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Several new outbreaks of COVID-19 cases were reported this week in La Plata County, notably at Vallecito Baptist Church where 12 attendees recently tested positive. As of Thursday at Four Corners...
DATE: Dec. 16, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
A crowd of medical staff at Mercy Regional Medical Center burst into applause at 12:02 p.m. Wednesday as a doctor received the COVID-19 vaccine – the first dose to be administered in La Plata...
DATE: Dec. 16, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
The first doses of vaccine to protect local frontline health workers in Montezuma County from COVID-19 arrived Wednesday at Southwest Memorial Hospital. The Cortez hospital received an initial...
DATE: Dec. 16, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
Kyle Mullica, a state representative who also works as an emergency room nurse, received his first dose of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine on Wednesday, saying he hopes to show others that the...
DATE: Dec. 16, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
AZTEC – San Juan County announced additional cases of COVID-19 within the county offices and detention center. Devin Neeley, spokesman for San Juan County, said as of Monday, 13 county employees...
DATE: Dec. 15, 2020 | CATEGORY: New Mexico
Public health officials warned Monday of a worsening COVID-19 outbreak at Hilltop House, a community corrections and rehabilitation center in Durango. As of Monday, the halfway house had 25...
DATE: Dec. 15, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
Colorado Gives Day brought in “record-breaking” donations for Southwest Colorado nonprofits this year, according to the Community Foundation Serving Southwest Colorado. Colorado Gives Day is a...
DATE: Dec. 15, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
The death toll at a Durango nursing home experiencing an outbreak of COVID-19 is up to five people, with nearly all residents now testing positive for the virus, according to San Juan Basin Public...
DATE: Dec. 14, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
The owner of the Wild Horse Saloon, who opened last weekend in defiance of public health orders, said she will not open this weekend but vowed to keep fighting the regulations. Because of a high...
DATE: Dec. 11, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
SANTA FE – New Mexico’s governor and top health officials are trying to fend off a flurry of lawsuits by businesses owners who say financial losses caused by the state’s pandemic health orders...
DATE: Dec. 11, 2020 | CATEGORY: Business
Economic leaders in Durango are looking to piggyback on an effort that started in Mesa County that gives businesses, especially restaurants, more breathing room to operate if they follow strict...
DATE: Dec. 11, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
Residents in Southwest Colorado are buying guns in record numbers this year, but finding places to train and practice shooting are in short supply. Jane Gustafson, co-owner of Good for the Woods,...
DATE: Dec. 11, 2020 | CATEGORY: Local News
If you have tested positive for COVID-19, OR if you develop fever, cough, and shortness of breath, follow these instructions. These instructions are for people who have been told to isolate or who are voluntarily isolating due to symptoms.
Isolation
How long does it last?
What else should I do?
Stay home, except to get medical care.
Monitor your symptoms
Separate yourself from other people and animals in your home.
If possible, wear a facemask when you are around other people or pets, and before you enter a health care provider’s office.
If you are not sick, but think you may have been exposed (in close contact with someone) who is sick, follow these instructions. These instructions are for people who have been told to quarantine, or who are voluntarily quarantining because they have a household member or close contact that has tested positive for COVID-19 or is exhibiting symptoms such as fever, cough and shortness of breath.
Quarantine
How long does it last?
What else should I do?
Stay home, or in your same location, except to get medical care.
Isolation and quarantine help protect the public by preventing exposure to people who are sick or have been exposed to people who are sick. This can include people who have tested positive for COVID-19, as well as people who have not been tested but have the symptoms of COVID-19 (fever, cough and shortness of breath). Generally, as long as the site is suitable, a person’s residence is the preferred setting for quarantine and isolation, according to the CDC.
Isolation and quarantine help protect the public by preventing exposure to people who are sick or have been exposed to people who are sick. This can include people who have tested positive for COVID-19, as well as people who have not been tested but have the symptoms of COVID-19 (fever, cough and shortness
of breath). Generally, as long as the site is suitable, a person’s residence is the preferred setting for quarantine and isolation, according to the CDC.
Isolation
Quarantine
There is an expanding outbreak of respiratory illness caused by a novel or new coronavirus, first identified in Wuhan, China in early December 2019. This means that before this current outbreak, people had never experienced or been made sick by this virus. Cases have been detected in a number of countries, including the United States, with cases confirmed in Colorado.
**Colorado is experiencing limited community spread of COVID-19, meaning people are becoming infected and the source could not be identified. Learn more here. With community spread, the everyday precautions below and prevention for higher risk people becomes crucially important.
There is no vaccine for COVID-19, but there are many everyday actions you can take to protect yourself from getting COVID-19. These are the same actions that can protect you from getting any respiratory illness.
With the increased spread of the highly contagious COVID-19 (novel coronavirus), social distancing, or an effort to reduce close contact between people and slow community transmission of the virus has become an increasingly vital strategy to fight the disease.
Social distancing is particularly important in protecting vulnerable populations from getting sick with COVID-19. This includes older adults, people with cardiac or lung illness, and people with diabetes.
Social distancing steps:
Social distancing is particularly important in protecting vulnerable populations from getting sick with COVID-19. This includes older adults, people with cardiac, lung, or kidney disease, and people with diabetes. People at higher risk should take action now to be prepared for this virus if there is an outbreak in their community. For people at higher risk, preparing means being ready to stay at home as much as possible if there is an outbreak in the community and paying extra attention to everyday actions like staying away from sick people, washing your hands frequently, and avoiding crowds.
Community interventions such as closures of public agencies, buildings, school, ski areas, libraries, and events are ways to create social distancing and reduce the spread of COVID-19. Through these closures, local public health officials, elected officials, school superintendents, and businesses owners are prioritizing the protection of the health of local residents and visitors. We also need your help in these efforts. Everyone’s daily preventive actions are important in reducing spread to people who may experience more severe illness.
Together, we can make a difference by committing to responsible choices that will best support our resilient community.
If you are at higher risk (including older adults and people with serious medical conditions such as heart disease, lung disease and diabetes) of getting very sick from COVID-19, you should:
Since COVID-19 is a new disease and there is more to learn about the virus, the current understanding about how it spreads is largely based on what is known about similar respiratory illnesses.