Richland County Remains Purple For 2nd Week, Ashland County On Watch List

Richland County remains Purple for the 2nd week in a row in the state of Ohio’s COVID-19 Public Health Advisory Map. Ashland County has now been moved onto the watch list to possibly turn purple.

There were more than 11,700 new COVID-19 in Ohio on Thursday.

Richland County Remains Level 4/Purple in Advisory System

Richland County, OH –Richland Countyhas remained at Level 4/Purple(the highest level) in the Ohio Public Health Advisory System (OPHAS) for COVID-19 for a second week. Richland County is one of five (5) counties that are at Level 4/Purple this week.

ThePurple level indicates severe exposure and spread of coronavirus and the recommendation to only leave home for supplies and services. It does not curtail businesses or the need to report to work. All 88 Ohio Counties remain listed for High Incidence of COVID-19 spread. All counties had active cases of coronavirus above the 100 cases per 100,000 population guideline established by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Richland County met six of the seven indicators this week to remain at the Purple Level. Those six indicators were for New Cases per Capita (1,134.92­ cases per 100,000 population, up from 905.46), New Case Increase (84.0 seven day average), Non-Congregate Cases (65.38 seven day average), Hospital Admissions (2.29seven day average), ICU Bed Occupancy (83.03 seven day average) and Emergency Department Visits (19.14 seven day average). The only indicator not met was Outpatient Hospital Visits (74.86 seven day average).

Richland County residents should follow the recommended guidelines for Risk Level 4to reduce the spread of COVID-19:

·Stay at home; necessary travel only.

·Wear a face covering (cloth mask) if you must be out in the public.

·Must wear a face covering (cloth mask) when entering a retail business or grocery

·Maintain social distancing of at least 6 feet from non-household members.

·Follow good hygiene standards, including:

·Wash hands frequently with soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

·Use hand sanitizer frequently.

·Avoid touching your face.

·Cover coughs or sneezes (e.g., into a tissue, or elbow).

·Symptom self-evaluation monitoring.

·Decrease in-person interactions with others.

·Limit attending gatherings of any number.

·Conduct a daily health/symptom self-evaluation and stay at home if symptomatic.

·Seek medical care as needed, but limit or avoid unnecessary visits to hospitals, nursing homes, and residential care facilities to see others as much as possible.

To fight the spread of the coronavirus, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine:

·Revised the Mandatory State mask order on November 11 to require businesses to ensure that customers and employees are wearing masks.

·Revised the Order to Limit and/or Prohibit Mass Gatherings in the State of Ohio on November 17 that prohibits public and private gatherings of greater than 10 people outside of a single residence.

·November 19: Ordered all retail businesses to enforce a curfew at 10 p.m. and not to reopen until 5 a.m. The Governor indicated he will renew this order after the 21 day initial restriction has ended.

Additional Guidelines:

1.Self-monitor for symptoms of COVID19. Get tested if you develop symptoms.

·If you have been in contact with someone that has recently tested positive for COVID19 or someone with COVID19 symptoms, stay home 14 days after your last contact with that person and monitor yourself for symptoms.

·If you are tested for COVID-19 during the quarantine period and test negative, you need to remain in quarantine for the full 14 day period in case symptoms develop.

·If you are diagnosed with COVID-19, remain in isolation for 10 days after symptoms start and end of fever for at least 24 hours, without the use of fever-reducing medications, and with improvement of other symptoms.

·For additional quarantining and isolation guidelines, see:https://richlandhealth.org/quarantining/

2.There is an increased risk of severe illness from COVID-19 among older adults and those who:

·Have a chronic illness such as asthma or diabetes

·Are obese or overweight

·Smoke or have a history of smoking

Avoid contact with anyone who is considered high-risk to protect them.

Stores should consider offering hours available for seniors only shopping to reduce exposure risk

3.Get your annual flu shot (call 419-774-4700 to make an appointment)

4.Limit in-person interactions with others. Consider alternative events for Holiday celebrations, avoid close contact with those outside of your household.

5.Limit attending gatherings of any number. Consider postponing gatherings like wedding receptions or parties with extended groups of family and friends. This will help to prevent transmission of the virus during the holidays.

6.For schools that are providing hybrid or full in-person education and/or holding extracurricular activities or sporting events, paying special attention to safety precautions is essential. Students should not gather in groups outside the schools setting and school activities.

7.Consider working remotely where options are available.

For more information about the coronavirus situation in Richland County visithttps://www.richlandhealth.org/and follow the coronavirus links in the sliders. Seehttps://richlandhealth.org/quarantining/for updated information on quarantining and isolation.

For more information about the Ohio Public Health Advisory System, visithttp://coronavirus.ohio.gov.

If you have questions, call the Ohio Department of Health COVID-19 Call Line 1-833-427-5634. The call line is open from 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. each day, including weekends.


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