Twenty more Sitkans tested positive for the coronavirus Tuesday (7-13-21), based on information added to the city’s COVID dashboard.
All but one of the patients were experiencing symptoms at the time of testing. The patients vary widely in age from a child under 10 to a woman in her 80s. Seven of the patients are in their 30s. Contact tracing is still in progress for most of the cases. So far, two of the cases are listed as “secondary,” meaning they had known contact with a COVID positive patient. One case is tied to community spread. Public health officials have not yet specified how many of the newest wave of patients are unvaccinated.
The twenty new cases push Sitka’s total active count to 67, and the rolling case rate is now the highest it has been since the pandemic began.
As of Tuesday afternoon, six patients were hospitalized at the Mt. Edgecumbe Medical Center.
In response to the dramatic surge in COVID cases, last night, the Sitka Assembly heard a report from EOC leader and Fire Chief Craig Warren and SEARHC Chief Medical Officer Dr. Elliot Bruhl. Warren and Bruhl said that the new peak has been driven mostly by unvaccinated cases. They also said that the EOC’s now recommends all Sitkans, vaccinated or unvaccinated, to wear masks in public. This diverges from current CDC guidelines, which state that fully vaccinated people can resume most activities without wearing a mask or physically distancing. But the CDC also says vaccinated Americans should still mask when required by federal, state, local, or tribal laws and regulations, including local business and workplace guidance.