Eight of 78 new COVID cases from Strafford County; 6th nursing home cluster found
Nancy West INdepthNH.org 8:22 a.m.
CONCORD - New Hampshire suffered one of its worst days in the COVID-19 pandemic reporting 78 new positive cases of COVID-19 and three deaths, according to officials at Gov. Chris Sununu's press conference on Friday. Another outbreak was also announced involving the Easter Seals residential care facility in Manchester. Sixteen residents and 16 workers at The Gammon Academy have tested positive, many of whom were asymptomatic, officials said. In total, 1,287 individuals have tested positive for the novel coronavirus in the Granite State and 37 have died, said Dr. Benjamin Chan, the state epidemiologist. Locally, eight new cases were reported in Strafford County, meaning new cases may have flattened but are not decreasing. Hospitals, he said, are keeping up with the number of cases. "We are still in the thick of this," Sununu said, calling it the second-worst day since the state started fighting the virus. "We are fighting it with everything we have." There were more positive tests reported on April 4 with 81 new cases.
Chan said the state should brace for the number of positive cases to go up next week as it really ramps up testing. The focus of that testing is expected to be in long-term health-care facilities in Rockingham and Hillsborough counties where more than 70 percent of the COVID-19 cases have been detected. Rapid testing is now available and will be deployed to get to an estimated 6,600 residents and staff of those facilities tested. Chan said, "as we look to increase testing of our most vulnerable population, you should expect increases in positive cases." He described those as people over the age of 65 with multiple underlying medical conditions. He said the expected increase in cases should not create concern or alarm. He did say there is evidence that the social distancing mitigation is helping particularly in terms of hospitalizations, which remain stable over the past few weeks. Hospital Funding A $50 million fund to help keep the doors open at health-care facilities was created a few weeks ago. Two weeks ago, Sununu announced that about $5 million of that would go to LRGHealthcare in Laconia and Franklin which had announced layoffs of about 600 people. On Friday, Sununu announced additional grants to Cottage Hospital in Woodsville, Weeks Medical Center in Lancaster, Upper Connecticut Valley Hospital in Colebrook, Androscoggin Valley Hospital in Berlin, and Exeter Hospital. All will be receiving funding and approximately 40 other smaller health-care providers will be getting funding totaling $7 million.
Sununu said that the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration awarded the state a $2 million grant to help during the crisis, particularly with the New Hampshire Rapid Response Crisis Intervention for mental health and substance abuse. Sununu was asked what he thought of President Donald Trump's three-tiered plan to open up the country and how that might play out in terms of what he was thinking for how he would open up New Hampshire.
Antibody tests "are not quite there yet," but every day the science gets a bit better and the availability and capacity of testing here increases daily as well. He also acknowledged regret for the high school seniors who have worked hard for 12 years and will not get to celebrate their accomplishments with graduations and proms. ,The governor said he had spoken Friday with the Commissioner of the National Hockey League to see if the state can be of assistance with hosting the NHL Playoffs this summer. The hockey games would be held without an audience, likely at the SNHU Arena in Manchester, "but these discussions aren't even really happening" yet, he said. On Friday, U.S. Senators Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H. and West Virginia's Joe Manchin led 32 fellow senators in advocating for local governments to receive dedicated, flexible funding in the next COVID-19 emergency funding bill. Shaheen said local governments need more flexible, dedicated funding in the next emergency funding package. Dairy Farm Aid Also in Washington, the entire New Hampshire and Maine congressional delegations have signed on to a letter urging the U.S. Department of Agriculture to boost support for dairy farmers impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Nancy West runs the New Hampshire news nonprofit INdepthNH.org
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