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immunization

How COVID19 Deaths Are Counted

Photo by Rhodi Lopez on Unsplash   How COVID19 Deaths Are Counted For the past two years, the true number of COVID19 infections has been hidden due to testing mishaps. This means that the overall official counts of deaths are also inaccurate. Some health departments across the country are currently being accused of falsely inflating the real number of deaths while other departments are refusing to release data to the public. Data withheld from the public is easier to manipulate. Unfortunately, assigning a cause of death is sometimes difficult. Even before the pandemic, mistakes were made in cause of death certificates. Red tape held back data pre-pandemic, and now the same regulations make finding valid data even more challenging. The data that is available, however, suggests that deaths related to COVID19 may be undercounted. Assigning Cause of Death According to the National Association of Medica Examiners (NAME), death certificates are assigned by the physician responsible for the patient, unless the death happens outside a hospital. In cases of non-hospital deaths, the certificate is completed by a medical examiner or coroner. In some areas, such as Chicago, the medical examiner is involved in every suspected COVID19 death. Asking the medical examiner to handle all COVID19 cases help create more consistency and better documentation. However, the way the paperwork is filled out is causing confusion. The primary reason for death is listed first, and in cases of COVID19, the first cause of death is often respiratory distress or heart issues, followed by the secondary cause, COVID. This leads some people to argue that the real cause was the first listed cause. They effectively ignore the secondary cause. In many cases, without COVID19, the primary cause would not have been the cause of death. Additionally, determining that COVID19 was truly the real cause of death is difficult. If a person has a comorbid condition, such as heart disease, it can be hard to determine the cause, especially if the person dies at home. Dying with COVID is different than dying from COVID. Further, deaths among younger patients causes confusion, as these deaths prove that there are COVID symptoms outside the lungs. Young, otherwise healthy patients who catch COVID19 may not have respiratory issues; instead, they have blood clotting that leads to strokes and heart attacks. Were past early blood-related deaths actually COVID deaths? Autopsies and Answers Many wonder why an autopsy doesn’t simply provide necessary answers. Unfortunately, there is a shortage of autopsies performed, and it’s been that way since before the pandemic. Families have to pay for autopsies, and there is an ongoing forensic pathologist shortage. America currently has half the number of forensic pathologists than necessary to handle all the autopsy cases. Additionally, COVID autopsies are dangerous due to the extreme infectious nature of this virus. Simply put, COVID19 deaths are underreported simply because there was not enough knowledge of the disease when it first began. There are not enough professionals available to assess the dead, and there is some disorganization in some geographical areas regarding who fills out death certificates. All of these reasons together lead to an unsettling fact: we may never know our true COVID19 death rate. At Vancouver Home Healthcare Agency, Caring and Compassion is our Business…  

California No Longer Accepts Excuses for Immunizations

California No Longer Accepts Excuses for Immunizations California has been a step ahead of the rest of the country in many areas, and they’ve done it again, according to a report posted in the LA Times. The state has adopted the most radical vaccination laws in the nation, barring personal-belief exemptions and religion exemptions for schoolchildren. This means that parents cannot simply say, “I do not believe in vaccinations” if their children attend a California public school. The move affects a high number of schoolchildren who will need to be updated on vaccinations, and poises California for fierce court battles with immunization opponents, according to the LA Times article. Lawmakers decided it was time to throw out personal belief after a series of preventable disease outbreaks in the state. Governor Jerry Brown’s intention is to stifle the amount of parents refusing immunizations, as that number is continuing to rise in his state. Public health officials are greatly leaning on a Disneyland incident and a measles outbreak last December. A number of parents, in 2014, sought vaccination waivers over unfounded safety concerns, allowing measles to reenter the populous, and causing the December outbreak. 150 citizens were affected, according to the LA Times; a few deaths resulted. California, Mississippi, and West Virginia are the only three states in the nation to ban waivers based on religious or personal beliefs. 20 states still allow parents to waiver immunizations for school children based on religion. California is moving in a positive direction to protect their citizenship as a whole. The LA Times reports that more than 80,000 California students annually file personal belief exemptions. The new law will either find a number of children getting a lot of vaccines this year, or home school rates rising. Though exemptions will be allowed, such as those entering day care, those with physician-certified allergies, or those with immune-system deficiencies, anyone entering a public school system will need the proper paperwork. College students also need vaccinations to remain in a California state school. Brown had supported a religious exemption as recently as 2012, and faced criticism because of it. This year, hundreds of people opposed to vaccination descended on the Capitol to protest the new legislation. They argued that it would violate parents’ right to make decisions about their children’s health and interfere with their children’s right to a public education. While protests will happen, California is on the right path to eradicating diseases which have made a comeback. The diseases were nearly non-existent before, and they will become nearly non-existent again with progressive laws such as these. This is good news for anyone in Oregon and Washington, as these diseases can spread quickly and find their way up the West Coast. If you have any questions about vaccinations, who needs them, and who is getting them, please talk to us at Vancouver Home Health Care Agency. At Vancouver Home Health Care Agency, Caring and Compassion is our business.

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