Aptos Times: November 15, 2021

Page 7

COMMUNITY NEWS

Two More COVID Deaths; Goodbye Herd Immunity By Jondi Gumz

W

hen health officials talk about the COVID-19 pandemic, you may not hear the words “herd immunity.” Even though deaths have risen — 759,000 in the United States, 72,000 in California and 222 in Santa Cruz County — officials at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control no longer see herd immunity as a national goal. Once 70 percent of the population (or 80 percent or 85 percent) was vaccinated against COVID-19, the new coronavirus would fade away — the world could return to normal. That idea, based on immunity to measles for children who got the disease, doesn’t seem to work with the easily spread Delta variant even as the vaccination rose to 58.5 percent fully vaccinated nationwide. California reports 73.7 percent have one dose; Santa Cruz County has 72.3 percent with one dose and 67.5 percent fully vaccinated. The Los Angeles Times quoted Dr. Jefferson Jones of the CDC’s COVID-19 Epidemiology Task Force telling a vaccine advisory panel that achieving a threshold where the virus does not spread may not be possible. Vaccines have been effective at preventing death, but not blocking spread, he said. Studies show protection from Pfizer’s and Moderna’s vaccine begins to wane after a few months, which is why booster shots are available. However, studies show both vaccines are highly protective against hospitalization. Santa Cruz County reports 408 active cases — up from 324 two weeks ago — five hospitalizations, unchanged, none in intensive care. One vaccine, Pfizer, was granted emergency use authorization for kids age 5-11. The first vaccine clinic for kids 5-11 in Aptos, offered through the Santa Cruz County Office of Education, was Nov. 10 at Valencia Elementary, and 21 students were vaccinated. At Mar Vista Elementary, 25 students had vaccine appointments on Nov. 12. Each school has 32 slots available. Appointments must be made in advance at: https://santacruzcoe.org/ vaccines/pvusd/ Court Blocks Mandate n Nov. 6, a federal appellate court in Louisiana temporarily blocked a new vaccine mandate for employers with 100 or more employees (part time as well as fulltime — independent contractors are not counted). President Biden ordered the mandate requiring 100 million workers to be vaccinated or get tests weekly, giving businesses until Jan. 4 to comply. Attorneys general from 27 states sued.

O

more lives in Santa Cruz County – two Latino men, both with underlying conditions — bringing the number of deaths to 222. The county reports 324 active cases, 20,517 cases since the pandemic began and 618 requiring hospitalization. Boosters n Nov. 3, with winter on the horizon, Santa Cruz County Public health officials encouraged everyone eligible to get a booster shot because of the waning protection. Boosters are recommended for: Anyone 18 and older who got their Johnson & Johnson shot 2 or more months ago, most people who received their Pfizer or Moderna shot 6 or more months ago, people 65+ or 18 and older living in a longterm care facility, and people 50+ with an underlying condition. The CDC definition of an underlying medical condition is very broad, and a significant portion of the population qualifies for a booster, according to health officials, adding that people are free to “mix and match” vaccines to get protection. “COVID Update” page 10

O

Hundreds rally on Ocean Street in Santa Cruz Nov. 3 in support of vaccine choice. One argument is the president set legisTesting sites are open at Cabrillo’s lative policy, which is the job of Congress, parking lot K, 2-5 p.m. Monday-Friday and and another is Congress did not give federal 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday; the PVUSD District Occupational Safety and Health adminis- Office parking lot, open from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. trators the power to end pandemics. Mondays, Wednesday, and Fridays, and One of the questions recently fielded the county Office of Education, 400 Encinal by Pajaro Valley Superintendent Dr. St., Santa Cruz. Michelle Rodriguez was: Why is the Juan Straub, Inspire project manager, vaccine mandated for students? said 230 people got tested on Nov. 10 Gov. Newsom announced plans to despite the rain. add the COVID-19 vaccine to the list of Students and their families, and vaccinations required to attend in-person staff and their families can use this free school once the vaccine gets full approval service. Those needing a test simply fill but Rodriguez explained that the vaccine is out the registration once at http://sccoe. still not a state requirement. link/inspiresc and go to any site. No “Therefore, currently PVUSD appointment is needed. encourages but does not require neither Locally the Delta variant claimed two staff nor students to be vaccinated. Once the State implements the COVID-19 vaccination requirement, PVUSD will follow the law,” she added, noting the law would have personal exemptions. Drugstores have Pfizer vaccine for kids 5-11 but on Nov. 12, there was no availability in Aptos. Plenty of Free Customer Parking The closest locations are Walgreens in Freedom and Santa Cruz and RiteAid in Freedom, according to VaccineFinder, Wilder Associates Inc. Joy of Movement which is searchable at santacruzhealth.org. Property Management Specialists Pilates & Gyrotonic® Dr. Faris Sabbah, Santa Cruz County 662-0291 More Zest for Life superintendent of schools, is working with 688-8077 all nine school districts to offer vaccine clinics for kids age 5 to 11. For details, see: https://santacruzcoe.org/vaccines/ Kumon Math Active School Cases & Reading Center Epicenter Cycling abbah launched a website, santacruzcoe. Learning for the Long Run Trek Bicycles for All Types of Riders org/coviddashboards, to report active cases and test results. 508-8200 662-8100 Pajaro Valley Unified School District reported nine active student cases and zero active staff cases. Village Liquors Dentistry for Animals Pacific Coast Charter School has two For All Your Beverage Needs active cases. So does Watsonville High. Dr. Judy Force, DVM There is one each at Valencia 688-5691 768-7148 Elementary, Mintie White Elementary, Radcliffe Elementary, E.A. Hall Middle School and Pajaro Valley High. State guidelines require students and school staff working with them to be masked indoors although Santa Cruz County lifted its indoor mask mandate Sept. 29. With Inspire Diagnostics, the County Office of Education has conducted more than 38,000 PCR surveillance tests for COVID at no charge to those tested.

S

www.tpgonlinedaily.com Aptos Times / November 15th 2021 / 7


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

2021 County Fair Apple Pie Winner, recipe by Janice Weaver

11min
pages 27-28

Community Calendar • Arts & Entertainment – Pages 28

4min
page 29

Armstrong Appointed CalFire CZU Unit Chief? • Kaiser Gives $200,000 to New Mental Health Center in Watsonville

3min
pages 20-22

Independent Review of AHS Fatality Underway • Credit Union’s

13min
pages 25-26

Who Is Drawing New Assembly District Lines?, By Jondi Gumz

4min
page 24

Paradise Fire Lesson Learned

6min
page 23

Monte Vista’s Bella Primavera Signs with University of South Carolina

3min
pages 18-19

Vets Village Planned in Ben Lomond: Donations in November will be Matched up to $75,000

2min
page 17

$1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Bill Passed: What’s in it for Santa Cruz County

6min
page 10

Goraya to head Monterey Bay Economic Partnership • Matt Huffaker

12min
pages 8-9

PUC Response on PG&E Outage • CPUC to PG&E: Respond on No Notice Outages Letter By Nov. 8

3min
page 6

Doing Good with Golf, By Jondi Gumz

3min
page 4

Are Grandma and Grandpa OK?, By Lisa McGrath

1min
page 16

Girl Power: Girl Scouts Aid Sheltered Animals in Tough Times, By Carrie

5min
pages 12-14

Local Government Fellows Program: Cabrillo College Endowment’s Goal is to Launch with $100,000, By Jondi Gumz

2min
page 11

Two More COVID Deaths; Goodbye Herd Immunity, By Jondi Gumz

5min
page 7
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.