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Tag: maryland department of health

  • Maryland joins multistate coalition to buck Trump administration vaccine policies – WTOP News

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    Maryland has joined a growing coalition of states that are setting their own public health guidelines to counter the Trump administration’s more restrictive vaccine policies, a health department spokesperson said Thursday.

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.

    The Maryland Department of Health believes joining the Northeast Public Health Collaborative will help “protect the health, safety and well-being” of Marylanders.(Danielle E. Gaines/Maryland Matters)

    Maryland has joined a growing coalition of states that are setting their own public health guidelines to counter the Trump administration’s more restrictive vaccine policies, a health department spokesperson said Thursday.

    As part of the Northeast Public Health Collaborative, Maryland joins a cohort of states that are developing vaccine recommendations and other public health guidelines amid growing skepticism of federal health rules being set under the Trump administration.

    “The Maryland Department of Health continues to explore all options to ensure broad vaccine access,” the spokesperson said in a prepared statement. “Part of this effort includes joining the bipartisan Northeast Public Health Collaborative where Maryland will partner with other states and jurisdictions to help protect the health, safety and well-being of our communities.

    “This collaborative will make decisions based on scientific evidence and strive to ensure equitable access to quality health care,” the statement said.

    Other states involved in the collaborative include Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont. New York City is also a major player.

    A handful of Northeastern states have been discussing such a collaboration since the start of the Trump administration and have held informal meetings – but it officially launched Thursday.

    The collaborative was created largely in response to more restrictive COVID-19 vaccine recommendations issued by federal health and safety agencies under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has questioned the effectiveness of certain vaccines, including COVID-19.

    The launch of the collaborative comes as the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is meeting to create new recommendations that could further limit access to COVID-19 vaccines, among other vaccinations. ACIP is scheduled to vote on the recommendations Friday.

    Kennedy recently added board members who have questioned the safety of current vaccine policies. Their decisions this week could affect whether certain vaccinations will be required to be covered by insurance, which would greatly impact access to the shot.

    In late August, the FDA approved an updated COVID-19 vaccine for seniors and those with health issues that suppress their immune system – a change from previous vaccine guidance that recommended the shot for everyone older than 6 months. The recommendation sparked concern that access to the COVID-19 vaccine would be cut off for some people who do not fall in those categories.

    Top medical societies, such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, pushed back on the federal COVID-19 vaccine recommendations. On Aug. 19, the academy recommended that “all young children ages 6-23 months get vaccinated against COVID-19, along with older children in certain risk groups.”

    The Northeast Public Health Collaborative has already released its own recommendations on COVID-19 vaccinations that largely align with the AAP’s recommendation as well as with the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the American Academy of Family Physicians.

    Ensuring access to vaccinations and other public health needs has been a concern for the Moore administration since President Donald Trump took office for his second term.

    Before the state joined the collaborative, Gov. Wes Moore (D) assured Marylanders that access to vaccinations would be protected in the state for the time being. In May, he signed legislation that required insurers to cover vaccinations that had been recommended by ACIP as of December 2024, avoiding any change to coverage based on upcoming ACIP recommendation. That law took effect June 1.

    “This protects against the withdrawal of vaccine coverage for a range of illnesses, not just COVID-19,” according to a recent statement from the governor’s office.

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    Diane Morris

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  • Another year, another rise: Maryland hospitals see 4th consecutive year of medical error spikes – WTOP News

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    Medical mistakes that led to either death or severe disabilities are apparently on the rise in Maryland, according to a new report from the state’s Department of Health.

    Medical mistakes that led to either death or severe disabilities are apparently on the rise in Maryland, according to a new report from the state’s Department of Health.

    The report, highlighting data from fiscal year 2023, marks the fourth consecutive year that Maryland hospitals have seen an increase in such incidents, starting with the increase in 2020.

    In fiscal 2023, the Maryland Department of Health said there were 957 adverse events reported, including 808 Level 1 events.

    Level 1 events are described as “an adverse event that results in death or serious disability.” The latest report marked a 5% increase in such incidences, according to the report.

    Pressure injuries were the most frequently reported Level 1 event for the latest report, but were down 2% from the previous year. These types of injuries include ulcers, which commonly happen because of failure to turn and reposition patients with limited mobility and offload pressure in hospital beds, the report found.

    Medical tubes and devices caused 30% of in-hospital pressure injuries. “Proper positioning and securing of medical tubes and devices is crucial to pressure injury prevention,” the report states.

    Falls were the second-most reported event, with a 22% increase from fiscal 2022, according to the report.

    (Courtesy Maryland Public Health Administration)

    The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality reports that more than one-third of hospital falls result in injury, including serious injuries such as fractures and head trauma.

    The state report mentions one fall patient in particular who was transferred from an outside hospital with leukemia. The nursing staff at the hospital assessed the patient as a “standard fall risk,” as they had no prior fall history.

    However, that patient was later diagnosed as nonverbal with a subdural hematoma after they hit the back of their head on a closet door while walking to the bathroom, according to the report. At the time of the fall, the patient was reported as having a “sudden urinary and fecal incontinence.”

    The report stated that the patient had become nonverbal during CT testing.

    An investigation into that incident revealed the patient should have been classified as “high-risk” due to their “diagnosis, comorbidities, and medications,” the report said. Investigators also believe the IV pole was a factor in the fall.

    “Since the patient’s risk for falls was not assessed accurately, appropriate interventions were not in place, such as a room closer to the nursing station or the use of a bed alarm,” the report stated.

    Delays in treatment are the third-highest reported event, and may happen due to “inadequate assessments, communication failures, or human factors, such as timely diagnostic testing, labs, and imaging.”

    The department said the trend of increased medical mistakes could be caused by workforce shortages and residual effects from the pandemic.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Valerie Bonk

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  • Maryland health department confirms 1st human case of West Nile virus this year – WTOP News

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    The Maryland Department of Health said Friday that an adult living in central Maryland has tested positive for West Nile virus, which is the first confirmed human case in the state so far this year.

    The Maryland Department of Health said Friday that an adult living in central Maryland has tested positive for West Nile virus, which is the first confirmed human case in the state so far this year.

    The patient is currently recovering from the infection. The health department did not confirm which county the person is residing, citing patient confidentiality issues.

    The virus is transmitted to humans through infected mosquitoes that have contracted the disease through birds. In rare cases, the virus can also be spread from person to person through organ donation, blood transfusion or from a pregnant woman to a fetus.

    “We urge people to be vigilant and take steps to avoid infection, such as eliminating standing pools of water where mosquitoes can breed,” Deputy Secretary for Public Health Services Dr. Meg Sullivan said in a statement.

    In 2024, 18 Maryland residents tested positive for West Nile virus.

    Nearly 80% of those infected with the disease do not develop symptoms, but some may experience mild symptoms, such as fever, headache and body aches, as well as skin rashes or swollen lymph lands. Symptoms can last anywhere from a few days to several weeks.

    The virus, which mainly affects the nervous system, is often more severe for those over 50 or those with previous health conditions once infected.

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    DC Health urges residents to take precautions after several birds test positive for West Nile virus

    D.C. health officials also recently came across four dead American crows that tested positive for the virus in Wards 2, 3, 5 and 7. D.C. Health recommended residents to take precautions by wearing long-sleeved clothing and wear EPA-approved mosquito repellent.

    The Maryland health department urges people who are concerned about mosquito bites to cover up exposed skin and monitor their yards and gardens for high mosquito activity, especially areas with standing water that can attract the insects.

    The department launched a campaign in May to prevent mosquito bites, including a social media tool kit to educate Marylanders on protecting themselves and their homes from mosquitoes.

    Although birds are not routinely tested for West Nile virus in Maryland, sick or injured birds can be reported to an appropriate local wildlife rehabilitator. Residents can call 877-463-6497 for a list of licensed rehabilitators or visit the Maryland Department of Natural Resources Wildlife.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Zsana Hoskins

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  • Religious exemptions for school vaccinations have been growing since COVID

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    Despite a growing number of kids getting religious exemptions from required school vaccinations, Maryland still vaccinates a higher percentage of students than the national average. (Photo by Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)

    “No Shots. No School. No Exceptions.” That’s what’s parents are greeted with on the Prince George’s County Public Schools webpage on required vaccinations for the upcoming school year.

    But that’s not entirely true. In Maryland, there are exceptions — specifically, families can easily get religious exemptions to opt their kindergartners out of vaccine requirements in any school year.

    And more Maryland families have been choosing that route for the last four school years, according to Maryland Department of Health data released this week.

    About 1.7% of the state’s 63,000 kindergartners, or approximately 1,075 kids, cited religious reasons to be exempted from required vaccinations during the 2024-2025 school year.

    It’s the highest percentage of religious exemptions since the 2019-2020 school year, when the start of the COVID-19 pandemic not only ushered in a new wave of vaccine hesitancy but also disrupted typical school procedures for many families.

    Since the 2021-2022 school year, at least 1% of kindergartners in Maryland have had a religious exemption – a couple hundred a year – and it’s been rising since.

    While it’s still a relatively small percent of students compared to the rest of the population, and well below the national rate, public health advocates call rising number of unvaccinated kids “concerning.”

    “COVID put us behind the eight ball in terms of vaccination levels in kids,” said Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association.

    “It’s a very concerning trend because we need to maintain adequate vaccination levels to maintain herd immunity,” Benjamin said Tuesday. “These childhood diseases are not benign. They’re very dangerous.”

    Maryland law requires that children have a handful of vaccinations when they enter kindergarten, in order to protect themselves and their classmates from transmissible diseases, such as measles, polio and chickenpox, among others. Children can be exempted if there is a medical reason they cannot receive a vaccine or a religious restriction against it.

    A medical exemption requires a written statement from a physician that vaccination would be harmful to the student. But invoking a religious exemption in Maryland is simple. Parents can just sign a form that says: “Because of my bona fide religious beliefs and practices, I object to any vaccine(s) being given to my child.”

    Religious exemptions spiked in 2019-2020 when 2.7% of kindergartners, or 1,641 kids, opted out of vaccination requirements. The COVID-19 pandemic did not go into full swing until spring 2020, so those families would have opted out prior to the pandemic in the United States.

    Public health officials and researchers look at nonmedical religious exemptions as an imperfect metric for vaccine hesitancy among families, though tracking such data is a tricky task.

    “To the extent that people are looking at ways to opt out of being vaccinated, you will see a higher increase in people taking advantage of … religious exemptions,” Benjamin said.

    The rate of religious exemptions varies by school district and can be influenced by population size.

    Kent and Garrett counties have the highest rate of religious exemptions in the state, for example, with more than 4% of kindergartners  in those counties getting a religious exemption from vaccines last school year, according to the data.

    But Kent County had just 155 kindergartners in the 2024-2025 school year, so if seven kids had a religious exemption, that would account for 4.5% of Kent County kindergarten students.

    Similarly, Garrett County had 243 students in its 2024-2025 kindergarten class. The 4.12% receiving a religious exemption from vaccinations represents about 10 kids.

    “We have fewer kindergartners,” said Rebecca Aiken, school health services manager for Garrett County Public Schools. “It can really skew the numbers.”

    She said that there could be many reasons why some kids are not up to date on their vaccinations or use a religious exemption to opt out of them.

    She noted that some kids are homeless or do not have a stationary home life, moving between family members or living with grandparents, which can make record-keeping for immunizations challenging. The county tries to help families in those situations get their vaccinations or find their records.

    But with the ease of religious opt-out for vaccines, Aiken said there’s no way to know why someone selects the religious exemption for vaccines.

    “We can’t force them to prove their religion, so we have to take it at face value,” she said.

    She noted that even if the families opt their kids out of vaccination requirements, the county health officials and school nurses help keep the families informed about communicable diseases.

    Sherelle Jones, an official with the Prince George’s County Office of School Health, noted that compliance with the vaccination requirement is down for the upcoming school year, but she has not noticed a rise in vaccine hesitancy specifically.

    She’s hearing that some families who do not have health care coverage have struggled to get their kids vaccinated. Prince George’s County Public Schools has hosted vaccination clinics in hopes of closing that coverage gap.

    Last school year, Prince George’s County’s schools had about 1.7% of its kindergartners getting a nonmedical religious exemption from vaccinations, on par with the state as a whole.

    Jones noted that there is still time for families to comply with the vaccination requirements, as school doesn’t start until Aug. 26 in Prince George’s County.

    But Benjamin noted that families are coming in with more questions about vaccines, which he says is a result of new messaging at the federal level about when to receive vaccines and at what age.

    “There is a very well-organized, well-funded antivaccine community out there,” Benjamin said. “Coupled with some of the mistrust that has been promoted by the current Health Secretary [Robert F.] Kennedy — that has raised the questions in people’s minds about when their kids should get their shots, how many shots they should get and whether they should get these shots.

    “My colleagues that are practicing pediatrics are telling me that more and more parents are coming in with more questions about vaccinations,” he said. “I would not equate that to vaccine hesitancy, although there is certainly more of that.”

    While the rate of religious exemptions is going up in Maryland, state health officials say that vaccine coverage among Maryland kindergartners is still high, especially compared to the rates nationally. The Centers for Disease Control and prevention said 3.6% of kindergartners nationwide were exempt from vaccinations for the 2024-2025 school year, up from 3.3% the previous year.

    “In general, vaccine coverage rates remain high in Maryland. The overall exemption rates remain below the national average and stable at 2.2% compared to the previous school year,” said David McCallister, public information officer for the state health department in a written statement. The 2.2% figure combines both 1.7% of kids who have a religious exemption and the 0.5% who have a medical exemption in the 2024-2025 school year.

    McCallister noted there’s been an increase in exemptions, “specifically non-medical exemptions” since the COVID-19 pandemic.

    “The Department will continue to monitor school exemption trends very closely, especially with regard to their relationship to vaccine preventable diseases,” McCallister said. “MDH continues to recommend vaccinations for all children.”

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  • Workplace heat-illness standards finalized as deadly ‘heat season’ in Maryland comes to an end – WTOP News

    Workplace heat-illness standards finalized as deadly ‘heat season’ in Maryland comes to an end – WTOP News

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    Long-awaited heat protection regulations for workers have been finalized and will go into effect Monday as a deadly “heat season” in Maryland comes to an end.

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.

    Long-awaited heat protection regulations for workers have been finalized and will go into effect Monday — two days after the official end of a deadly “heat season” that took the lives of dozens of Marylanders this summer.

    With just days left in the annual Heat-Related Illness Surveillance Report monitoring period — the so-called heat season — the Maryland Health Department had recorded 25 deaths and just under 1,200 emergency room visits due to heat-related illnesses this year.

    That was a sharp increase from the nine heat-related deaths recorded last year, and the most since 2018, when 28 people had died from heat illness. The highest number of heat deaths in a year was reported in 2012 when storm-driven power outages left many without air conditioning for days and 46 people died.

    The 2024 data was through Sept. 21, and the number could go up as the season does not officially end until this Saturday, Sept. 28.

    But state officials said that while the heat season may be over this weekend for record-keeping purposes, the heat could still be around for a while as the climate continues to warm, with hot weather starting earlier and staying later.

    “As our climate warms, both here in Maryland and nationally, we’re seeing increases in heat-related deaths and heat-related illnesses reported,” said Clifford S. Mitchell, director of the Environmental Health Bureau in the Maryland Department of Health.

    The new regulations from Maryland Occupational Safety and Health (MOSH) have been years in the making and will formally take effect on Sept. 30, according to a Maryland Department of Labor official. The regulations will ensure that employers provide ample breaks, water and cooling opportunities for workers.

    “As the temperature warms, the risk of people overexerting themselves and getting into trouble is going to increase,” Mitchell said. “So that’s the reason MOSH’s new standard is so important because it’s going to help people recognize and prevent people from getting to the point where they are feeling sick.”

    The regulations, officially published last week by the Maryland Division of Labor and Industry, offer a unified standard to avoid heat stress but provide flexibility for employers to tailor methods and strategies to the needs of their workplaces.

    In addition to ensuring that employers provide workers with the opportunity for sufficient breaks, water and cooling, the new regulations will also require more frequent and longer breaks when the heat index reaches 90 degrees and 100 degrees. The rules will apply to both indoor and outdoor workers.

    “The goal was to have a standard that would protect workers from extreme heat and would still allow businesses to operate,” Mitchell said.

    “The heat standard of workers is something that the Department of Labor has been working on for quite some time,” he said. “It’s a very complicated standard. It required a lot of discussion with industry, with labor unions and workers, with health care providers.”

    Mitchell could not say how many of the 25 heat deaths this year were people who got overheated while on the job, but he did say that “workers are at significant risk as the temperature warms.”

    At least one of the heat deaths this summer occurred on the job: Ronald Silver II died Aug. 2 from a heat-related illness while working at his job with the Baltimore City Department of Public Works’ Bureau of Solid Waste.

    The health department’s most recent data shows that 14 people who died this year from heat-related illness were aged 65 or older. Nine people who died were between the ages of 45 and 64, and two were between 18 and 44.

    Most fatalities have been among men, with 19 men dying this heat season compared to just six women. Twelve people who died were Black, 11 were white, one was Hispanic and the last victim’s race was listed as “other.”

    Mitchell noted that the current reports have not shown any pediatric fatalities due to heat this year.

    “As terrible as any death is that could be prevented due to heat, the fact that we appear to have gone by without any pediatric fatalities is one bright spot,” he said.

    This heat season, at least 1,190 Marylanders landed in the emergency room or urgent care for heat-related illnesses, beating the previous record of 901 emergency room visits set in 2021.

    Mitchell said the increase in heat cases this year over recent years could be skewed by the fact that heat-related deaths were driven down during the pandemic.

    “There’s a bit of a caveat here. Obviously, heat-related deaths are related to what’s happening with climate and weather,” he said. “But like everything else, COVID is almost certainly responsible for some of the change in patterns that we’ve seen in the last couple years.”

    “There were big disruptions to ordinary life, and that included some of the things that may be risk factors for heat-related illness and injury,” he said.

    Mitchell says that the 2024 heat season coming to an end emphasizes “the importance of preventive interventions, like the heat-related prevention standards from MOSH.”

    “What we’ve seen this year confirms the trend that we’ve continued to see, which is as the planet warms, and as Maryland warms, we see an increasing number of people at risk of serious heat-related illnesses. We’re seeing an increase in the number of emergency department and urgent care visits, and we continue to see that across the state,” he said.

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    Tadiwos Abedje

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