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Ohio s COVID health orders end June 2 Here s what it means

Ohio million dollar vaccine: Is the incentive working?

DeWine said that across the board, vaccinations are on the rise in Ohio.  The age group with the biggest spike in shots, DeWine said, is in those 16 and 17 years old, with a 94% increase. Ohioans 18 and 19 saw a 46% increase, and vaccinations in those 20-49 went up 55% since the announcement of the state s lottery incentives. DeWine also unveiled a list of the top ten counties seeing the biggest increase in vaccinations during the week of May 14, as compared to the week prior, including both Seneca and Wyandot counties in northwest Ohio. Credit: odh SCHOOL QUARANTINE AND ISOLATION On June 2, the health orders, with the exceptions of nursing homes, for the most part, go away. 

Ohio on track to hit key COVID case metric next month, DeWine says

Ohio ‘on track’ to hit key COVID case metric next month, DeWine says Kristen Spicker © Bill Lackey Governor Mike DeWine and his wife, Fran, talk with local officials as they visit the Clark County vaccine distribution center. BILL LACKEY/STAFF Ohio is on track to hit a key coronavirus case metric previously tied to when the state would lift its public health orders, Gov. Mike DeWine said. Popular Searches “We’ve been dropping 15 to 20 points every week since mid-April, which means that we are on track to hit our goal of 50 cases per 100,000 we would think in the coming month if this continues,” DeWine said. “We don’t know if this will continue, but we certainly like what we’re seeing.”

Editorial: Legislature again injects politics into public health

Tribune-Star Editorial Board May 14, 2021 Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb has handled the state s response to the COVID-19 pandemic with wisdom and openness. Holcomb, state Health Commissioner Dr. Kris Box, Indiana Department of Health Chief Medical Officer Dr. Lindsay Weaver and their public-health team have relied on sound medical science. They enacted necessary restrictions to prevent the spread of a coronavirus that has killed more than 13,000 Hoosiers and infected 730,000, leaving many survivors with long-term complications. Likewise, county health commissioners appointed by their own county officials and their staffs have generally stuck to solid medical practices in applying restrictions. Those decisions needed to be made quickly and nimbly, and be based solely on science, not politics. Those difficult decisions on mask mandates, public gatherings and capacity limits in businesses have saved lives.

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