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County to vaccinate more residents next week

State breaks single-day COVID-19 case record on consecutive days

By Staff | Jan 7, 2021

PHOTO PROVIDED BY LEE HEALTH

COVID-19 immunizations will resume once again next week as county officials plan to vaccinate another 4,000 residents on Tuesday and Wednesday. While more residents will receive their first dose of the Morderna vaccine, the toll-free call center will not reopen. Officials said more than 10,000 phone calls were captured in 11 minutes when the number went live Monday at noon. 

The Florida Department of Health – Lee (FDOH) and Lee County on Thursday announced that next Tuesday and Wednesday’s allocation of vaccinations at the RSW site will be used for those additional callers who were captured but not given an appointment the first go-round, most of whom have now been pre-registered by the vendor, Tidal Basin.

According to county officials, Tidal Basin will begin placing calls to schedule the pre-registered slots beginning Thursday through Monday. Shots will be administered between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan. 12 and 13.

“The phone line for reservations is currently closed and remains closed; residents are asked to not dial the call center,” read a county release. “The state and county will announce when additional vaccine doses are available and the line reopens.”

As of end of day Thursday, county officials said more than 11,000 individuals will have been vaccinated at Lee County sites. This total does not include medical workers vaccinated at separate sites by FDOH or vaccinations issued by other entities such as Lee Health.

“FDOH-Lee and the county soon will announce information about the second dose of the vaccine and how scheduling will be handled,” the release stated. 

The state and county have also requested that Tidal Basin set up a help line or call center for pre-registered people who have questions.

Details will be announced when they become available at www.leegov.com/vaccine.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office also warned the public to be on the lookout for fraudulent schemes regarding the vaccine including:

* Calls asking to pay out of pocket to get the vaccine.

* Calls asking to pay to put your name on a vaccine waiting list or to get early access.

* Advertisements for vaccines through social media platforms, email, telephone calls, online or from unsolicited/unknown sources.

* Marketers offering to sell or ship doses of the vaccine for payment.

* Requests from someone unknown to an individual asking for a Social Security number, bank account information or credit card information.

Lee County residents who believe they have been the victim of COVID-19 fraud can report it to:

* Lee County Sheriff’s Office fraud line – 258-3292

* HHS-OIG Hotline: 1-800-HHS-TIPS or log on to tips.hhs.gov 

* FBI Hotline: 1-800-CALL-FBI

* CMS/Medicare Hotline: 1-800-MEDICARE

 

Lee Health announces further vaccination efforts

Local health officials on Wednesday announced new programs to help vaccinate at-risk members of the community. 

President and CEO of Lee Health Dr. Larry Antonucci outlined steps the county’s leading healthcare provider is taking to vaccinate residents outside of the single location arranged for those 65 years of age or older and frontline healthcare workers at the RSW site in Fort Myers. 

“While the county and health department focus on the general public, Lee Health will be taking care of special populations such as healthcare workers, our volunteers and patients who qualify for the vaccine under the Governor’s Executive Order,” Antonucci said. “We have also been working with CVS to vaccinate patients and employees at our skilled nursing facilities.”

Officials on Wednesday also reiterated that Lee Health’s switchboard has been overwhelmed with people calling to make appointments for vaccination. 

“We are asking the community to discontinue calls to Lee Physician Group for vaccination appointments so that people who need to reach our hospitals may do so,” read a message from Lee Health. “Our limited supply of vaccinations for patients in Lee Physician Group offices is spoken for at this time. We will let the community know when we have more vaccines to offer to patients.”

Lee Health on Tuesday launched a vaccination site exclusively for healthcare workers who are not employed by Lee Health. 

“This site is for employees of independent medical offices, dentists and their staffs and home health agency employees,” for example, so they too can get their frontline healthcare workers vaccinated,” Antonucci said. 

This site is not for the general public, but healthcare workers only, he added. 

On Wednesday, Lee Health announced it has a limited supply of vaccines available for patients at 18 Lee Physician Group Primary Care Offices for qualifying LPG patients over the age of 65 or who have significant co-morbid medical conditions. Vaccines are by appointment only. Lee Health is contacting patients who qualify to be vaccinated to schedule appointments.

Lastly, Lee Health has opened up its vaccination clinics at hospitals for auxiliary volunteers who fall within the criteria of the Governor’s Executive Order.

“Unfortunately, we shut down our volunteer program early on in the pandemic to protect the health of our volunteers, as most of them are above the age of 65 and we wanted to reduce their risk of exposure to COVID-19,” Antonucci said. “These volunteers are critical to providing a welcoming and healing environment for our patients. We miss them greatly and getting them vaccinated is the first step to welcoming them back into our facilities.”

Antonucci also discussed the outlook vaccine supply and what the public can expect going forward.

“We anticipate exhausting the initial supply by early next week,” he said. “Admittedly, that is a little slower than we would have liked, but we had two major holidays to deal with and we are ramping up to our goal of providing up to 1,000 vaccinations a day. As stewards of this community resource, we are also sharing the vaccine with other large medical practices so they can vaccinate their own staff. Last week we provided 400 doses to a regional medical practice for their providers.

“We have made great progress over the past two weeks. We have a robust plan in place to deliver the vaccine, and we have hired about two dozen additional nurses and customer service reps to help with vaccination sites. Demand for the vaccine is higher than our supply, and while we have been assured that more doses are coming, we ask for the community’s patience as we roll out new access points across our region.”

Officials said they hope to vaccinate as many residents as possible, but that the process could take some time and asked the public to be patient. 

“The goal of rapidly getting the vaccine to as many people as possible brings with it complex supply chain issues, but it is important for you to understand we have a dedicated group of leaders who are working together to get the vaccine out to our community,” Antonucci said. “We all have the same goals of protecting people and creating herd immunity as quickly as possible.”

The single-location walk-up vaccination site arranged by the county is east of Interstate 75 off of Daniels Parkway and the site of the old airport terminal parking lot. Message boards will direct traffic to Paul J. Doherty Parkway. Officials said individuals should show up 45 minutes before their appointment time.

By the numbers

As of Thursday afternoon, there are 1,409,906 total cases of COVID-19 confirmed in Florida, an increase of 19,816 since FDOH’s last update Wednesday, the largest single-day increase of new COVID-19 cases since the pandemic began and the second consecutive day the state has broken that record (17,783 cases Jan. 6). 

Test results reported to the Department of Health on Wednesday, Jan. 6, resulted in an 11.60% positivity rate among 193,251 tests.

The state saw its highest daily percentage of positive patients on Dec. 29 when 22.75% percent of tests reported were positive among 62,303 tests.

Positivity rates in new cases have topped 10% in 10 of the last 11 days. Percent positivity rates in new cases have been over 5% since Oct. 29. 

Of those testing positive, 64,704 Florida residents have been hospitalized at some point during their illness according to the state.

The death toll increased by 170 from yesterday’s report, bringing the total number of deaths, both resident and non-resident, to 22,817.

According to the state, hospitalizations in Lee County, and statewide in Florida, make up 5 percent of all positive cases. Deaths statewide and in Lee County stand at 2% of positive cases.

On Dec. 27, 974 people were given the first dose of COVID-19 vaccine throughout the state according to FDOH. The total number vaccinated as of Wednesday throughout Florida was 384,223 with 13,737 being in Lee County. According to the state, 14,601 individuals have received both their first and second doses, 26 of those being in Lee County. 

In Lee County, 43,871 individuals (+544) have tested positive as of Wednesday’s update. 

Positive COVID-19 cases in the county have ranged from infants to a 103-year-old. Lee County saw its first two cases on March 7, when a man and a woman, each 77, tested positive. They had traveled to the Dominican Republic.

There have been 695 deaths in Lee County, an increase of four from Wednesday’s report.

As of Thursday afternoon, Lee Health had 197 COVID-19 patients isolated in system inpatient hospitals, including 31 new admissions and 22 discharges since Wednesday. 

A total of 4,213 patients who had tested positive have been discharged since the beginning of the pandemic.

On Wednesday, Lee Health had a 36.5% positivity rate on COVID-19 tests processed through Lee Health Labs. This represents Lee Health results only, not Lee County as a whole. Hospital positivity rates tend to be higher as the tests are performed on patients seeking treatment for a health issue, not the general public that includes asymptomatic individuals.

Census as of Thursday afternoon was at 97% of staffed operational bed capacity, with 13.9% of those being COVID-19 patients. Staffed operational capacity reflects the number of beds for which the hospital has adequate staffing, not the total number of beds within Lee Health hospitals. Overall bed capacity fluctuates hour to hour as the system discharges patients throughout the day who are ready to go home.

As of Thursday, 75% of ventilators and 11% of ICU rooms are available for use across Lee Health facilities.

As of Thursday, there were seven COVID-19 patients on ventilators and 29 in the intensive care unit.

COVID-19 is a highly contagious viral disease. For most individuals, symptoms are mild. For a minority, the disease becomes a type of viral pneumonia with severe complications. Especially at risk are those who are older, those with underlying health conditions and the immune-compromised.

Officials strongly urge all members of the public who are at risk to remain at home so as to limit exposure. All others are urged to observe social distancing and to wear a mask for all public interactions.

For more detail on Florida resident cases, visit the live DOH Dashboard.

To find the most up-to-date information and guidance on COVID-19, visit the Department of Health’s dedicated COVID-19 webpage. For information and advisories from the Centers for Disease Control, visit the CDC COVID-19 website. For more information about current travel advisories issued by the U.S. Department of State, visit the travel advisory website.

For any other questions related to COVID-19 in Florida, contact the department’s dedicated COVID-19 Call Center by calling 1-866-779-6121. The Call Center is available 24 hours per day. Inquiries may also be emailed to COVID-19@flhealth.gov.

— Connect with this reporter on Twitter: @haddad_cj