New help to quit smoking; how to get the health care you need – The Union Leader

Q: You talk about this a lot, but I just bombed out one more time on my stop-smoking attempt. I have tried patches, group support, daily mantras, exercising. But I always go back. Any new ideas? --Phil Y., Dunedin, Fla.

A: Your dedication is terrific and the key to success. Dont give up! Its important to realize that doctors and researchers see tobacco use as a chronic, relapsing substance-use disorder. Getting free takes time. Around 55% of Americans who smoke tried to quit in the previous year, but only 7.5% succeeded. Most people try to quit five to seven times before they do it for good. The new news is that there are some breakthroughs in understanding whats most effective.

Incentive: Its more important than ever to quit, since a new study in Thorax found people who smoke and test positive for COVID-19 are 200% more likely to end up in the hospital and 50% more likely to report over 10 COVID-19-related symptoms, including loss of smell, skipping meals, diarrhea, fatigue, confusion or muscle pain. More symptoms indicate a more severe case of COVID-19.

A plan: A recent study in JAMA says using varenicline is more effective than a nicotine patch or bupropion and using varenicline and a patch is even more powerful, although there is a slight increase in side effects.

Varenicline is a drug that reduces cravings for and the pleasurable effects of tobacco. You can take it before you quit to help you get there and after you quit to help you stay the course. The researchers recommend that varenicline be used for 12 weeks or longer. The problem: You cant drive or operate heavy machinery while taking it, so start while youre working from home!

The study also stresses that behavioral therapy should be part of a quit plan. Check out the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions 800-QUIT-NOW for info and coaching help. You can do it!

Q: Every time I have to interact with my health insurance, a doctors office or a hospital, I end up with the nagging feeling that Im not getting the best care I could be. Why does the U.S. health care system seem like such a mess?

Jess H., Lincoln, Neb.

A: It breaks our heart, but according to a well-done new study in JAMA Internal Medicine, the U.S. spends more than $3.5 trillion per year on healthcare, 25% more per capita than the next-highest-spending country. However ... compared with countries tracked by the Commonwealth Fund, the U.S. ranks behind every country on causes of preventable mortality that could have been addressed by health system interventions.

Where does that leave you? With a lot of work to make sure you stay healthy and a lot of work to make sure youre getting the best care you can. Fortunately, you can accomplish those things if you follow some pretty straightforward advice. In his upcoming book The Great Age Reboot, Dr. Mike predicts that scientific breakthroughs in aging research will help you live 30 years longer and younger. But you need to adopt a great lifestyle to benefit fully from these scientific breakthroughs. So here are four steps to help you regain control of your wellbeing day-to-day and when interacting with the health care system.

1. Follow the lifesaving nutritional advice in Dr. Mikes book What to Eat When and look at OzTube on doctoroz.com (search for exercise) for a complete rundown of activity choices.

2. Stay up to date with your regular checkups and vaccinations dont put it off.

3. Go to your doctor with written-out questions; take a family member or friend with you so they can ask questions too. Insist on being heard. Never hesitate to go for a second opinion.

4. If you go into the hospital, arrange to have the patient ombudsman talk to you so you know your rights, have an advocate and get answers to questions especially if family cannot be at your bedside.

Mehmet Oz, M.D. is host of The Dr. Oz Show, and Mike Roizen, M.D. is Chief Wellness Officer Emeritus at Cleveland Clinic. Email your health and wellness questions to Dr. Oz and Dr. Roizen at youdocsdaily@sharecare.com.

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New help to quit smoking; how to get the health care you need - The Union Leader

Delawareans Will Have New Opportunity to Gain Health Insurance Through HealthCare.Gov from Feb. 15 to May 15 – State of Delaware News -…

NEW CASTLE (Feb. 9, 2021) Delawareans looking for affordable health insurance will have an additional opportunity to sign up for coverage including tax credits for eligible enrollees that help to reduce monthly premiums significantly from Feb. 15 to May 15 on HealthCare.gov, the federal online Health Insurance Marketplace created by the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

In light of the exceptional challenges and uncertainty caused by the coronavirus pandemic, President Joe Biden signed an executive order Jan. 28 that created a three-month special enrollment period (SEP) to give Americans greater access to health insurance, including those who lost their job or their coverage as part of the fallout from the pandemic.

Access to affordable health care remains a critical need for all Delawareans as we continue to fight the spread of the coronavirus. I am grateful to President Biden for giving state residents this additional opportunity to get the coverage they need, said Delaware Gov. John Carney. I encourage everyone to spread the word about the benefits of enrolling in coverage through HealthCare.gov during this three-month sign-up period.

This special enrollment period provides a great opportunity for Delawareans who are looking for high-quality, affordable health insurance, especially those impacted by the pandemic, said DHSS Secretary Molly Magarik. Despite the success of the Health Insurance Marketplace since it opened eight years ago, many state residents still lack insurance, and some might remain unaware that they can access comprehensive care and, in many cases, get financial help to afford it through HealthCare.gov.

The marketplaces annual open enrollment period for 2021 coverage ended Dec. 15, and since then individuals could get coverage only if they experienced a life event that qualified them to apply for a special enrollment period. The new three-month enrollment period is open to all eligible applicants who want to apply for coverage or change their existing coverage for any reason; applicants wont be required to provide documentation of a qualifying event (e.g., loss of a job or birth of a child).

Individuals currently covered under a marketplace plan will be able to change to any plan available in Delaware without being restricted to the same level of coverage as their current plan. Current enrollees will need to go through their existing application and make any necessary changes then submit their application in order to receive an updated eligibility result.

Eligible individuals who enroll under the special enrollment period will have 30 days after they submit their application to choose a plan. Note that even after the special enrollment period ends May 15, individuals who experience qualifying life-changing events will be eligible to enroll for marketplace coverage. (It is also worth noting that proof of insurance is not required to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, once your group becomes eligible.)

Delaware is one of 36 states that use HealthCare.gov for eligible residents to sign up for coverage. More than 25,000 Delawareans signed up for 2021 coverage during the recent open enrollment period.

The special enrollment period is available to all marketplace-eligible individuals who are submitting a new application or updating an existing application. You can enroll in marketplace coverage at http://www.HealthCare.gov or http://www.CuidadodeSalud.gov or by calling 1 (800) 318-2596 (TTY: 1 855 889-4325).

Applicants will need to provide the following when applying for coverage:

About 6.6 percent of Delawareans remain uninsured, according to the 2020 Americas Health Rankings. Thats down significantly from the nearly 10 percent who lacked insurance in 2010 before the ACA and the Health Insurance Marketplace existed.

For nearly a year, we have hoped that the Health Insurance Marketplace would allow for greater enrollment opportunities in response to the pandemic and economic conditions. President Biden has made it happen, said Insurance Commissioner Trinidad Navarro. This Special Enrollment Period will help ensure Delaware residents have access to comprehensive health insurance that protects pre-existing conditions. And, because weve reduced rates by more than 19% over the past two years, these plans are more affordable for residents.

Support from Congressional delegation

Delawares U.S. senators and representative urged uninsured or underinsured Delawareans, especially those who may have lost their jobs because of the pandemic, to find out whats available for them on the marketplace during the three-month enrollment period.

President Biden understands that it is critical for Americans to be able to access the care and coverage they need during an unprecedented pandemic. Thats why hes beginning a new open enrollment period so that Delawareans, and families across this country, have another chance to enroll in a health insurance plan and get covered this year, said U.S. Sen. Tom Carper, who helped pen the Affordable Care Act that created the marketplaces. Dont leave your familys well-being to chance. Enroll in an affordable, high-quality health insurance plan today that meets your needs and your budget.

I commend the Biden administration for reopening the federal online Health Insurance Marketplace, which will allow Delawareans, particularly those impacted by COVID-19, another opportunity to sign up for the health insurance coverage that best meets their needs, said U.S. Sen. Chris Coons. Ensuring that Delawareans have access to quality, affordable health care is critical, even more so during a pandemic. I urge all Delawareans who need health coverage to assess their options during this three-month special enrollment period.

As we continue to face the COVID-19 pandemic, and Americans are in need of affordable and accessible care, it is crucial that comprehensive health coverage is available to all those that need it, said U.S. Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester. A special enrollment period is critical for allowing Delawareans in need of health insurance to sign up. Im grateful to President Biden for reopening the Health Insurance Marketplace and ensuring that everyone who needs coverage has access.

Whats covered

All plans on the marketplace offer essential health benefits such as coverage of pre-existing medical conditions, outpatient care (including telehealth services), emergency services, hospitalization, prescription drugs, mental health and substance use disorder services, lab services, and pediatric services.

Marketplace plans cant terminate coverage due to a change in health status, including diagnosis or treatment of COVID-19. The rules in marketplace plans for treatment of COVID-19 are the same as for any other viral infection; enrollees are encouraged to check their particular plan for complete information about benefits.

Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield Delaware is the sole health insurer offering plans on Delawares Health Insurance Marketplace for 2021. Highmark offers 12 plans for individuals and families. Two dental insurers Delta Dental of Delaware, Inc. and Dominion Dental Services, Inc. offer a collective 11 stand-alone dental plans on the marketplace.

Affordability

About 86 percent of marketplace enrollees in Delaware in 2020 were eligible for federal tax credits, which help reduce the cost of the monthly premium.

Tax credits are available for those whose household income is between 138 percent and 400 percent of the Federal Poverty Level. For 2021 coverage, thats between $17,609 and $51,040 for an individual, or between $36,156 and $104,800 for a family of four.

According to the most recent figures from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the overall average monthly premium in Delaware in 2020 was $668, with the average premium reduced to $192 per month after tax credit. For the 86 percent of Delawareans who received financial assistance, the average premium after tax credit was $110 per month.

Plans on the marketplace are spread among metal-level categories bronze, silver, gold and platinum and are based on how enrollees choose to split the costs of care with their insurance company. Bronze plans have low monthly premiums but high costs when you need care; gold plans have high premiums but lower costs when you need care. In a silver plan, the insurer pays about 70 percent of medical costs and the consumer pays about 30 percent. For any marketplace plan in 2021, individual consumers cant pay more than $8,550 in out-of-pocket medical costs and families cant pay more than $17,100.

Catastrophic plans are also available to some people. Catastrophic plans have low monthly premiums and very high deductibles. They may be an affordable way to protect yourself from worst-case scenarios, like getting seriously sick or injured. But you pay most routine medical expenses yourself.

Consumers who pick silver health care plans might also qualify for additional savings through discounts on deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance. In Delaware, about 29 percent of current enrollees qualify for cost-sharing reductions.

Where to find help

Delawareans who want help enrolling in coverage will have access to free assistance from trained specialists at Westside Family Healthcare. Virtual and phone appointments are encouraged; in-person appointments are limited and must be made in advance. Because of the pandemic, walk-ins are not permitted. Assistance is available in any language and for all Delaware residents. Call 302-472-8655 in New Castle County, 302-678-2205 in Kent/Sussex counties or email enrollment@westsidehealth.org.

State-licensed insurance agents and brokers are also available to help individuals re-enroll and to help employers update their coverage, at no extra charge. See a list at ChooseHealthDE.com.

Medicaid

President Bidens executive order also called for states to reexamine policies, such as work requirements, that restrict access to coverage through Medicaid, which pays medical bills for eligible low-income families and others whose income is insufficient to meet the cost of necessary medical services. This part of the presidents order does not affect Delaware, which under the ACA expanded access to Medicaid starting in 2014. More than 10,000 Delawareans have received coverage under the states Medicaid expansion. To be screened for eligibility or to apply for Medicaid benefits year-round, go to Delaware ASSIST.

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Delawareans Will Have New Opportunity to Gain Health Insurance Through HealthCare.Gov from Feb. 15 to May 15 - State of Delaware News -...

What Health Care Providers and Facilities Should Know About the PREP Act’s "Covered Countermeasures" – JD Supra

As many businesses and those in the health care industry wonder what protections, if any, they have against COVID-19-related litigation claims, Jackson Walker's Healthcare practice chair, Virginia Mimmack, and healthcare litigator Brad Nitschke discuss the patchwork laws and regulations of federal, state, and local governments. While the PREP Act allows for certain "covered countermeasures" for litigation claims, the expansion of telehealth services beyond traditional state borders raises questions about what protections are provided Seemore+

As many businesses and those in the health care industry wonder what protections, if any, they have against COVID-19-related litigation claims, Jackson Walker's Healthcare practice chair, Virginia Mimmack, and healthcare litigator Brad Nitschke discuss the patchwork laws and regulations of federal, state, and local governments. While the PREP Act allows for certain "covered countermeasures" for litigation claims, the expansion of telehealth services beyond traditional state borders raises questions about what protections are provided for COVID-19-related activities performed by telehealth workers. Seeless-

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What Health Care Providers and Facilities Should Know About the PREP Act's "Covered Countermeasures" - JD Supra

Health Care Workers Hit Hard by the Coronavirus Pandemic – The New York Times

Dr. Sheetal Khedkar Rao, 42, an internist in suburban Chicago, cant pinpoint the exact moment when she decided to hang up her stethoscope for the last time. There were the chaos and confusion of the spring, when a nationwide shortage of N95 masks forced her to examine patients with a surgical mask, the fears she might take the coronavirus home to her family and the exasperating public disregard for mask-wearing and social distancing that was amplified by the White House.

Among the final blows, though, were a 30 percent pay cut to compensate for a drop in patients seeking primary care, and the realization that she needed to spend more time at home after her children, 10 and 11, switched to remote learning.

Everyone says doctors are heroes and they put us on a pedestal, but we also have kids and aging parents to worry about, said Dr. Rao, who left her practice in October. After awhile, the emotional burden and moral injury become too much to bear.

Doctors, paramedics and nurses aides have been hailed as Americas frontline Covid warriors, but gone are the days when people applauded workers outside hospitals and on city streets.

Now, a year into the pandemic, with emergency rooms packed again, vaccines in short supply and more contagious variants of the virus threatening to unleash a fresh wave of infections, the nations medical workers are feeling burned out and unappreciated.

Over the last year, there have been the psychological trauma of overworked intensive care doctors forced to ration care, the crushing sense of guilt for nurses who unknowingly infected patients or family members, and the struggles of medical personnel who survived Covid-19 but are still hobbled by the fatigue and brain fog that hamper their ability to work.

Researchers say the pandemics toll on the nations health care work force will play out long after the coronavirus is tamed. The impact, for now, can be measured in part by a surge of early retirements and the desperation of community hospitals struggling to hire enough workers to keep their emergency rooms running.

Everyone wants to talk about vaccines, vaccines, vaccines, but for our members, all they want to talk about is work force, work force, work force, said Alan Morgan, chief executive of the National Rural Health Association. Right now our hospitals and our workers are just getting crushed.

Some health care experts are calling for a national effort to track the psychological well-being of medical professionals, much like the federal health program that monitors workers who responded to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

We have a great obligation to people who put their lives on the line for the nation, said Dr. Victor J. Dzau, president of the National Academy of Medicine.

Celia Nieto, 44, an intensive care nurse in Las Vegas, said many Americans had scant appreciation for the tribulations that she and her colleagues face day after day. There is the physical exhaustion of lifting and turning patients on their bellies so they might breathe easier, the never-ending scramble to adjust ventilators and pain medication, and the mental anguish of telling relatives she doesnt have the time to help them FaceTime with their loved ones.

It feels like were failing, when in actuality were working with what weve got and we dont have enough, she said. We feel quite helpless, and its a real injury to our psyches.

Dr. Donald Pathman, a researcher at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said he was struck by the early results of a study he has been conducting on the pandemics effect on clinicians who serve in poor communities. Many of the 2,000 medical, dental and mental health professionals who have participated in the survey so far say they are disillusioned.

There is a lot of personal trauma, Dr. Pathman said. Many people have been scarred by their experiences during the pandemic, and they will look to leave their practices.

In interviews, doctors who have recently left the field or are considering early retirement said the pandemic had exacerbated frustrations spurred by shifts in the business of medical care that often required them to work longer hours without increased compensation.

In a survey released in September by the online site Medscape, two-thirds of American doctors said they had grappled with intense burnout during the pandemic, with a similar percentage reporting a drop in income. A quarter of respondents said their experiences with Covid had led them to exit the medical field.

Another survey, by the Physicians Foundation, found that 8 percent of doctors in the United States had closed their offices during the pandemic, translating to 16,000 fewer private practices.

Feb. 14, 2021, 8:48 p.m. ET

Dr. Erica Bial, a pain specialist from suburban Boston who barely survived Covid-19 last spring, said she felt increasingly drained.

We put on our masks and come to work every day because we dont have the luxury of working from home in our pajamas, but the apathy and ennui thats taken hold of society just makes our job feel thankless, said Dr. Bial, who works full time despite struggling with the lingering effects of her illness. Its so demoralizing.

Staffing shortages have been especially acute at nursing homes and long-term care facilities. They were already struggling to retain employees before the pandemic, but many are now facing an existential shortage of skilled workers. According to a study released last week by the nonpartisan U.S. PIRG Education Fund, more than 20 percent of the nations 15,000 nursing homes reported severe shortages of nursing aides in December, up from 17 percent in May, a significant jump over such a short period.

As more and more medical staff members fall ill or quit, those who remain on the job have to work harder, and the quality of care invariably suffers, said Dr. Michael L. Barnett, assistant professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health who served as a consultant to the study.

Its a recipe for a collapse in the work force, he said.

So far, the federal government has shown little interest in addressing what Dr. Dzau, of the National Academy of Medicine, writing in The New England Journal of Medicine, described as a parallel pandemic of psychological trauma among health workers.

He and other experts say the government should start by making a concerted effort to accurately count medical worker infections and fatalities.

There is no comprehensive federal government count of worker deaths. But according to a tally by Kaiser Health News and the Guardian, more than 3,300 nurses, doctors, social workers and physical therapists have died from Covid-19 since March.

Experts say the death toll is most likely far higher. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention counts 1,332 deaths among medical personnel, which is striking given that its sister agency, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, lists roughly the same number of deaths just among nursing home workers a small portion of those employed by the nations hospitals, health clinics and private practices.

A number of studies suggest that medical professionals made up 10 percent to 20 percent of all coronavirus cases in the early months of the pandemic though they comprise roughly 4 percent of the population.

Christopher R. Friese, a researcher at University of Michigan, said the governments failure to track health care workers had most likely contributed to many unnecessary deaths. Without detailed, comprehensive data, he said, federal health authorities have been hamstrung in their ability to identify patterns and come up with interventions.

The number of health care worker deaths in this country are staggering, but as shocking and horrifying as they are, we cant be surprised because some very basic tools to address the crisis were left on the shelf, said Dr. Friese, who directs the schools Center for Improving Patient and Population Health.

Jasmine Reed, a spokeswoman for the C.D.C., acknowledged the limitations of its coronavirus case data, noting that the agency relies on reporting from state health departments and that can vary according to the state. At least a dozen states do not even participate in the C.D.C.s reporting process, she said.

Many medical workers who have survived Covid-19 face more immediate challenges. Dr. Bial, the pain specialist from Boston, is still plagued by fatigue and impaired lung function.

The day before I got sick, I could comfortably run eight to 10 miles, said Dr. Bial, 45, who started a Facebook group memorializing doctors lost to Covid. Now I go out for a brisk walk and my heart is pounding. Im starting to wonder whether these effects could be permanent.

Dr. Andrew T. Chan, a professor at Harvard Medical School and a gastroenterologist at Massachusetts General Hospital who has been studying the pandemics disproportionate toll on health care workers, said his preliminary research suggested that long haulers in the medical field suffer greater health challenges than the overall population. That is in part because they are often exposed to increased levels of virus, which can lead to more severe illness.

Another factor, he said, is that the worsening staffing shortages in much of the country lead many Covid survivors to return to work before they have fully recovered.

Health care workers are likely to experience a greater risk of long-term complications, Dr. Chan said. Covid could impact our health care system for years to come by not only depleting our work force but by impairing the ability of survivors to do their jobs.

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Health Care Workers Hit Hard by the Coronavirus Pandemic - The New York Times

These Are The States Attempting to Pass Anti-Trans Health Care Bills – Human Rights Campaign

Now, theyre targeting our communitys health care.

This legislative session, states across the country are trying to prevent transgender youth from receiving gender-affirming healthcare.

Right now, theres at least 15 bills targeting the trans community and our ability to seek medical care. Heres a running list of some of the bills were tracking, and what you can do to help:

ALABAMA

This anti-trans medical bill in Alabama (HB 1/SB 10) is called Vulnerable Child Compassion and Protection Act. Despite its name, this bill has nothing to do with compassion or protection - and seeks to harm trans youth, not protect them. This bill would impose criminal penalties on medical professionals and parents who provide best practice gender-affirming care to trans youth.

This is an appalling overreach. Alabaman legislators are trying to tell parents how to care for their trans kids -- and theyre dead wrong.

Fight back now. If you live in Alabama, you can help us.

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These Are The States Attempting to Pass Anti-Trans Health Care Bills - Human Rights Campaign

Many health care workers turned down their COVID vaccine. Here’s why – KGW.com

Data show about 62% of nursing home workers nationwide have not gotten vaccinated for COVID-19. Many Portland hospital employees have also declined the vaccine.

PORTLAND, Ore. While thousands of people are still waiting to get the vaccine, there is a large group not getting it when offered.

According to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), about 62% of nursing home workers across the country have not gotten the vaccine.

The CDC looked at more than 11,000 senior living facilities that held one vaccination clinic between mid-December and mid-January. While 78% of residents got the shot, only 37.5% of staff members did.

Melissa Unger, executive director for SEIO 503, which represents 73,000 nursing and home health care aides across Oregon, said there are several reasons why she believes workers declined the shot.

Unger said this is a young workforce with a distrust of government. Many nursing home workers have low wages and a difficult relationship with their employer.

Unger also said a large percentage of nursing home workers are people of color, who are historically vaccine hesitant.

"There are a lot of reasons. These are some of the first people to get it, lots of these people have had COVID because there's been massive outbreaks, so they question, do they need it? So, there's just a lot of factors that I think are really coming into play, said Unger, who believes most nursing home workers will eventually get the shot.

Its not just nursing home workers. Some hospital employees are also declining or refusing the COVID vaccine.

KGW Investigates checked with the major hospital systems in the Portland and found:

A spokesperson for OHSU said they dont have a number of who refused of declined the vaccine. Kaiser and Legacy Health officials told KGW they don't keep track of how many employees declined the vaccine.

Some workers have cited side effect concerns or wanting to give the shot to someone more vulnerable as reasons why they waited.

Its not a great idea for the people that are bathed in COVID like we are to refuse to get it because they themselves can be spreaders, said Dr. Mauricio Heilbronn, vice chief of staff at St. Mary Medical Center in Long Beach, California.

Dr. Heilbronn urges people in health care and everyone else to get it for themselves, for their families and to achieve the long-awaited herd immunity across the country.

This has been like a nightmare science fiction, horror movie for the last two months, three months. Anything we can do to keep people out of the hospital, we'll do that. And the vaccine will do that.

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Many health care workers turned down their COVID vaccine. Here's why - KGW.com

‘It happened so quickly’: Health-care workers lose everything in house fire – 9News.com KUSA

Mike and Tara Wiesner have spent a year on the frontlines helping people dealing with devastation, only to now deal with their own.

ERIE, Colo. A bag of dog food thudded as Allison Frary pushed it away with her foot. Donated jackets and pants were piled on her couches, and shoes covered her floor. She looked around and laughed at how cluttered the front room of her home had become.

"I dont like to look over there," she said as she stared at the charred home across the street. "But this happened because of that, so its nice to remember whats going on."

It was about 1 a.m. Wednesday when Frary ran out of her home in Erie to see the orange glow of a fire coming from her neighbor's house.

"It was my daughter," Frary said. "She heard Tara screaming for help and frantically started screaming for help for us to wake up because our neighbor's house was on fire."

The neighbors, Mike and Tara Wiesner, made it out safely along with their kids and dogs. A puppy and a guinea pig couldn't be saved. Mountain View Fire said the cause of the fire at the home on Parkdale Circle has not been released yet, but they didn't think it was suspicious.

"It happened so quickly that if our son hadn't woken us up, that would have been it," Mike Wiesner said.

"I just kept counting the children, just making sure all the kids were out," Tara Wiesner said.

Mike is a respiratory therapist, and Tara is a nurse case manager. Their year has been spent on the frontlines, helping people deal with devastation, only to come home to their own.

"My husband and I are no strangers to seeing people in peril and seeing people that were devastated by fire," Tara said. "Weve seen a lot go on this past year."

While the couple knows all too well how quickly anguish can spread, so can a little kindness, especially when it comes from just across the street.

"I asked them their sizes when they were here the night of the fire," Frary said as she folded a T-shirt. "Every member of the family has their own wardrobe now."

Frary said she couldn't sit around and replay those screams in her head. She needed to do something. She put the call out for donations the morning after the fire. Within hours, her living room was packed with clothes, toiletries, food and school supplies. She created a GoFundMe as well, and it raised more than $37,000 in a couple of days.

"It was just pretty much an instinct," she said. "I knew that they pretty much lost everything, their whole life that they have been working for. If they were in my shoes, I would just hope that they would do that same."

While houses may make up a neighborhood, they don't create a community. The Wiesner family realized it's compassion that really makes a neighborhood whole and believes theirs is worth rebuilding for.

"It's amazing the kindness that people can show you when something happens," Tara said. "Why would you ever want to leave that type of environment?"

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'It happened so quickly': Health-care workers lose everything in house fire - 9News.com KUSA

Healthcare equity and Alzheimers is the focus of March 3 virtual town hall – cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Alzheimers Association will host a virtual town hall examining the relationship between access to health care and the deadly disease from 5 to 6:30 p.m. March 3.

Those interested in the free event should register online here.

The impacts of the coronavirus pandemic continue to expose disparities in healthcare access that overwhelmingly affect communities of color. And underserved populations contend with elevated rates of Alzheimers and other dementias as well as COVID-19.

According to the Alzheimers Association, Black populations are twice as likely as whites to develop Alzheimers or another dementia. Hispanics are 1.5 times more likely.

Complicating the picture, particularly for caregivers, CDC data confirms that minorities are at greater risk of contracting COVID-19.

Case Western Reserve University researchers recently released a study indicating that Black Americans with dementia are nearly three times as likely to become infected with COVID-19 as their white counterparts.

In general, Black Americans are also more prone to factors associated with vascular disease, including diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol, that may put them at risk for Alzheimers and stroke-related dementia.

The town hall -- named for distinguished University of Michigan social psychologist James S. Jackson, who explored links between racial disparities and minority health -- will be hosted by Carl V. Hill, chief diversity, equity and inclusion officer for the Alzheimers Association, and Peter Lichtenberg, president of the Gerontological Society of America.

Speakers from The Ohio State University, the University of Michigan, Michigan State University, West Virginia University, the Michigan Alzheimers Disease Research Center and the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute will provide valuable insights.

According to Hill, it is important to examine disparities in health care because the research highlights contextual factors for Alzheimers and other dementia risk.

For example, he explained, cardiovascular health and stress may be part of the pathways to Alzheimers and other dementia for disproportionately affected communities.

Eric VanVlymen, Ohio regional leader of the Alzheimers Association, said the organization remains committed to funding national research initiatives that target minorities.

Such initiatives include the new IDEAS study, which aims to enroll 4,000 African-American and Latino participants to determine whether amyloid PET scans improve diagnosis and treatment of Alzheimers.

The association also continues to work with partners in Ohio and nationwide to improve outreach and ensure that all communities have equal access to opportunities for early detection and diagnosis of the fatal illness.

Being there in the community and working within the community is so critically important, said Hill. Its an unparalleled opportunity to translate research findings and engage all communities using community-based participatory strategies.

Hill hopes that all who attend the town hall will walk away with a stronger commitment to health equity and inclusion as part of the overall effort to defeat Alzheimers and other forms of dementia.

The Alzheimers Association is the leading voluntary health organization involved with Alzheimers care, support and research. The associations 24/7 help line can be reached at 800-272-3900.

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Healthcare equity and Alzheimers is the focus of March 3 virtual town hall - cleveland.com

Escalating Cyberattacks on Healthcare Organizations Highlight Need for Security Interventions – HIT Consultant

Michelle Drolet, CEO of Towerwall,

Healthcare organizations have faced continual stress from heavy COVID-19 caseloads in 2020. Cyberattacks on their information networks also loomed as a serious threat, and the pressure to protect data is expected to grow this year, as more criminals target healthcare providers.

Protecting patient data from unauthorized access has long been a regulatory prerequisite for healthcare organizations. But increasingly, cybercriminals see profit potential in attacking and crippling their networks, and restoring operations carry a high cost, both in the expense of repairing IT capabilities, as well as lost revenue, productivity hits, and erosion of community trust.

The rising pressure to protect data systems is prompting healthcare IT security executives to take a hard look at security procedures, and ways to identify and secure potential network weaknesses.

Attacks on the Rise

The need to batten down security hatches has grown in recent months, as COVID-strained healthcare has been hit with devastating cyberattacks, and government agencies warned that more could be coming.

In late October, the FBI and two federal agencies warned that they had credible information of an increased and imminent cybercrime threat to U.S. hospitals and healthcare providers. The potential attacks were attributed to a Russian-speaking criminal gang targeting providers with TrickBot and BazarLoader malware, leading to ransomware attacks, data theft, and service disruption. The agencies noted that the issues will be particularly challenging for organizations within the COVID-19 pandemic.

The federal warning came on the heels of several high-profile security breaches. In one attack, UVM Health Network had about 5,000 network computers rendered inoperable by a system outage that lasted 40 days; about 300 workers were furloughed because the outage prevented them from doing their jobs. The organization noted that its IT staff had to rebuild the entire infrastructure before re-populating it with backed up files and data, in addition to scanning and cleaning 5,000 computers and endpoints that had been infected. Hospital executives estimate the total cost of the attack at more than $63 million.

Another large cyberattack crippled Universal Health Services, a large hospital system that had a massive IT network outage in late September. The IT outage for the health system lasted eight days after a malware attack; it used downtime protocols and paper records during the outage.

Some reporting suggested that attackers are mounting ransomware attacks on healthcare system networks and charging higher-than-usual fees for its removal, suggesting that criminals may be targeting as many as 400 different facilities across the country.

More broadly, attacks are being aimed at the entire healthcare sector, according to reports from Microsoft. The technology company reported that it has detected cyberattacks from three nation-state actors targeting seven prominent companies directly involved in researching vaccines and treatments for COVID-19.

In addition, providers could face monetary fines from the Office of Civil Rights of the Department of Health and Human Services, which has the prerogative of assessing fines on healthcare organizations or business associates for lack of compliance with HIPAA and willful neglect of practices that protect patient information. As of November 2020, OCR has settled or imposed penalties in 92 cases, resulting in fines of almost $130 million.

Boosting Security Efforts

To counter these threats, healthcare organizations are taking a variety of steps to improve their security postures. Protecting healthcare information is increasingly becoming a challenge because of growing pressure for healthcare entities to distribute healthcare information to better coordinate care, engage with patients and comply with regulations forbidding information blocking. Also, the COVID-19 pandemic has fostered the use of remote patient monitoring and telehealth services, which increase the amount of patient information being exchanged on provider networks.

An important component of ensuring information security for provider organizations involves regularly testing the defenses that protect access to crucial networks. Penetration testing is one way to check for the effectiveness of cyber defenses before potential incidents, rather than afterward, when patient care can be disrupted and expensive to resolve.

Also known as a pen test, the exercise simulates a cyberattack against a healthcare organizations network to check for vulnerabilities that attackers could exploit. Pen testing can involve outside white hat hackers who attempt to breach application systems to find vulnerabilities, such as unprotected inputs that are susceptible to code injection attacks.

Pen testing can be complex, looking for weaknesses that can be exploited by insiders as well as outside attackers. It can involve significant preplanning in terms of reconnaissance, analysis of how systems and defenses respond to different forms of attack, and attempted exploits of weaknesses of systems such as cross-site scripting, SQL injection, and backdoor efforts as well as human engineering efforts, such as different forms of phishing attacks to see if system users need training so they dont give their network login codes to cybercriminals.

Analysis of such efforts also is complex, assessing which vulnerabilities were found and exploited, if any sensitive patient data or administrative systems could be accessed, or how long a pen tester could remain in the system undetected after gaining access.

Many organizations conduct annual penetration tests, subjecting defenses to internal, external and application attacks designed to emulate real attacks. In addition, healthcare organizations do such testing to meet compliance obligations for standards such as the NIST 800-35 CIS ISO 27001, the PCI DSS, and SOC2, which require businesses to conduct regular penetration tests and security reviews using skilled third-party testers.

But the threat environment for healthcare organizations is always changing, and cybercriminals are constantly honing their skills to access networks and extract value from their attacks. To effectively protect critical systems and private health information, healthcare organizations need to develop customized approaches, utilizing the latest techniques, tools, and technical expertise from outside the organization to understand vulnerabilities and develop an actionable remediation plan.

About Michelle DroletMichelle Drolet is the CEO and co-founder of Towerwall a woman-owned cybersecurity company. She serves as chairperson of the Board of Directors. As one of Towerwalls resident cybersecurity experts, Ms. Drolet assists organizations through the risk mitigation process to help them protect critical data by the evaluation, establishment, education, and enforcement of sound cybersecurity, network security, and data security practices. Reach her at michelled@towerwall.com.

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Escalating Cyberattacks on Healthcare Organizations Highlight Need for Security Interventions - HIT Consultant

Who can afford healthcare these days? | Journal-news – Martinsburg Journal

David Shapiro

Romney

With CoVid 19 spreading out of control, health care must be available and affordable for everyone.

With up to 300,000 people falling sick every day and up to 5,000 people dying daily from CoVid 19 (New York Times) the U.S. is at war with the virus. About 123,000 West Virginians have already gotten CoVid 19 and 2000 have died. Millions of Americans struggle to make ends meet. President Biden announced on Friday, January 22 that it will get worse before it gets better. (CNBC) https://cnb.cx/3rr1KDI

Thirty million people dont have health insurance. Another 44 million have such bare-bones coverage that they are always worried about the costs of getting care. (Commonwealth fund)

The Affordable Care Act (ACA or Obamacare) has helped people with pre-existing conditions to get health care.

Bidens current efforts to further strengthen the Affordable Care Act would include

Because private insurance company-based health care is pricey, Biden proposes an alternative, public, government-managed option to try to lower the costs. Is it a good idea or not?

Some say that it would be too expensive. My answer: If the public option is more expensive than your current option, dont take it. World Health Organization explains that US is the most expensive system in the world and the better government run systems cost half or less of the US system.

Some people say that taxes will increase. However, we might pay for it directly, without raising taxes. And if the participants do pay for the public option in taxes, the rise in taxes would likely cost less than the amount you pay now to private insurance.

Some people are concerned that it would not give as good health care coverage. However, the World Health Organization (WHO) ranked US 37 this year (and the past 15 years) in longevity and health care quality. The better programs were national government programs.

But will there be limitations to so that I cannot see my chosen doctor or hospital? The plan can be designed so that one can choose the doctor and hospital you want.

What if I want to stay with my current private insurance plan? its your option to stay with our current plan.

These changes would lower the cost of health care. And that is just what all of us West Virginians need in this health care crisis.

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Who can afford healthcare these days? | Journal-news - Martinsburg Journal

Since vaccinations began, fewer health care workers in Richmond have tested positive – Richmond.com

On Dec. 16, VCU injected its first vaccine into the arm of Audrey Roberson, a nurse manager of the medical respiratory intensive care unit. Within days, thousands of health care workers and their support staffs at VCU, Bon Secours and HCA received their first shot.

Six days later, the infection rate of VCU health care workers decreased 25%. By Jan. 19, 60% of VCU employees had received their first shot, and the number of sick employees had dropped 50% from its peak a month earlier. That means the vaccine seemingly made an impact before employees received their second dose.

The Pfizer vaccine trials reported recipients received a level of protection from the virus as early as 12 days after administration of the first dose. At VCU, 14 days after an employee received an inoculation, he or she was less likely to test positive than an employee who did not receive the vaccine, the letter writers wrote.

The Moderna vaccine arrived at VCU on Dec. 28. The hospital system offered immunizations to all of its 13,000 employees. As of this week, 69% have received both shots, and 60% have received one shot, the health system reported. Nearing its goal, VCU wants to vaccinate at least 70% of its employees.

At HCA, the seven-day average of associates calling out because of COVID has dropped 78% since the beginning of the year, spokesman Jeff Caldwell said. Other factors may have contributed besides the vaccine, Caldwell said, including a decline in overall hospitalizations, general fluctuation in COVID cases and the continued implementation of safety measures such as hand washing and masking.

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Since vaccinations began, fewer health care workers in Richmond have tested positive - Richmond.com

An Art Lover’s Guide to the Bahamas – Travel+Leisure

Editor's note: Those who choose to travel are strongly encouraged to check local government restrictions, rules, and safety measures related to COVID-19 and take personal comfort levels and health conditions into consideration before departure.

In 2004, at age nine years old, I decided I wanted to be an artist. That was the year my mother took me and my two siblings to the opening of a biennial exhibition at the National Art Gallery of the Bahamas. I remember being overwhelmed by the works on display, and by my mother's pride in her colleague Dereck Paulan architect like her, whom we had come to support. Seeing his vibrant mixed-media portrait,Mangra Skin,awakened a curiosity I needed to explore. In what order had he applied the bright colors of the woman's face? Why had he placed a pomegranate on the subject's head?

Shortly after we left, I announced to my mother, "I could do that too!" My mother typically surrounded us with other artists and creative people, so I held a strong confidence in the viability of this career path. She didn't hesitate to encourage me to make it a reality.

Like most aspiring artists here, I studied fine art at the College of the Bahamasand that's when I met the NAGB's chief curator, John Cox, who would become a recurring figure in my career. I couldn't have imagined that, 15 years after that museum visit, I would have the opportunity to work with Cox at one of the country's most prestigious new institutions: Current Gallery & Art Center, where he is now creative arts director.

Cox's sculpture Blessed Redeemer hangs inside of the Current, in front of his painting Aunt Ethel Meets the Kennedys. | Credit: Melissa Alcena

The Current is located at Baha Mar, a 1,000-acre luxury resort complex that looks out over the pristine waters of picturesque Goodman Bay. The artist-run initiative is a commercial gallery, but more importantly it serves as an incubator for educational and professional development. Since it opened in the summer of 2017, it's given the community a sense of how much potential there is in the Bahamian arts scene.

Bahamian art has been historically underrepresented on the global stage. That's partially because the world still sees the Bahamas through the lens of 'sun, sand, and sea.'

Between its three hotels (Grand Hyatt, Rosewood, and SLS) and its meeting spaces, Baha Mar houses the country's largest collection of Bahamian works, with 2,500 pieces from artists based across the archipelago. As such, visitors at Baha Mar are greeted with local art and culture at every turnfrom Heino Schmid's immense mixed-media pieces in the Convention Center to Dede Brown's aluminum bird sculpture in the rotunda of the SLS.

"My goal is to show a much more complex picture of who we are," Cox explained in a recent conversation. "I'm trying to present Bahamian-ness to guests in a way that is relatable, dynamic, and progressive."

From the beginning, Cox has developed experiences that are not only forward-thinking and true to the nation's spirit but also approachable to a broad range of travelersincluding those who may not automatically gravitate toward painting or sculpture.

The Current participates in international fairs and hosts an array of events, from poetry readings and plays to on-site concerts and classes for kids. Cox clearly feels a deep responsibility to the artists he works with. "It's important to me to allow the Bahamian arts community access to the space, as well as to opportunities for growth and visibility," he noted.

Unlike more traditional galleries, where exhibitions can last anywhere from two months to two years, the Current favors pop-ups, each lasting just a week or two, so Baha Mar guests are met with different pieces on every visit. Between presentations, the staff routinely changes out artwork within the consignment space, which means a greater number of artists can be featured.

Bahamian art has been historically underrepresented on the global stage. That's partially because we often struggle to cohesively articulate our identity in a contemporary way, but also because the world still sees the Bahamas through the lens of "sun, sand, and sea." While those elements have undoubtedly shaped our country, the roots of our culture run much broader and deeper.

Over the past decade, there's been a movement to showcase a more nuanced side of the Bahamas. In 2014, the nonprofit Creative Nassau helped establish Nassau as a UNESCO Creative City of Crafts and Folk Arts, which sparked island-wide conversations about the importance of the Orange Economy, a term used to describe a country's artistic industries. Since tourism is our main economic engine, bringing in about half of the country's GDP, how could we use the Orange Economy to enhance the way visitors experience Bahamian culture?

The Current has been a key force in making this idea a realityin no small part through its three-month artists' residencies. I applied in December 2019 and began the following January, with the intention of expanding on the ideas of exoticism, home, and Black Americana that I had started exploring as a student. Though the residency was cut short by the pandemic, I completed a collection of 12 oil paintings, relief prints, and sculptures. Perhaps more importantly, I learned the value of working in a sustained community and having a regimented artistic practice.

From left: June Collie in front of her mural Mindfulness; At the End of the Day by June Collie. | Credit: Melissa Alcena

Other Bahamian artists who have participated in the Current's residency program have also been profoundly impacted by the experience. "Listening to how Bahamians and guests from all over the world viewed my work was energizing, and it encouraged me to express new ideas without fear of ridicule," said muralist June Collie, an April 2019 artist-in-residence whose painted stools depicting curvaceous Black women can still be seen in the gallery.

Now Harris-Smith, a street photographer who focuses on the ideas of masculinity and otherness, has been able to use the Current as both a trial run and a launchpad. "It was the first time I exhibited my photography on a wider scale," she said of her show, "Aperture." "It gave me the courage to continue photographing subjects in my own unique way."

Painter and songwriter Navarro Newton's experience drives home just how wide-ranging the opportunities are. Natascha Vazquez, the Current's former curatorial manager, came across his abstract mixed-media paintings during the gallery's rolling consignment call. With about 40 pieces completed, Newton met with Vazquez to discuss the work in person, and their conversation blossomed into "Synesthesia," an exhibition that ran for a week last February.

From left: Nassau-born photographer Now Harris-Smith; her work Water. | Credit: Melissa Alcena

Two days after the opening, Newton joined Warp Trio, an internationally acclaimed contemporary classical group from the U.S., to perform two of his original songs at the gallery. The collaboration speaks directly to Cox's vision for the future of the Current. "The evolution for me, in terms of programming, is really trying to get Baha Mar to create dynamic connections to other cultural and artistic institutions, like universities and schools," he explained.

As the Covid-19 pandemic swept the world last winter, lockdowns meant the Current was forced to cancel my show (and many other events). Still, our community has remained resilient. Musicians have held virtual concerts. DJs have hosted livestreamed parties. Actors have rehearsed and recorded plays via Zoom. Bahamian artisans even launched digital marketplaces to sell their work.

From left: Detail of The Sinner, by John Cox; John Cox, creative arts director of Baha Mar's Current Gallery & Art Center. | Credit: Melissa Alcena

Last spring, the government of the Bahamas assembled an Economic Recovery Committee that has an Orange Economy Subcommittee. The inclusion of the creative industries is a testament to the work of institutions like the Current and the National Art Gallery of the Bahamas and organizations like Creative Nassauall of which recognize the arts can be just as lucrative as our "sun, sand, and sea."

The magic of the Current is that it shows culture does not have to be fabricated, just highlighted, and that the people who make it happen should be given resources to help them evolve. Cox points out that access and community are necessary for any industry within a small developing island nation, and I agreethose factors allow someone like me to succeed.

Although he and his team present a diverse depiction of Bahamian identity within the space itself, they leave room for visitors' curiosity. Each time I return, I wonder if any nine-year-olds will come through Baha Mar, see an artwork, and feel the same sense of awakening I did.

From left: Student aprons hang below paintings by Bahamian artist Samantha Treco inside the workshop space at Current; Cabbage Beach, on Paradise Island in the Bahamas. | Credit: Melissa Alcena

At press time, Baha Mar plans to reopen in phases, beginning with the Grand Hyatt and the Current on December 17. In addition to welcoming hotel guests back into the gallery and studio space, the Current will host private outdoor workshops, lectures, and art classes. The gallery will also be launching an e-commerce store to sell art and provide curatorial services.

A version of this story firstappearedin the February 2021 issue of Travel + Leisure under the headlineBeyond the Sea.

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An Art Lover's Guide to the Bahamas - Travel+Leisure

The Bahamas Ministry of Tourism Announces "From The Bahamas With Love" Virtual Romance Expo – PRNewswire

NASSAU, Bahamas, Feb. 9, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --The Bahamas, one of the world's leading destinations for weddings and honeymoons, is gearing up to host two virtual events - From The Bahamas With Love - to showcase the vast offerings for romantic escapes throughout the destination. The expo will bring together industry leaders, partners, hotels, venues and services for a truly unique and educational experience for trade and consumer participants.

The virtual events will kick off on Wednesday, March 3, 2021 (from 1pm to 4pm EST), with an afternoon planned specifically for trade professionals, including travel agents and event planners. The second day will be held on Wednesday, March 10, 2021 (from 4pm to 7pm EST), and is open to consumers, including soon-to-be engaged or recently engaged couples, future brides and grooms, bachelorette party planners, honeymoon do-over seekers and more.

The pandemic has caused many couples to postpone or reimagine their romantic getaways over the last year, and the destination wants to ensure future planning is made as seamless as possible in 2021. From the Bahamas With Love will feature a diverse series of panel discussions with experts from across all romance industry sectors, along with opportunities to network directly with partners. Those attending will enjoy a literal "taste" of The Bahamas from home via the following activities and experiences:

"With intimate, secluded cays, unmatched turquoise waters and pink- and white-sand beaches, it's easy to understand why The Bahamas is considered one of the world's most romantic destinations," said Joy Jibrilu, Director General of the Bahamas Ministry of Tourism & Aviation. "With so many offerings available, we are thrilled to connect consumers to experts across a number of industries through our virtual romance expo experience to ensure the ease of planning a romantic Bahamian getaway, especially after so many plans were upended this last year."

Whether couples are planning a wedding, anniversary, honeymoon or simply a romantic escape - the virtual expo offers invaluable access to experts, resources to take all of the stress away from planning and allow more time to find out why It's Better in The Bahamas.

Links to register for the events:

Travel Trade (March 3):https://www.bahamas.com/from-the-bahamas-with-love-tradeConsumer (March 10):https://www.bahamas.com/from-the-bahamas-with-love-consumer

PRESS INQUIRIESAnita Johnson-PattyGeneral Manager, Global Communications Bahamas Ministry of Tourism & Aviation[emailprotected]

Weber ShandwickPublic Relations[emailprotected]

ABOUT THE BAHAMASWith over 700 islands and cays and 16 unique island destinations, The Bahamas lies just 50 miles off the coast of Florida, offering an easy fly away escape that transports travelers away from their everyday. The Islands of The Bahamas have world-class fishing, diving, boating and thousands of miles of the earth's most spectacular water and beaches waiting for families, couples and adventurers. Explore all the islands have to offer at http://www.bahamas.comor on Facebook,YouTubeor Instagramto see why It's Better in The Bahamas.

SOURCE The Bahamas Ministry of Tourism and Aviation

http://www.bahamas.com

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The Bahamas Ministry of Tourism Announces "From The Bahamas With Love" Virtual Romance Expo - PRNewswire

BPC Looks Beyond The Bahamas for 2021 – Rigzone News

Shortly before Christmas, Bahamas Petroleum Co. plc (LON: BPC) revealed that it had spudded a well 10-plus years in the making off The Bahamas with Stena Drillings IceMAX drillship.

BPC reported Monday that drilling has concluded at the Perseverance #1 well after encountering non-commercial volumes of oil. The well, drilled to approximately 12,795 feet (3,900 meters), will now be permanently plugged and abandoned, the company noted in a written statement.

I am proud to say that after many years of diligent effort we did what we said we would do: BPC drilled the Perseverance #1 well safely and without incident, testing for the presence of hydrocarbons in the Southern Seas of The Bahamas, remarked Simon Potter, BPCs CEO. This was the very specific objective of the well not a scientific or geologic experiment, but to seek hydrocarbons in commercial quantities.

At a technical level, Perseverance #1 did validate the existence of oil, seal, and reservoir and verify the existence of a working Lower Cretaceous petroleum system and sequences of reservoir quality, Potter stated.

Perseverance #1 is the first exploration well in The Bahamas for decades, and the data gathered from this well will prove invaluable in providing a modern analysis as to the regional potential of the petroleum system, which, in our view, reduces technical risk for any future/further exploration in this new frontier province, said Potter.

BPC pointed out that it will review technical data and drilling results from Perseverance #1, presenting the findings to the Bahamas government to comply with license obligations. The review will also consider renewing farm-in discussions and future drilling within its license areas, the firm added.

Beyond The Bahamas, BPC is also focusing on its planned 2021 work program in Trinidad and Tobago and Suriname as well as prospect/lead maturation potential in Uruguay from reprocessed seismic data, the company noted.

Elsewhere in the portfolio, in Trinidad we have producing oil fields and, in combination with assets in Suriname, we have upcoming drilling programs scheduled in 2021, such that the near-term operational activity focus will now shift toward those activities, commented Potter. All of us at BPC are resolute in support of the diversification strategy embarked on during 2020, and we remain intent on delivering the potential that is latent across the entire portfolio.

To contact the author, email mveazey@rigzone.com.

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BPC Looks Beyond The Bahamas for 2021 - Rigzone News

Emergency Preparedness and Risk Reduction Plan in the Caribbean 2021 – Bahamas – ReliefWeb

IOM Vision

IOM in the Caribbean region is recognised as a robust actor in preparedness, disaster risk reduction and emergency response and works in close coordination with government entities, international and national organizations, civil society organizations and communities at regional, national and local levels. The vision and the activities of IOM in the Caribbean link to the 3 pillars of the IOM Strategic Vision: Resilience, Mobility and Governance. This Caribbean Crisis Response Plan is mainly geared towards increasing the resilience of individuals, families, communities, institutions and populations to withstand shocks and stresses linked to environmental and biohazards. The preparedness and disaster risk reduction (DRR) work will tie in with longer-term initiatives in the region to make the region safer for all.

CONTEXT ANALYSIS

The Caribbean has been historically recognised as one of the regions of the world most prone to a wide range of natural hazards, including hurricanes, floods, landslides, occasional earthquakes and volcanic eruptions[1]. The island states are particularly susceptible to these events, due to common factors such as the small and tourism-dependent economies, the topography, the geographic location, as well as the relative lack of comprehensive land-use and environmental protection regulations. Over the last 20 years, disasters have directly affected 12 million people in the Caribbean on average, and not a single year has passed in which disasters in the Caribbean have not claimed lives. Hurricane Maria and Irma in 2017 and Dorian in 2019 have caused significant loss of lives, displacement and billions of dollars in damages to the economy, infrastructure and houses which have to be repaired after each event.

The countries and islands targeted under this Crisis Response Plan (Bahamas, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Commonwealth of Dominica, Guyana, Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago) for the Caribbean are home to approximately 33 million people. Apart from Guyana, which is located on the continent, all the countries and territories covered by this Plan are small island developing states (SIDS) or small island overseas territories. The Caribbean islands are very diverse in culture, state of development, size and demographics. Fifteen states are organized in The Caribbean Community (CARICOM or CC) which has the primary objectives to promote economic integration and cooperation among its members, to ensure that the benefits of integration are equitably shared, and to coordinate foreign policy.

The Caribbean has witnessed numerous waves of migration throughout history, the effects of which have shaped current day society in each respective country in unique manners. The current migration trend is from countries with a lower GDP per capita like Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Cuba toward high-income countries like The Bahamas, St. Kitts and Nevis, and the United States of America. The region is beset by high unemployment, ageing demographics, high levels of non-communicable diseases, persistent gender inequalities, xenophobia and crime. The life expectancy in the Caribbean is 75 years for women and 70 years for men[2] which is lower than the wider Latin America and Caribbean ( LAC) average.

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Emergency Preparedness and Risk Reduction Plan in the Caribbean 2021 - Bahamas - ReliefWeb

COVID recoveries hold at 82 percent in The Bahamas – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS The Bahamas recovery rate of COVID-19 cases has surpassed the 80 percent mark for the 26th consecutive day.

A month ago, the recovery rate reached just over 79 percent, after remaining in the mid-70 percentile for months.

The recovery rate first surpassed the 80 percent mark on January 13.

At the time, there were 8,021 cases, of which 6,607 had recovered 81.1 percent.

Two days later, the recovery rate increased to over 83 percent.

As of Sunday, there were 8,289 confirmed cases in The Bahamas.

Of those, 1,223 cases remained active while 6,837 had recovered.

This means the recovery rate as of Sunday was 82.4 percent.

Health officials also confirmed an additional two cases on the virus one on Eleuthera and another case that had a pending location.

Twelve patients remain hospitalized, though none of them require intensive care.

There have been 176 confirmed deaths and 38 non-COVID-deaths, where infected individuals died of other causes.

However, another 15 have deaths have remained under investigation for more than a month.

Since January 8, there has been only one additional COVID-related-death.

On December 21, the Ministry of Health confirmed that five deaths under investigation were COVID-19-related.

Three men and two women, all of whom were from New Providence and between the ages of 35 and 61, died between September 29, 2020 and December 20, 2020.

This reduced the number of deaths under investigation to 20.

Another four deaths under investigation were confirmed as COVID-19-related on January 2.

These included three Grand Bahamian women and a Grand Bahamian man, ranging in age from 59 to 60, who died between November 12, 2020 and December 13, 2020.

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COVID recoveries hold at 82 percent in The Bahamas - EyeWitness News

Trio Stranded in the Bahamas Survived on Coconuts, Rats for 33 Days – The Daily Beast

Three people were rescued off a deserted island in the Bahamas on Tuesday after being stranded for 33 days. The group survived on rats, coconuts, and conch, according to the U.S. Coast Guard, which spotted the group on Monday while patrolling the area. The two men and one woman, all Cuban citizens, were taken to the Lower Keys Medical Center and were reported to be dehydrated but not seriously injured. The Coast Guard reported on Wednesday that they had since been transferred to ICE custody.

Its unclear how they got to the island or why they were in the area. The Coast Guard rescue was delayed until Tuesday due to weather. I cannot recall a time that we saved people who were stranded for over a month on an island, U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer 2nd Class Brandon Murray told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. That is a new one for me.

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Trio Stranded in the Bahamas Survived on Coconuts, Rats for 33 Days - The Daily Beast

Newscaster dies while traveling on a yola to the Bahamas – Dominican Today

File photo of the young Deyaniris Minaya Duarte.(External source)

The lifeless body of a young newscaster was found in Buen Hombre beachs waters in the Montecristi province. According to the community media, the young woman was Deyaniris Minaya Duarte,the mother of three children.

They report that Minaya Duarte, 38, was found in a state of decomposition off the beach located in the Villa Vsquez municipality, Montecristi province.

Illegal trips continue to cause deaths, bringing pain and mourning to Dominican families.

In recent months, many people have succumbed in the waters of the Atlantic Ocean, trying to cross the Mona Channel and reach the island of Puerto Rico, in search of new horizons.

Today the death of a communicator, Deyaniris Minaya Duarte, was reported. Duarte allegedly drowned while on an illegal trip to the islands of Turks and Caicos.

Nine people were on that trip, but the authorities have not given details about the tragic event.

From early in the morning of this past Friday, the news began to circulate about the disappearance of the communicator, who resides in Santo Domingo, but was a native of the municipality of Nagua, in the northeast of the country.

Police sources said that there are four people arrested, who were traveling in the boat, along with the communicator.

It was also reported that the vessel was wrecked several miles off the north coast and that four of the travelers were rescued by another vessel on the high seas, including the captain.

According to t the authorities, the boat left the coast of Puerto Plata and was stolen in Playa La Ensenada, in Punta Rucia.

The lifeless body of my former colleague from D&H news and varieties has been found on the high seas, we regret having to give such bad news, and of someone as close to one as fellow workers, the lifeless body will undergo an autopsy to determine if there were also criminal hands in her death, wrote a colleague of Minaya Duarte.

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Newscaster dies while traveling on a yola to the Bahamas - Dominican Today

6 Things to Know: Rescue in the Bahamas, Parkland Dad Joins Congresswoman Calling for New Gun Control Laws – NBC 6 South Florida

It's Thursday, Feb. 10th, and NBC 6 has your top news stories of the day.

It's a warm Thursday morning with many of us well into the 70s. This is courtesy of a southeast breeze enveloping the region. Click here for your full forecast, or scroll down.

Crews from the United States Coast Guard rescued three Cuban nationals who reportedly were stranded on a deserted island near the Bahamas for more than a month after their boat capsized and they swam ashore.

A news release said a crew from the Air Station Miami spotted the three people while on a routine patrol Monday near Anguilla Cay. Coast Guard officials say the three people told them they had been on the island for 33 days.

Read more here.

As residents of Parkland approach, Feb. 14 with a sense of dread, a New York Congresswoman is talking gun control laws.

U.S. Representative Carolyn Maloney, (D) New York, is using this occasion, the three-year mark of the horrific mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, to introduce a package of five gun control bills, and she was joined in that effort by an activist Parkland dad.

Since my daughter was killed, Id love to say weve done some really tremendous things on a national level, but we havent," said Fred Guttenberg in a virtual news conference. "The truth is the epidemic of failure to deal with this issue has continued."

Read more here.

Homeowners say they handed thousands of dollars in deposits to a South Florida company to install custom window treatments, but the work never got done.

Local residents Adam Klein and Robert Liguori say they paid Mark Block hefty deposits that were worth more than half of the total for the projects.

I dont care if it is a dollar or $5,000, he needs to be stopped, Klein said.

Its not the first time NBC 6 Responds has heard about this business owner.

In 2019, three homeowners told NBC 6 Responds that Block took their deposits and never completed the work he was contracted for.

Read more here.

Florida is increasing COVID-19 vaccine doses for seniors on the state's west coast, Gov. Ron DeSantis said Wednesday morning.

DeSantis held a news conference in Venice Wednesday where he announced more doses would be allocated to counties on Florida's Gulf coast, including Manatee, Charlotte and Sarasota.

Leon County leads the state with about 61% of seniors receiving shots, DeSantis said. Palm Beach County was near 50%, DeSantis said. Statewide, about 35% of Florida's 4.5 million seniors have received a shot.

Read more vaccine updates here.

Controversy is on the menu again at La Placita restaurant in the MiMo District of Miami.

The city has yet again ordered the restaurant to paint over their mural of the Puerto Rican flag. Jos Mendn, chef and owner of La Placita, posted a picture of the violation notice on his Instagram.

"After everything that weve gone through, before with the flag and now with the pandemic, after getting our business back, after getting people back to their restaurants, this is what we have to deal with right now," Mendn said. "Its very unfair."

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From meteorologist Adam Berg:

Temperatures are running very warm yet again early Thursdaymorning with many of us well into the 70s. This is courtesy of a southeast breeze enveloping the region. The breeze isn't strong, but just strong enough to keep the fog away for now. We will stay muggy today with only a 10% chance of showers as highs creep into the low-mid-80s. Friday offers more of the same.

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6 Things to Know: Rescue in the Bahamas, Parkland Dad Joins Congresswoman Calling for New Gun Control Laws - NBC 6 South Florida

Forbes: Bahamas has flattened curve of second wave – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS Director of the National HIV/AIDS and Infectious Disease Programme Dr Nikkiah Forbes said The Bahamas has passed the point of flattening the curve of the second wave of COVID-19, but due to ongoing cases on a daily basis, the wave is not over.

Speaking to Eyewitness News, Forbes said:We have been seeing numbers that are in the single digits and low double digits.

Some days, it is in the teens. So, thats very good. What that means is we have flattened the curve of the second wave.

But the reality is COVID-19 has not gone away, because we are still seeing cases every day, even though the curve has flatlined and the number of new cases are at a level where the healthcare system can function.

Its not too much pressure on the healthcare system whereby the healthcare system is overwhelmed, were out of bed capacity and that translates into deaths at the end of the day.

We look at other metrics that are also quite good. We look at the percent positives in the total samples, we look at total number of cases per day, hospitalizations and deaths.

And those have stayed fairly constant and, again, below the capacity of the healthcare system to cope. Thats a very good thing.

So, what you can say is that the curve, the crest, of the second wave has flattened. We are beyond that point, but the pandemic has not gone away. There are still cases.

The first wave of the virus spanned from mid-March to early July.

During that period, only 104 cases of the virus were confirmed.

There were 11 COVID-19-related deaths in the first wave in The Bahamas.

As of Wednesday, cases of the virus had reached 8,311, of which 1,148 remained active.

Another 6,931 have recovered.

This represents a recovery rate of 83 percent.

Eyewitness News reported on Monday that the recovery rate has surpassed the 80 percent mark for nearly a month.

According to Forbes, the number of recoveries is a good indicator and health officials want that figure to be as high as possible.

Remember, if you dont recover that means that you still actively have [an] infection or that the person has died, she said.

And so, deaths remaining low, that should mean that active cases of COVID are reduced, so there should be less transmissible persons if all the variables remain the same and there is no outbreak or surge. Thats what that means.

There have been 178 confirmed COVID-19 deaths.

Sixteen deaths remain under investigation.

Another 38 deaths were classified as non-COVID-related as those people died from other illnesses.

The Bahamas continues to prepare for the arrival of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine.

It is expected to receive 100,000 doses of the vaccine in two tranches beginning this month.

According to the National COVID-19 Vaccine Consultative Committee, headed by Dr Merceline Dahl-Regis, the committee was in the process of finalizing its distribution plan, some of which it presented to the public last week.

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Forbes: Bahamas has flattened curve of second wave - EyeWitness News