FAMILY FUN – Crystal Johns holds her son Zayne , 2, as  she follows her son Ezekiel, 4,  up an inflatable slide Saturday at Xoots Elementary School during the annual Spring Carnival. The event included games, prizes, cotton candy, and karaoke. (Sentinel Photo by James Poulson)

Funding for Schools Now a Waiting Game
18 Apr 2024 14:24

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Rep. Rebecca Himschoot says in the discussion on educ [ ... ]

Hard-Knock Life? Not for Sitka Young Players
18 Apr 2024 14:23

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Song, dance and a cast of school-aged actors will brin [ ... ]

Medicare Advisers Warn of Scam Calls
18 Apr 2024 14:21

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Don’t talk to people claiming to be from Medicare o [ ... ]

House Sends Senate Carbon Storage Bill
18 Apr 2024 14:20

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    The Alaska House of Representatives voted Wednesday to allow comp [ ... ]

Corps Upholds Denial Of Pebble Mine Permit
18 Apr 2024 14:19

By YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has dismissed an appeal filed by [ ... ]

April 18, 2024, Community Happenings
18 Apr 2024 14:16

Mr. Whitekeys
In Sitka to Tell
Gold Rush Tale
Sitka Historical Society and Museum will present ‘‘Th [ ... ]

April 18, 2024, Police Blotter
18 Apr 2024 14:13

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today: April 17
At 9:08 a.m. a transformer was r [ ... ]

Weir Funds Sustain Redoubt Subsistence
17 Apr 2024 15:16

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The threat of major cutbacks to the subsistence socke [ ... ]

Assembly Moves Ahead with 2025 Budget Talks
17 Apr 2024 15:13

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    With the first vote on the city budget for fiscal yea [ ... ]

Ye Loco Taco Wins Championship
17 Apr 2024 15:12

By Sentinel Staff
    In the final day of play in the recreational division City League volleyball [ ... ]

Sitkans Stretch Legs in Boston Marathon
17 Apr 2024 12:52

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    Three amateur athletes from Sitka were among tens of  [ ... ]

House Advances Bill On Drug OD Kits in Schools
17 Apr 2024 12:50

By CLAIRE STREMPLE
Alaska Beacon
    A proposal to require Alaska schools to keep opioid-overdose-r [ ... ]

Report: Kobuk River On List of ‘Most Threatened’...
17 Apr 2024 12:49

By YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
    Alaska’s Kobuk River, which flows out of the Brooks Range above [ ... ]

April 17, 2024, Police Blotter
17 Apr 2024 12:38

Police Blotter
Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
April 16
At 8:07 a.m. a woman [ ... ]

April 17, 2024, Community Happenings
17 Apr 2024 12:24

Presentation On
Medicare, SS
SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium and Cynthia Gibson, CFP®, an [ ... ]

Sitka Musicians Do Well at SE Music Fest
16 Apr 2024 15:30

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Musicians from Sitka High and Mt. Edgecumbe High scho [ ... ]

Walk Southeast Offers Fitness, Prizes for Sitkans
16 Apr 2024 15:28

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Whether you enjoy scaling mountains, walking in the p [ ... ]

Sitkans Turn in Times at Boston Marathon
16 Apr 2024 15:24

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    Two-time Alpine Adventure Run winner Chris Brenk cont [ ... ]

House Panel Advances Trans Girls-Sports Ban
16 Apr 2024 15:23

By CLAIRE STREMPLE
Alaska Beacon
    Republican members of the House Judiciary Committee expanded a [ ... ]

Correspondence School Ruling Raising Debate
16 Apr 2024 15:22

By JAMES BROOKS and
CLAIRE STREMPLE
    The Alaska Department of Education and Early Development is [ ... ]

April 16, 2024, Police Blotter
16 Apr 2024 15:20

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
April 15
A protective order was issued at 1 [ ... ]

April 16, 2024, Community Happenings
16 Apr 2024 15:17

Chamber Speaker
Event Wednesday
The Chamber of Commerce speaker series will continue noon Wednesday at [ ... ]

Latest Housing Event Brings New Insights
15 Apr 2024 15:33

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    From high costs and low availability to challenges sur [ ... ]

Work Groups Look At Housing Proposals
15 Apr 2024 15:31

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    A number of participants at Thursday’s community me [ ... ]

Other Articles

Daily Sitka Sentinel

COVID Creates Work In ‘Contact Tracing’

By NAT HERZ
Alaska Public Media

One of Alaska’s first positive cases of COVID-19 was a person who’d been to a grocery store while they were infectious.

Normally, this wouldn’t be cause for concern, given the need for prolonged exposure to significantly increase a person’s risk of getting sick. But in this case, a long wait at the checkout kept the infectious person in line for more than half an hour – potentially exposing the people behind and ahead of them to a deadly disease.

It fell to Drew Shannon, a nurse employed by the Anchorage Health Department, to find those unwitting “close contacts.” Armed with a receipt supplied by the sick person, he worked with the store to reach the two other people from the checkout line, then made sure they were quarantined to keep the disease from spreading further.

Both have now finished their quarantine without developing symptoms.

Shannon’s work is known as “contact tracing,” and it’s a critical piece of public health officials’ battle against COVID-19. The task entails finding, quarantining and monitoring people exposed to a disease, along with identifying the infection’s original source.

In Alaska, the job falls to a network of trained workers, many of whom are epidemiology staff and public health nurses from the state Department of Health and Social Services. In Anchorage, eight city nurses take on many of the cases, with support from school nurses who were reassigned after classes were canceled. One former city nurse even came out of retirement to help.

While public health experts say contact tracing is crucial to keeping COVID-19 in check, the nurses’ regular phone calls and check-ins also bring a measure of humanity and comfort to one of the groups of Alaskans with the highest risk of developing the disease.

“It’s nice to have somebody checking to see if you’re OK,” said Robert Bowles, a 60-year-old Juneau man who tested positive for COVID-19. “The fact that they were calling every day felt good.”

Contact tracing is part of what epidemiologists call “containment” – the essential work of determining where the virus already is so that further spread can be slowed.

In Wuhan, the Chinese city where the COVID-19 pandemic began, more than 1,800 teams of epidemiologists, each made up of at least five people, traced tens of thousands of contacts a day, according to the World Health Organization. Up to 5% of contacts were subsequently confirmed to have the disease.

Containment is not the only front on which authorities fight COVID-19. But the work is particularly important in Alaska because of its dispersed and remote villages that lack advanced health care infrastructure, said Joe McLaughlin, the state’s top epidemiologist. That means Alaska will continue its focus on containment even if the number of cases escalates to the point where “widespread community transmission” tests its tracking capacity, McLaughlin said.

Anchorage School District nurse Bethany Zimpelman looks at information with Anchorage Health Department’s Michael Fritz during her shift at the Anchorage Health Department Tuesday, March 31, 2020.

For now, officials say they have enough manpower to handle the cases confirmed each day.

State nurses were checking in with more than 60 people in Ketchikan and 20 in Juneau in recent days, according to Sarah Hargrave, a Juneau-based state nurse supervisor. Anchorage city and school nurses, plus support staff, were tracking 126 close contacts and 56 confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Saturday, according to the municipal health department. (Anchorage’s figures may not include people in the city who have recovered or are being monitored by other agencies, like the military.)

Contact tracing starts with a positive test result, which is assigned to an individual nurse or trained public health official for an investigation.

Many of the state and city public health nurses have similar experience investigating other illnesses, such as tuberculosis and sexually transmitted infections like syphilis or gonorrhea. But many of those cases are easier to track than COVID-19, which can be transmitted through sometimes-invisible respiratory droplets.

“Gonorrhea, for example, the mode of transmission is pretty clear,” said Shannon, the Anchorage nurse. “With COVID-19 respiratory droplets, that could be a lot more people.”

The investigator starts by calling the patient with a series of questions about their travel and who they’ve spent time with.

In countries without the U.S.’s privacy protections, public health authorities have reviewed cellphone data, surveillance camera footage and credit card transactions to help with their contact tracing.

In Alaska, nurses can use Facebook or other social media to locate a contact, or they might ask for help from a business. And the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a system to find people who sat on a plane near someone later diagnosed with COVID-19.

Otherwise, information comes mostly from patients, who are generally eager to cooperate, said McLaughlin, the state epidemiologist. Their close contacts, he added, are “their friends, their family members, their co-workers.”

“They really want to help protect them,” he said.

Close contacts are defined as people who spent more than 5 or 10 minutes within six feet of the patient during their infectious period; they’re asked to quarantine for two weeks. After developing a list, nurses and support staff will then call each patient and close contact once or twice daily, asking for temperature readings and other symptoms.

Once a nurse has established a rapport, they might switch to email or texting, or even the Whatsapp messaging program. Some of the Anchorage nurses have been speaking in Spanish with families, and they’ve also enlisted a Hmong translator.

But the work goes beyond collecting data on symptoms. Nurses have helped get food to people’s homes if they’re stuck in quarantine, and they can support people emotionally at a time when they’re isolated, vulnerable or afraid.

“Some people are scared. They’ve heard the horror stories,” said Hargrave, the state nurse supervisor. “A really important part of getting through this is having some social connection and support, and to not feel alone. And we’re happy to provide that when we can.”

Login Form

 

20 YEARS AGO

April 2004

Photo  caption: Sen. Lisa Murkowski talks with students in Karoline Bekeris’ fourth-grade class Thursday at the Westmark Shee Atika. From left are Murkowski, Kelsey Boussom, Laura Quinn and Memito Diaz.

50 YEARS AGO

April 1974

A medley of songs from “Jesus Christ Superstar” will highlight the morning worship service on Palm Sunday at the United Methodist Church.  Musicians will be Paige Garwood and Karl Hartman on guitars; Dan Goodness on organ; and Gayle Erickson on drums.

Calendar

Local Events

Instagram

Daily Sitka Sentinel on Instagram!

Facebook

Daily Sitka Sentinel on Facebook!