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Tag: virginia department of health

  • Virginia families face hurdles getting updated COVID-19 vaccine amid prescription confusion – WTOP News

    Virginia families are hitting roadblocks getting the new COVID-19 vaccine, as shifting federal rules spark confusion over pharmacy prescription requirements.

    Virginia families are hitting roadblocks while getting the new COVID-19 vaccine, as shifting federal rules spark confusion over pharmacy prescription requirements.

    According to the Virginia Department of Health, pharmacists can give vaccines in two ways: with a prescription from a medical provider, or under statewide protocols that allow vaccinations without a prescription — as long as they follow the immunization schedule from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The CDC’s current immunization schedule lists the 2024-25 COVID-19 vaccine, but not the 2025-26 version, which is why a prescription is now required for the newer shots.

    Jim Hardin, a 75-year-old resident of Haymarket, told WTOP he was asked to present a prescription recently when he tried to get a vaccination at a Giant Foods Pharmacy near his home. He said he’s never been asked for a prescription.

    “To me, this is kind of a federal bureaucracy … that’s really useless,” Hardin said. “If you think about it, what doctor is going to say, ‘No, I’m not going to give you a prescription for a COVID shot?’ I mean, they’ll all give it to you.”

    Hardin said he is retired veteran and can get a shot at a local military base. But he said that’s at least 20 miles away and not at all convenient.

    Several states have already acted on similar concerns. In Colorado, Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania, pharmacists can give COVID-19 vaccines without a prescription.

    The CDC’s vaccine advisory committee meets Sept. 18 and 19 to vote on updated COVID-19 shots. If approved, pharmacists could give the vaccines without a prescription.

    “I just think the government is trying to dissuade citizens from getting a shot,” Hardin said. “I think that’s wrong.”

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

    Alan Etter

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  • Opioids are increasingly impacting Black and brown communities in this Northern Virginia county – WTOP News

    Opioids are increasingly impacting Black and brown communities in this Northern Virginia county – WTOP News

    In the greater Prince William County area, overdose cases more than doubled among Black and brown people between 2017 and 2023, according to a new study.

    In the greater Prince William County area, overdose cases more than doubled among Black and brown people between 2017 and 2023, according to a new study.

    “The opioid overdose has traditionally been a Caucasian or white person issue but that’s not what we’re seeing in today’s opioid crisis,” said Kirstin Sievers, community engagement specialist for the Prince William Health District.

    The health district, which is part of the Virginia Department of Health, investigated overdose cases and deaths in the region, which includes Prince William County and the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park.

    Route 1 corridor hit hard

    “In the Hispanic community alone, there’s been a 500% increase in drug-related injuries, which is astronomical,” Sievers said.

    Among Black people, there was a 273% increase and there was a 106% increase among white people in the region.

    Sievers said the Route 1 corridor was hit the hardest.

    “Almost twice as many drug overdoses are happening on the east end of the county, as opposed to the west,” she said.

    When it comes to age groups, the 30- to 39-year-old group accounted for the most overdose cases, but the problem is skewing younger.

    “There’s a huge burden happening within the young adult population, so that 20-to-25 age group has grown tremendously, and they have a harder time engaging in treatment,” she said.

    ‘Chilling insight’

    In total, the region saw 454 people lose their lives to an overdose between 2017 and 2023.

    Sievers also said data concerning where overdoses are happening is telling, as is who is around victims at the time they overdose. The study found that 66% of people who overdosed did so at home and 79% of them had a bystander present.

    “That meant that someone was in the home, someone was within a certain amount of feet away from an individual who was unfortunately expiring based off of the opioids in their system,” she said.

    The study also found an increase in children overdosing by getting their hands on drugs around the home.

    And in what Sievers called “the most chilling insight,” the report also found one in four deaths was witnessed by a child.

    “These are all children under the age of 14,” she said.

    High costs

    The study also found the high costs associated with hospitalizations associated with opioid use disorder, with more than $3 million spent in 2022 alone. Also, $1.03 million was spent to treat infants with neonatal abstinence syndrome, which is result of being exposed to drugs while in the womb.

    All the information, according to Sievers, will help the region better understand the situation and get help and resources that areas that need them.

    “Prince William region is really working on creating low-barrier access to either medication assisted therapy or other … services, whether it’s treatment, rehab, group therapy, we’re really trying to close those gaps in care,” she said.

    Also, despite most overdoses occurring with a bystander present, only a third of victims received naloxone. She said this shows a need to encourage everyone to carry the opioid overdose reversal drug.

    “You never know when you’re going to come across an incident where you could save someone’s life,” she said.

    Removing the stigma

    She also said a stigma exists, which makes those in need of help less likely to ask for it. That, she said, needs to be addressed.

    “I think it’s really important to stress that people should get educated, that they should check on their neighbors, that they should recognize that addiction is not a moral failing. It is a disease that people are really fighting for their lives to get through,” Sievers said.

    She said while there is more funding coming in to help in this fight, even more will be needed.

    “There’s always a greater need than what we have funding for, but we, we will find a will and find a way,” she said.

    The numbers showed a dramatic spike in cases amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and Sievers said a light improvement has been seen in year-to-year overdose numbers since then.

    “We’re not yet at pre-pandemic levels for fatalities or nonfatal overdoses, but we are beginning to see a slight decline in our region, as well as across the state of Virginia,” she said.

    In presenting these findings, the state also plans to hold a listening session in which residents can weigh in on possible solutions to the crisis.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Mike Murillo

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  • Father of girl hospitalized with E. coli after swim in Lake Anna: ‘It’s just been a whole nightmare for us’ – WTOP News

    Father of girl hospitalized with E. coli after swim in Lake Anna: ‘It’s just been a whole nightmare for us’ – WTOP News

    The father of a teenager from Warrenton, Virginia, said his daughter has been hospitalized with kidney failure after she was diagnosed with E. coli after a Memorial Day swim at Lake Anna in Spotsylvania County.

    After spending Memorial Day weekend at Lake Anna with friends, Ava Inglett (top right in left photo) was hospitalized with kidney failure.(Courtesy John Inglett)

    The father of a teenager from Warrenton, Virginia, said his daughter has been hospitalized after she was diagnosed with E. coli after a Memorial Day swim at Lake Anna in Spotsylvania County.

    John Inglett said his daughter Ava was one of 20 reported cases of the illness linked to the lake. Ava had gone to the lake with friends on Memorial Day. A day later, she started getting sick.

    “We thought it was just going to be a quick sickness kind of thing,” Inglett said. “So we let it go a little bit further than we really wanted to, but it ended up in an emergency room visit.”

    Inglett said other parents contacted him and his wife, Judy, to let them know their children also came down with a similar illness and that doctors told those parents to keep their children hydrated as it runs its course.

    “We were not alarmed until that Friday, when she started having bloody diarrhea and throwing up violently,” Inglett said.

    He said they consulted their pediatrician who said the best course of action was to keep Ava hydrated, but when she showed little improvement over time, they decided to take her to the emergency room.

    “We’re just going to take her to the ER, maybe just get her on an IV just because, based on what everybody’s telling us, she’s got an issue with being hydrated,” Inglett said. “Later in the afternoon, (they) explained our situation, said, ‘Hey, you know she needs to be on fluids. We think she has E. coli, and it’s not getting any better.”

    Doctors also took blood work, and the results showed Ava was in kidney failure.

    “I was in just disbelief,” her father added. “It’s just been a whole nightmare for us.”

    Ava was later transferred to the Inova Fairfax Medical Campus where she underwent days of dialysis and three blood transfusions.

    On Thursday, Ava’s parents said doctors were optimistic that Ava will eventually be able to come off dialysis and be released on Friday.

    Both parents believe more should have been done to test the water of Lake Anna and other Virginia lakes, and visitors should be warned about the possible danger of bacteria such as E. coli.

    “There needs to be a warning system or a way for people to get more information on, ‘Hey, when I go to this lake, not just Lake Anna but any type of lake, that this could possibly happen,’” Inglett said.

    The Virginia Department of Health said it is investigating reported cases and testing the water. On Monday, the state said water testing results could be back as soon as Thursday.

    WTOP has reached out to the Virginia Department of Health for an update.

    John and Judy are warning other parents to be aware of this risk, which can come with swimming in lakes.

    “My daughter went down there 100% healthy, and she came out of there pretty much on life support, hoping that her kidneys will recover,” her father said.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Mike Murillo

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