

52  Hickman

0 deaths, 668 negative

46  Greene

2 deaths, 1,161 negative

41  Dyer

0 deaths, 918 negative

41  Loudon

0 deaths, 870 negative

40  Franklin

1 deaths, 1,472 negative

31  Anderson

1 deaths, 2,764 negative

31  Hawkins

2 deaths, 1,074 negative

30  Grundy

1 deaths, 357 negative

29  Marion

1 deaths, 622 negative

28  Monroe

1 deaths, 579 negative

27  DeKalb

0 deaths, 820 negative

26  Haywood

1 deaths, 471 negative

26  Jefferson

0 deaths, 1,104 negative

26  Lauderdale

0 deaths, 785 negative

24  Marshall

1 deaths, 736 negative

24  Smith

1 deaths, 594 negative

24  Weakley

0 deaths, 730 negative

22  Meigs

0 deaths, 253 negative

21  Hamblen

2 deaths, 1,375 negative

20  Lawrence

0 deaths, 1,040 negative

19  Carroll

1 deaths, 780 negative

18  Carter

1 deaths, 968 negative

17  Campbell

1 deaths, 941 negative

17  Cocke

0 deaths, 636 negative

16  Lincoln

0 deaths, 817 negative

16  Obion

1 deaths, 570 negative

16  White

0 deaths, 827 negative

15  Henry

0 deaths, 836 negative

13  Cannon

0 deaths, 354 negative

13  Perry

0 deaths, 106 negative

12  Chester

0 deaths, 364 negative

12  Humphreys

1 deaths, 410 negative

12  Morgan

0 deaths, 2,584 negative

12  Polk

0 deaths, 337 negative

12  Warren

0 deaths, 1,214 negative

11  McNairy

0 deaths, 523 negative

11  Overton

0 deaths, 772 negative

11  Scott

0 deaths, 422 negative

10  Henderson

0 deaths, 717 negative

10  Jackson

0 deaths, 456 negative

 Crockett

0 deaths, 367 negative

 Giles

0 deaths, 684 negative

 Hardin

0 deaths, 954 negative

 Roane

0 deaths, 2,012 negative

 Claiborne

0 deaths, 440 negative

 Stewart

0 deaths, 234 negative

 Benton

1 deaths, 477 negative

 Clay

0 deaths, 282 negative

 Fentress

0 deaths, 461 negative

 Grainger

0 deaths, 372 negative

 Houston

0 deaths, 208 negative

 Rhea

0 deaths, 733 negative

 Sequatchie

0 deaths, 737 negative

 Johnson

0 deaths, 260 negative

 Decatur

0 deaths, 215 negative

 Moore

0 deaths, 208 negative

 Unicoi

0 deaths, 341 negative

 Union

0 deaths, 334 negative

 Wayne

0 deaths, 301 negative

 Lewis

0 deaths, 190 negative

 Van Buren

0 deaths, 266 negative

 Pickett

0 deaths, 199 negative

 Hancock

0 deaths, 92 negative

 

14,096 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Tennessee, 6,783 recovered

Health
confirmed cases

In an effort to keep our readers, up to date with the latest number of cases confirmed in Tenn., Fetch Your News will continually be updating this article with the most recent updates from Tenn. Department of Health (TDH).

As of May 7, 2020 at 5:35 p.m., TDH reported 14,096 cases statewide, 237 deaths, and 6,783 recovered. The highest concentration is in Davidson with 3,157 cases, 31 deaths, and 1,601 recovered. TDH reported that 227,101 tests have been completed in the state.

Out of the positive cases around 9 percent have required hospitalization and 52 percent have recovered from home. Information about hospitalization status is gathered at the time of diagnosis, therefore this information may be incomplete. This number indicates the number of patients that were ever hospitalized during their illness, it does not indicate the number of patients currently hospitalized.

47 percent of cases have fully recovered from the virus. TDH defines “recovered” as people who (1) have been confirmed to be asymptomatic by their local or regional health department and have completed their required isolation period or (2)are at least 21 days beyond the first test confirming their illness.

Up to date map of COVID-19 spread in Tenn.

County Breakdown

3,157  Davidson

31 deaths, 19,632 negative

3,066  Shelby

64 deaths, 26,371 negative

1,356  Trousdale

2 deaths, 1,576 negative

672  Sumner

38 deaths, 4,340 negative

661  Rutherford

14 deaths, 6,487 negative

602  Bledsoe

0 deaths, 3,092 negative

434  Williamson

10 deaths, 5,908 negative

288  Wilson

6 deaths, 3,182 negative

253  Knox

5 deaths, 8,597 negative

217  Bedford

3 deaths, 1,629 negative

211  Hamilton

13 deaths, 3,919 negative

195  Robertson

0 deaths, 1,893 negative

162  Putnam

5 deaths, 2,381 negative

158  Tipton

2 deaths, 1,676 negative

155  Montgomery

2 deaths, 4,123 negative

145  Madison

1 deaths, 3,258 negative

108  McMinn

3 deaths, 1,755 negative

85  Dickson

0 deaths, 1,354 negative

84  Cumberland

1 deaths, 2,091 negative

73  Fayette

1 deaths, 1,349 negative

69  Blount

3 deaths, 1,856 negative

64  Bradley

1 deaths, 1,390 negative

63  Sevier

2 deaths, 2,168 negative

59  Lake

0 deaths, 1,109 negative

59  Washington

0 deaths, 2,106 negative

58  Cheatham

0 deaths, 1,097 negative

55  Macon

3 deaths, 842 negative

52  Gibson

1 deaths, 1,479 negative

52  Maury

0 deaths, 1,844 negative

52  Sullivan

1 deaths, 2,071 negative

48  Hickman

0 deaths, 630 negative

47  Coffee

0 deaths, 1,320 negative

43  Greene

2 deaths, 1,023 negative

39  Dyer

0 deaths, 864 negative

38  Loudon

0 deaths, 808 negative

37  Franklin

1 deaths, 1,398 negative

31  Anderson

1 deaths, 2,560 negative

31  Hawkins

2 deaths, 1,013 negative

30  Grundy

1 deaths, 339 negative

29  Marion

1 deaths, 594 negative

26  Haywood

1 deaths, 450 negative

26  Jefferson

0 deaths, 1,032 negative

26  Monroe

1 deaths, 536 negative

25  DeKalb

0 deaths, 735 negative

25  Lauderdale

0 deaths, 628 negative

24  Marshall

1 deaths, 699 negative

24  Weakley

0 deaths, 704 negative

23  Hardeman

0 deaths, 631 negative

23  Smith

1 deaths, 535 negative

20  Hamblen

2 deaths, 1,244 negative

19  Carroll

1 deaths, 751 negative

19  Lawrence

0 deaths, 979 negative

18  Carter

1 deaths, 864 negative

17  Cocke

0 deaths, 578 negative

17  Meigs

0 deaths, 213 negative

16  Campbell

1 deaths, 876 negative

16  Lincoln

0 deaths, 761 negative

16  White

0 deaths, 733 negative

15  Obion

1 deaths, 523 negative

14  Henry

0 deaths, 807 negative

13  Cannon

0 deaths, 332 negative

13  Perry

0 deaths, 96 negative

12  Polk

0 deaths, 278 negative

11  Humphreys

1 deaths, 380 negative

11  McNairy

0 deaths, 498 negative

11  Overton

0 deaths, 718 negative

11  Scott

0 deaths, 320 negative

10  Chester

0 deaths, 344 negative

10  Henderson

0 deaths, 691 negative

10  Warren

0 deaths, 1,134 negative

 Giles

0 deaths, 656 negative

 Jackson

0 deaths, 430 negative

 Roane

0 deaths, 1,806 negative

 Benton

1 deaths, 359 negative

 Claiborne

0 deaths, 398 negative

 Crockett

0 deaths, 349 negative

 Hardin

0 deaths, 919 negative

 Sequatchie

0 deaths, 700 negative

 Stewart

0 deaths, 218 negative

 Clay

0 deaths, 262 negative

 Grainger

0 deaths, 346 negative

 Houston

0 deaths, 199 negative

 Morgan

0 deaths, 400 negative

 Rhea

0 deaths, 668 negative

 Fentress

0 deaths, 424 negative

 Johnson

0 deaths, 125 negative

 Decatur

0 deaths, 205 negative

 Wayne

0 deaths, 287 negative

 Moore

0 deaths, 193 negative

 Union

0 deaths, 315 negative

 Lewis

0 deaths, 167 negative

 Unicoi

0 deaths, 318 negative

 Van Buren

0 deaths, 243 negative

 Hancock

0 deaths, 87 negative

 Pickett

0 deaths, 184 negative

 

DPH Release – Expanded Testing For COVID-19 In Georgia

Featured, Health

Revised Testing Criteria and Increased Number of Test Sites

Atlanta – The Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) is increasing the number of specimen
collection sites statewide for COVID-19 testing, and is revising the current testing criteria to
accommodate more testing of Georgia residents.

Effective immediately, all symptomatic individuals will be eligible for COVID-19 testing. Health
care workers, first responders, law enforcement and long-term care facility residents and staff will
still be prioritized for testing regardless of whether they are or are not symptomatic.
Referrals are still required, however, there are now two ways to be referred to a DPH specimen
collection site:

Local Health Department –
Individuals who meet COVID-19 testing criteria may now be referred to DPH specimen collection
sites by contacting their local health department. They will be screened by appropriate health
department staff and referred to the closest, most convenient specimen collection site.

Contact information for local health departments can be found on the DPH homepage, under COVID-19 in Georgia.

Health Care Provider Referral –
Health care providers and/or physicians can and should continue to refer patients for COVID-19
testing.

People should not arrive unannounced or without a scheduled appointment at a specimen
collection site, hospital, emergency room or other health care facility. Only individuals who have
been evaluated by public health or a health care provider and assigned a PUI # number will
be referred to these drive-thru sites.

Together we can stop further spread of COVID-19 in our state and save lives.

Stay home – the Governor has issued a shelter-in-place Executive Order that should be observed
by all residents and visitors.

Practice social distancing – keep at least 6 feet between yourself and other people.

Wash your hands – use soap and water and scrub for at least 20 seconds. Use an alcohol-based
hand sanitizer (60% alcohol) if soap and water aren’t readily available.
Wear a mask – the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommend the use of face
masks to help slow the spread of COVID-19, especially where socials distancing is difficult to
maintain (grocery stores, pharmacies, etc.), and especially in areas of significant community-
based transmission.

For more information about COVID-19 Click here or
Click Here.

For updates on the COVID-19 situation as it develops, follow @GaDPH, @GeorgiaEMA, and
@GovKemp on Twitter and @GaDPH, @GEMA.OHS, and @GovKemp on Facebook.

New Data Supports Social Distancing Now More Than Ever

Featured, Health, News
Department of public health

News Release from the Department of Public Health – April 2, 2020

Atlanta – As Governor Brian Kemp and DPH Commissioner Kathleen E. Toomey, M.D.,
M.P.H., finalize the details of the Executive Order requiring Georgians to shelter in place, it is
important to emphasize why these measures are needed now to keep all Georgians healthy and
safe and to stop the spread of COVID-19.

For weeks it has been known that people who were positive for COVID-19 but did not have
symptoms likely were able to transmit the virus. However, on March 30, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Robert Redfield, M.D., confirmed that new data indicates
that as many as 25% of individuals infected with COVID-19 remain asymptomatic. Additionally,
science also now informs us that individuals who are symptomatic, are infectious up to 48
hours before symptoms appear. This new information tells the health care community,
medical researchers, public health and governments why COVID-19 is spreading so rapidly.
“Until now, containing the spread of COVID-19 has been based on early detection and isolation
of people with symptoms of the virus,” said Toomey. “Social distancing and keeping people
apart from each other are now more than just recommendations; they are the best weapons we
have to stop the spread of COVID-19.”

In addition to social distancing, all Georgians are reminded to wash their hands frequently and
thoroughly with soap and water, or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer (60% alcohol) when
soap and water aren’t available. Avoid touching your face, nose, mouth, and eyes with
unwashed hands. Cover your coughs and sneezes with a tissue, and throw the used tissue in
the trash.

To read more about the presymptomatic transmission of COVID-19:
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/clinical-guidance-management-patients.html
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6914e1.htm?s_cid=mm6914e1_w
For more information about COVID-19 https://dph.georgia.gov/novelcoronavirus or
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/index.html.

For updates on the COVID-19 situation as it develops, follow @GaDPH, @GeorgiaEMA, and
@GovKemp on Twitter and @GaDPH, @GEMA.OHS, and @GovKemp on Facebook.

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