Fighter Kyle Daukaus, left, and his brother and training partner Chris Daukaus, walk home after exercising at Pleasant Hill Park, Saturday, May 2, 2020, in Philadelphia. Kyle, a rising star in the regional MMA promotion Cage Fury Fighting Championships, is still chasing his dream of getting the call to fight for UFC despite the coronavirus pandemic.
Fighter Kyle Daukaus, left, and his brother and training partner Chris Daukaus, walk home after exercising at Pleasant Hill Park, Saturday, May 2, 2020, in Philadelphia. Kyle, a rising star in the regional MMA promotion Cage Fury Fighting Championships, is still chasing his dream of getting the call to fight for UFC despite the coronavirus pandemic.
With our coronavirus coverage, our goal is to equip you with the information you need. Rather than chase every update, we’ll try to keep things in context and focus on helping you make decisions. See all of our stories here.
Pennsylvania on Wednesday reported below 1,000 new cases of the coronavirus for the fourth straight day, the longest such streak since the daily reports of new cases first reached four figures in early April.
Health Secretary Rachel Levine called the four-day dip below 1,000 “good news.”
“Trends mean more than any specific day, but it’s starting to form a trend, so I think that that’s very positive news,” Levine said during a video news conference.
Also Wednesday, Gov. Tom Wolf announced the creation of the Commonwealth Civilian Coronavirus Corps, an organization whose scale, funding and timeline remained unclear Wednesday.
The corps, Wolf said, will be designed to marshal Pennsylvanians into a force of workers to help contain future outbreaks of the virus and inject life into the economy.
“To have an impact on the economy, we want this to be a big deal,” Wolf told a video news conference.
He said he is working to secure federal funding for the project.
In other coronavirus-related news in Pennsylvania:
Cases
Cases tallied in the two months since Pennsylvania reported its first positive test now number more than 51,840, according to the state Department of Health, an increase of 888 from Tuesday’s figures.
Even so, the state has reported nearly 7,500 new cases in the past week, an increase of 17%. The state reported 94 more deaths, bringing the statewide total to 3,106.
In central Pennsylvania counties, a total of 9,305 people have tested positive or are presumed to have had the virus since the first cases were reported in the region on March 13. Of those who tested positive, 416 died from COVID-19.
Today’s update includes two newly reported deaths in Schuylkill County, one in Berks, one in Cumberland and one in Lancaster.
Adams: 148 cases, including 5 deaths
Berks: 3048 cases, including 148 deaths
Columbia: 302 cases, including 16 deaths
Cumberland: 386 cases, including 26 deaths
Dauphin: 711 cases, including 29 deaths
Franklin: 406 cases, including 9 deaths
Juniata: 86 cases
Lancaster: 2041 cases, including 145 deaths
Lebanon: 774 cases, including 15 deaths
Mifflin: 45 cases
Northumberland: 111 cases
Perry: 34 cases, including 1 death
Schuylkill: 419 cases, including 9 deaths
Snyder: 33 cases, including 1 death
Union: 39 cases, including 1 death
York: 722 cases, including 11 deaths
All told, about 256,000 people have been tested in Pennsylvania in the past two months, or 2% of the population. About one-fifth of those tests were conducted in the past week.
The number of infections is thought to be far higher than the state’s confirmed case count because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected with the virus without feeling sick. There is no data on how many people have fully recovered.
For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in a couple of weeks. Older adults and people with existing health problems are at higher risk of more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.
Veterans’ home deaths
The death toll at a hard-hit state veterans’ home in southeastern Pennsylvania has continued to rise, as the state’s secretary of the Department of Military and Veterans Affairs said he had sought inspections of the facility.
Federal, state and county inspections came back clean and showed that the Southeastern Veterans’ Center have sound protocols in responding to the spread of the coronavirus, Maj. Gen. Tony Carelli told a panel of Democratic state senators Wednesday.
Inspectors from the state Department of Health visited Friday, Carelli said, after he asked the department’s secretary to make an exception to her policy of suspending nursing home inspections during the pandemic.
There are conflicting reports on the number of COVID-related deaths at the center, in Chester County, outside Philadelphia.
The state Department of Military and Veterans Affairs reported 22 deaths across all six homes it operates in Pennsylvania. But the Chester County coroner said Wednesday that she had found 34 deaths at Southeastern alone.
However, Carelli and other department officials acknowledged Wednesday that, because of the unavailability of tests, they had been unable to test everyone who died at the facility.
Matt Rourke / AP Photo
A pedestrian walks past a boarded up Wine and Spirits store in Philadelphia, Friday, March 20, 2020.
77 liquor stores to reopen
Business reopenings that will begin Friday in 24 counties across northern and northwestern Pennsylvania will include 77 state-owned liquor stores, the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board said Wednesday.
The stores will limit the number of customers and employees inside to 25 people or less, depending on store size, and require face masks and social distancing.
The first hour will be reserved for older people and others at heightened risk of contracting COVID-19.
The stores are in the area designed by Gov. Tom Wolf as a “yellow” zone, counties in northwestern and northcentral Pennsylvania.
State offers free N95 decontamination
Gov. Tom Wolf today announced the availability of a federal program that will cover the costs of decontaminating N95 respirators for healthcare facilities, first responders, and other organizations that may be experiencing a shortage of the respirators due to limited availability.
“We are in the midst of an unprecedented shortage of personal protective equipment,” Wolf said. “This critical decontamination service, provided at no cost by the US Department of Health and Human Services (US HHS), gives us another option for making sure that the people at the forefront of this pandemic have the equipment they need to stay safe.”
The Battelle Critical Care Decontamination System was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the decontamination and reuse of N95 respirators as needed during a time of crisis. The system uses a vaporous hydrogen peroxide to decontaminate the units.
Kimberly Paynter / WHYY
Dana Heller, 3rd medical student, Dr. Pierre Chanson, Natalie Gonzalez, 4th year medical student, Dr. Renell Dupree, and Dr. Ala Stanford, are part of the Black Doctors COVID-19 consortium. They are taking mobile testing at-risk zip codes in Philadelphia.
Health care workers protected from civil lawsuits
Wolf signed an executive order Wednesday extending protection from civil liability for medical and health care professionals who show they acted in good faith while responding to the pandemic during the state’s disaster emergency.
The order also temporarily relaxed various practitioner regulations, including removing a physician supervision requirement for advanced practice nurses like nurse anesthetists, the Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists said.
The organization said suspending that requirement lets hospitals use nurses to fill critical roles outside the operating room during the pandemic. Nurse anesthetists have skills critical to the coronavirus response because they can help intubate patients and manage them on ventilators.
Liability protection had been sought by the Pennsylvania Medical Society, noting that New Jersey and New York had extended such protections, while broader legislation to that effect has stalled in the state Legislature.
However, the medical society said Wolf’s order did not cover physicians in outpatient offices, such as primary care offices and surgery centers, and said “more needs to be done.”
Meanwhile, a nursing home trade association said it was “shocked and dumbfounded” that Wolf’s order did not cover nursing homes, and the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry protections should also be extended to the entire medical community, including hospitals and health systems.
The chamber also urged protection for businesses that have overhauled operations to comply with social distancing orders and shifted their production lines to make desperately needed personal protective equipment.
Memorial Day flags
Montgomery County in hard-hit suburban Philadelphia has postponed the distribution of tens of thousands of flags for Memorial Day, and will distribute them instead ahead of Independence Day.
Dr. Valerie Arkoosh, chair of the Montgomery County Council, said 59,000 flags are normally distributed to 59 organizations such as scout troops, church organizations, rotary clubs and VFW groups who place them at 212 locations.
The county has purchased the flags for this year but “bringing these large numbers of groups together creates the very situation that we have been trying so hard to avoid,” Arkoosh said.
Instead, they are planning to move placing of the 59,000 flags on graves to the Fourth of July “when we believe we will be able to honor the fallen with less risk to the volunteers and to our community.”