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News / Health / Health Wire

State doubles down on contact tracing efforts

By Arielle Dreher, The Spokesman-Review
Published: November 26, 2020, 8:05am

The Washington Department of Health is hiring 350 more contact investigators and contact tracers to help in the statewide efforts to contain the virus.

The workers should begin in mid-December and can support local health jurisdictions overwhelmed by the surge in cases the entire state has seen this month.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new prioritization standards for case investigations and contact tracing which both state and local health departments are working to implement.

The guidance asks health departments to prioritize investigations of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in health care workers, first responders, hospitalized patients, residents of large households or congregate settings and critical infrastructure workers.

In November alone, statewide hospitalizations in Washington have nearly doubled and are projected to increase in the coming weeks.

“If this trend does not reverse, hospitals will need to postpone more elective surgeries and will have reduced ability to care for patients with and without COVID-19,” State Health Officer Kathy Lofy told reporters Wednesday.

State health officials said Washington should receive 62,400 doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in mid-December, if the Food and Drug Administration grants it emergency use authorization. The vaccine, which requires two doses to be effective and must be kept ultra-cold, will first be targeted to high-risk health care workers in the state.

Michele Roberts, assistant secretary at the Department of Health, said they will not know until early December which hospitals will receive the initial doses, but Washington state should receive about 200,000 doses by the end of 2020.

The Pfizer vaccine is going to be shipped in palettes of 975 doses, and Roberts said they are working on policies and plans to ensure that the vaccine can make its way to facilities in rural settings that cannot accommodate 975 doses at a time.

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