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ProPublica Story – Coronavirus Inside an Immigration Detention Facility as the Coronavirus Spreads

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At an ICE detention facility in New Jersey, detainees are on a hunger strike to try to obtain soap and toilet paper in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic.

By Joseph Singer and Katie Campbell
ProPublica spoke to immigrant detainee Ronal Umana on his fourth day of hunger strike at the Hudson County Correctional Facility in New Jersey.
The detainees have gone on a hunger strike because they have not been given any toilet paper or soap. And Umana said there are officials who said officers have tested positive for the illness.
“All the guards who used to work here – you don’t see them,” Umana said.

See original ProPublica link here,https://www.propublica.org/video/inside-an-immigration-detention-facility-as-the-coronavirus-spreads?utm_source=pardot&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailynewsletter

ProPublica Story- Coronavirus Medicine by Writing Prescriptions for Themselves and Their Families

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By Topher Sanders, David Armstrong and Ava Kofman

Pharmacists told ProPublica that they are seeing unusual and fraudulent prescribing activity as doctors stockpile unproven coronavirus drugs endorsed by President Donald Trump.

A nationwide shortage of two drugs touted as possible treatments for the coronavirus is being driven in part by doctors inappropriately prescribing the medicines for family, friends and themselves, according to pharmacists and state regulators.

“It’s disgraceful, is what it is,” said Garth Reynolds, executive director of the Illinois Pharmacists Association, which started getting calls and emails Saturday from members saying they were receiving questionable prescriptions. “And completely selfish.”

Demand for chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine surged over the past several days as President Donald Trump promoted them as possible treatments for the coronavirus and online forums buzzed with excitement over a small study suggesting the combination of hydroxychloroquine and a commonly used antibiotic could be effective in treating COVID-19.

Reynolds said the Illinois Pharmacists Association has started reaching out to pharmacists and medical groups throughout the state to urge doctors, nurses and physician assistants not to write prescriptions for themselves and those close to them.

“We even had a couple of examples of prescribers trying to say that the individual they were calling in for had rheumatoid arthritis,” he said, explaining that pharmacists suspected that wasn’t true. “I mean, that’s fraud.”

In one case, Reynolds said, the prescriber initially tried to get the pills without an explanation and only offered up that the individual had rheumatoid arthritis after the pharmacist questioned the prescription.

In a bulletin to pharmacists on Sunday, the state association wrote that it was “disturbed by the current actions of prescribers” and instructed members on how to file a complaint against physicians and nurses who were doing it.

“People are losing their minds about this product,” said Brian Brito, president of SMP Pharmacy Solutions in Miami. “We’re selling so much of this stuff and people are just stockpiling it prophylactically if anybody in their family gets sick — they’re just holding on to it.”

The two drugs are only available through a prescription and cannot be purchased over the counter. Hydroxychloroquine, sold under the brand name Plaquenil, is approved to treat lupus and rheumatoid arthritis while chloroquine is an anti-malarial treatment.

There is little evidence that the drugs work to treat coronavirus, although clinical trials are underway to find out. But as coronavirus cases multiply and protective gear for medical workers vanishes from emergency rooms, many patients and physicians see the drugs as the only hope to reverse the course of serious disease.

Brito said his pharmacy had about 800 tablets on Monday and were nearly sold out in about an hour. One doctor called and asked for 200 tablets, but the company refused. “He was a little upset about it but he understood and he went quickly from 200 to 42 tablets, which is essentially treating two people,” Brito said. “So yeah, they’re stockpiling it.”

A pharmacist in Houston, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation and violating patient privacy, said he was recently asked by a surgeon for an unusually large quantity with unlimited refills. “He said it was because his wife had lupus,” the pharmacist said, “but when I asked him for her name and diagnosis, he told me just to put it in his.”

Lupus patients are reporting difficulty in refilling their prescriptions for the drug. On Monday, the Lupus Foundation of America issued a joint statement asking the White House Coronavirus Task Force to “take action to ensure current supplies are allocated for patients taking them for indicated uses.” Several states in the past few days have already moved to limit prescriptions of the drugs, neither of which is approved to treat the coronavirus. Trump, in press conferences and tweets over the past week, has promoted the use of the drugs as potentially blunting the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak.

“It’s unfortunate that a news conference, I think prematurely, made it sound like this was the answer, and that’s led to this panic,” Michelle Petri, director of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine’s Lupus Center, said Friday. “I have spent the last two days trying to help lupus patients who actually need their refills.” She said some patients have refills on back order while others are being provided smaller amounts than usual.

The West Virginia Board of Pharmacy, in an alert Saturday, ordered pharmacists to limit new prescriptions to no more than 30 tablets and only to cases where the drugs were being used for approved indications.

“Currently, both nationally and in West Virginia, some prescribers have begun writing prescriptions for these drugs for family, friends, and coworkers in anticipation of Covid-19 related illness,” the board wrote.

Texas and Ohio have also restricted prescribing of the drugs. Louisiana on Sunday also issued an emergency rule limiting when the drugs can be prescribed, citing “inappropriate use” and “hoarding.” On Monday, the Louisiana Board of Pharmacy said it was rescinding that order because manufacturers had boosted distribution of the drugs.

Experts are warning that any use of the drugs outside of a hospital setting can be dangerous, and admonished doctors to stop prescribing the medicines inappropriately.

Daniel Brooks, the medical director of the Banner Poison and Drug Information Center in Phoenix, said it was “immoral” for physicians to hoard the medications.

“One should not be selfish and scared, especially medical providers,” he said. “I find it incredibly embarrassing and unfortunate that physicians appear to be prescribing these medications inappropriately.”

This weekend Brooks cared for a man in his 60s who died after ingesting a version of chloroquine commonly used to clean fish tanks. The man, who thought he might have COVID-19, took a small amount of the substance in a misguided effort to treat his symptoms. His wife was also hospitalized after taking the substance but survived.

Brooks said the amount the couple ingested was equivalent to a couple days’ worth of prescription chloroquine.

Ken Thai, the owner of a chain of Los Angeles-area pharmacies, said his stores are witnessing a rash of inappropriate prescribing.

“A lot of physicians, unfortunately, are writing high amounts for more than the required number of tablets and calling in five, six, seven and eight prescriptions at a time,” he said. “I don’t want to insinuate what is going on, but it is very unusual.”

He said his pharmacists are declining to fill suspicious orders and telling prescribers they don’t have enough of the medication on hand to complete those requests. Among the prescriptions flagged are those for people who have not previously taken the drug as well as orders from doctors who do not typically treat lupus and rheumatoid arthritis patients.

“If a doctor is writing a prescription for himself or aunts and uncles, that is usually a red flag for us,” he said. “Whatever we have in stock, we have to preserve for the patients we currently service.”

On Twitter, pharmacy workers traded stories about dentists and opthamologists requesting hydroxychloroquine under dubious pretenses. “A dentist just tried to call in scripts for hydroxychloroquine + azithromycin for himself, his wife, & another couple (friends),” tweeted a pharmacist in Eugene, Oregon. “I have patients with lupus that have been on HCQ [Hydroxychloroquine] for YEARS and now can’t get it because it’s on backorder.”

Steve Moore, president of the Pharmacists Society of the State of New York, said medical providers hoarding the drugs is occuring in the state, which has the highest number of coronavirus cases in the country.

“That’s a double whammy,” he said. “We’re potentially taking that medication away from patients with autoimmune conditions and patients with the actual virus that may need treatment.”

Update, March 25, 2020: On Wednesday, the country’s largest professional organization for physicians requested that doctors cease writing prescriptions of chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine for themselves and their families.

“The AMA is calling for a stop to any inappropriate prescribing and ordering of medications, including chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine, and appealing to physicians and all health care professionals to follow the highest standards of professionalism and ethics,” said Patrice A. Harris, president of the American Medical Association. “The nation’s physicians and other health care professionals continue to demonstrate remarkable leadership every day. We are confident in physicians’ judgment to make the right decisions for their patients and their families based on guidance offered by the AMA Code of Medical Ethics.”

See original story link here:
https://www.propublica.org/article/doctors-are-hoarding-unproven-coronavirus-medicine-by-writing-prescriptions-for-themselves-and-their-families?utm_source=pardot&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailynewsletter

Lung Health Tips for COVID-19

With all the information circulating right now regarding COVID-19 or coronavirus disease 2019, BREATHE LA has shared the following lung health tips for everyone, but especially those with ongoing chronic lung disease like asthma, COPD and emphysema.
If you have asthma, BREATHE LA recommends following the below safety tips and procedures:
Those with asthma or other respiratory ailments need to make daily checks around their baseline health.
If you have asthma and you use your rescue inhaler more than twice a week, you may need to re-evaluate how to manage your symptoms.
If your asthma is particularly unstable, it is best to stay home and self isolate. If symptoms continue to act up, contact your physician immediately.
One major difference between asthma symptoms and COVID-19 symptoms: Coughs in COVID-19 are dry while asthma coughs are typically wet and mucous-filled.
As of now, there are no available vaccines or treatments for COVID-19 infections. COVID-19 is spread through person-to-person contact with someone infected with the coronavirus so continue to practice social distancing (6-feet apart from others) and wash your hands regularly.
Both the World Health Organization and CDC do not currently recommend those with asthma to wear masks, only those infected with COVID-19.
If you do get sick with any COVID-19 symptoms, including a fever over 100 degrees and high shortness of breath, call your doctor immediately and if you are asthmatic, make sure to have your Asthma Action Plan at-hand.
For those with emphysema and COPD or other chronic lung diseases, here are some additional tips:
Make sure you have a 30-day supply of current medications on hand.
Stock up on household supplies.
If you rely on oxygen, contact your oxygen supplier to ask what plans they have made to prepare for a COVID-19 outbreak in your community.
If you rely on a visiting nurse or aide to help you in your home, check with them to make sure they are following recommended protocols for disease prevention.
Clean and disinfect your home to remove germs: practice routine cleaning of frequently touched surfaces (for example: tables, doorknobs, light switches, handles, desks, toilets, faucets, sinks & cell phones), but we remember that some sanitizers give off fumes that can be a trigger for asthma attacks and COPD flare-ups.
Avoid crowds, especially in poorly ventilated spaces. Your risk of exposure to respiratory viruses like COVID-19 may increase in crowded, closed-in settings with little air circulation if there are people in the crowd who are sick.
If COVID-19 is spreading in your community, take extra measures to put distance between yourself and other people to further reduce your risk of being exposed to this new virus.
Have a plan if you get sick. Consult with your health care provider for more information about monitoring your health for symptoms suggestive of COVID-19.
Determine who can provide you with care if your caregiver gets sick or is around anyone who gets sick. If your caregiver or family member is exposed to someone with COVID-19, they may not show symptoms for up to 14 days. So make sure the caregiver or family member self-quarantines for that period of time to make sure they are not infected, and do not infect you.
Pay attention for potential COVID-19 symptoms including, fever, cough, and shortness of breath, as well as any other symptoms that are severe or concerning.
If you develop emergency warning signs for COVID-19, get medical attention immediately. In adults, notable emergency warning signs include: Difficulty breathing or shortness of breath, Persistent pain or pressure in the chest, New confusion or inability to arouse, Bluish lips or face
Some symptoms of COVID-19 may be similar to what COPD patients experience with a COPD flare-up (exacerbation). But watch for a high fever. High-grade fevers are a common symptom of COVID-19 but are not a common symptom of COPD flare-ups.
If you are concerned about symptoms that are not typical when you have a flare-up, contact your doctor.
If you believe you may have been exposed to COVID-19 or feel like you are developing symptoms, call your doctor or ER instead of visiting. If you do have coronavirus and you visit unannounced, then you could expose others to the disease.
The CDC doesn’t currently recommend the use of masks for most people: only people who are sick with COVID-19 and the people who are caring for them should wear face masks.
You can also find additional information on COVID-19 and get up-to-date health information from both the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and more information on CDC recommendations for those with chronic lung disease.
Details: https://www.breathela.org

Random Independent Music

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Now that we all have a little more time on our hands, why not submerge ourselves in some new independent music artist.

Herman Dune – Life On The Run

Herman Dune – Joanna

Windy Barnes – Some Things Are Precious

Windy Barnes – COLORS (A Call to End Racism)

Electric Gremlin – This World is Fucking Loco

Electric Gremlin – Pocket Chocolate

Chris Maxwell – Walking Through The Water

Chris Maxwell – New Store No. 2

Matt WilsonWhen I was a Writer video

Matt Wilson – Decent Guy

Lost Bayou Ramblers – Granny Smith

New Media – Signals

Cej – My Baby Knows

Cej – All Brand New

Todd Congelliere – Terminal Island Lockdown Podcast

Recorded at The Sardine, talking and playing Recess bands.

Spider Stacy of Poguetry Playlist


It’s been a bit since the Association for Cultural Equity / Alan Lomax Archives original  made 17,000+ musical performances available for free streaming via http://research.culturalequity.org/ — but it bears repeating, especially to music geeks with time on their hands. The archive also includes am impressive amount of video footage shot in the late 1970s and early 1980s in the American South. These performances were collected by Archives founder, the iconic musicologist and field recordist Alan Lomax — some in conjunction with his father John in 1930’s. So, feel free to enjoy and perhaps alert your readers to this HUGE, glorious FREE resource. If you’re interested, ACE staff and executives are available for interviews.

Los Angeles County Announces Three New Deaths Related to 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19)

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LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health (Public Health) has confirmed three new deaths and 128 new cases of 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19). One individual was a youth under the age of 18, and two other individuals were between 50-70 years old. One of the individuals between 50-70 years old had underlying health conditions and resided in West Adams, the other is from a location that is still under investigation. The individual under the age of 18 resided in Lancaster. Because there are positive cases across the entire County, the public should not think one location is safer than the other. Additional information regarding some of the new cases is pending further investigation. Over the last 48 hours there have been 256 new cases.
To date, Public Health has identified 662 cases across all areas of LA County, including 11 deaths. This includes one new death reported by Long Beach yesterday. Upon completion of investigations, two cases reported earlier were not LA County residents. As of today, 119 positive cases have been hospitalized.
Public Health is investigating all new cases and will notify close contacts who are household members, intimate partners and healthcare professionals to assess and monitor them for signs and symptoms of illness. All confirmed cases are being isolated and close contacts are quarantined. It is critically important that everyone adheres to all the social distancing measures and practice good public health hygiene, including washing hands as frequently as possible.
On March, 21 Public Health issued an enhanced Health Officer Order to reconcile elements in the March 19 Health Officer Order necessary to be consistent with the Governor’s Order. The enhanced Order prohibits all gatherings and events, and clarifies that golf courses and personal grooming services (including hair and nail salons) are non-essential services that should remain closed. The Order can be found online: http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/media/Coronavirus/
Public Health has issued the following guidance during this time of increased spread:
– If you are mildly sick, stay home for at least seven days or until 72 hours after being fever free, whichever is longer. Call your doctor if you are concerned and/or your symptoms worsen. Individuals who are elderly, have underlying health conditions or pregnant should consider contacting their providers earlier when they are sick.
Public Health reminds LA County residents to do their part and adhere to the Order by alway practicing social distancing.
Additional things you can do to protect yourself, your family and your community are on the Public Health website.
Please see the locations were cases have occurred:
Total Cases
Laboratory Confirmed Cases – 662
Los Angeles County (excl. LB and Pasadena) 635
Long Beach – 21
Pasadena – 6
Age Group (Los Angeles County Cases Only-excl LB and Pas)
– 0 to 17 – 10
– 18 to 40 – 268
– 41 to 65 – 250
– over 65 – 107
Hospitalization and Death
– Hospitalized (Ever)-119
– Deaths – 11
LOCAL CITY
Carson – 8
Harbor Gateway -1
Lomita – 9
Rancho Palos Verdes – 3
San Pedro – 2
Torrance – 5
Wilmington – 4

USNS Mercy, On its Way to the Port of Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES- LA County has less than 200 ICU beds available countywide. About 90 percent of the city’s hospital beds are already occupied by patients who are not COVID-19 patients — meaning our healthcare system is at risk of being easily overwhelmed as the number of cases of this virus rises exponentially day by day.
On March 20, LA County Supervisor Janice Hahn sent a letter to President Trump asking him to immediately send the USNS Mercy to the Port of LA to help LA County relieve this oncoming burden.
March 22, the President announced that the Mercy would be directed to Los Angeles, bringing with it 1,000 badly-needed hospital beds that will be used to treat non-COVID-19 patients along with 800 Navy medical personnel. The Navy expects it will dock this week.
This will allow hospitals across LA County to have the space and resources they need to deal with a surge of incoming COVID-19 cases. This will save lives.
In the coming weeks, Hahn will continue to press state and federal leaders for the resources needed to meet this crisis, such as additional masks for first responders and ventilators for hospitals.

Congress Must Immediately Guarantee Masks, Testing & Ventilators for All Americans

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By Joel Segal and Harvey Wasserman, Free Press Correspondents

In the midst of this terrible Pandemic, three absolutely essential items must be made immediately available to all Americans: masks, testing and ventilators.

Congress must drop all other business—-including its in-fighting over a multi-trillion economic stimulus package—-and do everything in its power to make these three things immediately available to all Americans.

The masks of course must first go to all First Responders, along with gloves, protective clothing and whatever else is needed to guarantee the safety of our doctors, nurses and other health professionals.  It’s wrong on all fronts to expect these brave citizens to put their lives at risk while treating others.

The testing must be made universally available with no charge.  Only a tiny percentage of our population knows with any certainty if they have this disease.  Early detection and treatment are exponentially more effective than waiting even a day or two.

The desperate shortage of respirators in our over-burdened hospitals is causing people to needlessly die, and to spread the virus. Home-appropriate respirators can help alleviate overcrowding and let many with preliminary symptoms survive in isolation at home.

It’s totally unacceptable for a government this rich and powerful to fail to make these three essential items available to everyone.

During World War II Franklin Roosevelt ran our auto and other heavy industries as the “Arsenal of Democracy.”  This was a federal undertaking.  Had it been left to the states, as Trump is now suggesting for the Pandemic, we would have lost that war.

Congress must stop squabbling over economic stimulus proposals and immediately do what will save lives NOW.

Please call your Senators and Representatives demanding immediate action, and sign the moveon.org petition ( https://sign.moveon.org/petitions/congress-must-immediately-guarantee-face-masks-testing-respirators?just_launched=true asking them to do so.

____________________

Harvey Wasserman’s People’s Spiral of US History:  From Jigonsaseh to Solartopia to Life after Trump is at www.solartopia.org

As a long-time aide to US Representative John Conyers, Joel Segal helped draft the Affordable Care Act.  He’s a board member of Progressive Democrats of America.

Dignity Health Offers Free Virtual Urgent Care Visits for Patients Experiencing COVID-19 Symptoms

Los Angeles — Dignity Health – Southwest Division March 23, announced the launch of a free virtual urgent care service, Virtual Care Anywhere, for anyone in our community experiencing mild to moderate symptoms of the new coronavirus. Virtual urgent care visits are encouraged as an initial care option for anyone who would like to discuss symptoms characteristic of COVID-19 with a health care professional.
As ambulatory and acute care facilities across the country experience an increase in the number of patients with COVID-19 symptoms, virtual health care visits can help providers meet demand while reducing potential transmission of the coronavirus. The service is a safe and convenient way for people to speak with a medical professional for advice without needing to visit a physical care location. There are six Dignity Health hospitals in Southern California, including St. Mary Medical Center in Long Beach.
To use the service, visit dignityhealth.org/virtualcareanywhere, download the
Virtual Care Anywhere app in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store, or call 855-356-8053 and use the coupon code COVID19. The service has a fee of $35 per visit, and the fee will be waived for any patient who thinks they may be experiencing COVID-19 symptoms. After requesting a virtual care visit, a provider will contact the patient typically within 15-30 minutes, although high demand may result in longer wait times. The service is on-demand and does not accept appointments.
Nicholas Testa, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Dignity Health
Southwest Division is available for media interviews surrounding the new Virtual urgent care
program and COVID-19.
Health care experts are recommending virtual urgent care for patients with less severe symptoms of COVID-19, such as low-grade fever, a cough, or shortness of breath. People with mild symptoms who are evaluated virtually by a medical professional can avoid interacting with others and ensure they receive the appropriate level of care in the right setting.
Anyone experiencing severe symptoms of a respiratory illness, such as a high fever or difficulty breathing, should call 911 or visit your nearest emergency room. Dignity Health encourages people to call their medical facility in advance to notify the care team of any COVID-19 symptoms before visiting in person.

Hawaii: In a Pandemic, No State Is an Island

By David Bacon

James “Jiro” Yuda holds a sign at the entrance to the access road to the Hilo, Hawaii, airport.  It reads, in part, “Be Responsible. No More Flights to Hawaii.” Yuda, 44, is the former deputy public defender on the Big Island, and now works in the Family Law Division of the Hawaii Department of the Attorney General.  “I’m doing this,” he tells Capital & Main, “because someone has to.  Our leaders have to accept the reality of this situation, and what has to be done.  We face an existential threat.”

Yuda says his protest was motivated by the inactivity of the Big Island’s political leaders in the face of the Covid-19 crisis.  On March 20 Hawaii Lt. Governor Josh Green, an emergency room physician on the Big Island, urged the state to suspend “all non-essential travel” in and out of the islands.  Some airlines have stopped or limited their service, including Hawaiian Airlines, which suspended its nonstop service between Maui and Las Vegas.

In the meantime, the Big Island’s County Council urged Governor David Ige and island Mayor Harry Kim to impose a 15-day lockdown with a mandatory “shelter-in-place” order if conditions deteriorate, a move the mayor continues to oppose. In the meantime, another council resolution urged a limited restriction allowing only “essential businesses” to operate.  Hawaii has a state government, and each island is a county with a mayor and council.

Kim has argued that it is sufficient for the island to help businesses use preventative practices and for the county to sanitize its public areas.  In a broadcast statement last Tuesday Kim announced, “The County of Hawaii will maintain all of its services and operators as normal.”  He called a state directive on restaurant and church closures “a guide” and declared, “Within this county, restaurants, bars and places of worship may make their own decision as to open or close.”

Some Big Island restaurants have begun serving take-out food only, while others still have table service.  In the island’s numerous farmers’ markets, booths selling items other than food are now banned, while others selling fruit and vegetables from local farms continue.  Hilo’s Farmers’ Market, normally thronged with people, has seemed virtually deserted, while other markets have closed entirely.

Yuda feels more urgent measures are necessary, like those imposed in California by Governor Gavin Newsom.  “We can’t carry on like this,” he warns.  “Look at what’s happened in Italy.”  Hawaii’s economy is more dependent on tourism than any other state’s, and stopping travel to and from the islands would have an enormous impact, especially on workers in the tourism industry.  While stringent measures will cause sacrifices, he acknowledges, “You can’t work if you’re dead.  We have to put life before the economy.”

Yuda is one of 10 candidates who have filed papers to run against Kim in the next mayoral election-a primary on August 8 and general election on November 3.  Yuda says his priorities are public safety and climate change.

Photos:  Farmers market in Hilo after people begin to stay away from crowded places.

HILO, BIG ISLAND, HI – 21MARCH20 – Farmers’ market in Hawaii as COVID-19 virus restriction take hold. Some vendors wear masks, and the throngs of people are absent. Copyright David Bacon

HILO, BIG ISLAND, HI – 21MARCH20 – Farmers’ market in Hawaii as COVID-19 virus restriction take hold. Some vendors wear masks, and the throngs of people are absent.Copyright David Bacon

HILO, BIG ISLAND, HI – 21MARCH20 – Farmers’ market in Hawaii as COVID-19 virus restriction take hold. Some vendors wear masks, and the throngs of people are absent.Copyright David Bacon

HILO, BIG ISLAND, HI – 21MARCH20 – Farmers’ market in Hawaii as COVID-19 virus restriction take hold. Some vendors wear masks, and the throngs of people are absent.Copyright David Bacon

COVID-19 Outbreak at Trump National Golf Course Party

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Rancho Palos Verdes — Several current and former city officials in the City of Rancho Palos Verdes attended the 70th  birthday party of former Mayor Susan Brooks March 8, which was attended by guests who subsequently tested positive for the novel coronavirus.

The City has learned that both Mayor John Cruikshank and former Mayor Brooks have tested positive for COVID-19 along with 15 others who attended this party at Trump National Golf Course . Both the current and former mayors are in home isolation. Mayor Pro Tem Eric Alegria, who also attended the party, is not exhibiting symptoms and has not been tested, but has chosen to self-quarantine. A City employee who was also in attendance has displayed symptoms and is self-quarantined, but has not been tested at this time.

City Manager Ara Mihranian and Interim Deputy City Manager Kit Fox did not attend the party, but are self-isolating out of an abundance of caution due to their interactions with those officials who did, including Mayor Cruikshank.

One source who attended the party, who wished to remain anonymous, told RLnews that the majority of people in attendance, most of whom were Republicans, ignored the directives about hand shaking, hugging and were in active denial of precautionary measures. 

The one couple who attended the party was a doctor and his wife who had just returned from a cruise and were experiencing symptoms before attending.

In an update, the total number of people who reported being ill has now risen to 17.

See below for a previous story from The Easy Reader News.

16 sick following former RPV mayor’s birthday party at Trump National [Updated Mar. 23, 2020]

by Kevin Cody

Two days before Susan Brooks’ 70th birthday party at Trump National Golf Club Los Angeles in Rancho Palos Verdes, she sent a cautionary Evite.com message to the 65 invited guests.

“I told them that in light of the global virus situation, please stay home if you are not feeling well and if you do come, practice social distancing. No kissing. No hugging,” Brooks said in a phone interview on Sunday, two Sundays after the March 8 party.

Fourth District Supervisor Janice Hahn and Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor John Cruikshank were among the many, locally prominent political guests. Brooks served on the Rancho Palos Verdes City Council from 1991 to 1995 and again from 2011 to 2019. She ran unsuccessfully for Congress as the Republican Party candidate in 1994, 1996 and 1998.

The Sunday following her party, on the day Governor Gavin Newsom directed Californians over 65 to self isolate, Brooks sent a second, more alarming Evite.com message to her birthday party guests. A man who had attended her birthday party, she wrote, had called that day to tell her he and his wife had tested positive for the coronavirus.

Over the following week, 15 of her guests reported falling ill. Brooks subsequently tested positive and two of the male guests were hospitalized and placed on ventilators.

“They were both healthy, older men. It seems more of the men got sick than women. And there were couples who attended and only one got sick,” Brooks said.

It is not known how many of the other ill guests contracted the coronavirus because not all have been able to get tested.

Superintendent Hahn, on the day following Brooks’ message about the couple who had tested positive, announced she was going into self-isolation at her home in San Pedro.

“The supervisor has not been tested, but she shows no symptoms of the coronavirus and it has been two weeks since she attended the birthday party,” Hahn’s director of communications Liz Odendahld said Monday. Hahn wrote in a March 19 column for Easy Reader that she self-isolated because she is over 65. “I am following the Governor’s orders and it is important that you do, too,” she wrote.

Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor John Cruikshank did test positive for the coronavirus, creating a domino effect at City Hall. Because of their contact with the mayor following the party, City Manager Ara Mihranian and Interim Deputy City Manager Kit Fox, like Cruikshank, went into home isolation and city hall underwent a deep cleaning.

The usually upbeat Brooks used an unprintable word to describe how the illness made her feel. She said it was “the worst flu ever” and that she is struggling to keep her lungs from becoming infected because she has asthma.

“I was on FaceTime with my grandchildren today,” Brooks said. “They were showing me their Legos and stuffed animals and I felt like I was going to faint. I told them, ‘Grandma has to go lie down.’”

Brooks agreed to talk about her birthday party, she said, because she wants people to know how easily the virus spreads.

The guest who called Brooks to warn he and his wife had tested positive was Dr. Edward Piken, a local gastroenterologist. Three days after the birthday party, Piken and his wife Kelly dined at the Palos Verdes Country Club. The next morning, they tested positive for the virus, prompting the club to close until at least March 31. In a letter to members, the club noted the Pikens had recently returned from a cruise, leading to suspicion that the couple was the source of contagion at the Trump National birthday party.

But in an interview Monday, Piken said he believes he and his wife contracted the virus at the birthday party, not on the cruise ship. No one else on the cruise has contracted the virus and none of the 70 guests he had at his home two days before the birthday party have contracted the virus, he said. The party at his home was a memorial service for his father, who passed away that week at age 111. The Pikens also attended a party of 40 people the afternoon of Brooks’ birthday party and none of those guests have reported being sick, Piken said.

Brooks agreed it is not possible to know who might have brought the virus to her party. She said a second guest exhibited coronavirus symptoms the day after her party, suggesting the guest would have been infectious at the party even without exhibiting symptoms.

Though the party was before “social distancing” was common parlance, before schools and businesses were closed and on the same day 20,000 people ran in the Los Angeles Marathon, Brooks said she encouraged guests to greet one another with toe taps.

“Some of the guests practiced social distancing, but others didn’t take it seriously,” Brooks said.

The ‘70s, disco-themed birthday party included a DJ, disco ball and dancing, but did not include a sit-down dinner. Servers passed hors d’oeuvres trays of lollipop lamb, coconut shrimp, ahi wontons and beef chimichurri. The bar served wines from the Boisset Wine Club.

“Maybe the virus was passed around by the hors d’oeuvres tray,” Brooks said. “We don’t really know. My doctor said my party shows how easily the virus spreads and how important it is to avoid groups.”

There were people mad at me because I didn’t invite them,” she said. “But they’re not mad at me now.” ER