Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC ReportUPDATE | May 1, 2020, 3:15 p.m.:) Harris County’s ‘Stay Home, Work Safe’ order officially ended today as Phase 1 of the governor’s reopening plan begins, but local leaders including health care executives urge the community to remain vigilant and to continue the safety practices established over the past two months.

At a Friday morning news conference, Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo reiterated that the pandemic is not over as Texas reported 50 deaths on Thursday and more than 1,000 new cases of COVID-19. In addition, Harris County reported 97 new cases and 1 additional death outside the city of Houston.

“It’s a grim reminder that this virus doesn’t respect dates on a calendar,” Hidalgo said. “It’s impossible to pull a date out of thin air and say to the virus: ‘We’re ready for you to go away now.’ That’s not how it works. That’s not how any of this works. We can’t allow ourselves to be desensitized to what’s happening, to lose our sense of humanity. Fifty Texans—brothers, sisters, parents, grandparents, sons and daughters—had their lives cut short yesterday from a single, invisible killer that still lurks among us.”

Hidalgo urged people in Harris County to reopen slowly for the sake of public health.

“If the virus spreads like wildfire and the hospitals run out of space, or are running out of space again, things are going to have to shut back down—again,” Hidalgo said. “If we do the re-opening step by step, carefully, there’s a chance of succeeding by slowly reopening if we’re able to contain and we’re able to test and we’re able to trace.”

Hidalgo noted that the Texas attorney general issued a clarifying letter to try to clear confusion about what businesses could open and which should remain closed.

“If you’re not essential, as defined by the order I issued or by the governor’s order, and you are not reopen as classified under the governor’s order—the three reopenings he listed—you should be closed,” the county judge said.

She added that she would reissue her order later today to conform with the governor’s order and the attorney general’s clarification.

“Just because you can open, doesn’t mean you should,” she said, also announcing that she was adding another “T” for “teamwork” to her “test, trace, treat” reopening strategy.

“That ‘T’ involves every single resident in Harris County,” she said. “If these doctors and these nurses get overwhelmed, people die en masse. Plain and simple.”

Joining Hidalgo at this morning’s briefing was Esmaeil Porsa, M.D., MBA, MPH, president and CEO of Harris Health System; Umair A. Shah, M.D., MPH, executive director of Harris County Public Health; Marc L. Boom, M.D., president and CEO of Houston Methodist Hospital; and Paul Klotman, M.D., FACP, president and CEO of Baylor College of Medicine.

Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC Report:UPDATE | April 30, 2020, 4:45 p.m.:) With phase 1 of Gov. Greg Abbott’s plan to restart the state’s economy taking effect tomorrow, many restaurants and retailers will be begin reopening their doors. Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner and Houston’s COVID-19 Recovery Czar Marvin Odum announced measures they’re taking in order to safely and responsibly reopen the city.

“The virus has spread like fire. The curve is flattening—that is clear, but we are still reporting these new cases,” he said during his daily briefing this afternoon. “Like a fire, you can extinguish the flames, but often it continues to smolder. The reality is, if you start coming back together, not engaging in social distancing, not wearing face coverings, then it’s almost like adding fuel to the fire. You may think it’s out, but quite frankly, it’s not. It will come back … with a vengeance and be reignited, so please, as we start tomorrow, May 1, for those businesses opening up in stages, be very careful.”

Although the “Stay Home Work Safe” expires today, Turner said he is modifying the order. All city permitted and sponsored events will be canceled or rescheduled through the end of May. In addition, the Houston Public Library System will remain closed through the end of the month.

As people transition back to business mode, people should continue to practice social distancing, wear face coverings and stay at home, he emphasized.

Restaurants and retailers are required to limit their occupancy to 25 percent during the first phase of Abbott’s executive order. However, Turner said the city will be relying on an honor system to make sure businesses adhere to the occupancy limit.

“Quite frankly, it’s going to be on a trust basis and self-policing because we simply don’t have the resources to be going all around the city of Houston to check whether or not you’re following the 25 percent occupancy limit,” Turner said.

During the press conference, Odum highlighted three main priorities he will be tackling in his role: testing, contact tracing and “safe zone” measures.

“We’re moving forward with a different strategy on testing in the city,” Odum said. “The situation now allows us to look at this entire geography, think about all the risks that are out there, starting with our vulnerable and at-risk communities, thinking about that from a socioeconomic standpoint, where we’ve seen outbreaks in the past … to understand where the priorities are.”

Odum and his team have developed a plan for a number of different sites around the city to make testing available and more convenient starting next week.

However, testing alone is not enough, he said.

“The reason you need these [testing and contact tracing] together is because testing identifies additional infections out there,” Odum said. “Contact tracing allows you then to contain that to a small area, so you don’t get wide community spread.”

The third priority is to track hospital bed numbers, ICU capacity and critical equipment supplies to make sure the health care system remains in the “safe zone” as the city goes through the reopening process.

Odum collaborated with the Greater Houston Partnership and chambers across the city to develop a “Reopen Houston Safely” strategy, a set of guidelines and best practices for businesses to incorporate into their operations.

The city has also distributed approximately 120,000 face coverings and masks this past week through various channels, including city council members and faith-based community organizations. Turner said he plans to distribute 50,000 to 70,000 more over the next few days.

“As we move forward, people will be assuming a little bit more risk as people come together, but we’re going to do everything we can within our power to keep everyone safe and make this reopening work,” Turner said. “It’s going to require all of us to be responsible and do their part, as well.” — Shanley Pierce

Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC Report and UPDATE | April 28, 2020, 7:30 p.m.:) Houston and Harris County officials have crafted a response to Gov. Greg Abbott’s plan to reopen parts of the Texas economy on Friday aimed at avoiding a local increase in COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths.

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner expressed concern about backsliding on the progress of containing the virus amid local orders that have kept people at home, working safe, at physical distance and, this week, guided to wear facial coverings in public. Both executives warned of potentially perilous circumstances with more movement in the community as the virus continues to circulate.

At a Tuesday morning news conference, Hidalgo announced a three-point “test, trace, treat” plan to contain the spread of COVID-19 as parts of the Texas economy—retail stores, restaurants, movie theaters and malls—can reopen with restrictions on May 1.

Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC Report:UPDATE | April 27, 2020, 4:20 P.M.:) Earlier this afternoon, Gov. Greg Abbott announced his tiered plan to reopen Texas.

After the state stay-at-home order expires on April 30, the first phase of Abbott’s strategy will allow retail stores, restaurants, movie theaters and malls to reopen on May 1 at no more than 25 percent capacity. Museums and libraries also will be allowed to reopen their doors, but all hands-on exhibits must remain closed.

Outdoor sports that keep a certain distance, such as golf and tennis, will be allowed but limited to no more than four people at a time.

Phase 2 of Abbott’s plan could go into effect as soon as May 18.

“Phase 2 will open more businesses and allow the businesses open in Phase 1 to expand their operations. We need to see two weeks of data to confirm no flare-up of COVID-19,” Abbott said. “That is exactly why now, more than ever, Texans must continue safe distancing practices. If we do that, we will be able to expand into Phase 2, opening up our economy even more.”

Barbershops, hair salons, bars and gyms will remain closed for now. The governor said he is aiming for “on or no later than mid-May” to reopen those businesses.

Abbott’s executive order supersedes orders set at the local level.

COVID-19 Testing Sites

(by:Emergency operation center):Any Houstonian, regardless of symptoms, may receive one FREE COVID-19 test at our drive-thru testing sitesCall 832-393-4220 to be provided an access code and instructions on where to go. A FEMA contractor calls with test results, also made available through the LabCorp or Quest Diagnostics website, as described in this document.

United Memorial Medical Center has a new FREE COVID-19 drive-through testing site at Barnett Sports Complex (6800 Fairway Drive) in Southeast Houston. The site does not require people to have symptoms or appointments and is open daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Learn more by calling 1-866-333-covid or visiting ummcscreening.com.

Houston COVID-19 update

TMC Report and UPDATE | April 23, 2020, 5:45 p.m.:  Mayor Sylvester Turner announced today during an afternoon press conference that the Houston Health Department reported 71 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the city’s total to 2,346. There were no deaths today, marking the fourth consecutive day that Houston has reported no fatalities from COVID-19.

Houston METRO Board Chair Carrin Patman shared how the Houston METRO is working to protect its employees and riders during the pandemic. Ridership has dipped in all sectors but less for the TMC and its park and rides. The transit authority has implemented social distancing practices on buses, suspended fares, initiated temperature checks when employees arrive to work and will be supplying masks to riders as available.

Turner stressed the importance of wearing masks to comply with the new order from Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, effective Monday, April 27.  Joining the press conference virtually to add their support to the Mask Up Houston campaign (#MaskUpHOU) were Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles, Houston Astros shortstop Carlos Correa and local rapper Slim Thug.

“If you do have to leave the house, I would strongly suggest that you mask up and glove up and just sanitize on the regular,” said Slim Thug, who has made a full recovery from COVID-19.

Turner emphasized that his goal was to provide masks rather than simply enforce the order, saying the city should not have a mandate without providing adequate resources.

“Masks over citations,” Turner said. “We don’t give citations. We give masks or face coverings.”

To support the city’s most vulnerable communities, Turner announced a new Health Equity Response task force that will focus on bringing more information and more supplies to those most at risk and disproportionately affected by COVID-19. Strategies include a public health education campaign to encourage residents in the highest risk neighborhoods to take additional precautions to protect themselves and others; direct community support to distribute essential supplies to Houstonians, including masks; and a Houston health equity response fund to accept donations that will provide resources to those who need them most.

“Here in Houston, as in many other parts of our nation, the pandemic is magnifying the pre-existing health disparities and socioeconomic challenges facing our most vulnerable communities,” said Shannon Buggs, Complete Communities director at the mayor’s office and a member of the new task force. “Before COVID-19, we already knew that 39 percent of Houstonian households didn’t have $400 for an emergency. Now, despite stay-at-home orders, only 1 out of every 5 black workers and 1 out of every 6 Latino workers in the United States actually can work from home, compared with 30 percent of white workers and 37 percent of Asian workers. … Mayor Turner appointed the Health Equity Response task force to keep the focus on the most acute and critical needs.”

Turner also announced an initiative for members of local faith communities to help make more than 1 million masks.

“We are committed to not leaving anyone behind,” Turner said. “The City of Houston is the most diverse city in the country, and in order to make sure that we touch the needs, it is important that this team be as diverse as possible. And we are committed to doing just that. …We want to make sure that we are touching, and working very closely, with all of our communities, especially those who are at risk and are most vulnerable.”

Earlier today, Harris County Public Health (HCPH) announced its revamped COVID-19 online self-assessment tool to improve the testing process with advanced scheduling options. Testing is free and open to the public, regardless of citizenship status, but all individuals must register first and obtain a unique identification code. More information about the assessment can be found at www.readyharris.org or www.hcphtx.org or by calling 832-927-7575.

Additionally, the Texas Policy Lab (TPL) in Rice University’s School of Social Sciences has joined Hidalgo’s office in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic. TPL is drawing upon their expertise to provide the county with relevant data, including evaluation of the effectiveness of the county’s Stay Home, Work Safe order. — Alexandra Becker

UPDATE | April 22, 2020, 6 p.m.: Harris County will require face coverings in public beginning Monday, County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner announced in a joint news conference.

The order applies to people 10 and older for 30 days beginning April 27 with exceptions for people with health conditions, those exercising alone or while driving and eating. Residents have been given several days to acquire or make a face covering, which doesn’t have to be medical grade, but must be a mask or other item that protects the nose and mouth. Order violators apprehended at the discretion of law enforcement agencies could face a $1,000 fine or up to 180 days in jail.

“Face coverings are not a substitute for social distancing,” Hidalgo said. “We are still under a stay home, work safe order. We should not be out unless absolutely necessary. And if we do this, we will get that curve down to where it needs to be to where we can actually begin reopening things and do so in a way that is sustainable.”

Turner noted that the city’s COVID-19 deaths remained at 34 for the third consecutive day. He also mentioned reports from the Texas Medical Center that show COVID-19 discharges outnumber current hospitalizations for TMC-affiliated institutions.

“A face covering will help slow the spread of this coronavirus and can save lives,” the mayor said. “Wearing a face covering protects other people from you because you do not know if you are a carrier and can transmit the virus. You can be asymptomatic.”

Davis Persse, M.D., the city’s public health authority, pressed the importance of face coverings given the predominance of “asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic or minimally symptomatic spread” and how measures taken so far have staved off the virus, which is circulating in the community, from devastating the area with illness, hospitalizations and deaths.

Houston COVID-19 update

HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- Offering optimistic news, Mayor Sylvester Turner reported no new COVID-19 deaths for a second straight day, which he says is the first time that has happened since the pandemic.

Turner also noted that the 20 positive cases Tuesday are the lowest single-day count of new cases "in a while."

"The only time we've had this number of cases has been on Sunday. We didn't have anything to report on Sunday, it was zero," Mayor Turner said. "But then during the week, we're reporting 20 cases, new cases that is. That's pretty much an all time low, since the very beginning. That's the first time we've reported back-to-back zero deaths. It's the first time."

While this is welcoming news, the city's death toll remains at 34, and health officials still say cases have not peaked yet.

Just a day before, Turner made a first step toward reopening the city's economy by naming Marvin Odum, former president of Shell Oil, his "recovery leader."

Houston COVID-19 update

 (KHOU11 Report): In response to the global coronavirus pandemic, President Donald Trump said he will sign an executive order to temporarily suspend immigration into the United States.

Trump said the order will be put in place in order to protect the jobs of American citizens.

It's not clear when the order will be signed or how long it will remain in effect.

Houston COVID-19 update

(Houston Chronicle):After weeks of grim, ever-worsening statistics, Houston medical and public health leaders say the area has begun to flatten the COVID-19 curve, the rate at which the disease is spreading through the community.The start of such flattening, seen in testing and hospitalization data, represents the turning of a significant corner for an area that has been shut down for more than a month to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus, which causes COVID-19. The virus has infected more than 2 million people globally and killed more than 33,000 in the U.S.“We haven’t peaked yet, but we’re seeing very encouraging signs that the curve is flattening,” said Dr. Marc Boom, president of Houston Methodist. “The number of people testing positive has slowed and hospitalizations have also leveled off.”All the stories, all the timeUnlock The Chronicle for 95¢SUBSCRIBEDr. Paul Klotman, president of Baylor College of Medicine, added that the trend is “definitely positive — we’re getting closer to the peak.” But he noted that “the peak is not a good place to be. The only safe place is when we’re going toward the valley.”Texas Medical Center leaders told Mayor Sylvester Turner this week that the rate of the virus’s spread, exponential early, has definitely slowed. But they were quick to warn again complacency and stressed that now, more than ever, people need to keep aggressively practicing social distancing.Related StoriesCOLLEGEBRENT ZWERNEMAN2020 Texas A&M football status report: The OLASTROSCHANDLER ROMEWith baseball on hold, Astros' Alex Bregman focused on charity...JOHN MCCLAINBY JOHN MCCLAIN, STAFF WRITERMcClain: Don’t be surprised if Texans trade downLIFESTYLEBY LISA GRAY, STAFF WRITER‘We are the response.’ How a Harvey rescuer retooled his...LIFESTYLEBY MIKE MOFFITT, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE STAFF WRITERCOVID-19 myths are spreading as fast as the virus itselfJORDAN RAY, DUG BEGLEY, HANNAH DELLINGER, HOUSTON CHRONICLECoronavirus live updates: Abbott unveils timeline to reopen TexasERICA GRIEDERBY ERICA GRIEDER, STAFF WRITERTexas AG shouldn’t scoff at legitimate coronavirus concernsBUSINESSBY SERGIO CHAPA, STAFF WRITERSchlumberger’s $7.4B loss sets stage for ‘most...EDITORIALSBY THE EDITORIAL BOARDThumbs: Dallas Cowboy’s social-distancing foulLETTERS[Letters] Are we ready for Rep. Dan Crenshaw’s response to...Public health leaders nationally and locally have stressed the need to flatten the curve by social distancing to reduce the number of deaths and prevent the health care system from being inundated with patients. Oft cited is the situation in New York City, which ran out of hospital beds and to date has suffered nearly 11,500 deaths because measures were not adopted until well into the outbreak. There have been 103 deaths so far in the Houston area.The Houston area, which benefited from the virus arriving later, acted comparatively sooner, closing bars and restaurants and canceling popular events, including its livestock show and rodeo, in early to mid-March, before Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo on March 24 issued a stay-at-home order that shut down all but essential businesses. Similar orders were issued in surrounding counties.A week later, Hidalgo extended the order through the end of April. She has yet to decide whether to extend the stay-at-home order beyond April 30.‘Too early to tell’Despite the measures, the Houston area’s COVID-19 numbers continued to spike — expected, experts said, because of the virus’s incubation time of two to 14 days, the sometimes slow disease progression, the lack of access to testing and the often lengthy delays in lab results.But in recent days, public health officials said, the signs such measures are working have become evident.According to new research by two Harvard scientists and a Baylor doctor, for instance, the rate at which the virus is spreading dropped from nearly 30 percent a week and a half ago to almost 5 percent as of Wednesday. That means the time it takes to double the size of the outbreak has gone from every three days to 20 days now.Now Playing'COVID-19 in 60': April 17, 2020Houston ChronicleParking Lot Prayer and PraiseHouston ChronicleEaster in the Age of COVID-19Houston ChronicleCoronavirus health care: ER nurse dresses for protectionHouston ChronicleHouston shoppers line up for food as COVID-19 fears mountHouston Chronicle'COVID-19 in 60': Houston coronavirus news in a minuteVideo: Houston Chronicle“It’s too early to really tell — the next week or two will be crucial — but Houston’s social distancing appears to be doing enormous good,” said Dr. Mark Siedner, a Harvard professor of medicine and infectious disease specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital. “The trend over the last week is really positive.”The next two weeks are when a number of models project Houston’s cases will peak.Officials said not to read too much into daily counts, which can go up or down depending on the day’s number of test results returned by laboratories, often in batches that include a backlog of cases. Dr. David Persse, health authority for the Houston Health Department, complained about that tendency by the labs Wednesday.The officials said to look at the average number of cases over a week’s time. Klotman noted that the area’s count went from 1,200 cases April 1 to 2,800 cases April 7 to 5,200 cases April 14 — that is, up 133 percent in the first six days, 85 percent in the last seven days.Positive test rates also show a flattening. Gulshan Sharma, chief medical officer at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, said the county testing positive rate in the last week has dropped from between 10 and 12 percent in the beginning to between 2 and 4 percent. Others say that’s partly a reflection of testing a wider variety of people than just those with severe disease, the case at the beginning.‘Cautiously optimistic’Hospitalizations are also encouraging. Memorial Hermann and Methodist health systems, which have seen the area's most COVID-19 patients in their system hospitals, reported a gradual increase in their censuses last week but a decrease since. Memorial Hermann had 167 COVID-19 patients Thursday, down from 189 on April 10; Methodist had 173 on Thursday, down from 202 on Sunday.The area’s overall hospital occupancy rate is 69 percent and ICU bed rate is 85 percent, according to the SouthEast Texas Regional Advisory Council, which oversees the area response to medical emergencies. Despite ups and downs, those percentages have been relatively flat during the outbreak.Texas Medical Center hospital officials expressed confidence this week that they will be able to handle any surge of patients without the need to send patients to other area hospitals or a makeshift hospital under construction at NRG Stadium. The hospitals can expand by more than 20 percent under internal contingency plans.“We are cautiously optimistic with the trending data,” said Dr. Umair Shah, executive director of Harris County Public Health. “We know the prevention measures put in place, such as the stay-at-home order, are slowing down the disease transmission.”But like the TMC leaders, Shah emphasized the area isn’t out of the clear yet. He said that “if we try to do ‘business as usual,’ we run the risk of seeing a dramatic increase of cases that could unravel the progress that we have made.” He called it essential to ensure there is the necessary public health infrastructure in place — such as universal testing and contact tracing — “so that we are ready to respond to either a ‘second wave’ or have a focused response to the virus being re-introduced into the community.”Jasper Scherer contributed to this report.todd.ackerman@chron.comSign up for Breaking News alertsWe're tracking COVID-19 across Texas. Get updates delivered to your inbox.SIGN UPBy subscribing, you agree to our Terms of use and acknowledge that your information will be used as described in our Privacy Policy.Todd AckermanTodd Ackerman is a veteran reporter who has covered medicine for the Houston Chronicle since 2001. A graduate of the University of California at Los Angeles, he previously worked for the Raleigh News & Observer, the National Catholic Register, the Los Angeles Downtown News and the San Clemente Sun-Post.Past Articles from this Author:Blood plasma therapy for COVID-19 patients coming to more Houston hospitalsAs Houston-area COVID-19 hospitalizations climb, uncertainty remains over when downslope beginsMethodist transfuses blood into 2 more COVID-19 patientsNEWSLETTERCoronavirus updatesGet breaking news alerts and a morning briefing with the latest on COVID-19 and other local news.SIGN UPBy subscribing, you agree to our Terms of use and acknowledge that your information will be used as described in our Privacy Policy.Most PopularHome sales volume, prices predicted to be impacted for a yearGov. 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Houston COVID-19 update

(Houston Chronicle):After weeks of grim, ever-worsening statistics, Houston medical and public health leaders say the area has begun to flatten the COVID-19 curve, the rate at which the disease is spreading through the community.

The start of such flattening, seen in testing and hospitalization data, represents the turning of a significant corner for an area that has been shut down for more than a month to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus, which causes COVID-19. The virus has infected more than 2 million people globally and killed more than 33,000 in the U.S.

“We haven’t peaked yet, but we’re seeing very encouraging signs that the curve is flattening,” said Dr. Marc Boom, president of Houston Methodist. “The number of people testing positive has slowed and hospitalizations have also leveled off.”

All the stories, all