Idaho looking at map to track coronavirus
CRAIG NORTHRUP | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 2 months AGO
The website that updates the rise of the coronavirus throughout the state will likely soon include a map.
During an AARP Idaho-sponsored telephone town hall Tuesday, state officials acknowledged the current website, coronavirus.idaho.gov, will likely soon include a map that indicates the home city of a patient who tests positive.
“The more information we have, the more we know where this is hitting,” said Dr. Christine Hahn, state epidemiologist.
The conference call included Hahn, Idaho Gov. Brad Little and Department of Health and Welfare director Dave Jeppesen. The trio fielded pandemic-related questions from the public that ranged from concerns for those with damaged immune systems to a critique over the speed of the government’s response. When a member of the callers asked about how they could find region-specific data, the idea of the map was floated.
“It’s something that you’re likely going to see soon,” Hahn said. “As this progresses, [a map is] likely coming soon.”
The website now lists the number of people being monitored by Idaho public health districts, the people who have cleared monitoring, the number of people tested through public and private laboratories, and the number of confirmed coronavirus patients, which stood at seven by mid-day Tuesday.
While the site has links to press releases, a Twitter feed and informative videos, it does not have a consolidated map or details of the patients who’ve tested positive.
“This is a moving issue,” Little said. “The science is moving.”
The town hall was an open forum to everyone but targeted the most susceptible coronavirus patients: The elderly. It’s a population that is now the focus of community efforts to self-isolate and exercise social distancing to try and slow the spread of the disease.
“Our goal is to take that [infected population] increase and spread it out over a long enough period of time, so our health care capacity can handle it,” the governor said.
Little added that the best thing Idahoans can do right now is to wash our hands, be mindful of our physical condition and act human in uncertain times.
“‘Love thy neighbor,’” Little quoted.
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