Washington has 70 confirmed COVID-19 cases, Grant County resident tests positive
Arielle Dreher | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 9 months AGO
The number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Washington jumped to 70 on Thursday morning, including a Grant County resident hospitalized at Central Washington Hospital in Wenatchee who has tested positive for COVID-19.
No new deaths from the respiratory disease were reported Thursday morning. So far, 10 people have died in Washington from the disease.
The confirmed case in Grant County represents the first case confirmed east of the Cascades. The rest of the cases are in King and Snohomish Counties.
Confluence Health CEO Peter Rutherford said the Grant County patient who tested positive was first admitted to the hospital Saturday, but the person did not initially meet the state’s requirements for COVID-19 testing, the Wenatchee World reported. Confluence Health owns Central Washington Hospital.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention loosened guidelines to test patients for COVID-19 this week, which will lead to an increase in testing in the coming weeks.
Spokane County and the Northeast Tri County Health Districts have also submitted samples for people tested for COVID-19. Neither county has announced results of those tests, and as of this morning, Spokane County health officials still have not received the results despite the state lab receiving those samples on Monday.
As the latest numbers on confirmed cases were announced, Gov. Jay Inslee said the state will require insurance companies operating in Washington to waive co-pays and deductibles for COVID-19 testing. For people without insurance, the state will cover the costs of testing.
A person who has to go out of their health insurance’s network to see a health care provider must be charged at the same rate as an in-network visit, state Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler said.
Workers compensation payments will also be available for health care workers and first responders who are unable to work because they are placed in quarantine after being exposed to COVID-19 while on the job. The state is also looking at the unemployment compensation system for aid to people who are laid off by actions to contain the virus.
Testing kits are limited, Inslee, said, but a person who is experiencing mild symptoms should take the same precautions whether they would test positive or negative. Stay home from work, wash hands frequently and stay away from other family members as much as possible.
Inslee is advising Washington residents to avoid gatherings of more than 10 people that could be considered “non-essential.”
“It’s something we want people to consider. This is not an order,” he said. At some future point, if conditions warrant it, Inslee would have the authority under state law to issue such an order.
The benefits of such an order would have to outweigh the disruptions to the economy and personal freedom, Inslee said.
Right now, any decision to close a school has been deferred to local school officials, he said.
This story is developing and will be updated.
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