Staten Island coronavirus hospitalizations hold steady; death toll increases by 23 – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Hospitalizations for the coronavirus (COVID-19) remained mostly steady on Staten Island on Sunday; however, the boroughs overall death total rose by 23, according to the latest figures from the city Health Department.

The New York City Department of Health data, which accounts for cases and deaths as of 6 p.m. on Saturday, showed 556 Staten Islanders are confirmed to have died from the coronavirus and that 127 are listed as probable to have died from the virus bringing the boroughs total to 683.

The latest data showed an increase of 30 confirmed deaths, but a decrease of 7 probable deaths from Friday nights total. It is unclear if previously probable deaths were added to the confirmed death total.

A death is classified as probable if the decedent was a city resident who had no known positive laboratory test for the coronavirus, but the death certificate lists COVID-19 or an equivalent as a cause of death.

Citywide, 11,460 New York City residents are confirmed to have died from the virus. An additional 5,213 are listed as probable deaths for a total 16,673 deaths.

The citys death total rose by 403 between Friday and Saturday night.

The citys Health Department said 8,213 of the 8,278 deaths investigated by the department have occurred in patients with underlying medical conditions.

Underlying conditions include diabetes, lung disease, cancer, immunodeficiency, heart disease, hypertension, asthma, kidney disease and gastro-intestinal/liver disease, said the Health Department.

HOSPITALIZATIONS

The number of coronavirus hospitalizations remained mostly steady Sunday morning decreasing by only one patient across the boroughs two medical systems since Saturday.

Staten Island University Hospitals (SIUH) Ocean Breeze campus is treating 174 positive coronavirus patients 12 less than a day before, and the Princes Bay site is treating 33 patients an increase of one person since 24 hours ago, according to Jillian OHara, a spokeswoman for SIUH.

At Richmond University Medical Center (RUMC) in West Brighton, 127 coronavirus patients are being treated, according to Alex Lutz, a spokesman for RUMC, which is an increase of 10 patients since Saturday morning. Of those patients, 44 are in the ICU which is the same amount of patients as 24 hours before.

In total, 1,351 patients have been treated and released across SIUHs two campuses, which rose from yesterdays total by 36.

RUMC has released a total of 308 coronavirus patients an increase of four patients over the past day.

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RATE OF INFECTION

Staten Island maintained the second highest rate of infection in New York City.

Through Saturday night, 2,368 of every 100,000 is testing positive for the virus, according to 2018 Census data projections and the Health Departments data.

The latest data shows Staten Island has 11,275 confirmed cases, which represents 7% of the citys total.

Citywide, there are 153,204 total coronavirus cases based on Saturday nights figures, which is an increase of 2,628 since the day prior. The growth of confirmed cases was slashed considerably compared to the rise in cases seen between Thursday and Friday.

Officials, however, stress the examinations do not necessarily reflect the full spread of the virus.

The Bronx retained the highest rate of infection in New York City, with 2,424 of every 100,000 residents testing positive for the virus. The borough has a total of 34,711 confirmed cases.

After Staten Island, Queens has the third-highest rate of coronavirus infections at 2,085 confirmed cases for every 100,000 residents. Queens has the highest number of confirmed cases 47,511 and accounts for 31% of the citys total.

Brooklyn, the heaviest populated borough, has the next-nighest rate of infection, with 1,572 positive coronavirus cases per 100,000 residents. Brooklyn has 40,493 total cases.

Manhattan has the lowest rate of infection in the city. Data shows 1,169 per 100,000 residents have tested positive for the virus in the borough.

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Staten Island coronavirus hospitalizations hold steady; death toll increases by 23 - SILive.com

Small Island crews return to work – Martha’s Vineyard Times

Updated 6:30 pm

Island contractors are slowly being cleared by building inspectors to return to their job sites in crews of one and two as long as they adhere to extensive health protocols.

At the end of March, towns began to consider the possible health and safety issues involved with large crews of construction workers, landscapers, and other contracted laborers in close quarters.

A construction ban was issued by all Island towns that essentially stopped any regular business associated with new or existing construction sites and forced many local companies into uncertain territory.

On April 16 and 17, Island towns approved having crews go back to work and set protocols for that to happen. Last week, the Marthas Vineyard Builders Association held a town hall meeting to go over protocols, which included requiring inspections of job sites.

Reached on his way out to a site visit, West Tisbury building inspector Joe Tierney said he will have conducted over 20 site inspections on Monday alone.

I did 10 this morning and I am going to do 11 this afternoon, Tierney said. Tierney said he is going to each site in West Tisbury and running down a checklist to make sure everyone is adhering to all the necessary safety criteria.

Some are passing, and some are needing a little bit of help, he said.

West Tisbury health agent Omar Johnson said he will conduct a total of five site visits on Monday, and had already failed one site for lack of proper hand washing equipment.

Johnson said so far, site supervisors have been cooperative and amenable to all the health guidelines, and although workers recognize the reasoning behind the restrictions, they all say the same thing we need to work to feed our families.

When asked whether workers appear to be concerned about getting sick while on job sites, Johnson said, People seem to be very concerned about their work, that is definitely what they are focusing on. From what I can see, they are not as focused on the virus.

As the summer season approaches, Doug Best, owner of D. Best Construction, says he and his crew are trying to get back to work in a way that is quick, efficient, and safe.

We are following all the rules, and are going to do things the right way, Best said.

Best has been involved with a working group of business owners collaborating with building inspectors and health agents.

The group has been working to prepare all contractors for the return to work, and Best said his company has been preparing to hit the ground running over the past month.

I have been very much in the know about what needs to be done. We havent been allowed to go out into the field at all, Best said. About a month ago, when the virus hit, we started ordering all our personal protective equipment (PPE) and doing whatever we could to get plenty of masks in the hands of all our employees.

He also said D. Best has been gathering disinfectant sprays, solvents, bleaches, and posters to put up at all job sites that list the proper health guidelines, of which there are many.

There are about five different sheets in both English and Portuguese with everything from the hospitals instructions on how to properly put on and take off a mask, to how to wash your hands the right way, Best said.

All sites will be fitted with porta potties with handwashing stations and work teams need to have plenty of disinfectant, wipes, and bleach. Metal trash cans are even being placed at sites instead of plastic ones to dispose of alcohol based wipes and other flammable or corrosive cleaners.

We will be sending in the checklist of all our protective equipment and sanitary materials this morning to each of the inspectors. We usually have anywhere from 20 to 24 sites going at any given time, but right now we are waiting for the go ahead, Best said. This is just adding one more element of juggling to our daily challenge. We recognize we are going to have to maximize productivity.

But Best said he and his workers arent just following the proper protocols to adhere to the law, they want to protect themselves and the Island community as a whole.

My workers have lots of mixed emotions, they are rather tentative. The last thing they want to do is put their coworkers, friends, and family at risk, Best said.

He said his workers are dedicated to fully understanding the processes of signing in and out whenever they come and go on a site, and disinfecting regularly.

We have to clean the site on the way in, and clean the site on the way out. Maybe the last person didnt do it and the next person might not do it, so its just making sure everyone is doing what they can to be safe, Best said.

Best thanked Island health agents for working together to bring about a common methodology amongst all the towns, and said he greatly appreciates all that the Marthas Vineyard Builders Association has done.

Everyone is really stepping up to create a greater awareness, and establish more adherence to keep this virus to a minimum on the Island, Best said.

As far as the future of construction work and life in general is concerned, Best said this virus has changed things forever. Until there is a vaccine and some comprehensive planning, we are going to be dealing with these requirements for some time to come, Best said.

And construction workers arent the only ones who are scrambling to make up for lost time landscapers are looking to get back to work as well.

Bill Davies of Davies Landscape and Tree Services said his crew is following all the proper protocols, although it is frustrating when the vehicle occupancy restrictions (one person per truck) and other regulations make it difficult for his business to run at maximum efficiency.

Its a huge challenge for us to have one person per vehicle. We have 12 workers and eight trucks, so what are we going to do? Davies said.

Davies said he hopes things change in the phase two rollout of health and safety regulations for workers.

Maybe you could have people wearing respirators in the trucks. Its frustrating because my crew starts their day together at the shop anyway. We send out two- or three-men mow crews. What am I going to do, have one guy drive the truck and another follow behind him? Davies asked.

With such a close-knit group of employees that are used to doing lots of hands-on work with each other, Davies said it has been a huge adjustment.

We are all practicing our six-foot distancing, and I am all for doing what we need to do to keep my employees and my customers safe and comfortable, Davies said

For the most part, Davies said his clients have been understanding and compassionate about the plight that landscapers face, and the limitations they must work under.

We maintain about 50 or 60 clients during the season, and we have had most of them for a very long time. So most people are very understanding of what we are dealing with here, Davies said.

Despite advisories from the Marthas Vineyard Hospital and town health officials, and rather vehement opposition from some Islanders, Davies said his clients are still planning on showing up to their summer homes, if they arent here already.

I anticipate people are still going to come. A lot of them are already moved in, Davies said. I would say at least 30 percent of my clients are here already, and It doesnt seem like the virus is slowing people down.

In the future, Davies said he hopes things can return to some degree of normalcy, although he said he will comply with any advisories or guidance provided by the towns and the federal and state government.

Im 55 years old, I dont want to get sick, I dont want to get anybody sick. I am praying that things return to normal eventually and we find a vaccine, Davies said. Until then, we will be doing what we have to to keep everyone safe.

Landscope Landscaping owner Fred Fournier said for the reentry phase, his crew will focus on being vigilant, healthy, and safe. Employees must answer a lengthy questionnaire to determine if they could have possibly been exposed to the virus. For the foreseeable future, Fournier said he is going to be taking workers temperatures as they come to work.

You need to come to us healthy. If you do that, we will keep you healthy, Fournier said. We have spent thousands of dollars on protective equipment to make sure everyone is in good shape.

Fournier said Landscope has about 20 trucks and work vehicles that have all been cleaned and sanitized, along with dozens of pieces of equipment such as mowers, trimmers, and blowers.

And according to Fournier, his employees are eager to start working again and are taking all the necessary precautions to protect themselves and their families.

My employees have kids, they have wives. They are very cognizant of the fact that they need to be incredibly careful, Fournier said.

Updated to include comments from Fournier. -ed

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Small Island crews return to work - Martha's Vineyard Times

Staten Island Sports Hall of Fame will once again honor 4 at annual golf outing – SILive.com

Staten Island Advance

Fore!

By CHARLIE De BIASE JR.

The Staten Island Sports Hall of Fame's 10th annual Golf Outing and Reunion is still on, but will be pushed back a few months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

And, once again, the event will honor four Islanders in the process as two will receive the"Steve Zuntag Good Guy Award" while two others are 2020 recipients of the Bobby Thomson Ambassador Award.

This year's outing will now take place on Sept. 2. It was originally scheduled for June 3.

The annual golf outing and reunion will begin at South Shore Golf Course in Huguenot. Registration is 11 a.m. and lunch is at 11:30.

The shotgun format begins at 1 p.m. while the dinner, which will take place at the Grand Oaks Country Club, commences at 6 p.m.

Level of support includes: Foursome/Dinner/plus Celebrity ($1,200); Foursome/Dinner/Tee Box Sign ($800); Foursome with Dinner ($700); Beverage Cart sponsor ($500); Golf/Dinner/Tea Box Sign ($275); Golf and Dinner ($175); Tee Box Sign ($100) and Dinner Only ($75).

Those wishing to obtain a registration form may do so by contacting John Woodman via phone (H-718-816-7249; C-347-612-1379) or email (jwoodman1@si.rr.com).

The deadline for registration is May 20.

For a look at this year's award winners, please scroll down.

(Past participants of the Staten Island Hall of Fame Golf Outing have included, left to right, former New York Rangers forward and Island native Nick Fotiu; Former pro golfer and Island native Bill Britton and former heavyweight boxer Gerry Clooney)

Staten Island Advance

Mike Gutierrez

Mike Gutierrez, the General Manager of the South Shore Golf Course, is one of the two recipients of the "Steve Zuntag Good Guy Award."

Gutierrez always makes sure everyone is welcomed to the Huguenot course.

Staten Island Advance/Jan Somma-Hammel

Ken Mitchell

Ken Mitchell (at the podium), who is the Executive Director of the Staten Island Zoo, is also a recipient of the"Steve Zuntag Good Guy Award."

Mitchell has donated a family membership as an item for the Staten Island Sports Hall of Fame Golf Outing raffle packages the previous nine years.

Staten Island Advance/Charlie De Biase Jr.

Nick Kvasic

Nick Kvasic, who was the first soccer captain at Port Richmond High School and a three-year starting midfielder at Wagner College, is a recipient of the 2020 Bobby Thomson Ambassador Award.

But his greatest contributions were as a coach, referee, and ambassador for the game.

Kvasic won six PSAL city championships and two Metro Bowl titles in 34 seasons as the girls soccer coach at New Dorp High School. During his tenure, his teams compiled win streaks of 49 and 35 games.

In addition, he started or revived programs at three Island high schools and the College of Staten Island.

Kvasic is a member of the SISHOF Class of 2015.

Staten Island Advance

Tom Roche

Tom Roche, standing second from left, is also a recipient of the 2020 Bobby Thomson Ambassador Award.

He was a standout tailback at Monsignor Farrell HS, where teams he played on only lost three times in his three-year varsity career.

Roche led Staten Island in rushing and scoring his junior year, but moved to the other side of the ball before enjoying a solid career at Ohio St.

He played in two Rose Bowls, the Orange Bowl and the Sugar Bowl with the Buckeyes as a defensive back. He also led the Big Ten Conference in interceptions and helped the OSU win or share the conference championship four years in a row.

Roche is a member of the SISHOF Class of 2001.

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Staten Island Sports Hall of Fame will once again honor 4 at annual golf outing - SILive.com

South Padre Island reopens but some locals think its too soon – KXAN.com

SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TEXAS (Border Report) The breezes from the Gulf of Mexico cooled South Texas beach goers down on Monday as they eagerly flocked to South Padre Island after a month-long closure.

The popular island was reopened to swimming, surfing, boating and kayaking after weeks of being shuttered due to COVID-19. And that enticed many people out, even on a Monday.

But some locals, like Tiki Tommy Saenz, said he worries the decision to reopen businesses came too soon.

I think they should have waited another couple of weeks according to the charts to the CDC on the peak, said Saenz, who does a local daily surf report. Im not an expert or anything but from what Ive read it has indicated we should have waited a little bit but Im not the one calling the shots.

Cameron County Judge Eddie Trevino Jr., has been calling the shots since he ordered a state of emergency over a month ago, shuttering beaches, restaurants and retail stores and ordering residents to shelter in place. But last Friday, Trevino announced that beaches and public water parks and boat ramps would reopen with some restrictions. The facilities will have limited hours, face masks must be worn in public (except when in the water), and beach-goers must practice social distancing. Boats can only have a couple riders, including charter vessels, and fishermen may not gut their catch in public.

A few other states, like Georgia, have started to loosen their restrictions and are allowing public facilities to reopen. And on Monday, Gov. Greg Abbott announced that Texas businesses, retail stores, restaurants and movie theaters will be able to reopen on Friday, May 1.

Watch Abbotts press conference.

On Monday, hundreds of families strolled on the beaches, played in the tide, and walked dogs on the sand. And most wore face masks and practiced social distancing, as Trevino ordered.

Nayelly Montalvo, 21, from Rio Grande City raced to the beach, which she says she has missed during the closure.

I come every chance I get. Its just so beautiful, she said as she sat with her Chihuahua dog Bambi beside her beach chair.

When asked if she thought the beaches reopened too soon, she admitted she has some concerns.

A part of me says yes and a part of me says no. Of course were social distancing so theres nobody around me, Montalvo said. Im happy and just being at the beach.

Ali Chafin, 19, of nearby Brownsville, Texas, was at the beach with her friend Sunshine Alcala and two others. They wore colored masks to match their bikinis. Both believed the beaches were opened too soon, they said in unison.

Im staying only with them and practicing social distancing. I dont think you should be with new people because that defeats the whole purpose. We should be allowed to be out here to enjoy it but also practice social distancing, Chafin said.

Thomas Gomez of McAllen, and his wife call themselves beach bums and were sunning themselves on lounge chairs. They said in all the years theyve been coming theyve never worn a mask.

Were still trying to be safe. Everybody seems to be having a good time and keeping space and I think thats going to help us a lot, not to overwhelm the beach, Gomez said.

But Saenz said he feels like visitors are already overwhelming these shores.

Saenz and his retiree friend, Bill Best, 65, live on South Padre Island year-round and he said they worry that so many people coming onto the island could bring COVID-19.

Saenz said that during the closure residents or those with essential business on the island had to show ID proof to an officer to get onto the island.

Then they released all that this weekend and let anybody come in to play on the beach. Before it was kind of locked down and we felt safer. Now they have opened it up to the public. Now weve had thousands of people come in and so I dont know how thats going to affect us, Saenz said.

Particularly troubling to them, they said, is that two nursing homes in the town of Harlingen, about 30 miles away, have had 13 deaths and at least 144 cases of COVID-19. Cameron County has 366 cases, including 12 new cases announced on Sunday.

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South Padre Island reopens but some locals think its too soon - KXAN.com

Grand Island-area residents urged to avoid church services; Health Department worker tests positive – Omaha World-Herald

At a Grand Island press conference Monday morning, Central District Health Department Director Teresa Anderson was conspicuously absent.

Anderson has led the response to the hard-hitting coronavirus outbreak in the three-county region surrounding Grand Island.

But even her department isnt immune to the contagious virus.

A Health Department worker not Anderson has tested positive for the coronavirus, the department discovered Sunday, and had worked while experiencing symptoms.

Now the public health workers on the front lines of the effort to track and contain the virus in a central Nebraska hot spot are self-isolating as much as possible, or working in small numbers at the departments office while wearing masks.

I think this proves that we all are at risk for COVID-19, Anderson said in a statement read at the event by Grand Island Mayor Roger Steele.

The health director said employees have been wearing masks for weeks, so they have a lower risk of catching the virus. Still, more will work from home and isolate as much as possible while still coordinating testing and tracking of local coronavirus cases.

By Monday, the department, which covers Hall, Hamilton and Merrick Counties, counted 954 confirmed cases and 25 deaths. Hall County, where Grand Island is located, accounts for 899 cases, the most in Nebraska and almost double the 489 known infections in Douglas County, the most populous county in the state.

Please remember we are at a critical time here in the Central District, Anderson said in her prepared remarks. The number of cases continues to rise at an alarming rate.

Gov. Pete Ricketts announced Friday that he would relax some restrictions in certain parts of the state that have been less affected by the virus. Religious services can be held again statewide starting May 4 with some limitations, including more distance between worshippers.

Still, Anderson asked Grand Island-area residents to avoid group gatherings, including church and other religious services, until the number of positive cases there begins to drop.

We dont know how bad this will get before we start to see numbers fall, but we are not anywhere close to being able to relax, she said.

Grand Island Bishop Joseph Hanefeldt said this weekend that he was seeking advice from his council of priests on tailoring an approach to fit the varying levels of infection in the dioceses large expanse of Nebraska, stretching from the Platte River north to the state line and west to Wyoming.

That includes some counties that have had no cases, some that have had no new cases for a couple of weeks and some places such as Grand Island and Lexington that have still-growing outbreaks.

Edward Hannon, president of St. Francis Hospital in Grand Island, noted glimmers of hope amid the grim and growing daily count of coronavirus cases.

Were testing more people, so we should expect that that number will go up, he said.

Hospital admissions of COVID-19 patients at St. Francis arent declining yet, he said, but they do seem to be stabilizing.

The 124-bed hospital now has 20 ventilators but hasnt had to use more than 15 at the same time. About 15 patients are typically in the intensive care unit there, and the rest of the hospital is about half-empty. Twenty-four patients have been transferred to other hospitals, including in Omaha.

And most people who are getting sick are able to recover at home, he said.

Since the start of the outbreak in March, St. Francis has admitted roughly 100 COVID-19 patients, or a little more than 10% of total infections in the Central District Health Department.

The great work were doing in the community together washing hands, staying home, keeping 6 feet apart is working, he said. Were making some progress, were flattening the curve, which we set out to do.

Shelly Schwedhelm, executive director of emergency management and biopreparedness at Nebraska Medicine, and Dr. James Lawler, a director at the University of Nebraska Medical Centers Global Center for Health Security, toured the JBS USA beef plant in Grand Island last week.

More than 200 coronavirus cases are tied to the plant, Anderson has said, although workers have tested positive at a number of businesses and workplaces. That includes 125 health care workers and residents at nursing and long-term care facilities who have become ill.

Steele read an email Schwedhelm wrote summing up their visit.

She said JBS had instituted a number of best practices, including providing masks for workers, putting up posters about the coronavirus in four different languages and allowing workers who were pregnant or older than 70 to stay at home with pay.

The plant could work on some other measures, she said, including setting up more hand-washing or hand sanitizer stations and talking more with workers about the importance of social distancing and other prevention strategies outside of work.

We offered some suggestions on airflow and HVAC items and Zach (Ireland, the plant manager) quickly jumped on that and engaged the engineers to see how to take action, she wrote. He reported back success with this.

The plant also distributed flyers in English, Somali and Arabic about safely celebrating Ramadan, the Islamic month of fasting and prayer that began last week. The plants workers include immigrants and refugees from the Middle East and several sub-Saharan African countries.

Use religious and cultural greetings that avoid physical contact, one of the flyers says. Please avoid hand shaking, hugging and touching while greeting each other.

Masks made by Ann Kane and her family.

Ann Kane and her family are producing masks. Everyone has a job.

Ann Kane and her family have made around 200 masks.

UNMC med student Nate Mattison works on his laptop at his apartment near downtown Omaha.

A bottle of Purell sits on a kitchen countertop as UNMC med student Nate Mattison works on his laptop. Mattison is one of a handful of UNMC students who have stepped up fill various nonprofit needs. Mattison has signed up to be a Big Brother and is currently waiting to be paired up.

Mattison is one of a handful of UNMC students who have stepped up to fill the needs of various nonprofits.

Matt Van Zante prints parts for face shields in his basement.

A 3D printer prints parts for face shields.

Matt Van Zante is among a group making face shields for personal protective equipment for medical personnel.

Matt Van Zante shows off one of the finished face shields he helped make.

Matt Van Zante shows off a finished face shield.

A 3D printer prints parts for face shields in Matt Van Zante's basement.

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Grand Island-area residents urged to avoid church services; Health Department worker tests positive - Omaha World-Herald

COVID-19 testing rolls out on island – Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomber

Earlier this spring, islander Jim Bristow grew frustrated with the lack of coronavirus testing options for his wife, who was sick with a bad cough, and he set about addressing the scarcity of testing on the island. Now, thanks to his efforts and several other people in Vashons Medical Reserve Corps, COVID-19 testing for symptomatic island residents and workers is available weekday afternoons at Mukai Farm & Garden.

The Vashon COVID-19 Testing Project launched on April 7 and tested approximately 30 people in its first two weeks. So far there have been no positive tests, and the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases among island residents was still at four as of Monday. Testing at the Mukai site is expected to continue at least throughout the summer, as the state loosens its restrictions and additional people contract the illness. Plans are in the works not only to continue testing, but also to conduct contact tracing when called for, and provide practical support to people who test positive as well as those in their households.

So far, patients have been appreciative of this local effort, with many sending thank you notes after their tests.

They are glad to have us here, and we are glad to be here, and we are here for the long haul, Bristow said.

Medical Reserve Corps member Dr. Zach Miller, who had a long career as an infectious disease specialist with Group Health Cooperative, has also been involved with the local testing effort. He cautioned islanders not to read too much into Vashons low number of confirmed cases, as the extent of illness is not fully known.

I think it is very, very hard to make any assumptions about coronavirus from our testing in terms of how widespread it might really be. It has been hard to know that in any community at any given time, Miller said.

He pointed to hospitalizations and deaths as better markers than testing for the amount of illness circulating, but those figures are not available for the island. He also noted that it is possible for any community to have many people with mild to moderate respiratory symptoms who would not have access to testing or have not sought to be tested, so the disease could easily be present but undetected.

I would not tell anybody that they should be thinking there is not COVID on Vashon Island and that they should feel fine about not taking precautions, he said. You still have to be concerned that it is out there and hope that it will diminish along with its decrease in the greater Seattle area because of the measures people are taking.

Self-administered testing is slightly less reliable than the nasopharyngeal swab, with data showing the self-tests are about 5% less likely to detect the virus, Miller noted. He cautioned that no test is perfect and stressed that no matter the test, those who are given a negative result could still have the illness in a small percentage of instances.

Last week, Bristow retired from his career as a pediatric cardiologist at the University of California San Francisco and as the deputy director at the Joint Genome Institute at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory recounted how this homegrown testing project came to be.

At the same time Bristows wife was sick and he looked in vain for a test for her, Dr. Anthony Fauci told Congress that public health testing efforts were failing. Initially, Bristow, a staunch believer in public health, was angry, but then changed course.

I realized that it was time for me to stop complaining and start working, he said. I started calling around to figure out how to make something happen.

Those calls eventually led him to Rick Wallace, who has long been instrumental in the islands emergency and disaster planning/response efforts through VashonBePrepared. Wallace connected him with the leaders of the islands Medical Reserve Corps, part of the VashonBePrepared coalition. That connection was essential in identifying and overcoming obstacles and creating the path forward.

Their participation was crucial in helping turn my enthusiasm into something that could be done here, Bristow said.

Miller identified obstacles early on: Bristows original plan called for volunteers to conduct tests by administering the nasopharyngeal swabbing themselves. This method, which collects secretions from the back of the nose and throat, was the only one approved at the time. Using it meant they would need abundant personal protective equipment, which was not available. It also would have put the local volunteers at risk of contracting the illness a particular concern because many of them are over 60. With those issues in mind, Miller suggested self-testing as the best option. That method was not FDA-approved at the time, a complication that made for additional obstacles, including that Public Health- Seattle & King County would not agree to its use.

Soon after the project appeared that it might not move forward, the FDA approved self-collected swabs for COVID-19 testing, based on data from Washington state and that made all the difference.

All of a sudden, the pieces fell into place, and we were ready to go, Bristow said.

After that, the rest of the details were about logistics. Public Health-Seattle & King County and the University of Washington did not have enough tests to supply the effort. Ultimately, LabCorps, a national clinical laboratory network that routinely serves the island, provided the tests.

The testing steering committee, which also includes island physicians Ina Opplinger and Bonny and Clayton Olney along with operational and logistical support from Allen de Steiguer and Shawn Boeser, determined just how the Mukai site would work, with patients remaining in their cars throughout the testing process. The plan for traffic flow came about in true Vashon style, Bristow noted. In a discussion about how to proceed, Opplinger had shared that the fruit club had recently distributed mason bees to its members, and it had worked perfectly.

So pretty much our model is based on the fruit club mason bee distribution model, Bristow said with a laugh, noting the group made some adjustments after a dry run. Its spectacular.

Now each day, between 3 and 4 p.m. one person at a time visits the site by appointment, assisted by volunteers from the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT), also part of the VashonBePrepared network. CERT Manager Jan Milligan says it is a good partnership and one that will likely extend into the future, with CERT providing support for other Medical Reserve Corps actions. Currently, 15 of CERTs 40 active volunteers have participated in the testing effort. That group, too, is prepared to be involved for the duration.

There are lots of really great people in CERT. This could go on and on, Milligan said.

For his part, Bristow believes this model for testing could work well for many other rural and tribal communities. In fact, Bristow said he and the Medical Reserve Corps have been working with two tribes already and hope to expand the model well beyond that. He noted that many rural communities share much in common with Vashon: Acute care capabilities are limited; it may take a long time to get to an acute care facility; personal protective equipment is difficult to come by, and medical volunteers may be limited as well. But none of that gets in the way of testing the way it is being done at the Mukai site.

We realized what we have been able to do was really a very fortunate byproduct of the incredibly talented group of people on the island, Bristow said, acknowledging the many people who worked to make his initial plan a reality in three short weeks. I mean no disrespect for rural America. We just have a remarkable collection of people here.

Island residents and workers are eligible for tests if they have symptoms, including cough, shortness of breath and fever. A doctors referral is required. For people without a primary care physician, MRC members can provide the needed testing referral, but they do not provide follow-up care. The cost of the test is $50 and will be billed to insurance. For those without insurance or if their claim is denied, VashonBePrepared will cover the cost. For more information, call the testing project at 844-469-4554, or see testing.vashonbeprepared.org.

Neighborcare clinic offers coronavirus testing

In addition to the volunteer-run clinic at Mukai Farm & Garden, coronavirus testing has been underway for two weeks at the Neighborcare clinic at the Sunrise Ridge facility.

Medical Director Dr. Jessica Wesch said the clinic has its COVID-19 testing and respiratory evaluation tents up and running. When patients call with respiratory concerns or COVID-19 symptoms, Neighborcare providers refer them to the tent for care and testing if needed. The clinic has seen and evaluated two to eight patients a day and has conducted 32 COVID-19 tests on the island. Providers there have seen established patients as well as some who are new and want care on the island, Wesch said. The tents are available Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.

Wesch urged caution regarding the virus on the island.

While the positive test numbers and the patients with clinical symptoms of COVID-19 are fairly low, we know COVID-19 is in our community, she said in a recent email. She added that as the pandemic precautions are lifted, the clinic may see the demand for testing and respiratory care quickly change and will be monitoring that need closely. Neighborcare providers are providing phone visits and some limited office visits for conditions that cannot be assessed or treated by phone.

We have been surprised by how much we can do over the phone, Wesch said. We encourage patients to call for care if they need it even issues not related to potential COVID-19.

Susan Riemer is a volunteer with VashonBePrepareds Emergency Operations Center and a former editor of The Beachcomber.

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COVID-19 testing rolls out on island - Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomber

New York City’s Hart Island: An overlooked final resting place – CBS News

On a deeply cold Saturday morning in January, correspondent Erin Moriarty took a nearly-empty ferry to a speck of land in Long Island Sound. For most souls who go there, it's a one-way trip.

Hart Island is where the city of New York buries the unknown, the unclaimed, or those too poor to afford a burial. At 101 acres, it's the largest Potter's field in the country. [No cameras or cell phones are allowed.]

Moriarty went with Elaine Joseph, whose infant daughter, Tomika, is among the one million people buried there. "We're going today because it is her birthday, and I'm commemorating her 42nd birthday," Joseph said.

"There are no markers; there's a mass grave. You just know there's bodies buried there 'cause they told us so."

"But you go?"

"I go. Because it's all I have. It's all I have left."

In January 1978, Joseph was a 23-year-old nurse, pregnant and living with her boyfriend, when she unexpectedly went into labor and gave birth a month early. "It was my first child. And I was happy to be having her," she said.

Days later, she said, her daughter needed emergency surgery for a heart deformity. New York City was in the middle of a crippling snow storm: "I couldn't get to the hospital. There were no trains, there were no buses. There was no public transportation."

She was home when she got the news: "They said she had another cardiac arrest and she died."

"You had to hear that on the phone?" Moriarty asked.

"Yes, I couldn't be there. That's one of my main regrets, is that I was not there at the hospital with her." Getting tearful, Joseph said, "Excuse me, it's 41 years, but it never goes away."

When she did get to the hospital to claim the body of her baby girl, "They said, 'She was already buried.' I'm like, 'Buried how?' They said that I signed to have her buried in the city cemetery."

"Did anyone mention Hart Island to you at that point?"

"I had never heard of the term 'Hart Island' ever in my life," said Joseph.

Until recently, most people had never heard of Hart Island, although it's been a part of New York since 1868, when officials paid $75,000 (or more than a million dollars in today's money) to make it a city cemetery.

Hart Island might have remained out of view, if not for COVID-19, and the shocking aerial photos showing the devastation of a pandemic on those without resources.

In the last month, New York went from burying 25 bodies a week at Hart Island to five times as many.

"It's always existed on the margins of the city," said New York City Councilman Mark Levine. "And it's been the place where we have buried those who were marginalized in life for generations."

What makes Hart Island so unusual, said Levine, is that for much of its history, it's been run by the Department of Correction, using inmate labor: "It's almost out of a Dickens novel that it's inmates from Riker's Island who are responsible for burials there."

Victims of various pandemics tuberculosis, the Spanish Flu, and AIDS have been buried in secrecy, and sometimes in shame.

Until his release from jail in February, Vincent Mingalone placed pine boxes in mass graves on Hart Island. "I would take a wax crayon, write the name of the deceased, their last name in big letters on the side of the box," he said.

"And what do you know about these people, other than their names and the day they died?" asked Moriarty.

"That's pretty much all we know," Mingalone replied. "But you always wondered: these are fellow New Yorkers. Is this somebody who served us coffee? Was this somebody who tailored our clothes, did our laundry?"

The city refused to release the names of those buried there, until Melinda Hunt, a visual artist, sued to obtain them.

"So, all of the sudden in 2008, I had 50,000 burial records," Hunt said.

She created the Hart Island Project, an online memorial. "The whole point of a cemetery is storytelling," she said. "The city had no reason to deny families this information . And there were so many families."

And that's how, in 2009, Elaine Joseph finally discovered where her infant daughter was buried, 31 years after she'd died.

"It's not only my daughter that's buried there; it's all these others," Joseph said. "Everybody belonged to somebody. Everybody had a mom, had a dad, had somebody. And many of them, families don't even know they are there."

Visitation to Hart Island is very limited. Joseph had to schedule this birthday celebration months in advance. She left a toy for her daughter, while a Corrections officer took Polaroids to mark the occasion.

Joseph said, "I could accept that she died. That I can accept. What I couldn't accept is that I lost track of where her body went, and how she was treated after death."

Councilman Levine said, "That final resting place has never been as dignified as it should have been. It's never gotten the respect it needed. And that certainly needs to change."

Last December, the New York City Council transferred control of Hart Island to the Parks Department. Earlier this month, inmates were replaced by paid landscape workers.

Many are hopeful that next year, Hart Island will be open as a memorial park, honoring those buried there.

Elaine Joseph said, "Everybody's human. We're all human. Maybe we don't all have money, but we all deserve dignity."

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Story produced by Mary Raffalli. Editor: Joe Frandino.

Originally posted here:

New York City's Hart Island: An overlooked final resting place - CBS News

Greg Hardy ready to live on Fight Island, knockout all 15 heavyweights en route to UFC title – MMA Mania

Power-punching UFC heavyweight Greg Hardy is going to be stepping inside the Octagon to throw hands anyway, so why not do it on a lush tropical island where he can also live and train every day for the next year or so?

Thats why the Prince of War is petitioning promotion president Dana White for a spot on Fight Island, the remote (and still secret) location that will allow quarantined fighters to bypass stateside travel restrictions.

Dana, man, listen, if youve got quarters, I will stay on that island, bro, you know Im not ashamed to move in, Hardy told TMZ Sports. We can fight every couple of weeks, dude. With all seriousness, lets run it. Ill live on it and break my own record that I tied last year 100 percent.

Before Hardy (5-2, 1 NC) can worry about his island adventures, the Prince of War must first get past Yorgan De Castro at the upcoming UFC 249 pay-per-view (PPV) event on May 9, taking place inside VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, Florida.

After that? Hardy, 31, plans to eliminate the rest of the Top 15.

I think we start with (No.) 15 and go down the line, Hardy continued. Fifteen fights later, I knock out the guy whos holding the belt whoever that is. You get the best show like that. Go down the whole line so everybody can just shush, calm down, wait their turn, and get knocked the crap out. Nobody can talk trash because Id be fighting all the best everybody with a number. We do it the G. Hardy way easily just eliminate everybody one by one on the island.

That would require him to avenge his UFC Moscow loss to this guy.

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Greg Hardy ready to live on Fight Island, knockout all 15 heavyweights en route to UFC title - MMA Mania

Increased halal, kosher options offered at Staten Island meal sites – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- The city Department of Education (DOE) will increase the supply and distribution of halal meals at 32 meal hubs with large Muslim populations -- including three on Staten Island -- during Ramadan, the Muslim holy month.

New York Citys more than 400 meal hub sites continue to offer grab-and-go meals that are free to adults and children across the five boroughs while public schools are closed due to the coronavirus (COVID-19).

A halal meal is one prepared in accordance with Islamic law -- as defined in the Quran, Islams holy book. Ramadan began on Thursday and will end on the evening of May 23 with the traditional Eid al-Fitr festivity.

The three Staten island schools that will increase the supply and distribution of halal meals are:

-- Curtis High School in St. George - 105 Hamilton Ave.

-- PS 22 in Graniteville - 1860 Forest Ave.

-- CSI High School in New Springville - 100 Essex Drive

*** CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE COVERAGE OF CORONAVIRUS IN NEW YORK ***

KOSHER NOW OFFERED

Beginning Monday, PS 54 in Willowbrook will exclusively offer kosher-certified meals, which are prepared in accordance with Jewish dietary regulations. The school is located at 1060 Willowbrook Rd.

Kosher meals follow the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) meal nutrition guidelines and are produced in partnership with a certified kosher distributor. The kosher meal sites are housed in DOE school buildings and staffed by DOE food service staff.

The meals are free and available to any New Yorker that requests them.

37

Life on lockdown: Coronavirus in NYC

GRAB-AND-GO

While school buildings are closed due to COVID-19, New York City has set up the meal hubs across the five boroughs to ensure New Yorkers dont go hungry.

The DOE offers three free meals on weekdays for any New Yorker, and all three can be picked up at one time from 7:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

Children and families pick up meals from 7:30 to 11:30 a.m. Adults pick up free meals from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

No one will be turned away from receiving a meal, according to the DOEs website. No registration, identification, or documentation is required. Vegetarian options will be available at all sites. No dining space is available, so meals must be eaten off-premises.

Families can search Free Meals on schools.nyc.gov or call 311 to find a site near them. Families can also text FOOD or COMIDA to 877-877 to find a meal near them.

Here is a complete list of meal hubs on Staten Island.

FOLLOW ANNALISE KNUDSON ON FACEBOOK AND TWITTER.

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Increased halal, kosher options offered at Staten Island meal sites - SILive.com

Lone Residents of Little Bay Islands Share Tips for Living in Times of Isolation – VOCM

(Photo courtesy Kintsugi via Facebook.)

As many Canadians are learning to deal with a prolonged period of isolation, its something the only two people on Little Bay Islands opted for when they decided to remain in the small, island town.

Mike Parsons and his wife, Georgina Parsons, made the decision to be the only full-time inhabitants on Little Bay Island last year.

Now theyre some of the most isolated people in the province.

Mike Parsons says it has been surreal sitting on the outside, looking in from their own little bubble.

As someone who not only lives a life of isolation but who thoroughly enjoys it, Parsons offered some helpful advice for those not used to being alone.

He says coming up with a routine and trying to stick to it every day helps pass the time and provides a sense of purpose.

They post updates on their blog Kintsugi Little Bay Islands on Facebook.

Read the rest here:

Lone Residents of Little Bay Islands Share Tips for Living in Times of Isolation - VOCM

Staten Island Home of the Week: Multiple large balconies and terraces, $2.9M – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Built in 2005, this all-brick, center-hall Colonial is located in a private wooded neighborhood at 120 College Place, Todt Hill.

It is priced at $2,888,888, as listed on SILive.com."The house has multiple large balconies and terraces, framed with columns and elaborate aluminum railings, for relaxing and enjoying the views," according to the listing on Staten Island Multiple Listing Service at SIBOR.com.

The listing mentions that the uniqueness of this property is a remarkable product carried out by the building team. For its construction, skilled masons, stone cutters, inlayers, carvers, painters and other artisans were requested and hired."

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

With the housing industry one of the hardest-hit commercial sectors during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, Staten Island Realtors have developed a virtual home showing and open house process to assist home buyers and sellers.

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

120 College Place, Todt Hill

KRISTINA GERSHTEYN of ROBERT DEFALCO REALTY, INC. is the listing agent. (Courtesy Staten Island Board of Realtors)

Link:

Staten Island Home of the Week: Multiple large balconies and terraces, $2.9M - SILive.com

On Fishers Island, protocols in place to limit spread of virus – Suffolk Times

As the coronavirus spread rapidly through the rest of Southold Town, Fishers Island residents have banded together to avoid potential catastrophe on their remote, four-square-mile island.

Just two cases of COVID-19 have been documented among islanders, according to officials at the Island Health Project, a nonprofit formed to raise funds for Dr. Chris Ingram, the small communitys only physician.

The first patient was evacuated March 27 via marine Sea Stretcher to Lawrence & Memorial Hospital in New London, Conn., and discharged April 1. That patient and a family member who also tested positive are now both recovering at their primary residence off-island, officials said.

Southold Town Supervisor Scott Russell said Monday that the town is looking into how numbers are reported for Fishers Island.

Residents usually seek medical treatment at health care facilities in Connecticut, Mr. Russell said. I do not know if there is reporting to the New York State Department of Health of any positive cases.

Four people listed as persons of interest have completed isolation periods and Dr. Ingrams latest update on Friday noted that there are no new cases of COVID-19 to report.

The Island Health Project and Island Community Board have teamed up to urge homeowners coming to the island to abide by a strict set of protocols to limit potential spread of the virus and because limited resources are available locally.

Any residents arriving on Fishers Island are asked to self-quarantine and practice social distancing measures even if they are returning from a quick trip off-island to run errands.

Think carefully before coming, or leaving and returning, Dr. Ingram wrote in an April 10 letter.

The ferry, which is running on a reduced schedule of three round-trips per day, also has precautions in place to limit exposure, now prohibiting riders from exiting their vehicles while in line for or on board the ferry.

The Village Market, the islands sole grocery store, remains closed but is accepting orders via call or text, and the post office has restrictions in place to limit the number of people inside at any given time.

Before Gov. Andrew Cuomos mandate that New Yorkers wear masks in public spaces, Fishers Island residents were already being urged to take the precaution.

Dr. Ingram developed an unofficial health census to track COVID-19 to prepare for community needs as well as track how many part-time residents have flocked to the haven, which has approximately 250 year-round residents.

The head count currently stands at about 500 people, but he said he believes hes missed many households.

The population grew very quickly as seasonal residents moved back to their homes there to shelter from the virus, Mr. Russell said. Still, he said, the remote nature of Fishers Island and population numbers, which increase seasonally to approximately 2,000, are not ideal conditions for the virus to spread. Being on an island, theyre much less likely to frequent more densely populated areas where infection is more likely, the supervisor said.

Last week, Dr. Ingram said island organizations are working to get a supply of virus and antibody tests to Fishers Island.

A group of volunteers is helping to explore solutions for supply and funding, he wrote April 17. Testing at this point is imperfect, so its not 100% clear how testing results could be applied to our situation. Nevertheless, we believe testing protocols will be critical to maintaining safety and order on the island as the summer season approaches.

In his latest update April 24, Dr. Ingram protocols for the summer must be developed in line with state policies. This summer will be very different from normal, the physician warned residents, adding that childrens programs and institutions will likely remain closed and big parties are definitely discouraged.

Please begin envisioning your summer to be simpler and more family oriented, less social, more self-sufficient and less reliant on services of various kinds, Dr. Ingram told residents.

He said even a modest increase in population will increase the risk for an outbreak on Fishers Island. With that in mind, Dr. Ingram said they are trying to bring additional medical staff to the island but residents shouldnt take that as false hope that theyre protected.

In the meantime, all residents of Fishers Island are being urged to continue social distancing to stop the spread of the virus.

Fishers Island Justice Louisa Evans, a member of the Southold Town Board and island resident, said its heartening to see how the organizations are working to keep residents safe, even without the presence of a local governing body.

It seems like people are taking the correct precautions and following guidelines. In a small community like ours, it is important that people willingly come together to establish expectations and help and look out for each other, she said.

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On Fishers Island, protocols in place to limit spread of virus - Suffolk Times

Running for her hometown; Alex Graham completes marathon on the Island – Shelter Island – Shelter Island Reporter

It didnt get really bad until around mile 20 when herlegs began to bother her. And then the skies opened and she was running throughhard rain and wind.

There was an upside, however. The downpour took my mindoff the pain, year-round Islander Alex Graham said.

Ms. Graham ran her first marathon on Sunday, completing a 26.2 mile course that took her from Wades Beach all the way out to Ram Island, to Silver Beach, and back through the Center and finishing at her starting point.

A few friends and family ran with her for shorter distances throughout the day, including her friend James Marshall. But I was never really alone, she said, noting that people along the way were on the sides of the roads to cheer her on. Some people had signs and cars would honk and people would yell out their windows, she said.

Last week the Reporter noted several spots along the route she would pass so people could gather to cheer and encourage her, but some took it upon themselves to cheer at other locations.

The marketing professional was supposed to run the prestigious Big Sur Marathon in California this past weekend, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the marathon and her California trip were cancelled. She had trained for over a year for her first-ever marathon.

Her race Sunday was to test herself finishing in thevery respectable time of 4 hours and 37 minutes but also for her community,she said, promoting the recently formed Shelter Island Alliance.

She and Brett Surerus created the nonprofit Alliance tohelp Island restaurants weather the economic storm brought on by the pandemic,as well as helping feed healthcare employees working long hours without breaks.The idea is to keep the restaurants functioning and also pay them to help feedthe staffs at Eastern Long Island and Stony Brook Southampton hospitals throughdonations.

The Alliance has also expanded its scope to help peoplein need on the Island.

Donors choose the restaurant they would like to supportand the amount they want to donate and then go to Venmo Shelter Island ActionAlliance (@shelterisland-actionalliance). Or checks can be made out to ShelterIsland Action Alliance and sent to P.O. Box 452, Shelter Island, NY 11964.

Donations go directly to the restaurant of choice, whichwill determine the best way to optimize the money to feed the most people.

Ms. Grahams solo race gave the Alliance a boost, she said. Many people have contacted us, she added.

So far, the nonprofit has delivered and scheduled morethan 3,000 meals.

Her start Sunday morning at Wades Beach was quiet, with afew friends, including Adam Bundy who played a recording of the National Anthemfrom his car. The weather was perfect for a long distance run, she said, cooland overcast. But that changed with the downpour when she got to the SilverBeach-stretch of her marathon.

She as asked if she ever hit the wall that distancerunners speak of, the time when energy is drained and one foot in front ofanother can be an ordeal. If there was a wall, she ran through it, she said.But she did suddenly understand the runners wisdom that a marathon doesntreally start until mile 20.

Ms. Graham credits Mr. Marshall and Mr. Bundy as her unofficial trainers, who especially helped with ideas on nutrition for the endurance sport.

Back where she started at Wades Beachfour-and-a-half-hours before, Ms. Graham was exhausted but proud of achieving along-sought goal, and doing somethingmeaningful for her home town.

She also wanted everyone to know: I finished first.

For more information on the Shelter Island Alliance, email [emailprotected] or phone 631-806-5458 (Brett Surerus) or 646-415-2792 (Alex Graham).

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Running for her hometown; Alex Graham completes marathon on the Island - Shelter Island - Shelter Island Reporter

Grizzly bear just relocated from Vancouver Island shot dead – Nanaimo News Bulletin

The grizzly bear Mali, relocated a couple of weeks ago after it showed up on Hanson Island, was shot dead last week by a resident in an act of self defence.

B.C. Conservation Officer Service confirmed that the incident took place on the evening of April 20. Investigation into the circumstance concluded the shooting was in self defence and no charges were laid .

Mali was identified by the ear tags that were placed on him during the relocation operation when he was moved to a remote area on B.C.s mainland.

In a statement, the Conservation Officers Services said that the bear was killed more than 30 kilometres away from the isolated area where it was released.

The grizzly bear made headlines earlier in April due to the historical nature of joint efforts in its relocation operation. Several groups including conservation officers, First Nations and the Grizzly Bear Foundation came together to relocate Mali.

READ MORE: Young grizzly bear saved by the joint efforts of First Nations and conservation officers on Hanson Island

Nicholas Scapillati, executive director of Grizzly Bear Foundation, said that although the bear was successfully relocated, there was no means to trace its movements and it must have wandered off again into a residential area in search of food or a new habitat.

Unfortunately Mali wasnt collared when he was relocated since everything happened very rapidly back then, said Scapillati.

The bears death highlights deeper issues such as climate change, lack of salmon and habitat loss among other issues which may be causing bears to wander into residential areas.

Mali had previoulsly swum to Hanson Island in search of food.

Grizzly bears are moving across the Island and we need to put some science behind this issue and find out why they are moving, said Scapillati.

He also said, that on spotting a bear in a residential area, most people panic and resort to guns which often results in the death of the bear.

Conservation officials throughout the region have been advising on the use of bear spray as the most effective tool and a safer option for both citizens and bears.

Scapillati stressed on increasing awareness through educative campaigns about bear sprays and attractants so that humans and bears can live in peaceful coexistence in the future.

Malis situation could have been very different, he added.

However, the joint conservation efforts that took place in relocating Mali earlier was a positive development in conservation efforts, setting precedent for more such rescue and relocation operations.

Sad things can happen in conservation sometimes, but you learn a lot and know that more grizzly bears need to be protected.

The conservation officers will give Malis body to the First Nations who will hold a small burial ceremony for the bear.

READ ALSO: Vancouver Islands bear patrol is watching your garbage

ConservationEnvironment

Excerpt from:

Grizzly bear just relocated from Vancouver Island shot dead - Nanaimo News Bulletin

How Staten Island nursing homes stepped up to face hospital coronavirus overflow – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has wreaked havoc on nursing homes and adult care facilities throughout New York, with more than 3,500 deaths within the state as of Tuesday 125 of which were on Staten Island.

The stress of housing the boroughs most vulnerable population and the overflow of a strained health care system has caused concerns in multiple nursing homes across the Island, according to interviews with approximately a dozen health care workers and family members of residents.

In March, Dr. Ginny Mantello, the boroughs director of health and wellness, told the Advance/SILive.com that nursing homes were a critical piece in the puzzle to lessen the burden on hospital systems.

The least we can do is say the ones that are not critically ill and not in an ICU setting and not on a ventilator should be sent to the next step down level, Mantello said, which is not a triage tent, its not a building we stood up to take patients, its not a dormitory or a hotel its a nursing home."

That approach, according to Mantello, was executed and allowed hospitals to care for the most severe coronavirus patients throughout the height of the outbreak in the borough.

After weeks of extremely limited testing, Staten Islands 10 skilled nursing facilities, the Advance/SILive.com exclusively reported, will have all of its staff and residents tested in conjunction with a borough-wide partnership.

Mantello credits nursing home facilities across the Island for recognizing that keeping the coronavirus out of individual homes was an impossibility, and taking the the approach that it was the homes moral duty ... their obligation to the community, to the hospitals, to everybody, to be able to help decant these patients out of the hospitals in an effort to reduce hospital overload.

The extent of the role nursing homes played in reducing hospital capacity is becoming increasingly clear, with dozens of senior residents being discharged from hospitals to the care of the nursing home facilities in the borough.

Since the onset of the virus, Staten Island University Hospitals two campuses have discharged 105 COVID-19 positive patients to skilled nursing facilities across the Island. This total includes patients who were initially at the nursing homes.

The total number of coronavirus patients discharged from Richmond University Medical Center to nursing homes was not available.

37

Life on lockdown: Coronavirus in NYC

STATE MANDATES

On March 25, the New York State Department of Health issued a directive that No resident shall be denied re-admission or admission to the NH (nursing home) solely based on a confirmed or suspected diagnosis of COVID-19.

During this global health emergency, all NHs must comply with the expedited receipt of residents returning from hospitals to NHs, said the directive.

The state Health Department did not provide the number of patients who were discharged from hospitals into nursing homes throughout New York by the time of publication.

On Thursday, Gov. Andrew Cuomo firmly referenced the states directive and said nursing homes are required to have enough personal protective equipment (PPE) for staff, isolate coronavirus positive residents, only re-admit positive coronavirus residents who can be cared for properly, and notify all residents and their family members if any resident tests positive or dies as a result of the virus.

Cuomo also announced that the states Health Department will be partnering with Attorney General Letitia James to investigate violations of the mandates, saying that facilities could be fined $10,000 per violation or even lose their operating licenses.

Beginning Thursday, nursing homes must immediately report all actions they have taken to comply with state Health Department and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) directives. The New York State Department of Health will investigate those who have not complied with those guidelines.

Photo shows the entrance to the Carmel Richmond Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center in Dongan Hills on Friday, April 17, 2020. (Staten Island Advance/ Paul Liotta)

NURSING HOMES PERFORMED VALIANT EFFORT

In addition to re-admitted patients deemed stable by hospitals, some of the boroughs largest nursing homes, including Carmel Richmond Health Care and Rehabilitation Center, in Dongan Hills, and Eger Health Care and Rehabilitation Center, in Egbertville, have taken coronavirus patients who were not previously residents.

Carmel Richmond has admitted a total of 19 COVID-19-positive patients from the hospital as of April 22, as required by the state, according to Jon Goldberg, a spokesman for the Archdiocese, which runs the facility. As of last Friday, Eger Health Care and Rehabilitation Center had admitted the same amount, with more expected.

As ArchCare noted in its statement last Friday, the number of deaths by facility released by the state on Friday dont distinguish between infections that may have originated in a particular nursing home and those that were introduced to the nursing home by already-infected patients coming from the hospital, Goldberg said.

The statement came after a New York state survey determined at least 44 people died as a result of the coronavirus at the Dongan Hills nursing home. It was the only Staten Island nursing home on the list, which included any nursing home with more than five reported deaths.

However, Borough President James Oddo, who has called for more action to protect nursing homes, said in an interview with the Advance that hes worried that the list could paint an inaccurate portrait of how the virus is affecting the states most vulnerable.

I dont think that number, in a vacuum, and having Carmel Richmond alone on that list, is fair to those heroes that work in that facility and run that facility and are doing their very best under circumstances that they did not create, said Oddo, who added that he had only positive experiences when his loved ones were in that nursing home.

That sentiment is furthered, as some nursing homes including New Broadview Manor in South Beach have received no patients from hospitals during the pandemic, the facility said.

Without additional context, the number of Covid-related deaths in a given nursing home is a misleading statistic,'' the ArchCare statement said last week. "On their own, these figures do not accurately reflect the overall quality of care a facility provides or its diligence in trying to control the infection.

New York City announced on Thursday that it would surge supplies and staff to nursing homes across the city, including multiple borough homes.

Mantello, despite the lack of testing and PPE available, said the efforts performed by nursing homes throughout Staten Island was very valiant, to say the least."

Our nursing home partners stepping up was very brave on their part, she said, adding that the facilities were forced to stretch themselves to the limit in order to help overall hospital capacity in light of earlier projections, which forecasted long-term overflow at hospitals across the city.

Mayor Bill de Blasio delivered supplies to Richmond University Medical Center today along side him were Borough President James Oddo, Councilwoman Debi Rose and Assemblymember Charles Fall. April 20,2020. (Staten Island Advance/Jan Somma-Hammel)

OUR RESPONSIBILITY

Regardless of the new patients admitted into nursing home facilities from hospitals, borough senior living centers reported positive coronavirus cases even before the state mandate as a variety of factors, including staff with limited PPE, could cause the virus to transmit easily.

It doesnt matter if a nursing home has 20 patients or 30 from a hospital that are COVID positive -- remember, they have staff going in and out daily, said Mantello.

(COVID-19) is in every nursing home, an ArchCare spokesman said previously. Theres absolutely no way to contain it, no matter how hard they try."

Concerns about the availability of testing within nursing homes and adequate PPE have been strongly aired by facilities, officials and health care workers alike.

In an interview with the New York Times, Scott LaRue, the president of ArchCare, said: I cant test, I dont have PPE .. What am I supposed to do?

Testing for the coronavirus at individual nursing homes has been an impossibility so far, effectively handcuffing the facilities, and with larger hospital systems such as Northwell Health fighting for PPE, smaller institutions like skilled nursing facilities were left in a somewhat untenable position, Oddo said.

In the face of criticism against nursing homes and how individual facilities handled the outbreak, Oddo said: If youre going to be angry at someone, be angry at us. Be angry at us in government.

In a crisis to this degree, individual hospitals, individual hospital systems, individual skilled nursing facilities they have a responsibility, but ultimately the only entity out there that could provide the answer to the problem was government, and we didnt, because there are nurses and aides walking through skilled nursing facilities without the proper PPE, Oddo said.

A sign on Manor Road gives strength to Staten Islanders. Wednesday, April 8, 2020. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

PERSPECTIVE FROM THE FRONT LINE

A nurse in a Staten Island nursing home, who answered emailed questions from the Advance/SILive.com from her hospital bed in Staten Island University Hospital in Ocean Breeze, said the coronavirus continues to take a heavy toll on the health care workers in the boroughs senior facilities.

After attending to 47 patients during a single shift on April 2, the woman said she began to feel body aches, chills and headaches. The next day, the woman said she called her sister-in-law to take her 10-month-old baby in fear she could infect her child.

After heading to a City MD, a chest X-ray confirmed pneumonia, though the facility did not have enough capacity to test for the coronavirus at the time. After receiving antibiotics, her chest pain progressed and her fever rose before she was taken to RUMC.

Within days, she returned home, but ended up calling the state Health Department to have a coronavirus test conducted and was swabbed the next day at 11 a.m.

Her condition continued to stagger, with her oxygen dropping to dangerous levels. Family and friends were checking on me, urging me to go back to the hospital, she said.

After days of pain and struggling to breathe, I rushed to SIUH ER Friday April 10 around 4:30 a.m. and was admitted for hypoxia -- low oxygen, the woman said.

Days later, the woman was discharged; however, she said she felt a lack of proper PPE contributed to my illness.

We were being told to use one surgical mask during our shift,'' she said. "I was one nurse for 40-50 almost every night at work.

This photo provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows CDCs laboratory test kit for the new coronavirus. (CDC via AP) APAP

A CORONAVIRUS TRAGEDY

The reality within nursing homes for some families despite what some officials say has been concerted efforts to handle the pandemic proactively has been bleak.

For one woman, whose 89-year-old mother was a long-term resident of Carmel Richmond, the coronavirus situation in the facility accelerated rapidly.

Early in March, the woman said she noticed visiting protocols being changed at the nursing home. A week later, visitors were not allowed in the nursing home.

The following week, she was told patients had tested positive for the coronavirus but that her mother was not symptomatic. Then I was called and told that she had a fever, but she didnt have the virus, she said.

Just days later, she was told her mother had the coronavirus and was dehydrated. That was on Sunday, and then Monday night they called me and told me she died," she said.

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How Staten Island nursing homes stepped up to face hospital coronavirus overflow - SILive.com

Trump betting millions to lay the groundwork for quantum internet in the US – CNBC

In the 1960s the U.S. government funded a series of experiments developing techniques to shuttle information from one computer to another. Devices in single labs sprouted connections, then neighboring labs linked up. Soon the network had blossomed between research institutions across the country, setting down the roots of what would become the internet and transforming forever how people use information. Now, 60 years later, the Department of Energy is aiming to do it again.

The Trump administration's 2021 budget request currently under consideration by Congress proposes slashing the overall funding for scientific research by nearly 10% but boosts spending on quantum information science by about 20%, to $237 million. Of that, the DOE has requested $25 million to accelerate the development of a quantum internet. Such a network would leverage the counterintuitive behavior of nature's particles to manipulate and share information in entirely new ways, with the potential to reinvent fields including cybersecurity and material science.

Whilethetraditional internet for general useisn't going anywhere, a quantum networkwouldoffer decisive advantages for certain applications: Researchers could use it to develop drugs and materials by simulating atomic behavior onnetworked quantum computers, for instance, and financial institutions and governments would benefit from next-level cybersecurity. Many countries are pursuing quantum research programs, and with the 2021 budget proposal, the Trumpadministration seeks to ramp up thateffort.

"That level of funding will enable us to begin to develop the groundwork for sophisticated, practical and high-impact quantum networks," says David Awschalom, a quantum engineer at the University of Chicago. "It's significant and extremely important."

A quantum internet will develop in fits and starts, much like the traditional internet did and continues to do. China has already realized an early application, quantum encryption, between certain cities, but fully quantum networks spanning entire countries will take decades, experts say. Building it willrequire re-engineering the quantum equivalent of routers, hard drives, and computers from the ground up foundational work already under way today.

Where the modern internet traffics in bits streaming between classical computers (a category that now includes smart phones, tablets, speakers and thermostats), a quantum internet would carry a fundamentally different unit of information known as the quantum bit, or qubit.

Bits all boil down to instances of nature's simplest eventsquestions with yes or no answers. Computer chips process cat videos by stopping some electric currents while letting others flow. Hard drives store documents by locking magnets in either the up or down position.

Qubits represent a different language altogether, one based on the behavior of atoms, electrons, and other particles, objects governed by the bizarre rules of quantum mechanics. These objects lead more fluid and uncertain lives than their strait-laced counterparts in classical computing. A hard drive magnet must always point up or down, for instance, but an electron's direction is unknowable until measured. More precisely, the electron behaves in such a way that describing its orientation requires a more complex concept known as superposition that goes beyond the straightforward labels of "up" or "down."

Quantum particles can also be yoked together in a relationship called entanglement, such as when two photons (light particles) shine from the same source. Pairs of entangled particles share an intimate bond akin to the relationship between the two faces of a coin when one face shows heads the other displays tails. Unlike a coin, however, entangled particles can travel far from each other and maintain their connection.

Quantum information science unites these and other phenomena, promising a novel, richer way to process information analogous to moving from 2-D to 3-D graphics, or learning to calculate with decimals instead of just whole numbers. Quantum devices fluent in nature's native tongue could, for instance, supercharge scientists' ability to design materials and drugs by emulating new atomic structures without having to test their properties in the lab. Entanglement, a delicate link destroyed by external tampering, could guarantee that connections between devices remain private.

But such miracles remain years to decades away. Both superposition and entanglement are fragile states most easily maintained at frigid temperatures in machines kept perfectly isolated from the chaos of the outside world. And as quantum computer scientists search for ways to extend their control over greater numbers of finicky particles, quantum internet researchers are developing the technologies required to link those collections of particles together.

The interior of a quantum computer prototype developed by IBM. While various groups race to build quantum computers, Department of Energy researchers seek ways to link them together.

IBM

Just as it did in the 1960s, the DOE is again sowing the seeds for a future network at its national labs. Beneath the suburbs of western Chicago lie 52 miles of optical fiber extending in two loops from Argonne National Laboratory. Early this year, Awschalom oversaw the system's first successful experiments. "We created entangled states of light," he says, "and tried to use that as a vehicle to test how entanglement works in the real world not in a lab going underneath the tollways of Illinois."

Daily temperature swings cause the wires to shrink by dozens of feet, for instance, requiring careful adjustment in the timing of the pulses to compensate. This summer the team plans to extend their network with another node, bringing the neighboring Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory into the quantum fold.

Similar experiments are under way on the East Coast, too, where researchers have sent entangled photons over fiber-optic cables connecting Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York with Stony Brook University, a distance of about 11 miles. Brookhaven scientists are also testing the wireless transmission of entangled photons over a similar distance through the air. While this technique requires fair weather, according to Kerstin Kleese van Dam, the director of Brookhaven's computational science initiative, it could someday complement networks of fiber-optic cables. "We just want to keep our options open," she says.

Such sending and receiving of entangled photons represent the equivalent of quantum routers, but next researchers need a quantum hard drive a way to save the information they're exchanging. "What we're on the cusp of doing," Kleese van Dam says, "is entangled memories over miles."

When photons carry information in from the network, quantum memory will store those qubits in the form of entangled atoms, much as current hard drives use flipped magnets to hold bits. Awschalom expects the Argonne and University of Chicago groups to have working quantum memories this summer, around the same time they expand their network to Fermilab, at which point it will span 100 miles.

But that's about as far as light can travel before growing too dim to read. Before they can grow their networks any larger, researchers will need to invent a quantum repeater a device that boosts an atrophied signal for another 100-mile journey. Classical internet repeaters just copy the information and send out a new pulse of light, but that process breaks entanglement (a feature that makes quantum communications secure from eavesdroppers). Instead, Awschalom says, researchers have come up with a scheme to amplify the quantum signal by shuffling it into other forms without ever reading it directly. "We have some prototype quantum repeaters currently running. They're not good enough," he says, "but we're learning a lot."

Department of Energy Under Secretary for Science Paul M. Dabbar (left) sends a pair of entangled photons along the quantum loop. Also shown are Argonne scientist David Awschalom (center) and Argonne Laboratory Director Paul Kearns.

Argonne National Laboratory

And if Congress approves the quantum information science line in the 2021 budget, researchers like Awschalom and Kleese van Dam will learn a lot more. Additional funding for their experiments could lay the foundations for someday extending their local links into a country-wide network. "There's a long-term vision to connect all the national labs, coast to coast," says Paul Dabbar, the DOE's Under Secretary for Science.

In some senses the U.S. trails other countries in quantum networking. China, for example, has completed a 1,200-mile backbone linking Beijing and Shanghai that banks and other companies are already using for nearly perfectly secure encryption. But the race for a fully featured quantum internet is more marathon than sprint, and China has passed only the first milestone. Kleese van Dam points out that without quantum repeaters, this network relies on a few dozen "trusted" nodes Achilles' heels that temporarily put the quantum magic on pause while the qubits are shoved through bit-based bottlenecks. She's holding out for truly secure end-to-end communication. "What we're planning to do goes way beyond what China is doing," she says.

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Researchers ultimately envision a whole quantum ecosystem of computers, memories, and repeaters all speaking the same language of superposition and entanglement, with nary a bit in sight. "It's like a big stew where everything has to be kept quantum mechanical," Awschalom says. "You don't want to go to the classical world at all."

After immediate applications such as unbreakable encryptions, he speculates that such a network could also lead to seismic sensors capable of logging the vibration of the planet at the atomic level, but says that the biggest consequences will likely be the ones no one sees coming. He compares the current state of the field to when electrical engineers developed the first transistors and initially used them to improve hearing aids, completely unaware that they were setting off down a path that would someday bring social media and video conferencing.

As researchers at Brookhaven, Argonne, and many other institutions tinker with the quantum equivalent of transistors, but they can't help but wonder what the quantum analog of video chat will be. "It's clear there's a lot of promise. It's going to move quickly," Awschalom says. "But the most exciting part is that we don't know exactly where it's going to go."

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Trump betting millions to lay the groundwork for quantum internet in the US - CNBC

Wiring the Quantum Computer of the Future: Researchers from Japan and Australia propose a novel 2D design – QS WOW News

The basic units of a quantum computer can be rearranged in 2D to solve typical design and operation challenges. Efficient quantum computing is expected to enable advancements that are impossible with classical computers. A group of scientists from Tokyo University of Science, Japan, RIKEN Centre for Emergent Matter Science, Japan, and the University of Technology, Sydney have collaborated and proposed a novel two-dimensional design that can be constructed using existing integrated circuit technology. This design solves typical problems facing the current three-dimensional packaging for scaled-up quantum computers, bringing the future one step closer.

Quantum computing is increasingly becoming the focus of scientists in fields such as physics and chemistry, and industrialists in the pharmaceutical, airplane, and automobile industries. Globally, research labs at companies like Google and IBM are spending extensive resources on improving quantum computers, and with good reason. Quantum computers use the fundamentals of quantum mechanics to process significantly greater amounts of information much faster than classical computers. It is expected that when the error-corrected and fault-tolerant quantum computation is achieved, scientific and technological advancement will occur at an unprecedented scale.

But, building quantum computers for large-scale computation is proving to be a challenge in terms of their architecture. The basic units of a quantum computer are the quantum bits or qubits. These are typically atoms, ions, photons, subatomic particles such as electrons, or even larger elements that simultaneously exist in multiple states, making it possible to obtain several potential outcomes rapidly for large volumes of data. The theoretical requirement for quantum computers is that these are arranged in two-dimensional (2D) arrays, where each qubit is both coupled with its nearest neighbor and connected to the necessary external control lines and devices. When the number of qubits in an array is increased, it becomes difficult to reach qubits in the interior of the array from the edge. The need to solve this problem has so far resulted in complex three-dimensional (3D) wiring systems across multiple planes in which many wires intersect, making their construction a significant engineering challenge. https://youtu.be/14a__swsYSU

The team of scientists led by Prof Jaw-Shen Tsai has proposed a unique solution to this qubit accessibility problem by modifying the architecture of the qubit array. Here, we solve this problem and present a modified superconducting micro-architecture that does not require any 3D external line technology and reverts to a completely planar design, they say. This study has been published in the New Journal of Physics.

The scientists began with a qubit square lattice array and stretched out each column in the 2D plane. They then folded each successive column on top of each other, forming a dual one-dimensional array called a bi-linear array. This put all qubits on the edge and simplified the arrangement of the required wiring system. The system is also completely in 2D. In this new architecture, some of the inter-qubit wiringeach qubit is also connected to all adjacent qubits in an arraydoes overlap, but because these are the only overlaps in the wiring, simple local 3D systems such as airbridges at the point of overlap are enough and the system overall remains in 2D. As you can imagine, this simplifies its construction considerably.

The scientists evaluated the feasibility of this new arrangement through numerical and experimental evaluation in which they tested how much of a signal was retained before and after it passed through an airbridge. The results of both evaluations showed that it is possible to build and run this system using existing technology and without any 3D arrangement.

The scientists experiments also showed them that their architecture solves several problems that plague the 3D structures: they are difficult to construct, there is crosstalk or signal interference between waves transmitted across two wires, and the fragile quantum states of the qubits can degrade. The novel pseudo-2D design reduces the number of times wires cross each other, thereby reducing the crosstalk and consequently increasing the efficiency of the system.

At a time when large labs worldwide are attempting to find ways to build large-scale fault-tolerant quantum computers, the findings of this exciting new study indicate that such computers can be built using existing 2D integrated circuit technology. The quantum computer is an information device expected to far exceed the capabilities of modern computers, Prof Tsai states. The research journey in this direction has only begun with this study, and Prof Tsai concludes by saying, We are planning to construct a small-scale circuit to further examine and explore the possibility.

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Wiring the Quantum Computer of the Future: Researchers from Japan and Australia propose a novel 2D design - QS WOW News

Enterprise Quantum Computing Market is Projected to Grow Massively in Near Future with Profiling Eminent Players- Intel Corporation, QRA Corp, D-Wave…

New Study Industrial Forecasts on Enterprise Quantum Computing Market 2020-2026: Enterprise Quantum Computing Market report provides in-depth review of the Expansion Drivers, Potential Challenges, Distinctive Trends, and Opportunities for market participants equip readers to totally comprehend the landscape of the Enterprise Quantum Computing market. Major prime key manufactures enclosed within the report alongside Market Share, Stock Determinations and Figures, Sales, Capacity, Production, Price, Cost, Revenue. The main objective of the Enterprise Quantum Computing industry report is to Supply Key Insights on Competition Positioning, Current Trends, Market Potential, Growth Rates, and Alternative Relevant Statistics.

TheMajorPlayers Covered in this Report: Intel Corporation, QRA Corp, D-Wave Systems, Computing, Cambridge Quantum, QC Ware, QxBranch, Rigetti, IBM Corporation, Quantum Circuits, Google, Microsoft Corporation, Atos SE, Cisco Systems & More.

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The global Enterprise Quantum Computing market is brilliantly shed light upon in this report which takes into account some of the most decisive and crucial aspects anticipated to influence growth in the near future. With important factors impacting market growth taken into consideration, the analysts authoring the report have painted a clear picture of how the demand for Enterprise Quantum Computing Driver could increase during the course of the forecast period. Readers of the report are expected to receive useful guidelines on how to make your companys presence known in the market, thereby increasing its share in the coming years.

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Enterprise Quantum Computing Market is Projected to Grow Massively in Near Future with Profiling Eminent Players- Intel Corporation, QRA Corp, D-Wave...

Deltec Bank, Bahamas – Quantum Computing Will bring Efficiency and Effectiveness and Cost Saving in Baking Sec – marketscreener.com

When you add AI and machine learning capabilities to the mix, we could potentially develop pre-warning systems that detect fraud before it even happens.

As online banking grows it is becoming a hot target for cybercriminals around the world as they become ever more adept at cracking bank security. Now, banks are looking into the technology behind quantum computing as a potential solution to this threat as well as its many other benefits. Currently, the technology is still in development but it is expected to take over from traditional computing in the next five to ten years.

What is quantum computing?

With quantum computing, the amount of processing power available is far larger than even the fastest silicon chips in existence today. Rather than using the traditional 1 and 0 method of binary computer processing, quantum computing uses qubits. Utilizing the theory of quantum superposition, these provide a way of processing 1s and 0s simultaneously, increasing the speed of the computer by several orders of magnitude.

For example, in October 2019, Google's 'Sycamore' quantum computer solved an equation in 200 seconds that would have taken a normal supercomputer 10,000 years to complete. This gives you an idea of the power that we are talking about.

So how does this help the banking sector?

1. Fraud Detection

Fraud is quickly becoming the biggest threat to online banking and data security. Customers need to feel confident that their money and their personal information is kept secure and with data leaks happening more frequently, this problem must be addressed.

Quantum computing offers significant benefits in the fight against fraud, offering enough computing power to automatically and instantly detect patterns that are commonly associated with fraudulent activity. When you add AI and machine learning capabilities to the mix, we could potentially develop pre-warning systems that detect fraud before it even happens.

2. Quantum Cryptography

Cryptography is an area of science that has recently gained popularity. The technology has proven incredibly useful in helping to secure the blockchain networks.

Quantum cryptography takes this security to an entirely new level, particularly when applied to financial data. It provides the ability to store data in a theoretical state of constant flux, making it near impossible for hackers to read or steal.

However, it could also be used to easily crack existing cryptographic security methods. Currently, the strongest 2048-bit encryption would take normal computer ages to break in to, whereas a quantum computer could do it in a matter of seconds.

3. Distributed Keys

Distributed key generation (DKG) is already being used by many online platforms for increased protection against data interception. Now, quantum technology provides a new system known as Measurement-Device Independent Quantum Key Distribution (MKI-QKD) which secures communications to a level that even quantum computers can't hack.

The technology is already being investigated by several financial institutions, notably major Dutch bank ABN-AMRO for their online and mobile banking applications.

4. Trading and Data

Artificial intelligence, machine learning, and big data are all new technologies that are currently being tested enthusiastically by banks. However, one of the biggest pain points with these technologies is the amount of processing power required.

According to Deltec Bank - "Quantum computing could quickly accelerate this research past the testing level and provide instant solutions to many problems currently facing the banking world. Time-consuming activities like mortgage and loan approvals would become instant and high-frequency trading could become automated and near error-proof."

Banks that are looking into quantum

Many major banks around the world are already investigating the potential benefits of quantum computing.

UK banking giant Barclays has worked in conjunction with IBM to develop a proof-of-concept that utilizes quantum computing to settle transactions. When applied to trading, the concept could successfully complete massive amounts of complex trades in seconds.

Major US bank JPMorgan has also expressed an interest in the technology for its security and data processing abilities. The bank has tasked its senior engineer with creating a 'quantum culture' in the business and meeting fortnightly with scientists to explore developments in the field.

Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA) is working with the Spanish National Research Council (CISC) to explore various applications of quantum computing. The team believes the technology could reduce risk and improve customer service.

Quantum Computing though still in an early stage will have a significant impact on the Banking sectors in years to come.

Disclaimer: The author of this text, Robin Trehan, has an Undergraduate degree in economics, Masters in international business and finance and MBA in electronic business. Trehan is Senior VP at Deltec International http://www.deltecbank.com. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in this text are solely the views of the author, and not necessarily reflecting the views of Deltec International Group, its subsidiaries and/or employees.

About Deltec Bank

Headquartered in The Bahamas, Deltec is an independent financial services group that delivers bespoke solutions to meet clients' unique needs. The Deltec group of companies includes Deltec Bank & Trust Limited, Deltec Fund Services Limited, and Deltec Investment Advisers Limited, Deltec Securities Ltd. and Long Cay Captive Management.

Media Contact

Company Name: Deltec International Group

Contact Person: Media Manager

Email: rtrehan@deltecial.com

Phone: 242 302 4100

Country: Bahamas

Website: https://www.deltecbank.com/

Source: http://www.abnewswire.com

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Deltec Bank, Bahamas - Quantum Computing Will bring Efficiency and Effectiveness and Cost Saving in Baking Sec - marketscreener.com

Quantum Computing Market Segmentation, Application, Technology, Analysis Research Report and Forecast to 2026 – Cole of Duty

1qb Information Technologies

Global Quantum Computing Market Segmentation

This market was divided into types, applications and regions. The growth of each segment provides an accurate calculation and forecast of sales by type and application in terms of volume and value for the period between 2020 and 2026. This analysis can help you develop your business by targeting niche markets. Market share data are available at global and regional levels. The regions covered by the report are North America, Europe, the Asia-Pacific region, the Middle East, and Africa and Latin America. Research analysts understand the competitive forces and provide competitive analysis for each competitor separately.

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Quantum Computing Market Region Coverage (Regional Production, Demand & Forecast by Countries etc.):

North America (U.S., Canada, Mexico)

Europe (Germany, U.K., France, Italy, Russia, Spain etc.)

Asia-Pacific (China, India, Japan, Southeast Asia etc.)

South America (Brazil, Argentina etc.)

Middle East & Africa (Saudi Arabia, South Africa etc.)

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Production by Region: It shows how the revenue and production in the global market are distributed among different regions. Each regional market is extensively studied here on the basis of import and export, key players, revenue, and production.

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Tags: Quantum Computing Market Size, Quantum Computing Market Trends, Quantum Computing Market Growth, Quantum Computing Market Forecast, Quantum Computing Market Analysis

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Quantum Computing Market Segmentation, Application, Technology, Analysis Research Report and Forecast to 2026 - Cole of Duty