- UNR medical students face their fears to help test community for COVID-19 (thenevadaindependent.com)
Evans (Lauran Evans, a recent graduate of the University Nevada, Reno’s School of Medicine) was the first medical student at the university to volunteer as a swabber at the district site at the Reno-Livestock Events Center...She started helping out in March after the university canceled in-person classes...About 70 medical students are now volunteering as testers, babysitters and phone bankers through the Washoe County Health District, Reno’s Emergency Medical Services Authority and other providers...READ MORE
- Rx for anger, as Nellis lockdown bars military retirees from pharmacy (reviewjournal.com)
When retired Navy Chief Petty Officer Richard Gray and his wife, Sheila, were able to go to the Nellis Air Force Base pharmacy, they picked up their prescriptions with full coverage and no copayment...But now their only option is off base, and the 16 medications they take between them cost upward of $2,000 a month out of pocket at Walgreens...Under the base’s public health emergency called on April 3 and renewed May 4 in response to the coronavirus outbreak, only uniformed members and their dependents and essential civilian contract employees are allowed on base, including the pharmacy...The Nellis pharmacy was placed off limits for retirees on April 10, leaving thousands of local military widows and retirees, many of them living on fixed incomes, locked out of the no-cost medication to which they are entitled. Now they are subject to copays that can quickly add up to hundreds of dollars...READ MORE
- Nevada hospital reports kept secret amid coronavirus spread (reviewjournal.com)
The Nevada Hospital Association has reportedly threatened to stop providing state health officials with daily reports detailing acute-care hospitals’ coronavirus activity, if those officials share the information with the public...For almost four weeks, the Review-Journal has sought copies of the documents from state and local governments under Nevada’s Public Records Act in order to provide the information to the public. The NHA has refused to provide the reports, which are provided to Gov. Steve Sisolak and other top state officials as they make critical decisions during the COVID-19 outbreak...While the hospital association is a private nonprofit that is not bound to respond to record requests, (Patrick) File (Nevada Open Government Coalition president) said the daily reports became subject to the state’s public records act as soon as the government received copies...READ MORE
- Coronavirus in Nevada -Tracking the spread through data (reviewjournal.com)
COVID-19 has killed more than 200 people in Nevada...Most of those who died have been age 65 or older, but a handful of young adults have succumbed to the disease as well...In Clark County, COVID-19 has killed black and Asian residents at a disproportionately high rate compared to their white and Hispanic counterparts...The state’s first day of double-digit fatalities occurred in early April...READ MORE
- As Nevada ramps up antibody testing, CDC issues accuracy warning (reviewjournal.com)
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned this week that some coronavirus antibody tests are inaccurate and cautioned that even the better tests should not be used to determine who can safely return to work or school...“Suffice to say, CDC is adequately worried about all the junk (antibody) tests that FDA let out on the market,” Mark Pandori, the director of Nevada State Public Health Laboratory, said...The CDC’s guidance comes at a time when public health agencies in Nevada are ramping up to offer the antibody tests to the public...READ MORE
- Touro students form volunteer corps to help first responders, homebound seniors (lasvegassun.com)#MedReady Community Network (tun.touro.edu)
As the COVID-19 pandemic started to become more prevalent in Nevada, three medical school students at Touro University Nevada quickly responded to help serve Southern Nevada’s needs...By late March, they launched a website to gather student volunteers to address these needs — from online tutoring, dog walking and even disseminating falsehoods about the virus...“We all as medical students want to help, it’s just in our nature,” said Cassandra McDiarmid, who plans to go into obstetrics and gynecology when she finishes school...“We (Ashlie Bloom, Parisun Shoga) saw there was a need for clinical assistance, but wanted to have something that was not clinical-related such as tutoring and grocery shopping to help out in any way we could,” she said. “We were trying to come up with a way to put all this information in one place and make it easily accessible.”...READ MORE
- Southern Nevada hospitals to resume elective surgeries next week (reviewjournal.com)
Southern Nevada’s major hospitals plan to resume “medically necessary” elective surgeries and procedures Monday, according to a Nevada Hospital Association letter...The letter, dated Tuesday, was sent this week to medical staff at University Medical Center, North Vista Hospital and The Valley Health System, Dignity Health and HCA Healthcare hospital systems. The companies own and operate more than a dozen local hospitals that have more than 4,000 staffed acute-care beds...Scheduling elective surgeries and procedures can begin immediately...READ MORE
- Casinos ready to open doors, tourists ready to return to Las Vegas (reviewjournal.com)Health and Safety Policies for Resumption of Gaming Operations Nonrestricted Licensees (gaming.nv.gov)
The two-month casino shutdown in Nevada seems to have an end in sight...On Friday afternoon, Gov. Steve Sisolak gave Nevada casinos a tentative date they could plan to reopen: June 4. Seventy-eight days after casinos first closed down to help stem the spread of COVID-19...The move comes as the state has faced an increasing amount of pressure to reopen; Nevada’s unemployment rate hit record highs in April, and casinos in 12 other states had opened their doors ahead of those in Sin City...Virginia Valentine, president and CEO of the Nevada Resort Association, said Sisolak’s announcement is “fantastic news” for Nevada’s gaming industry...“Our members have spent more than two months preparing for this day,” she said in an emailed statement. “They’ve put in place enhanced health and safety plans and protocols … Our members are excited to show off the enhancements they’ve made that preserve the experience while ensuring the well-being of our employees and visitors.”...Casinos have been preparing for this day for weeks, publishing updated health and safety guidelines and setting tentative booking dates online to make sure they’d have guests ready to fill rooms...READ MORE
‘We’re ready to go back’
Tourists ready to return
All eyes on the Gaming Control Board - Nevada Gov. Sisolak declares State of Fiscal Emergency due to COVID-19 pandemic (carsonnow.org)Sisolak declares ‘fiscal emergency,’ says state facing up to $911 million budget shortfall (thenevadaindependent.com)Nevada meets two of three reopening criteria under new coronavirus model, though testing still lags (thenevadaindependent.com)
Gov. Steve Sisolak declared a state of fiscal emergency on Monday arising from the strain the COVID-19 pandemic has put on public services in the State of Nevada...The global economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic is disrupting commerce and negatively impacting revenues across the country, in other states, and in Nevada...Nevada is estimating a significant shortfall of State General Fund revenue with joint estimates from the Governor’s Finance Office and Legislative Counsel Bureau-Fiscal Division ranging from $741 million to $911 million for the fiscal year ending on June 30, 2020...The declaration of a fiscal emergency gives the Governor and the Interim Finance Committee authority to transfer money from the Account to Stabilize the Operation of the State Government – commonly called the Rainy Day Fund – to the general fund...READ MORE
- Gov. Sisolak says some necessary medical, dental procedures may go forward (thenevadaindependent.com)Sisolak loosens restrictions on golf, drive-in worship services May 1; other elements of stay-at-home order extended (thenevadaindependent.com)Business leaders slam Sisolak on slow reopening plans (reviewjournal.com)
Gov. Steve Sisolak announced late Tuesday that the Nevada Hospital Association was preparing to resume some “medically necessary” elective procedures in the coming days — the first sign that some restrictions put in place to slow the spread of COVID-19 may be eased in the coming weeks...Unlike many other industries that were temporarily closed by emergency order, Sisolak never issued an order legally curtailing such procedures. State hospitals had instead sought to postpone unnecessary hospital visits on their own, especially as they geared up for an influx of coronavirus infections during March...READ MORE