Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Corona Virus update 7/21

This pandemic has had multiple crisis.
The medical crisis of so many sick and so many dead.
The economic crisis of the shutdown of the economy.
The racial healthcare disparity crisis worsened.
And the healthcare coverage crisis.

The Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation report (here) that “More than 10 million people are estimated to lose employer-sponsored health insurance as a result of pandemic-related job loss in their household between April and December 2020.”  The report continues, “Projections show 3.3 million of those people will regain employer-sponsored insurance by being added to a family member’s policy, 2.8 million people will enroll in Medicaid, and 600,000 people will enroll in the individual market, mainly via the Affordable Care Act’s marketplace. Still, 3.5 million people will become uninsured.”  

 A couple Of things to report.
Nuvance Healthcare (Danbury and New Milford) is now instructing our members to NOT reuse N95s. This is significant and is where we want all hospital systems to get too. We must push for a return to normal infection control.

Prospect Healthcare (Manchester and Rockville) is starting to fit test and train with elastomeric respirators, which, unlike N95s, are designed for decontamination and reuse.

134 days since the first confirmed case of Covid in Connecticut, we are at 62 people hospitalized and there were no new reported deaths today. In total, 4,406 have passed away. Positive tests are running just below 1%. (0.7% today)
Although this is welcome news, other states are recording record cases. We must learn from what we have been through and continue the practices that are helping.

Be well.


Friday, July 17, 2020

Corona Virus Update 7/17

We are 130 days since our first confirmed case of Covid in Connecticut.
To date, 4,396 residents have died from Covid.
We currently have 66 hospitalizations statewide, after topping out at 1,972.

Today, after 4 months of advocating for a presumption of Workers Compensation for essential workers, with an incredible amount of effort by labor, with help from the chairs of the the Labor and Insurance Committees of the General Assembly, the Governor posted this:

Connecticut owes a debt to the health care professionals, grocery store clerks, and other essential workers who stood at their posts during the darkest days of this pandemic. (1/3)
1:26 PM · Jul 17, 2020Twitter Web App
Replying to
We can pay a part of that debt by providing workers who contracted COVID-19 on the job during those days with a timely, straightforward opportunity to claim any benefits they are due through the workers’ compensation system. (2/3)
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I'm committed to providing that opportunity through a forthcoming exec order. I appreciate the employers who've done the right thing by their employees, the Workers Comp Commission for operating during the pandemic, and most of all the workers for their efforts & sacrifice. (3/3)




We welcome the Governor's announcement an look forward to reading it. Our essential workers have taken care of us, they deserve to be taken care of by us.

Be well,
John