Live updates: 1 in 10 Oregon coronavirus cases are children

By Courtney Sherwood (OPB) and Meerah Powell (OPB)
July 31, 2020 1 p.m. Updated: Aug. 1, 2020 12:42 a.m.

The Oregon Health Authority issued a report analyzing pediatric COVID-19 cases in Oregon on Friday. It found that 1,755 cases, or 10% of all diagnoses in the state, were of children under age 18.

Children are far less likely to become severely ill after diagnosis, the state reported, with about 1.5% being hospitalized, compared to 9.7% of adults.

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Half of all infected children were exposed by people in their household, compared to just one in five adults. Pediatric infection rates have been highest in Morrow, Jefferson and Union counties, the state reported.

Court ruling could help immigrants access health care

Oregon officials are responding to a federal ruling this week that temporarily freezes Trump administration immigration policies in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Department of Homeland Security had decreed that any non-U.S. citizen or legal resident who receives government assistance such as food stamps, public housing vouchers or Medicaid could be considered a “public charge,” a label that can harm the chances of obtaining a green card.

On Wednesday, a federal judge in New York put those restrictions on hold, citing the coronavirus pandemic, and noting that people have refused to enroll in publicly funded health programs or to receive treatment for COVID-19 out of fear they might put their immigration status at risk.

“The public charge rule has worsened health disparities, especially for the Latino/a/x community, at a time when they are most hard hit by the lethal coronavirus,” Oregon Health Authority Director Patrick Allen said Friday in a statement. “Here in Oregon many immigrant families decided not to access public benefits, even leaving their children without health insurance.”

The agency said this week’s federal injunctions will allow immigrant communities across Oregon to access critical health care.

Special legislative session could tackle COVID-19 workplace issues

Gov. Kate Brown will call a special legislative session for Aug. 10, in order to close a $1.2 billion budget gap brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Capitol sources.

Much of the session’s work is likely to focus on state finances and police reform, but the Legislature also could take up proposals for how liable businesses are when customers or employees are sickened with COVID-19. After mounting pressure in June, a work group has been looking at whether to grant liability protections against lawsuits in such cases, a concept that has strong support in the Oregon House.

House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, has also voiced support for a proposal by labor unions to grant workers’ compensation payments to people who’ve come down with COVID-19 while being required to go to work, regardless of whether there is proof they contracted the disease in the workplace.

Related: Oregon Legislature to convene Aug. 10 to close budget hole

Door-to-door tests find coronavirus widespread in Hermiston

Umatilla County is in the middle of one of the worst outbreaks of COVID-19 in Oregon. Since the beginning of July, the county has registered more than 17 cases per 1,000 people. But data released Friday by Oregon State University suggest the rate of coronavirus infection could actually be significantly higher in places.

A door-to-door testing initiative called TRACE (Team-based Rapid Assessment of Community-Level Coronavirus Epidemics) in Hermiston found that nearly 17% of the city’s population is infected. That’s 169 infections per 1,000 people in the city.

Project co-director Ben Dalziel calls the infection numbers “very high,” the highest yet detected by TRACE after testing in several cities around the state.

Related: Close to 17% of Hermiston residents could have COVID-19

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Oregon announces 6 more deaths

COVID-19 has claimed six more lives in Oregon, bringing the pandemic’s death toll in the state to 322, health officials reported Friday.

The Oregon Health Authority also reported 373 new confirmed and presumptive cases of the coronavirus Friday, bringing the total diagnosed with the virus to 18,492 since the start of the pandemic.

The most new cases were in Multnomah County, which reported 77 diagnoses, followed by Washington County with 45, Marion County with 44 and Umatilla County with 40.

Clark County, Washington, announces 40th death

Clark County, Washington, health officials Friday reported one more death to the coronavirus, a woman in her 70s with no underlying helath conditions. She was 40th person to die of COVID-19 in the Southwest Washington county. Officials also reported 22 new positive test results, bringing the number of Clark County residents diagnosed with the virus to 1,778.

The latest available data from the Washington Department of health shows 55,803 cases of COVID-19 have been diagnosed since the pandemic began, and 1,564 people in Washington have died from the virus.

Oregon moves Umatilla County to reopening baseline, Morrow County to Phase 1

Due to the rapid spread of the coronavirus in recent days, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced Thursday that Umatilla County has been moved back to the baseline of the state’s reopening plan, with the most restrictive limits, effective Friday.

Morrow County has been moved back to reopening Phase 1 starting Friday.

“COVID-19 has spread dramatically in both Umatilla and Morrow Counties for the past month,” Brown said in a statement. “My heart goes out to the families in Morrow County, Umatilla County, and the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation who have been impacted by this disease.”

Brown continued: “If we do not act immediately, we could see the virus spread even more rapidly, infecting and killing more community members. I know that this is difficult news for business owners and working families in the region.”

George Murdock, a Umatilla County Commissioner and liaison for the county’s public health agency, said some business owners and residents have expressed disappointment, but he hopes the move helps to flatten the curve of coronavirus cases in the region.

“Hopefully this will be a strong enough message to the 80,000 residents of Umatilla County that if we open back up, we’re all going to have to be in it together,” Murdock told OPB.

He said many of the county’s coronavirus cases have come from people going into work sick. The county is working with the state and employers to expand leave benefits, Murdock said, to ensure people can stay home.

Oregon updates its list of counties to watch

Oregon has updated its watchlist of counties reporting concerning coronavirus levels, with some areas of the state now receiving higher scrutiny. The list documents which counties have the broadest spread of COVID-19 cases, and allows the state to prioritize resources and increase monitoring.

Brown announced Thursday that Hood River, Marion and Multnomah counties have been added to the watchlist. There are now 10 counties on the list. The other counties are: Baker, Jefferson, Lake, Malheur, Morrow, Umatilla and Wasco.

According to the Oregon Health Authority, people in counties on the state’s watchlist should assume that COVID-19 is spreading quickly where they live. “Think of the watchlist as a yellow light: Proceed with caution,” the agency wrote in an email.

Union County, which had moved to Phase 2 of reopening before an outbreak at a church was linked to hundreds of positive COVID-19 tests, agreed to move back into Phase 1, which comes with greater restrictions. With that change, it was removed from the state’s watchlist. Lincoln County, where a June outbreak was linked to a seafood processor, and which has opted to stay in Phase 1, was also removed from the list. Both Lincoln and Union counties have reported only a small trickle of new coronavirus diagnoses over the past two weeks.

“I want to applaud county officials and community members in Lincoln and Union Counties for their diligent work in bringing the spread of COVID-19 under control in these areas. Your leadership shows that we can reduce the spread of this disease if we work together,” Brown said in a statement.

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