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Oregon county asks for morgue truck as COVID fatalities rise

Andrew Selsky | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 3 years, 2 months AGO
by Andrew SelskySara Cline
| August 28, 2021 12:03 AM

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Noting that the COVID delta variant “is spreading like wildfire among the unvaccinated in our community," the leaders of an Oregon coastal county said Friday they no longer have capacity to store the bodies of those who have died and are asking the state for a refrigerated morgue truck.

“The spread of COVID in Tillamook County has reached a critical phase,” the county board of commissioners said in a statement. They said that from Aug. 18 to Aug. there were six new COVID-19 deaths in the county, surpassing the five total COVID-19 deaths that occurred during the first 18 months of the pandemic.

“That is six tragic deaths in six days. We grieve for our friends and neighbors and their families. We are so very sorry for your loss,” Commissioners Mary Faith Bell, David Yamamoto and Erin Skaar wrote.

A local funeral home is licensed to hold nine bodies and has been at capacity since last week, they said.

“Due to increased COVID mortality and the anticipation of additional deaths, we have ordered a refrigerated morgue truck from the state,” the commissioners said.

They urged people to get vaccinated, saying that 86% of the newly diagnosed COVID-19 cases are among unvaccinated individuals.

As Oregon shatters its record for daily COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue to overwhelm the health system, an outdoor mask mandate was reinstated in the state on Friday. Oregon is the first state in the U.S. to reimplement an outdoor mask mandate for both vaccinated and unvaccinated residents since the delta variant resulted in a surge of COVID-19 cases.

People 5 and older, regardless of vaccination status, are required to wear masks in most public outdoor settings — including large outdoor events where physical distancing is not possible, such as festivals and concerts. The rule does not apply to “fleeting encounters,” such as two people walking by each other on a trail or in a park.

The mandate that had been previously announced is part of a growing list of statewide requirements — including an indoor mask mandate and vaccine requirements for health care workers, teachers and state employees — implemented in Oregon in an attempt to slow the rapid spread of COVID-19.

The Oregon Health Authority reported 3,207 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 on Friday. The previous record, set earlier in the month, was 2,971. Since the start of the pandemic there have been 268,401 reported coronavirus cases in the state.

Over the past month, coronavirus cases, fueled by the highly transmissible delta variant, have overwhelmed hospitals in the Pacific Northwest state. As of Friday, 1,098 people with COVID-19 are hospitalized, beating the state’s record set the previous day by 18 people. Prior to this month, the record was 622, set in November when vaccines were not yet available.

Oregon was once described as a success story for limiting the spread of the coronavirus, after its Democratic governor imposed some of the nation’s strictest safety measures. Those restrictions were lifted June 30, and the state is now being hammered by delta variant, which was first detected in India.

Currently, there are just 40 adult intensive care unit beds available in Oregon. Currently, more than 90% of the state’s ICU and hospital beds are full. Health officials say the overwhelming majority of people hospitalized are unvaccinated.

COVID-19 hospitalizations have increased 990% in Oregon since July 9, according to health officials. Many hospitals have canceled elective surgeries, and some patients are housed in hallways instead of rooms.

On Friday Oregon’s U.S. Senators Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden announced that the Federal Emergency Management Agency will supplement medical staff at six hospitals in southern and central Oregon, where there are critical staffing needs.

“The heartbreaking and harrowing accounts that nurses, doctors and staff shared with me last week in Bend and Medford speak directly to their need for immediate assistance as they work long hours caring for Oregonians filling their hospitals,” Wyden said.

On Wednesday, Brown announced that “crisis teams” of hundreds of nurses, respiratory therapists, paramedics and nursing assistants are being deployed to regions of the state hardest hit by a surge in COVID-19 hospitalizations that have stretched hospitals to the limit.

The state has finalized a contract with a medical staffing company that will send up to 500 health care providers to central and southern Oregon, where hospitals have been slammed by a surge in coronavirus patients, most of them unvaccinated. Smaller teams will also head to long-term care facilities around the state.

In addition to the medical crisis teams announced Wednesday, Brown has dispatched about 1,500 National Guard troops to hospitals around the state to help with logistics and nonmedical tasks.

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Andrew Selsky reported from Bend, Oregon. Sara Cline is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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