Tag Archives: illinois covid

Chicago COVID update: With cases rising, officials urge face mask use over Memorial Day weekend

CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago area public health officials are urging people to put masks back on in certain situations, especially over the Memorial Day holiday weekend.

The warning comes as a recent COVID surge has moved Chicago and many surrounding counties into the CDC’s high community transmission level. However, returning to a mask mandate seems a long way off.

Heading into the Memorial Day weekend, with many people planning to gather with family and friends, Chicago Commissioner of Public Health Dr. Allison Arwady urged people to wear masks when indoors with the city in the high risk category.

“We ask everybody for this short time period while we are in high put that mask on especially if you are in an indoor crowded setting,” Dr. Arwady said.

But, will people voluntarily comply? Psychiatric experts say compliance rates definitely increase if people are required to do something, but after two years, mandates are tough as people suffer from COVID fatigue.

“You can only demand conformity or mandate conformity for a period of time until people become weary of it,” said Dr. Robert Shulman at Rush University.

WATCH | Dr. Arwady on what it means when Chicago moves to ‘high’ COVID risk

Chicago’s not alone. In the Chicago area, Cook, DuPage, Lake (IL), McHenry, Will and Grundy counties all appeared as “high risk” on the CDC’s map when it was updated Thursday afternoon.

Despite the recommendation to wear masks, it is not a requirement for now.

“I’m going to wear my mask inside, it’s probably the right thing to do,” Michael Pattis said.

What does is mean to be at high COVID level?

“It’s hard to breathe, plus it should be your choice to wear one or not,” Raymond Rodgers said. “I’m not going to do it.”

In Chicago, compared to the start of the pandemic when 50 to 60 people a day were dying, the current average is less than one per day.

Despite an increase in hospitalization numbers, they’re still a fraction of what they were during the omicron peak a few months ago.

At Edward-Elmhurst Health, COVID-related hospitalizations have more than doubled in the past five weeks.

But compared to other surges, fewer patients are critically ill.

“Because of vaccinations and the protection they have and because of anti-viral treatments, we’re not seeing severe illness lead to death or ICU care as much,” Dr. Jonathan Pinsky, Medical Director of Infection Control at Edward Elmhurst Health, said.

But health officials are keeping a close eye on how stressed the healthcare system may become.

“If we see an increase in stress, than we’ll have to take other measures,” said Dr. Rachel Rubin, at Cook County Dept. of Public Health.

Rubin said hospitalizations can remain low if people do the right thing and mask up.

“What I would hope is for the management of these public spaces – whether it’s a retail establishment or event space – that they would do their best to ask people put masks on,” Rubin added.

To keep it under control, Arwady said more Chicagoans need to get boosted. The rate has remained low for months, with only 42% of eligible residents having received a booster shot.

In addition, Arwady said residents should avoid crowded indoor gatherings, limit gatherings to small numbers and test right away if you have symptoms.

Anyone who tests positive is asked to isolate for five days and if they are feeling better, they can go in public while wearing a mask for the next five days.

Copyright © 2022 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

Chicago COVID update: With cases rising, officials urge face mask use over Memorial Day weekend

CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago area public health officials have urged people to put masks back on in certain situations.

The warning comes as a recent COVID surge has moved Chicago and many surrounding counties into the CDC’s high community transmission level. However, returning to a mask mandate seems a long way off.

Heading into the Memorial Day weekend, with many people planning to gather with family and friends, Chicago Commissioner of Public Health Dr. Allison Arwady urged people to wear masks when indoors with the city in the high risk category.

“We ask everybody for this short time period while we are in high put that mask on especially if you are in an indoor crowded setting,” Dr. Arwady said.

WATCH | Dr. Arwady on what it means when Chicago moves to ‘high’ COVID risk

Chicago’s not alone. In the Chicago area, Cook, DuPage, Lake (IL), McHenry, Will and Grundy counties all appeared as “high risk” on the CDC’s map when it was updated Thursday afternoon.

Despite the recommendation to wear masks, it is not a requirement for now.

“I’m going to wear my mask inside, it’s probably the right thing to do,” Michael Pattis said.

“It’s hard to breath, plus it should be your choice to wear one or not,” Raymond Rodgers said. “I’m not going to do it.”

In Chicago, compared to the start of the pandemic when 50 to 60 people a day were dying, the current average is less than one per day.

Despite an increase in hospitalization numbers, they’re still a fraction of what they were. during the Omicron peak a few months ago…

At Edward-Elmhurst Health, COVID-related hospitalizations have more than *doubled in the past five weeks.

But compared to other surges, fewer patients are critically ill.

“Because of vaccinations and the protection they have and because of anti-viral treatments, we’re not seeing severe illness lead to death or ICU care as much,” Dr. Jonathan Pinsky, Medical Director of Infection Control at Edward Elmhurst Health, said.

To keep it under control, Arwady said more Chicagoans need to get boosted. The rate has remained low for months, with only 42% of eligible residents having received a booster shot.

In addition, Arwady said residents should avoid crowded indoor gatherings, limit gatherings to small numbers and test right away if you have symptoms.

Anyone who tests positive is asked to isolate for five days and if they are feeling better, they can go in public while wearing a mask for the next five days.

Copyright © 2022 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

Illinois COVID Update Today: IL reports 6,406 new coronavirus cases, 8 deaths

CHICAGO (WLS) — Illinois reported 6,406 new COVID cases and 8 deaths Wednesday.

There have been at least 3,274,360 total COVID cases as of Wednesday, including at least 33,796 related deaths in the state since the pandemic began.

As of Monday night, 1,138 patients in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 120 patients were in the ICU, and 35 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

RELATED | Pfizer says its 3-shot COVID vaccine for kids 6 months to 5 years old 80% effective against omicron

IDPH officials reported a seven-day case average of 41.6 per 100,000 people.

A total of 22,270,391 vaccine doses have been administered in Illinois as of Tuesday, and 64.76% of the state’s population is fully vaccinated. The seven-day rolling average of vaccines administered daily is 13,957.

RELATED | COVID reinfection likely to become more common without variant-specific vaccines, experts say

Chicago’s top doctor expects the city will move from the “medium” risk level of community transmission to “high” by Friday.

Dr. Allison Arwady is urging people who are unvaccinated or with underlying conditions to avoid indoor gatherings.

She does not anticipate the return of mask mandates unless more people are hospitalized.

Copyright © 2022 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

COVID reinfection likely to become more common without variant-specific vaccines, experts say

CHICAGO (WLS) — Infectious disease specialists say COVID reinfection is likely to become more and more common as the virus keeps mutating and our vaccines play catch-up.

“The variants seem to be very good at evading the immunity of prior infection,” said Dr. Max Brito, UIC Health.

Chicago Bulls All Star Zach LaVine recently missed a playoff game due to his third bout with COVID. Like in his case, reinfection is becoming more common even among people who became infected during the omicron surge.

RELATED: IL reports 5,327 new COVID cases, 14 deaths

Experts say while prior infection does give you an initial boost of antibodies, with omicron sub-variants it doesn’t last long.

“You have the potential for new waves with a lot infection and waning protection from the vaccine,” Brito said.

A Rush University Medical Center study followed the antibody levels of 1,100 vaccinated employees, and found that the levels dramatically drop in six months after two doses.

“In six months we’ve lost 90% of those antibodies and those antibodies are measured against the viral type and if you’re talking about antibodies against omicron it’s lower than that,” said Dr. James Moy, Rush University Medical Center.

Moy said levels go way back up with a booster, but there’s not enough data on how long the immunity lasts, especially against sub-variants.

“Unfortunately, it seems like COVID-19 has evolved to the point where it will keep infecting us with new variants and new mutations,” he said.

The immunity provided by vaccines and infection wanes, but both have provided enough protection to keep people out of hospitals for now. That may change in fall and winter.

Doctors say the only way to stop people from getting infected or reinfected is a new variant-specific vaccine. Drug companies are currently conducting trials with the hope of having such a vaccine available in the next few months.

Copyright © 2022 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

Pritzker Won’t Say What May Trigger an Order – NBC Chicago

Gov. J.B. Pritzker warned Tuesday that if Illinois’ COVID metrics don’t decline, “significantly greater mitigations” could be imposed in the state.

“We’re consistently looking at the menu of options that we may need to impose in order to bring down the numbers,” Pritzker said during a press conference. “I will remind you that if we are not able to bring these numbers down, if hospitals continue to fill, if the hospital beds and ICUs get full like they are in Kentucky -that’s just next door to Illinois – if that happens, we’re going to have to impose significantly greater mitigations.”

As of Tuesday, 37 Illinois counties and Chicago were at a “warning level” for intensive care unit bed availability, according to data from the state health department.

For a county to reach “warning level,” it must have below 20% ICU bed capacity, the Illinois Department of Public Health reported.

All counties in Illinois, except one, are also seeing “high” community transmission of COVID-19, placing the most of the state in the category in which everyone over the age of 2 should resume wearing a mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status, health officials say.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance late last month to recommend that fully vaccinated people wear masks in indoor settings again in areas of the U.S. that are seeing “substantial” or “high” transmission of COVID-19.

Illinois health officials on Friday reported 24,682 new COVID-19 cases in the past week, along with 126 additional deaths and nearly 235,000 new vaccine doses administered – increases in all metrics as the state continues to see a surge fueled by the delta variant.

As of midnight Thursday, 2,000 patients were hospitalized due to COVID in the state – up roughly 21% from the week before. Of those patients, 468 were in ICU beds, and 234 were on ventilators. All metrics are a reported increase from numbers seen the week prior.

Pritzker said heightened mitigations could include this like “phases,” which brought restrictions on both a regional and statewide level earlier in the pandemic, though he did not offer many specifics.

“Those are things that we don’t want to go back to,” he said, “Those are, you know, phases, situations, things on the menu that I think we don’t want to go to but right now.”

Pritzker noted that increased mitigations have already been implemented across the state, including an indoor mask mandate in schools, a vaccine mandate for state employees in congregate settings, a vaccine requirement for nursing home personnel and a mask mandate in all state buildings.

Meanwhile, both Chicago and suburban Cook County have independently issued indoor mask mandates, requiring anyone over the age of 2 to wear masks in indoor public settings regardless of vaccination status.

Last week, the governor declined to give a specific metric at which the state might impose a similar indoor masking mandate, leaving the door open for further mitigations but deferring to local authorities to take action, even as he called the current COVID-19 surge fueled by the delta variant a “very dangerous moment.”

Earlier this month, Pritzker unveiled a new mask mandate specifically for schools, requiring – rather than recommending – that all students, teachers and staff in K-12 schools wear masks while indoors, effective immediately.

The Illinois State Board of Education later placed several schools and districts across the state on probation or changed their status with the state to “nonrecognized” for not adhering to the mandate.

When asked about that action at an unrelated news conference Friday, Pritzker said schools not following the requirement are endangering students and their communities at “a very dangerous moment.”

“What I can tell you is that those schools that are not following the mask requirements for their children are, of course, endangering their children, they’re also endangering the people who work in the school, the parents and grandparents who pick up and drop off their children at school,” Pritzker said.

“We are living in a very dangerous moment of coronavirus, an upswing of the delta variant across the nation and here in Illinois,” he continued. “I am deeply concerned especially that the delta variant is having an increasingly serious medical impact on younger people, not just young children who attend school, but older kids in high school and the young teachers who come to work at schools every day and so we’re trying simply to ask people to make sure that people are following a mitigation that we know works.”

Read original article here

Pritzker Won’t Say What May Trigger an Order – NBC Chicago

Gov. J.B. Pritzker warned Tuesday that if Illinois’ COVID metrics don’t decline, “significantly greater mitigations” could be imposed in the state.

“We’re consistently looking at the menu of options that we may need to impose in order to bring down the numbers,” Pritzker said during a press conference. “I will remind you that if we are not able to bring these numbers down, if hospitals continue to fill, if the hospital beds and ICUs get full like they are in Kentucky -that’s just next door to Illinois – if that happens, we’re going to have to impose significantly greater mitigations.”

As of Tuesday, 37 Illinois counties and Chicago were at a “warning level” for intensive care unit bed availability, according to data from the state health department.

For a county to reach “warning level,” it must have below 20% ICU bed capacity, the Illinois Department of Public Health reported.

All counties in Illinois, except one, are also seeing “high” community transmission of COVID-19, placing the most of the state in the category in which everyone over the age of 2 should resume wearing a mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status, health officials say.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance late last month to recommend that fully vaccinated people wear masks in indoor settings again in areas of the U.S. that are seeing “substantial” or “high” transmission of COVID-19.

Illinois health officials on Friday reported 24,682 new COVID-19 cases in the past week, along with 126 additional deaths and nearly 235,000 new vaccine doses administered – increases in all metrics as the state continues to see a surge fueled by the delta variant.

As of midnight Thursday, 2,000 patients were hospitalized due to COVID in the state – up roughly 21% from the week before. Of those patients, 468 were in ICU beds, and 234 were on ventilators. All metrics are a reported increase from numbers seen the week prior.

Pritzker said heightened mitigations could include this like “phases,” which brought restrictions on both a regional and statewide level earlier in the pandemic, though he did not offer many specifics.

“Those are things that we don’t want to go back to,” he said, “Those are, you know, phases, situations, things on the menu that I think we don’t want to go to but right now.”

Pritzker noted that increased mitigations have already been implemented across the state, including an indoor mask mandate in schools, a vaccine mandate for state employees in congregate settings, a vaccine requirement for nursing home personnel and a mask mandate in all state buildings.

Meanwhile, both Chicago and suburban Cook County have independently issued indoor mask mandates, requiring anyone over the age of 2 to wear masks in indoor public settings regardless of vaccination status.

Last week, the governor declined to give a specific metric at which the state might impose a similar indoor masking mandate, leaving the door open for further mitigations but deferring to local authorities to take action, even as he called the current COVID-19 surge fueled by the delta variant a “very dangerous moment.”

Earlier this month, Pritzker unveiled a new mask mandate specifically for schools, requiring – rather than recommending – that all students, teachers and staff in K-12 schools wear masks while indoors, effective immediately.

The Illinois State Board of Education later placed several schools and districts across the state on probation or changed their status with the state to “nonrecognized” for not adhering to the mandate.

When asked about that action at an unrelated news conference Friday, Pritzker said schools not following the requirement are endangering students and their communities at “a very dangerous moment.”

“What I can tell you is that those schools that are not following the mask requirements for their children are, of course, endangering their children, they’re also endangering the people who work in the school, the parents and grandparents who pick up and drop off their children at school,” Pritzker said.

“We are living in a very dangerous moment of coronavirus, an upswing of the delta variant across the nation and here in Illinois,” he continued. “I am deeply concerned especially that the delta variant is having an increasingly serious medical impact on younger people, not just young children who attend school, but older kids in high school and the young teachers who come to work at schools every day and so we’re trying simply to ask people to make sure that people are following a mitigation that we know works.”

Read original article here

37 Illinois Counties, Chicago Are at ‘Warning Level’ For ICU Availability, IDPH Data Shows – NBC Chicago

Thirty-seven Illinois counties and Chicago are now at “warning level” for intensive care unit bed availability, according to COVID-19 data from the state health department.

The Illinois Department of Public Health is reporting that the following areas are experiencing limited ICU bed availability: Alexander, Bond, Boone, Carroll, Chicago, Clinton, Cook, DeKalb, Edwards, Franklin, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Jackson, Jefferson, Jo Daviess, Johnson, Lee, Madison, Marion, Massac, Monroe, Ogle, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, Randolph, Saline, St. Clair, Stephenson, Union, Wabash, Washington, Wayne, White, Whiteside, Williamson, Winnebago.

For a county to reach “warning level,” it must have below 20% ICU bed capacity, IDPH noted.

As of Tuesday, Chicago was experiencing 17.1% availability, Cook County was at 18.9% and DeKalb County reported 17.4%, according to IDPH data.

All counties in Illinois, except one, are also seeing “high” community transmission of COVID-19, placing the most of the state in the category in which everyone over the age of 2 should resume wearing a mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status, health officials say.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance late last month to recommend that fully vaccinated people wear masks in indoor settings again in areas of the U.S. that are seeing “substantial” or “high” transmission of COVID-19.

The new guidance marked a reversal from earlier recommendations that said fully vaccinated people could remove masks in most settings.

So in which areas is the CDC advising people wear masks indoors? The agency points to its COVID-19 data tracker showing levels of community transmission, along with other data, for each county in the U.S.

As of Sunday, 101 counties in Illinois were experiencing “high” levels of community transmission, per IDPH data. Carroll County was marked as “substantial” transmission.

All counties seeing “high” transmission means the recommendation to mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status, continues.

The agency uses two measures to group U.S. counties into the four levels of community transmission: the number of new cases per 100,000 residents and the percent of COVID-19 tests that are positive over the past week.

If a county has reported 50 to 100 cases per 100,000 residents over a seven-day period or has a positivity rate of 8% to 10%, it falls into the “substantial transmission” tier, while those reporting 100 cases or more per 100,000 or have a positivity rate of at least 10% are labeled as “high transmission.” Those are the two groups for which the CDC recommends mask-wearing.

The CDC also said last week that fully vaccinated people also “might choose to mask regardless of the level of transmission, particularly if they or someone in their household is immunocompromised or at increased risk for severe disease, or if someone in their household is unvaccinated.”

The Illinois Department of Public Health said last month that it was “fully adopting” the CDC’s updated guidance and following federal health officials’ lead in recommending masking indoors at K-12 schools universally among teachers, staff, students and visitors to schools, regardless of vaccination status. 

On Aug. 4, Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced a new mask mandate, requiring – rather than recommending – that all students, teachers and staff in K-12 schools wear masks while indoors as officials take steps to try to slow the spread of the more transmissible delta variant.

Chicago health officials have ordered a new indoor mask mandate for all individuals 2 years and older, regardless of vaccination status, which requires a face covering in all indoor public settings, including bars, restaurants, gyms and private clubs.

Masks can be removed at restaurants, bars and other establishments while customers are eating or drinking, as well as for certain activities like beard shaves and facials, according to CDPH.

Read original article here

37 Illinois Counties, Chicago Are at ‘Warning Level’ For ICU Availability, IDPH Data Shows – NBC Chicago

Thirty-seven Illinois counties and Chicago are now at “warning level” for intensive care unit bed availability, according to COVID-19 data from the state health department.

The Illinois Department of Public Health is reporting that the following areas are experiencing limited ICU bed availability: Alexander, Bond, Boone, Carroll, Chicago, Clinton, Cook, DeKalb, Edwards, Franklin, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Jackson, Jefferson, Jo Daviess, Johnson, Lee, Madison, Marion, Massac, Monroe, Ogle, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, Randolph, Saline, St. Clair, Stephenson, Union, Wabash, Washington, Wayne, White, Whiteside, Williamson, Winnebago.

For a county to reach “warning level,” it must have below 20% ICU bed capacity, IDPH noted.

As of Tuesday, Chicago was experiencing 17.1% availability, Cook County was at 18.9% and DeKalb County reported 17.4%, according to IDPH data.

All counties in Illinois, except one, are also seeing “high” community transmission of COVID-19, placing the most of the state in the category in which everyone over the age of 2 should resume wearing a mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status, health officials say.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance late last month to recommend that fully vaccinated people wear masks in indoor settings again in areas of the U.S. that are seeing “substantial” or “high” transmission of COVID-19.

The new guidance marked a reversal from earlier recommendations that said fully vaccinated people could remove masks in most settings.

So in which areas is the CDC advising people wear masks indoors? The agency points to its COVID-19 data tracker showing levels of community transmission, along with other data, for each county in the U.S.

As of Sunday, 101 counties in Illinois were experiencing “high” levels of community transmission, per IDPH data. Carroll County was marked as “substantial” transmission.

All counties seeing “high” transmission means the recommendation to mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status, continues.

The agency uses two measures to group U.S. counties into the four levels of community transmission: the number of new cases per 100,000 residents and the percent of COVID-19 tests that are positive over the past week.

If a county has reported 50 to 100 cases per 100,000 residents over a seven-day period or has a positivity rate of 8% to 10%, it falls into the “substantial transmission” tier, while those reporting 100 cases or more per 100,000 or have a positivity rate of at least 10% are labeled as “high transmission.” Those are the two groups for which the CDC recommends mask-wearing.

The CDC also said last week that fully vaccinated people also “might choose to mask regardless of the level of transmission, particularly if they or someone in their household is immunocompromised or at increased risk for severe disease, or if someone in their household is unvaccinated.”

The Illinois Department of Public Health said last month that it was “fully adopting” the CDC’s updated guidance and following federal health officials’ lead in recommending masking indoors at K-12 schools universally among teachers, staff, students and visitors to schools, regardless of vaccination status. 

On Aug. 4, Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced a new mask mandate, requiring – rather than recommending – that all students, teachers and staff in K-12 schools wear masks while indoors as officials take steps to try to slow the spread of the more transmissible delta variant.

Chicago health officials have ordered a new indoor mask mandate for all individuals 2 years and older, regardless of vaccination status, which requires a face covering in all indoor public settings, including bars, restaurants, gyms and private clubs.

Masks can be removed at restaurants, bars and other establishments while customers are eating or drinking, as well as for certain activities like beard shaves and facials, according to CDPH.

Read original article here

Chicago Announces Indoor Mask Mandate For All, Regardless of Vaccination Status – NBC Chicago

The city of Chicago announced Tuesday an indoor mask mandate for all individuals 2 years and older, regardless of vaccination status, beginning Friday, Aug. 20.

“With the highly transmissible Delta variant causing case rates to increase, now is the time to re-institute this measure to prevent further spread and save lives,” said CDPH Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady in a statement. “We continue to track the data closely and are hopeful this will only be temporary and we can bend the COVID curve, as we’ve done in the past.”

According to Arwady, masks are required in all indoor public settings, “including bars and restaurants, gyms, common areas of condos and multi-residential buildings, and private clubs.”

“Similar to previous mask mandates, masks can be removed at restaurants, bars and other eating/drinking establishments by patrons when they are actively eating and drinking,” Arwady said in a statement. “Masks can also be removed for certain activities that require their removal, such as beard shaves or facials. Additionally, masks can be removed by employees in settings that are not open to the public, if employees are static and maintaining at least six feet from all other individuals (office cubicles, for example).”

The mandate announcement comes a day after Chicago surpassed the metric of 400 average new cases of COVID-19 diagnosed per day, a figure that city health officials warned earlier in the pandemic would mark a “line in the sand” to implement more mitigations.

Chicago was averaging 419 new COVID-19 cases per day as of Monday, according to city data. That metric was up from 347 the week before, having grown by 21% in the past week.

That figure is also more than 12 times the low of 34 that the city saw in late June, before cases began to rise again, but remains lower than the more than 700 new cases per day the city was seeing at the peak of the last surge earlier this year.

On July 19, Chicago’s average daily COVID case rate was at 132, meaning the number of average new cases per day has more than tripled in the past four weeks.

While cases continue to steadily rise, other metrics have not been increasing at the same rate, city data shows.

Hospitalizations in Chicago are down 18% from last week while deaths are down 24%, per the city’s data. But the positivity rate in testing is up to 4.3% this week, an increase from 3.8% last week, which was up each week since it was at 1% a month ago.

The average of 419 new cases per day recorded Monday is over the threshold of 400 that Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said just over a year ago “really marks line in the sand” to bring back restrictions to slow the pandemic’s spread.

City officials cited that metric last year in announcing that Chicago Public Schools would begin the 2020-2021 school year with fully remote learning.

That figure of 400 cases per day is also the equivalent of the threshold Chicago officials use to determine if states should be added to the city’s travel advisory, recommending unvaccinated individuals entering the city from those areas test negative for COVID-19 or quarantine upon arrival.

“It’s the equivalent of needing to go back to a phase three, really pulling back on major activities,” Arwady said in August 2020, before any of the three vaccines currently in use were available.

But Arwady said Tuesday that vaccines have changed the way the city approaches that metric of average daily case rate, taking other data into account in its evolving pandemic response.

“So we actually have not changed any of those cut offs at any point throughout COVID,” Arwady said during a Facebook Live broadcast Tuesday, responding to a question about her previous comments on 400 being a “line in the sand.”

Arwady said that over 200 cases per day puts Chicago in the category of “moderate” or “substantial” transmission, per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, while more than 400 cases per day moves the city into the “higher risk setting for transmission.”

“When we get over 800 cases a day, that’s the highest risk setting, but I want to be clear that that risk is especially for people who are unvaccinated,” Arwady continued. “And so, as vaccine has come into the picture, what we’ve seen is that the other indicators that we follow have actually stayed at that lower risk level. Yes, our percent positivity is over 4% but while we’re under 5%, we actually are in that lower risk category, not even the moderate. CDC defines anything under 10% positivity as in that moderate. Our hospitalizations or deaths remain low. And that is because vaccine is available for adults, it is older unvaccinated adults who continue to account for the majority of our severe outcomes and that’s where a lot of our focus has been.”

“I’ve been really careful to try not to change those lines, to try not to change those data,” she added. “I know it can feel like things are just moving all the time and where are they, but those risks are based on if you’re out and about in Chicago, how likely is it that you will potentially encounter somebody with COVID, and it’s not only about cases it’s also about positivity.”

Mayor Lori Lightfoot warned last month that reaching over 200 new cases per day would be the threshold at which the city might reinstate a mask mandate – then later backed off that assertion.

“Well, look, if we get back into an area where we feel like we’re in a red zone, which we are working very hard to make sure that our daily case rate is below 200, if we start to see consistently going over that, we’re not only going to look at a mask mandate, but we’re going to look back at other tools that we’ve been compelled to use,” Lightfoot said in an interview with the New York Times. “I hope we don’t get there. What we’re going to keep focusing on is pushing the vaccine. But my number one priority is to keep people safe.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance late last month to recommend that fully vaccinated people wear masks in indoor settings again in areas of the U.S. that are seeing “substantial” or “high” transmission of COVID-19.

Chicago, as well as 98 of Illinois’ 102 counties, is seeing “high” transmission, triggering the recommendation to wear masks indoors, regardless of vaccination status.

Read original article here

All Counties in Illinois Except 1 Seeing ‘Substantial’ or ‘High’ COVID Transmission and Should Mask Indoors, CDC Says – NBC Chicago

Every county in Illinois except one is seeing “substantial” or “high” community transmission of COVID-19, placing nearly the entire state in the category in which everyone over the age of 2 should resume wearing a mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status, federal health officials say.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance late last month to recommend that fully vaccinated people wear masks in indoor settings again in areas of the U.S. that are seeing “substantial” or “high” transmission of COVID-19.

The new guidance marked a reversal from earlier recommendations that said fully vaccinated people could remove masks in most settings.

So in which areas is the CDC advising people wear masks indoors? The agency points to its COVID-19 data tracker showing levels of community transmission, along with other data, for each county in the U.S.

As of Saturday, 101 of Illinois’ 102 counties were experiencing either “substantial” or “high” levels of community transmission, triggering the recommendation to mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status.

The only county still in the “moderate” transmission level is Stark County, with 98 counties – including every county in the Chicago area – seeing “high” transmission and just three in the “substantial” transmission range: Putnam, Lee and Whiteside counties, all west of the Chicago area.

The agency uses two measures to group U.S. counties into the four levels of community transmission: the number of new cases per 100,000 residents and the percent of COVID-19 tests that are positive over the past week.

If a county has reported 50 to 100 cases per 100,000 residents over a seven-day period or has a positivity rate of 8% to 10%, it falls into the “substantial transmission” tier, while those reporting 100 cases or more per 100,000 or have a positivity rate of at least 10% are labeled as “high transmission.” Those are the two groups for which the CDC recommends mask-wearing.

The CDC also said last week that fully vaccinated people also “might choose to mask regardless of the level of transmission, particularly if they or someone in their household is immunocompromised or at increased risk for severe disease, or if someone in their household is unvaccinated.”

The Illinois Department of Public Health said last month that it was “fully adopting” the CDC’s updated guidance and following federal health officials’ lead in recommending masking indoors at K-12 schools universally among teachers, staff, students and visitors to schools, regardless of vaccination status. 

Then on Aug. 4, Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced a new mask mandate, requiring – rather than recommending – that all students, teachers and staff in K-12 schools wear masks while indoors as officials take steps to try to slow the spread of the more transmissible delta variant.

Pritzker said that the new requirement would take effect immediately, and will also apply to all students and coaches participating in indoor sports and other activities.

“As your governor, it’s my duty to say that we must all take immediate and urgent action to slow the spread of the delta variant,” he said. “People are dying who don’t have to die.”

Pritzker added that the state has a “limited amount of time” to slow the spread of the delta variant.

State employees who work in congregant care facilities, veterans’ homes and correctional facilities will also be required to receive COVID-19 vaccinations, according to the governor.

Read original article here