Kansas City metro area health officials are grappling with how to handle continuing case count increases after reopening businesses more than four months ago. What you need to know:The Kansas Department of Health and Environment said Wednesday the state has 288,717 confirmed cases of COVID-19, and there have been 4,521 deaths since the outbreak started. Overall the state said 10.4% of the population has been vaccinated. Kansas is now only updating COVID-19 data on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services said Thursday there have been 473,459 cases of COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak and 7,695 deaths. Overall the state said 10.9% of the population has received at least one dose. THURSDAY3:15 p.m. — Due to severe weather conditions across the country, the VA Eastern Kansas Health Care System, including the Dwight D. Eisenhower and Colmery-O’Neil VA Medical Centers, said it is currently experiencing challenges with receiving vaccine deliveries. The VA said it may impact vaccination appointments that are scheduled over the next few days. “If you are experiencing a delay or schedule change for your vaccination appointment or any other procedure, please know that we will continue to work to reschedule appointments,” the VA said. “As always, our priority remains the safety of Veterans and our staff. Please do not attempt to go to a facility if doing so would be unsafe. For those scheduled, please know our teams will be reaching out to reschedule as quickly as possible. We appreciate your patience.”2:15 p.m. — College students who lost class time or were forced into online classes because of the pandemic could have some of their tuition refunded under a measure Kansas lawmakers are debating. A House panel amended the state’s higher education budget Wednesday to require that colleges, community colleges and technical schools reimburse students for 50% of the tuition paid every day they spent online instead of in the classroom. The amendment would reimburse at 100% for days that students missed class entirely. READ MORE12:45 p.m. — According to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, flu activity is at its lowest in the last decade. The CDC said it is possible COVID-19 mitigation efforts have kept the virus at bay this season. READ MORE11:30 a.m. — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 473,459 on Thursday, which is an increase of 718 cases.The state said there have now been 7,695 (+225) deaths since the start of the outbreak. The MDHSS said 218 of the new deaths reported were attributed to further analysis of death certificates, including two deaths dating back to July and August of 2020.The state said it has administered 939,810 vaccine doses, 666,430 people have received at least one dose and 273,380 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.9% of the population has received at least one dose.[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.The state said it has tested a total of 4,359,840 and 59,265 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 3,734 positive cases and an average of 533 cases a day in the last week.Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,436 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,741 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,766 cases in Clay County, 7,144 in Cass County and 3,055 in Platte County.10:15 a.m. — Missouri lawmakers on Wednesday advanced a bill to make a temporary rule allowing curbside cocktails during the coronavirus pandemic permanent. The Missouri Division of Alcohol and Tobacco Control temporarily relaxed liquor rules so restaurants could sell to-go mixed drinks when the virus first hit the state last year, but the waiver is set to expire at the end of March. READ MORE8 a.m. — Officials with the University of Kansas Health System said the hospital has 33 acute COVID-19 cases, including eight that are in the ICU and two on ventilators. In addition, 36 other patients are in recovery, for a total of 69 COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Hospital.6 a.m. –Detainees have complained for decades about conditions inside St. Louis’ jails, but when COVID-19 worries were added to the mix, the tension reached breaking point.In the predawn hours of Feb. 6, 117 inmates at the downtown City Justice Center broke free from their cells. They smashed windows, set fires and tossed chairs, a filing cabinet and other items through the broken glass onto the street four stories below. A corrections officer was briefly hospitalized.“These were just very angry, defiant, very violent people that we house at the justice center,” Public Safety Director Jimmie Edwards said at a news conference that day.It was the third uprising at the downtown jail since December. Advocates say concerns about COVID-19 are at the heart of the anger.“They were fed up and scared for their lives,” said Tracy Stanton of EXPO, a nonprofit advocacy group made up of former detainees. “This last resistance happened because they still were not being heard. At this point, the pot had boiled over.”Edwards said there are “zero” virus cases at the jail. Yet so far in 2021, more than 100 inmates or people speaking for them have called a hotline to report positive tests or coronavirus symptoms, said Inez Bordeaux of ArchCity Defenders, a non-profit law firm that operates the hotline.Litel Joyner, 60, said his son, Litel Gilmore, 41, tested positive for COVID-19 on Dec. 30 while housed at the justice center.“He’s really not doing well,” Joyner said. “I think the COVID has kind of taken control of him.”Edwards’ spokesman said he would not comment further. Inmates complain about a lack of COVID-19 precautions. City officials declined interview requests but cited protocols that include 14-day quarantine periods for each new detainee, masks replaced upon request and testing anytime a detainee or a nurse detects symptoms.U.S. Rep. Cori Bush, a longtime activist in St. Louis, sent a letter last week to city leaders calling for more transparency about jail conditions and COVID-19 protocols.“Every person in our society deserves to be treated with dignity and respect,” Bush, a Democrat, wrote.Mayor Lyda Krewson appointed a task force that plans public meetings as part of its examination of conditions at both St. Louis jails. The task force includes the head of the local NAACP, two aldermen and others, and is led by the Rev. Darryl Gray, a longtime activist leader.The virus is creating anger inside the jail in another way. Jury trials were shut down early in the pandemic because of social distancing restrictions. Many detainees awaiting trial have been jailed for more than a year with no trial date in sight, said Matthew Mahaffey, who heads the public defender office in St. Louis.The City Justice Center is the largest of two correctional facilities in St. Louis, opening in 2002. Though relatively modern, one major design flaw has become obvious — some cell locks don’t work.“Unfortunately, inside of our system in certain units, our detainees have the ability to jimmy their locks,” Edwards said. “And the locks don’t necessarily lock. Even though our automated panel system would indicate the cells are locked, they are in fact not locked.” The St. Louis Board of Estimate and Apportionment voted Wednesday to spend $1.5 million to fix the faulty lock system. The board decided to use money budgeted for employee salaries at the facility that won’t be needed because of vacancies, said director Paul Payne.Mayor Lyda Krewson’s spokesman, Jacob Long, said the work is projected to take 10 to 12 weeks. Officials said more money may be needed to cover the overall cost.In the interim, about half the detainees involved in the uprising have been moved to another floor where the locks work, city spokesman Jacob Long said. The other half were moved to a medium-security jail known as the workhouse.The workhouse has, for decades, been the subject of criticism. A 2017 lawsuit filed by ArchCity Defenders cited rodent infestations, overflowing toilets, extreme heat in the summer and cold in the winter.It remains open despite a pledge from the Board of Aldermen last year to close it. City leaders now say closure would lead to overcrowding at the justice center.Stanton, now a college student, recalled being jailed at the workhouse in 2016 when she was addicted to drugs. She was inside when another female inmate hung herself, and two others suffered serious wounds from spider bites, she said.Stanton’s brother, Roland Pullum, was jailed on a trespassing charge at the workhouse in 2013. She said he had been stabbed in the head prior to incarceration, and that he died while he was in jail.“He went from the hospital to the jail,” Stanton said. “He wanted some medical help, something wasn’t right.”She said guards think detainees who ask for help just want attention or to be let out of their cells.Bordeaux said detainee treatment isn’t just a St. Louis problem — activists in Los Angeles, New York, Detroit, Atlanta and elsewhere are fighting similar battles.“Once people walk inside of a jail, we, as a society, immediately tend to strip them of their humanity,” Bordeaux said. “When it comes to the list of priorities that many cities have, taking care of people accused of crime is very far down on the list.” [ COVID-19 IN KC: TRACKING CASES, DEATHS AND LATEST RESTRICTIONS ][ FAQ ABOUT THE COVID-19 VACCINE IN KANSAS, MISSOURI ] [ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS & ANSWERS ABOUT THE VACCINE ]WEDNESDAY9:30 p.m. — Kansas will put a priority on vaccinating teachers and other school staff against COVID-19 so that K-12 students across the state can resume in-person classes as quickly as possible, Gov. Laura Kelly said Wednesday.The Democratic governor’s announcement came a week after she told leaders of the Republican-controlled Legislature that 60% of the state’s 286 school districts had started inoculating teachers. The state’s public schools have about 72,000 staff members, including 34,000 certified teachers. READ MORE4:45 p.m. — Public health leaders in Lawrence and Douglas County have updated the local health order to expand the mass gathering limit and to expand hours of operation for venues and establishments serving food and drinks indoors. READ MORE2:30 p.m. — The city of Merriam says it will be able to open its indoor pool on March 1 after new guidance from the Johnson County Department of Health and Environment. READ MORE2 p.m. — Rural Missouri counties are both the most and least successful at getting COVID-19 vaccine into the arms of residents, according to data from the state’s coronavirus dashboard on Wednesday.Shelby County, with just 6,400 residents in a remote area of northeast Missouri, has provided at least one dose of the vaccine to 20.7% of residents. Atchison County, with just under 6,000 residents in Missouri’s far northwestern corner, has vaccinated 20.2% of residents, followed by Worth County at 18.2%.Among the top 15 counties for vaccinations, just one — Cape Girardeau County — has more than 50,000 residents. Cape Girardeau County is tied for fourth with Gasconade County, where 17% of residents have received a dose.Pulaski County, which is home to Fort Leonard Wood and has 52,000 residents, has the lowest vaccination rate at just 4.2%, followed by other outstate counties — Newton at 4.4%, McDonald at 4.7%, Crawford at 5.2% and Pemiscot at 5.5%.Overall, 10.6% of Missourians have received at least one dose, and data shows the two urban areas lag behind.Some St. Louis-area leaders have raised concerns that the region is not getting its fair share of vaccine, prompting an angry rebuke from Gov. Mike Parson. The Republican governor last week accused the region’s leaders — particularly Dr. Alex Garza, head of the St. Louis Pandemic Task Force — of using “cherry-picked” data.The information on the state dashboard shows that just 7.8% of Jackson County residents have received a shot. In the St. Louis region, vaccination rates were 9.3% in the city, 7.2% in St. Louis County, 8.2% in St. Charles County and just 6.1% in Jefferson County.The number of newly confirmed COVID-19 cases continues to decline. The state on Wednesday reported 598 new cases and 12 new deaths. The state has reported 472,741 confirmed cases and 7,470 deaths since the pandemic began.With hospitalizations also on the decline, St. Louis County Executive Sam Page announced that the county is easing restrictions on youth and adult sports.Effective Wednesday, the county will allow competitive games and tournaments for all sports as long as only two teams are present on the field or court at the same time. Limits continue on the number of spectators.Restrictions had been in place since September, drawing protests from parents and athletes.1:15 p.m. — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported an increase of 1,267 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in its first update since Monday, pushing the statewide total to 288,717 since the outbreak started.KDHE officials said Wednesday the death total grew by 115 to 4,521 and hospitalizations increased by 79 to 9,002 since the outbreak started. The state said it has tested 1,229,298 people with 940,581 negative test results and an overall monthly positive test rate of 5.3%. The state also said it has vaccinated 303,677 people, 418,653 total doses of the vaccine have been administered and 10.4% of the population has been vaccinated.[ KANSAS COVID-19 COVID-19 DASHBOARD ]Sedgwick County has the highest total of confirmed cases since the start of the outbreak with 52,832. Johnson County is second with 52,582 cases. Wyandotte County is third with 18,792 cases. Leavenworth County has 6,632 cases, Douglas County reports 8,137 and Miami County has 2,581.Health officials they are monitoring 210 active outbreak clusters.1 p.m. — The Unified Government Public Health Department said Wednesday that people who live in Wyandotte County and are over 65 years old are now eligible for COVID-19 vaccinations. The UGPHD said it’s now scheduling vaccinations for those at highest risk, and highest priority will be given for seniors who live in zip codes 66101, 66102 and 66105. READ MORENoon — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 472,741 on Wednesday, which is an increase of 1,079 cases.The state said there have now been 7,470 (+12) deaths since the start of the outbreak.The state said it has administered 910,3380 vaccine doses, 650,449 people have received at least one dose and 259,889 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.6% of the population has received at least one dose.[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.The state said it has tested a total of 4,350,392 and 70,446 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,227 positive cases and an average of 604 cases a day in the last week.Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,393 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,614 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,749 cases in Clay County, 7,130 in Cass County and 3,050 in Platte County.9:15 a.m. — “Our state’s teachers and support staff have faithfully risked their lives this year,” a letter says from Missouri’s 2017-2021 Teachers of the Year. It is addressed to Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services Director Randall Williams and it presses him to let teachers and support staff get their coronavirus vaccinations immediately.” READ MORE8 a.m. — Officials with the University of Kansas Health System said the hospital has 31 acute COVID-19 cases, including eight that are in the ICU and two on ventilators. In addition, 39 other patients are in recovery, for a total of 70 COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Hospital.7 a.m. — Kansas is likely to have pockets of a new, more contagious coronavirus variant first identified in the United Kingdom, and public health officials believe it could become the state’s dominant strain, the head of the state health department said Tuesday.Dr. Lee Norman also said that winter weather across the central and eastern U.S. has created a “brief speed bump” in the second phase of the state’s COVID-19 vaccine distribution. Norman said the shipment of some vaccine doses from the federal government have been delayed a few days, and below-zero temperatures prompted the Shawnee County health department in northeast Kansas to cancel a vaccination clinic.The first recorded Kansas case of the United Kingdom coronavirus variant was in Ellis County earlier this month, infecting a student-athlete at Fort Hays State University “who never was particularly very ill,” Norman said. The state health department said Monday that a second case had been identified in Sedgwick County, home to Wichita, and Norman said the person infected was a “young man” who had traveled out of state.Public health officials said the emergence of the coronavirus variant in a majority of states means that people can’t let their guard down about wearing masks, social distancing and taking other precautions. Norman said the case in Ellis County in northwest Kansas and in Sedgwick County in south-central Kansas are not connected.“We are getting the feeling that it will become a dominant strain because it is more infectious,” Norman said during an online briefing with University of Kansas Health System officials. “I’m sure there’s going to be pockets of spread in local regions.”The state identifies coronavirus variants through genetic testing, and Norman said the state health department is now doing it for medical providers “whenever we’re asked.” Meanwhile, Kansas is still dealing with the economic effects of the pandemic, and Gov. Laura Kelly said Tuesday that the state will receive $200 million under the last federal coronavirus relief legislation approved in December to help people struggling to pay their rent and utility bills. The city of Wichita plans to take applications for its residents starting Feb. 22, and the state’s Housing Resources Corporation will be begin taking them from people outside Wichita on March 15.Kansas has seen the number of new confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases drop in recent weeks. The state averaged 641 new cases a day for the seven days ending Monday, according to state Department of Health and Environment data, the lowest figure since early October. The state averaged 30 additional COVID-19 deaths a day during the same period.The state health department has reported more than 287,000 confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases since the pandemic reached Kansas in early March 2020, or nearly one for every 10 of the state’s 2.9 million residents. The state has reported more than 4,400 deaths, or one for every 661 residents.The state health department is reporting that as of Monday, nearly 292,000 Kansas residents, or 10% of the population, have received at least the first of two required vaccine doses. Norman has said repeatedly that the number of shots given is actually higher than reported because of a lag in reporting that the state is working to end.The state launched its second phase of vaccinations last month, and it covers people over 65, as well as teachers, workers critical to the economy and people in group living situations, including prison inmates. That’s as many as 1 million people, and Gov. Laura Kelly and the health department have repeatedly faced criticism that it’s moving too slowly.The Shawnee County Health Department in Topeka also cited the possibility of rolling electricity blackouts in canceling its clinic in an older exhibition building near the city’s largest arena and convention center, though Evergy, the electric provider for Topeka, later announced that blackouts used to limit the demand on its system had been suspended Tuesday morning.Spokesman Craig Barnes said the county health department will open its planned vaccination clinic Thursday three hours early to allow people who’d planned to get shots Tuesday to still get them.6 a.m. — The snow, ice and bitter cold gripping Missouri has delayed people from coronavirus vaccinations, including those who signed up for mass inoculation events that had been scheduled for this week. The governor’s office said it was trying to reschedule the National Guard-run events, but that registrants should seek vaccinations elsewhere in the meantime.The cancellations followed a storm that dumped several inches of snow in much of the state and sent temperatures plunging below zero, including in Kansas City, where it was 9 degrees below zero on Tuesday, a new record for the date.“Missouri is experiencing severe winter weather that makes driving dangerous and threatens the health and safety of anyone exposed to the cold. These conditions will also likely delay some vaccine shipments,” Parson said in the news release announcing the cancellations. “We want to protect the safety of everyone involved in the mass vaccination events, from the patients being vaccinated to the volunteers who generously support these events.”Parson said the cancellations would not affect the weekly allocation of vaccines to each region.Some of those scheduled for vaccinations at the National Guard clinics were due for their second doses of the Pfizer vaccine. Parson’s office said plans were being made to administer those second doses as soon as possible.The second dose of the Pfizer vaccine ideally comes four weeks after the first, but experts say it is important to get the second dose as a booster to the first, even if it is delayed. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said the second dose may be administered as late as six weeks after the first dose. The National Guard-operated sites weren’t alone in calling off vaccinations. Several Missouri hospitals and clinics also had to postpone them because of the weather, including one operated by the Truman Veterans Administration Hospital in Columbia, which closed three hours early on Monday. The hospital said 200 doses had already been administered in Columbia.The weather has also affected coronavirus testing. In Columbia, MU Health Care closed an on-campus drive-thru testing site until Wednesday.The state launched a program Monday to help older Missourians get access to vaccinations. The partnership between the state health department and Missouri’s Area Agencies on Aging will help people age 60 and older with online vaccination registration, coordinate transportation to vaccination events, and provide reminder calls for second doses.Anyone interested can call their local Area Agency on Aging hotline.The state on Tuesday reported 481 newly confirmed cases of COVID-19 and three new deaths from the disease, pushing its pandemic totals to 472,143 cases and 7,458 deaths.[ COVID-19 IN KC: TRACKING CASES, DEATHS AND LATEST RESTRICTIONS ][ FAQ ABOUT THE COVID-19 VACCINE IN KANSAS, MISSOURI ] [ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS & ANSWERS ABOUT THE VACCINE ]TUESDAYNoon — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 471,662 on Tuesday, which is an increase of 481 cases.The state said there have now been 7,458 (+3) deaths since the start of the outbreak.The state said it has administered 886,800 vaccine doses, 641,376 people have received at least one dose and 245,424 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.5% of the population has received at least one dose.[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.The state said it has tested a total of 4,343,306 and 69,425 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,183 positive cases and an average of 598 cases a day in the last week.Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,355 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,516 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,743 cases in Clay County, 7,123 in Cass County and 3,042 in Platte County.10 a.m. — A second case of a more-contagious coronavirus variant has been confirmed in Kansas, state health officials said Monday.The variant virus first detected in the United Kingdom was found in the Wichita area, the state Department of Health and Environment said in a news release.The first case of the U.K. variant was found in a Fort Hays University student in Ellis County earlier this month. Officials have said it is likely more widespread in the state. The person with the second confirmed case likely contracted it while traveling out of state, the health department said. No further details about the person were released.“This finding does not change our public health recommendations,” Dr. Lee Norman, KDHE secretary, said in the release. “We continue to encourage people to take the appropriate precautions.”8 a.m. — Officials with the University of Kansas Health System said the hospital has 28 acute COVID-19 cases, including nine that are in the ICU and three on ventilators. In addition, 42 other patients are in recovery, for a total of 70 COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Hospital.6 a.m. — Just over 10% of Missouri’s population has received at least one shot of the COVID-19 vaccine as of Monday, the state health department said.Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services data showed 873,675 vaccine doses were distributed, with 239,293 people receiving both doses. A vast majority of the shots have gone to older residents, with those 85 and older receiving 34.4%, followed by 22.4% for those between 75 and 84, and 24.8% for those between 65 and 74.Gov. Mike Parson’s administration on Sunday announced several more mass vaccination sites across the state for this week but residents were urged to check to ensure the events were not postponed because of frigid weather and snow that has settled over the state.On Monday, Missouri reported 471,662 confirmed cases of COVID-19, with 7,455 deaths since the pandemic began. That’s an increase of 1,555 confirmed cases and three deaths since Friday. [ COVID-19 IN KC: TRACKING CASES, DEATHS AND LATEST RESTRICTIONS ][ FAQ ABOUT THE COVID-19 VACCINE IN KANSAS, MISSOURI ] [ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS & ANSWERS ABOUT THE VACCINE ]MONDAY5:30 p.m. — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson announced Monday that all COVID-19 mass vaccination events in partnership with the Missouri National Guard, Department of Health and Senior Services, and State Emergency Management Agency scheduled for Feb. 15-19, are being canceled in the interest of safety due to extreme winter weather.”Missouri is experiencing severe winter weather that makes driving dangerous and threatens the health and safety of anyone exposed to the cold. These conditions will also likely delay some vaccine shipments,” Parson said. “We want to protect the safety of everyone involved in the mass vaccination events, from the patients being vaccinated to the volunteers who generously support these events.”4 p.m. — Kansas health officials said a second case of the UK of COVID-19 has been found in the state. The B.1.1.7 variant was been identified in Sedgwick County, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. READ MORE3:50 p.m. — The Johnson County Department of Health and Environment said it is postponing Tuesday’s COVID-19 vaccination clinic because of the extreme weather and the possibility of rolling power outages. READ MORE2:30 p.m. — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 471,662 on Monday, which is an increase of 421 cases.The state said there have now been 7,455 (+0) deaths since the start of the outbreak.The state said it has administered 873,686 vaccine doses, 634,393 people have received at least one dose and 239,293 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.3% of the population has received at least one dose.[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.The state said it has tested a total of 4,338,009 and 69,546 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,223 positive cases and an average of 603 cases a day in the last week.Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,317 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,495 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,736 cases in Clay County, 7,105 in Cass County and 3,042 in Platte County.1:30 p.m. — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported an increase of 1,348 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in its first update since Friday, pushing the statewide total to 287,450 since the outbreak started.KDHE officials said Wednesday the death total grew by 42 to 4,406 and hospitalizations increased by 36 to 8,923 since the outbreak started. The state said it has tested 1,224,232 people with 936,782 negative test results and an overall monthly positive test rate of 5.4%. The state also said it has vaccinated 291,724 people, 394,523 total doses of the vaccine have been administered and 10% of the population has been vaccinated.[ KANSAS COVID-19 COVID-19 DASHBOARD ]Sedgwick County has the highest total of confirmed cases since the start of the outbreak with 52,633. Johnson County is second with 52,199 cases. Wyandotte County is third with 18,720 cases. Leavenworth County has 6,601 cases, Douglas County reports 8,112 and Miami County has 2,568.Health officials they are monitoring 252 active outbreak clusters.8 a.m. — Officials with the University of Kansas Health System said the hospital has 32 acute COVID-19 cases, including 10 that are in the ICU and five on ventilators. In addition, 36 other patients are in recovery, for a total of 68 COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Hospital.Officials said during the morning COVID-19 panel that the overall drop in COVID-19 patients at the hospital is a good thing, however, they’re watching the number of acute patients, hoping those numbers don’t begin to trend upward again. [ COVID-19 IN KC: TRACKING CASES, DEATHS AND LATEST RESTRICTIONS ][ FAQ ABOUT THE COVID-19 VACCINE IN KANSAS, MISSOURI ] [ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS & ANSWERS ABOUT THE VACCINE ]SUNDAY7:30 p.m. — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 471,241 on Saturday, which is an increase of 489 cases.The state said there have now been 7,455 (+2) deaths since the start of the outbreak.The state said it has administered 866,875 vaccine doses, 629,947 people have received at least one dose and 236,928 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.3% of the population has received at least one dose.[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.The state said it has tested a total of 4,331,743 and 73,991 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,599 positive cases and an average of 657 cases a day in the last week.Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,296 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,483 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,731 cases in Clay County, 7,102 in Cass County and 3,038 in Platte County.[ COVID-19 IN KC: TRACKING CASES, DEATHS AND LATEST RESTRICTIONS ][ FAQ ABOUT THE COVID-19 VACCINE IN KANSAS, MISSOURI ] [ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS & ANSWERS ABOUT THE VACCINE ]SATURDAY4:55 p.m. — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 470,752 on Saturday, which is an increase of 645 cases.The state said there have now been 7,453 (+11) deaths since the start of the outbreak.The state said it has administered 843,740 vaccine doses, 617,042 people have received at least one dose and 226,698 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.1% of the population has received at least one dose.[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.The state said it has tested a total of 4,3211,174 and 76,854 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,881 positive cases and an average of 697 cases a day in the last week.Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,252 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,456 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,721 cases in Clay County, 7,092 in Cass County and 3,038 in Platte County.[ COVID-19 IN KC: TRACKING CASES, DEATHS AND LATEST RESTRICTIONS ][ FAQ ABOUT THE COVID-19 VACCINE IN KANSAS, MISSOURI ] [ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS & ANSWERS ABOUT THE VACCINE ] The Associated Press contributed to this story.
Kansas City metro area health officials are grappling with how to handle continuing case count increases after reopening businesses more than four months ago.
What you need to know:
- The Kansas Department of Health and Environment said Wednesday the state has 288,717 confirmed cases of COVID-19, and there have been 4,521 deaths since the outbreak started. Overall the state said 10.4% of the population has been vaccinated. Kansas is now only updating COVID-19 data on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
- The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services said Thursday there have been 473,459 cases of COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak and 7,695 deaths. Overall the state said 10.9% of the population has received at least one dose.
THURSDAY
3:15 p.m. — Due to severe weather conditions across the country, the VA Eastern Kansas Health Care System, including the Dwight D. Eisenhower and Colmery-O’Neil VA Medical Centers, said it is currently experiencing challenges with receiving vaccine deliveries. The VA said it may impact vaccination appointments that are scheduled over the next few days.
“If you are experiencing a delay or schedule change for your vaccination appointment or any other procedure, please know that we will continue to work to reschedule appointments,” the VA said. “As always, our priority remains the safety of Veterans and our staff. Please do not attempt to go to a facility if doing so would be unsafe. For those scheduled, please know our teams will be reaching out to reschedule as quickly as possible. We appreciate your patience.”
2:15 p.m. — College students who lost class time or were forced into online classes because of the pandemic could have some of their tuition refunded under a measure Kansas lawmakers are debating.
A House panel amended the state’s higher education budget Wednesday to require that colleges, community colleges and technical schools reimburse students for 50% of the tuition paid every day they spent online instead of in the classroom. The amendment would reimburse at 100% for days that students missed class entirely. READ MORE
12:45 p.m. — According to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, flu activity is at its lowest in the last decade. The CDC said it is possible COVID-19 mitigation efforts have kept the virus at bay this season. READ MORE
11:30 a.m. — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 473,459 on Thursday, which is an increase of 718 cases.
The state said there have now been 7,695 (+225) deaths since the start of the outbreak. The MDHSS said 218 of the new deaths reported were attributed to further analysis of death certificates, including two deaths dating back to July and August of 2020.
The state said it has administered 939,810 vaccine doses, 666,430 people have received at least one dose and 273,380 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.9% of the population has received at least one dose.
[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]
Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.
The state said it has tested a total of 4,359,840 and 59,265 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 3,734 positive cases and an average of 533 cases a day in the last week.
Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,436 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,741 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,766 cases in Clay County, 7,144 in Cass County and 3,055 in Platte County.
10:15 a.m. — Missouri lawmakers on Wednesday advanced a bill to make a temporary rule allowing curbside cocktails during the coronavirus pandemic permanent. The Missouri Division of Alcohol and Tobacco Control temporarily relaxed liquor rules so restaurants could sell to-go mixed drinks when the virus first hit the state last year, but the waiver is set to expire at the end of March. READ MORE
8 a.m. — Officials with the University of Kansas Health System said the hospital has 33 acute COVID-19 cases, including eight that are in the ICU and two on ventilators. In addition, 36 other patients are in recovery, for a total of 69 COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Hospital.
6 a.m. —Detainees have complained for decades about conditions inside St. Louis’ jails, but when COVID-19 worries were added to the mix, the tension reached breaking point.
In the predawn hours of Feb. 6, 117 inmates at the downtown City Justice Center broke free from their cells. They smashed windows, set fires and tossed chairs, a filing cabinet and other items through the broken glass onto the street four stories below. A corrections officer was briefly hospitalized.
“These were just very angry, defiant, very violent people that we house at the justice center,” Public Safety Director Jimmie Edwards said at a news conference that day.
It was the third uprising at the downtown jail since December. Advocates say concerns about COVID-19 are at the heart of the anger.
“They were fed up and scared for their lives,” said Tracy Stanton of EXPO, a nonprofit advocacy group made up of former detainees. “This last resistance happened because they still were not being heard. At this point, the pot had boiled over.”
Edwards said there are “zero” virus cases at the jail. Yet so far in 2021, more than 100 inmates or people speaking for them have called a hotline to report positive tests or coronavirus symptoms, said Inez Bordeaux of ArchCity Defenders, a non-profit law firm that operates the hotline.
Litel Joyner, 60, said his son, Litel Gilmore, 41, tested positive for COVID-19 on Dec. 30 while housed at the justice center.
“He’s really not doing well,” Joyner said. “I think the COVID has kind of taken control of him.”
Edwards’ spokesman said he would not comment further.
Inmates complain about a lack of COVID-19 precautions. City officials declined interview requests but cited protocols that include 14-day quarantine periods for each new detainee, masks replaced upon request and testing anytime a detainee or a nurse detects symptoms.
U.S. Rep. Cori Bush, a longtime activist in St. Louis, sent a letter last week to city leaders calling for more transparency about jail conditions and COVID-19 protocols.
“Every person in our society deserves to be treated with dignity and respect,” Bush, a Democrat, wrote.
Mayor Lyda Krewson appointed a task force that plans public meetings as part of its examination of conditions at both St. Louis jails. The task force includes the head of the local NAACP, two aldermen and others, and is led by the Rev. Darryl Gray, a longtime activist leader.
The virus is creating anger inside the jail in another way. Jury trials were shut down early in the pandemic because of social distancing restrictions. Many detainees awaiting trial have been jailed for more than a year with no trial date in sight, said Matthew Mahaffey, who heads the public defender office in St. Louis.
The City Justice Center is the largest of two correctional facilities in St. Louis, opening in 2002. Though relatively modern, one major design flaw has become obvious — some cell locks don’t work.
“Unfortunately, inside of our system in certain units, our detainees have the ability to jimmy their locks,” Edwards said. “And the locks don’t necessarily lock. Even though our automated panel system would indicate the cells are locked, they are in fact not locked.”
The St. Louis Board of Estimate and Apportionment voted Wednesday to spend $1.5 million to fix the faulty lock system. The board decided to use money budgeted for employee salaries at the facility that won’t be needed because of vacancies, said director Paul Payne.
Mayor Lyda Krewson’s spokesman, Jacob Long, said the work is projected to take 10 to 12 weeks. Officials said more money may be needed to cover the overall cost.
In the interim, about half the detainees involved in the uprising have been moved to another floor where the locks work, city spokesman Jacob Long said. The other half were moved to a medium-security jail known as the workhouse.
The workhouse has, for decades, been the subject of criticism. A 2017 lawsuit filed by ArchCity Defenders cited rodent infestations, overflowing toilets, extreme heat in the summer and cold in the winter.
It remains open despite a pledge from the Board of Aldermen last year to close it. City leaders now say closure would lead to overcrowding at the justice center.
Stanton, now a college student, recalled being jailed at the workhouse in 2016 when she was addicted to drugs. She was inside when another female inmate hung herself, and two others suffered serious wounds from spider bites, she said.
Stanton’s brother, Roland Pullum, was jailed on a trespassing charge at the workhouse in 2013. She said he had been stabbed in the head prior to incarceration, and that he died while he was in jail.
“He went from the hospital to the jail,” Stanton said. “He wanted some medical help, something wasn’t right.”
She said guards think detainees who ask for help just want attention or to be let out of their cells.
Bordeaux said detainee treatment isn’t just a St. Louis problem — activists in Los Angeles, New York, Detroit, Atlanta and elsewhere are fighting similar battles.
“Once people walk inside of a jail, we, as a society, immediately tend to strip them of their humanity,” Bordeaux said. “When it comes to the list of priorities that many cities have, taking care of people accused of crime is very far down on the list.”
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WEDNESDAY
9:30 p.m. — Kansas will put a priority on vaccinating teachers and other school staff against COVID-19 so that K-12 students across the state can resume in-person classes as quickly as possible, Gov. Laura Kelly said Wednesday.
The Democratic governor’s announcement came a week after she told leaders of the Republican-controlled Legislature that 60% of the state’s 286 school districts had started inoculating teachers. The state’s public schools have about 72,000 staff members, including 34,000 certified teachers. READ MORE
4:45 p.m. — Public health leaders in Lawrence and Douglas County have updated the local health order to expand the mass gathering limit and to expand hours of operation for venues and establishments serving food and drinks indoors. READ MORE
2:30 p.m. — The city of Merriam says it will be able to open its indoor pool on March 1 after new guidance from the Johnson County Department of Health and Environment. READ MORE
2 p.m. — Rural Missouri counties are both the most and least successful at getting COVID-19 vaccine into the arms of residents, according to data from the state’s coronavirus dashboard on Wednesday.
Shelby County, with just 6,400 residents in a remote area of northeast Missouri, has provided at least one dose of the vaccine to 20.7% of residents. Atchison County, with just under 6,000 residents in Missouri’s far northwestern corner, has vaccinated 20.2% of residents, followed by Worth County at 18.2%.
Among the top 15 counties for vaccinations, just one — Cape Girardeau County — has more than 50,000 residents. Cape Girardeau County is tied for fourth with Gasconade County, where 17% of residents have received a dose.
Pulaski County, which is home to Fort Leonard Wood and has 52,000 residents, has the lowest vaccination rate at just 4.2%, followed by other outstate counties — Newton at 4.4%, McDonald at 4.7%, Crawford at 5.2% and Pemiscot at 5.5%.
Overall, 10.6% of Missourians have received at least one dose, and data shows the two urban areas lag behind.
Some St. Louis-area leaders have raised concerns that the region is not getting its fair share of vaccine, prompting an angry rebuke from Gov. Mike Parson. The Republican governor last week accused the region’s leaders — particularly Dr. Alex Garza, head of the St. Louis Pandemic Task Force — of using “cherry-picked” data.
The information on the state dashboard shows that just 7.8% of Jackson County residents have received a shot. In the St. Louis region, vaccination rates were 9.3% in the city, 7.2% in St. Louis County, 8.2% in St. Charles County and just 6.1% in Jefferson County.
The number of newly confirmed COVID-19 cases continues to decline. The state on Wednesday reported 598 new cases and 12 new deaths. The state has reported 472,741 confirmed cases and 7,470 deaths since the pandemic began.
With hospitalizations also on the decline, St. Louis County Executive Sam Page announced that the county is easing restrictions on youth and adult sports.
Effective Wednesday, the county will allow competitive games and tournaments for all sports as long as only two teams are present on the field or court at the same time. Limits continue on the number of spectators.
Restrictions had been in place since September, drawing protests from parents and athletes.
1:15 p.m. — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported an increase of 1,267 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in its first update since Monday, pushing the statewide total to 288,717 since the outbreak started.
KDHE officials said Wednesday the death total grew by 115 to 4,521 and hospitalizations increased by 79 to 9,002 since the outbreak started.
The state said it has tested 1,229,298 people with 940,581 negative test results and an overall monthly positive test rate of 5.3%. The state also said it has vaccinated 303,677 people, 418,653 total doses of the vaccine have been administered and 10.4% of the population has been vaccinated.
[ KANSAS COVID-19 COVID-19 DASHBOARD ]
Sedgwick County has the highest total of confirmed cases since the start of the outbreak with 52,832. Johnson County is second with 52,582 cases. Wyandotte County is third with 18,792 cases. Leavenworth County has 6,632 cases, Douglas County reports 8,137 and Miami County has 2,581.
Health officials they are monitoring 210 active outbreak clusters.
1 p.m. — The Unified Government Public Health Department said Wednesday that people who live in Wyandotte County and are over 65 years old are now eligible for COVID-19 vaccinations. The UGPHD said it’s now scheduling vaccinations for those at highest risk, and highest priority will be given for seniors who live in zip codes 66101, 66102 and 66105. READ MORE
Noon — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 472,741 on Wednesday, which is an increase of 1,079 cases.
The state said there have now been 7,470 (+12) deaths since the start of the outbreak.
The state said it has administered 910,3380 vaccine doses, 650,449 people have received at least one dose and 259,889 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.6% of the population has received at least one dose.
[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]
Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.
The state said it has tested a total of 4,350,392 and 70,446 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,227 positive cases and an average of 604 cases a day in the last week.
Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,393 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,614 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,749 cases in Clay County, 7,130 in Cass County and 3,050 in Platte County.
9:15 a.m. — “Our state’s teachers and support staff have faithfully risked their lives this year,” a letter says from Missouri’s 2017-2021 Teachers of the Year. It is addressed to Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services Director Randall Williams and it presses him to let teachers and support staff get their coronavirus vaccinations immediately.” READ MORE
8 a.m. — Officials with the University of Kansas Health System said the hospital has 31 acute COVID-19 cases, including eight that are in the ICU and two on ventilators. In addition, 39 other patients are in recovery, for a total of 70 COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Hospital.
7 a.m. — Kansas is likely to have pockets of a new, more contagious coronavirus variant first identified in the United Kingdom, and public health officials believe it could become the state’s dominant strain, the head of the state health department said Tuesday.
Dr. Lee Norman also said that winter weather across the central and eastern U.S. has created a “brief speed bump” in the second phase of the state’s COVID-19 vaccine distribution. Norman said the shipment of some vaccine doses from the federal government have been delayed a few days, and below-zero temperatures prompted the Shawnee County health department in northeast Kansas to cancel a vaccination clinic.
The first recorded Kansas case of the United Kingdom coronavirus variant was in Ellis County earlier this month, infecting a student-athlete at Fort Hays State University “who never was particularly very ill,” Norman said. The state health department said Monday that a second case had been identified in Sedgwick County, home to Wichita, and Norman said the person infected was a “young man” who had traveled out of state.
Public health officials said the emergence of the coronavirus variant in a majority of states means that people can’t let their guard down about wearing masks, social distancing and taking other precautions. Norman said the case in Ellis County in northwest Kansas and in Sedgwick County in south-central Kansas are not connected.
“We are getting the feeling that it will become a dominant strain because it is more infectious,” Norman said during an online briefing with University of Kansas Health System officials. “I’m sure there’s going to be pockets of spread in local regions.”
The state identifies coronavirus variants through genetic testing, and Norman said the state health department is now doing it for medical providers “whenever we’re asked.”
Meanwhile, Kansas is still dealing with the economic effects of the pandemic, and Gov. Laura Kelly said Tuesday that the state will receive $200 million under the last federal coronavirus relief legislation approved in December to help people struggling to pay their rent and utility bills. The city of Wichita plans to take applications for its residents starting Feb. 22, and the state’s Housing Resources Corporation will be begin taking them from people outside Wichita on March 15.
Kansas has seen the number of new confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases drop in recent weeks. The state averaged 641 new cases a day for the seven days ending Monday, according to state Department of Health and Environment data, the lowest figure since early October. The state averaged 30 additional COVID-19 deaths a day during the same period.
The state health department has reported more than 287,000 confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases since the pandemic reached Kansas in early March 2020, or nearly one for every 10 of the state’s 2.9 million residents. The state has reported more than 4,400 deaths, or one for every 661 residents.
The state health department is reporting that as of Monday, nearly 292,000 Kansas residents, or 10% of the population, have received at least the first of two required vaccine doses. Norman has said repeatedly that the number of shots given is actually higher than reported because of a lag in reporting that the state is working to end.
The state launched its second phase of vaccinations last month, and it covers people over 65, as well as teachers, workers critical to the economy and people in group living situations, including prison inmates. That’s as many as 1 million people, and Gov. Laura Kelly and the health department have repeatedly faced criticism that it’s moving too slowly.
The Shawnee County Health Department in Topeka also cited the possibility of rolling electricity blackouts in canceling its clinic in an older exhibition building near the city’s largest arena and convention center, though Evergy, the electric provider for Topeka, later announced that blackouts used to limit the demand on its system had been suspended Tuesday morning.
Spokesman Craig Barnes said the county health department will open its planned vaccination clinic Thursday three hours early to allow people who’d planned to get shots Tuesday to still get them.
6 a.m. — The snow, ice and bitter cold gripping Missouri has delayed people from coronavirus vaccinations, including those who signed up for mass inoculation events that had been scheduled for this week.
The governor’s office said it was trying to reschedule the National Guard-run events, but that registrants should seek vaccinations elsewhere in the meantime.
The cancellations followed a storm that dumped several inches of snow in much of the state and sent temperatures plunging below zero, including in Kansas City, where it was 9 degrees below zero on Tuesday, a new record for the date.
“Missouri is experiencing severe winter weather that makes driving dangerous and threatens the health and safety of anyone exposed to the cold. These conditions will also likely delay some vaccine shipments,” Parson said in the news release announcing the cancellations. “We want to protect the safety of everyone involved in the mass vaccination events, from the patients being vaccinated to the volunteers who generously support these events.”
Parson said the cancellations would not affect the weekly allocation of vaccines to each region.
Some of those scheduled for vaccinations at the National Guard clinics were due for their second doses of the Pfizer vaccine. Parson’s office said plans were being made to administer those second doses as soon as possible.
The second dose of the Pfizer vaccine ideally comes four weeks after the first, but experts say it is important to get the second dose as a booster to the first, even if it is delayed. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said the second dose may be administered as late as six weeks after the first dose.
The National Guard-operated sites weren’t alone in calling off vaccinations. Several Missouri hospitals and clinics also had to postpone them because of the weather, including one operated by the Truman Veterans Administration Hospital in Columbia, which closed three hours early on Monday. The hospital said 200 doses had already been administered in Columbia.
The weather has also affected coronavirus testing. In Columbia, MU Health Care closed an on-campus drive-thru testing site until Wednesday.
The state launched a program Monday to help older Missourians get access to vaccinations. The partnership between the state health department and Missouri’s Area Agencies on Aging will help people age 60 and older with online vaccination registration, coordinate transportation to vaccination events, and provide reminder calls for second doses.
Anyone interested can call their local Area Agency on Aging hotline.
The state on Tuesday reported 481 newly confirmed cases of COVID-19 and three new deaths from the disease, pushing its pandemic totals to 472,143 cases and 7,458 deaths.
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TUESDAY
Noon — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 471,662 on Tuesday, which is an increase of 481 cases.
The state said there have now been 7,458 (+3) deaths since the start of the outbreak.
The state said it has administered 886,800 vaccine doses, 641,376 people have received at least one dose and 245,424 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.5% of the population has received at least one dose.
[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]
Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.
The state said it has tested a total of 4,343,306 and 69,425 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,183 positive cases and an average of 598 cases a day in the last week.
Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,355 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,516 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,743 cases in Clay County, 7,123 in Cass County and 3,042 in Platte County.
10 a.m. — A second case of a more-contagious coronavirus variant has been confirmed in Kansas, state health officials said Monday.
The variant virus first detected in the United Kingdom was found in the Wichita area, the state Department of Health and Environment said in a news release.
The first case of the U.K. variant was found in a Fort Hays University student in Ellis County earlier this month. Officials have said it is likely more widespread in the state.
The person with the second confirmed case likely contracted it while traveling out of state, the health department said. No further details about the person were released.
“This finding does not change our public health recommendations,” Dr. Lee Norman, KDHE secretary, said in the release. “We continue to encourage people to take the appropriate precautions.”
8 a.m. — Officials with the University of Kansas Health System said the hospital has 28 acute COVID-19 cases, including nine that are in the ICU and three on ventilators. In addition, 42 other patients are in recovery, for a total of 70 COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Hospital.
6 a.m. — Just over 10% of Missouri’s population has received at least one shot of the COVID-19 vaccine as of Monday, the state health department said.
Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services data showed 873,675 vaccine doses were distributed, with 239,293 people receiving both doses. A vast majority of the shots have gone to older residents, with those 85 and older receiving 34.4%, followed by 22.4% for those between 75 and 84, and 24.8% for those between 65 and 74.
Gov. Mike Parson’s administration on Sunday announced several more mass vaccination sites across the state for this week but residents were urged to check to ensure the events were not postponed because of frigid weather and snow that has settled over the state.
On Monday, Missouri reported 471,662 confirmed cases of COVID-19, with 7,455 deaths since the pandemic began. That’s an increase of 1,555 confirmed cases and three deaths since Friday.
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MONDAY
5:30 p.m. — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson announced Monday that all COVID-19 mass vaccination events in partnership with the Missouri National Guard, Department of Health and Senior Services, and State Emergency Management Agency scheduled for Feb. 15-19, are being canceled in the interest of safety due to extreme winter weather.
“Missouri is experiencing severe winter weather that makes driving dangerous and threatens the health and safety of anyone exposed to the cold. These conditions will also likely delay some vaccine shipments,” Parson said. “We want to protect the safety of everyone involved in the mass vaccination events, from the patients being vaccinated to the volunteers who generously support these events.”
4 p.m. — Kansas health officials said a second case of the UK of COVID-19 has been found in the state. The B.1.1.7 variant was been identified in Sedgwick County, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. READ MORE
3:50 p.m. — The Johnson County Department of Health and Environment said it is postponing Tuesday’s COVID-19 vaccination clinic because of the extreme weather and the possibility of rolling power outages. READ MORE
2:30 p.m. — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 471,662 on Monday, which is an increase of 421 cases.
The state said there have now been 7,455 (+0) deaths since the start of the outbreak.
The state said it has administered 873,686 vaccine doses, 634,393 people have received at least one dose and 239,293 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.3% of the population has received at least one dose.
[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]
Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.
The state said it has tested a total of 4,338,009 and 69,546 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,223 positive cases and an average of 603 cases a day in the last week.
Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,317 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,495 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,736 cases in Clay County, 7,105 in Cass County and 3,042 in Platte County.
1:30 p.m. — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported an increase of 1,348 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in its first update since Friday, pushing the statewide total to 287,450 since the outbreak started.
KDHE officials said Wednesday the death total grew by 42 to 4,406 and hospitalizations increased by 36 to 8,923 since the outbreak started.
The state said it has tested 1,224,232 people with 936,782 negative test results and an overall monthly positive test rate of 5.4%. The state also said it has vaccinated 291,724 people, 394,523 total doses of the vaccine have been administered and 10% of the population has been vaccinated.
[ KANSAS COVID-19 COVID-19 DASHBOARD ]
Sedgwick County has the highest total of confirmed cases since the start of the outbreak with 52,633. Johnson County is second with 52,199 cases. Wyandotte County is third with 18,720 cases. Leavenworth County has 6,601 cases, Douglas County reports 8,112 and Miami County has 2,568.
Health officials they are monitoring 252 active outbreak clusters.
8 a.m. — Officials with the University of Kansas Health System said the hospital has 32 acute COVID-19 cases, including 10 that are in the ICU and five on ventilators. In addition, 36 other patients are in recovery, for a total of 68 COVID-19 patients at the University of Kansas Hospital.
Officials said during the morning COVID-19 panel that the overall drop in COVID-19 patients at the hospital is a good thing, however, they’re watching the number of acute patients, hoping those numbers don’t begin to trend upward again.
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SUNDAY
7:30 p.m. — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 471,241 on Saturday, which is an increase of 489 cases.
The state said there have now been 7,455 (+2) deaths since the start of the outbreak.
The state said it has administered 866,875 vaccine doses, 629,947 people have received at least one dose and 236,928 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.3% of the population has received at least one dose.
[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]
Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.
The state said it has tested a total of 4,331,743 and 73,991 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,599 positive cases and an average of 657 cases a day in the last week.
Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,296 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,483 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,731 cases in Clay County, 7,102 in Cass County and 3,038 in Platte County.
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SATURDAY
4:55 p.m. — The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced the state’s total of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 470,752 on Saturday, which is an increase of 645 cases.
The state said there have now been 7,453 (+11) deaths since the start of the outbreak.
The state said it has administered 843,740 vaccine doses, 617,042 people have received at least one dose and 226,698 people have received a second dose. Overall the state said 10.1% of the population has received at least one dose.
[ MISSOURI COVID-19 DASHBOARD]
Missouri does not list how many people have recovered from COVID-19.
The state said it has tested a total of 4,3211,174 and 76,854 were tested in the past seven days. There have been 4,881 positive cases and an average of 697 cases a day in the last week.
Looking at local numbers, the DHSS reported 36,252 confirmed cases in Kansas City, Missouri, and 29,456 cases in Jackson County. The state also lists 7,721 cases in Clay County, 7,092 in Cass County and 3,038 in Platte County.
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The Associated Press contributed to this story.