Monthly Archives: May 2021
Don’t sign the Benicia recall petition!
Our Benicia School Board is smarter than this group of parents
By Roger Straw, May 5, 2021A totally unnecessary $300,000 is supposed to help protect our children? Profoundly stupid. The recall is simply an attack on two decent local human beings. Stand up for Sheri Zada and Mark Maselli – DON’T SIGN THE PETITION!
Those pushing the recall have one purpose: to fully open our schools to in-person learning. And it seems they don’t realize that the full BUSD School Board is on track with making that happen as soon as it is safe. Right now we have a hybrid situation, with a close eye on state and local COVID conditions.
COVID case rates among children and youth are up in Solano County. Benicia saw 72 new positive cases among all ages during April. I don’t want our kids back to school full time yet, passing their mild cases around and bringing it back home to mom, dad, grandma and grandpa.
Mild cases are NOT ok – see “Benicia Doc: People with mild covid-19 can have long-term health problems”
Solano County numbers better, but people still getting sick with COVID
25 new cases in our County today. Uptick in percent positive rate. See also: People with mild COVID can have long-term health problems
Solano County COVID report on Tuesday, May 4.
[Source: see far below. See also my ARCHIVE spreadsheet of daily Solano COVID updates.]Solano County COVID-19 Dashboard – SUMMARY:
On May 4, Solano County reported 25 new COVID cases. We saw 1,288 new cases in April, an average of 43 per day. Reports are that Solano will not be joining all other Bay Area counties in the State’s orange tier anytime soon. Solano’s Active cases went down today, falling from 321 to 310. Our percent positivity rate rose again today to 8.4%, after rising dramatically yesterday to 8.2%. We have not seen rates this high since Feb. 22.
Cases among children and youth have increased alarmingly
Percent of TODAY’S new cases, by age groups, May 4, 2021 | ||||
New Cases 0-17 years |
New Cases 18-49 years |
New Cases 50-64 years |
New Cases 65+ years |
TOTAL New Cases Today |
6 | 14 | 4 | 1 | 25 |
24% | 56% | 16% | 4% | 100% |
COMPARE TODAY (above) WITH PERCENTAGES SINCE LAST SUMMER (below). Since last June, cases among children and youths 0-17 years of age have increased dramatically as a percentage of total cases. This chart shows the changes among age groups over the past 11 months.
Solano County COVID-19 – CASES SINCE JUNE 2020, BY AGE GROUP AS % OF TOTAL | ||||
Date | Cases % 0-17 |
Cases % 18-49 |
Cases % 50-64 |
Cases % 65+ |
6/5/20 | 5.8% | 45.2% | 25.6% | 23.3% |
7/1/20 | 9.0% | 57.5% | 20.1% | 13.4% |
8/31/20 | 11.0% | 60.6% | 19.2% | 9.2% |
5/4/21 | 12.2% | 55.4% | 20.5% | 11.9% |
Hospitalizations – very little information…
The Solano County COVID dashboard Summary tab only shows active hospitalizations for the current day (23 today, see image at top of page). This number represents the total currently hospitalized after yesterday’s admissions and discharges. Little can be learned from this about the accumulated total of hospitalizations since the outbreak began.
But on the Demographics tab of the County dashboard, the County “occasionally” updates the accumulated total of hospitalizations by age group. These numbers have not been updated since early April, so it isn’t possible to determine whether there has been an increasing number of hospitalizations among our children and young adults. I have asked Public Health Officer Dr. Bela Matyas for an update on these numbers, and he replied by email on 4/29 that he “believes” his staff will update these numbers soon, and “will double check.” But no update as yet. So age group hospitalization totals on the dashboard remain old and unchanged:
Solano County Total COVID Hospitalizations by AGE GROUPS as of Early April | |||
Hospitalizations Age 0-17 |
Hospitalizations Age 18-49 |
Hospitalizations Age 50-64 |
Hospitalizations Age 65+ |
26 | 323 | 330 | 591 |
>> The virus is still on the move here. Stay safe, get vaccinated, wear a mask and social distance! We will get through this together.
Cases by City on Monday, May 4:
- Benicia remained steady today, total of 972 cases since the outbreak began. Benicia averaged 2 cases per day in April.
- Dixon added 1 new case today, total of 1,871 cases.
- Fairfield added 8 new cases today, total of 8,841 cases.
- Rio Vista remained steady today, total of 369 cases.
- Suisun City added 2 new cases today, total of 2,232 cases.
- Vacaville added 6 new cases today, total of 8,528 cases.
- Vallejo added 8 new cases today, total of 9,698 cases.
- Unincorporated areas remained steady today, total of 102 cases.
COMPARE: Screenshots from Solano County COVID Dashboard on Monday, May 3:
The data on this page is from today’s and the previous Solano County COVID-19 Dashboard. The Dashboard is full of much more information and updated weekdays around 4pm. On the County’s dashboard, you can hover a mouse or click on an item for more information. Note the tabs at top for Summary, Demographics and Vaccines. Click here to go to today’s Solano County Dashboard.
Sources
- Solano County Coronavirus Dashboard (posted on the County website today).
- The State of California’s Open Data Profile at COVID19.CA.GOV
- See also on the BenIndy: Hospitalizations AND ICU Beds by REGION.
- See also my ARCHIVE of daily Solano COVID updates (an excel spreadsheet).
Benicia Doc: People with mild covid-19 can have long-term health problems
Important VA Study of long-term health impacts
Benicia Nextdoor, by Richard Fleming, April 3, 2021People with mild covid-19 can have long-term health problems. The NY Times recently reported on a VA study, published in Nature, showing the long-term health impacts on many people who had mild covid-19 cases. The study reviewed over 73,000 people who had mild covid infection and did not require hospitalization.
A few key points from the study:
1. People with mild covid illness had a 60% higher rate of death over a six month period than comparable people without covid. The causes of death were not identified.
2. They had a 20% higher need for outpatient medical care than non-infected people.
3. Post-covid problems in this population included lung problems, cardiac problems, neurological problems, psychiatric problems, and others. How long these problems will persist is of course not yet known.
4. It needs to be noted that the study population was not representative of the U.S. population. Because it was a VA study, the average age was 61. 88% of the subjects were male. 25% were Black. Nonetheless, there is a clear possibility that the long-term health problems experienced by so many in this group might also be found among women and among younger people with mild covid illness.
More studies on the long-term sequelae of covid-19 infection, both mild and severe, will be done in the months and years ahead. Much is not yet known. But it is becoming increasingly clear that this virus can cause long-term health problems, even in people with mild illness who recover quickly, and even in younger people.
Why am I bringing this up? To encourage people not to treat this pandemic dismissively. To not shrug it off as a nothing-burger. I bring it up in hopes of encouraging folks to get vaccinated.
Of course life is full of risks. Some we have control over. Some we don’t. I understand why some folks may be hesitant about getting a relatively new vaccine, out of concern for possible side effects. Or out of a feeling that even if they themselves get infected with covid-19, it won’t be a big deal.
What is becoming increasingly clear, with well over 104,000,000 Americans now fully vaccinated, is that the risk of side effects from the vaccines is negligible. If there were significant side effects, they should have become apparent by now. And it is also becoming more clear that even those with a mild infection might be in for long-term problems, posing significant risks to quality of life, the ability to participate in sports and other physical activities, and possibly even to one’s lifespan itself.
So, weighing the risks between possible vaccine side effects and possible covid-19 side effects, I think the scales tilt strongly towards getting the vaccine. I’m happy to try to answer any questions about vaccines folks have.
Thanks.
You must be logged in to post a comment.