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Potential COVID-19 Exposure in Bulloch - Local Woman Tells her Story

According to Ted Wynn, Public Safety Director for Bulloch County, “This morning on a conference call with Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) local leaders were advised of a potential positive exposure here in Bulloch County of COVID-19.
DHP Bulloch Exposure FT

According to Ted Wynn, Public Safety Director for Bulloch County, “This morning on a conference call with Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) local leaders were advised of a potential positive exposure here in Bulloch County of COVID-19.  DPH did not give any detail, or additional information, on the call.”

Later in the day, Southern Family Medicine, a Statesboro doctor’s office confirmed on social media that a patient had tested positive for COVID-19 on March 24th in their office.

The doctors office notified DPH  and verified that DPH is conducting social contact tracing to help minimize our communities exposure.

Local Doctors Follow CDC Protocol

This doctor’s office followed CDC guidelines which included wearing N95 mask and gloves.  The patient was seen on their isolation hallway, using a separate entrance, which they set up for these scenarios.  Their cleaning and sanitation practices after this, and each suspected or tested patients’s visit, met appropriate standards and guidelines set forth by DPH.  This is considered by CDC algorithm a low-risk exposure for their staff and they do not feel that any members of their staff has been exposed.

DPH Continues to Report NO Confirmed Cases in Bulloch

Based on the 12 noon report from DPH there were no confirmed cases.  However the report shows the second largest number of cases outside of Fulton is unknown.  The report lists 160 people who have tested positive listed as “unknown”.   According to Rebecca Reis, Risk Communicator for DPH, “When it is “unknown”, the provider or laboratory could have left off the county OR it is still being processed by Public Health and will update at a later time.”

What we have learned today is that DPH is not counting where the test was “taken”, but where the individual “lives” who is tested positive for purposes of this report.

This report also states that only 6,179 out of Georgia’s 10.62 million population has been tested.  DPH will not give a breakdown of how many tests are being conducted by each county.

Stories pour in of refused, delayed or inconclusive tests

We continue to see stories on social media about citizens in Bulloch County who are very sick and feel they are positive but have not been tested because they do not fit the current DPH testing protocols.  Many of you have reached out to Grice Connect to share your stories anonymously.  Most of the patient’s accounts include being very sick, but being refused a test because of not meeting guidelines for testing.  Doctors have reached out about the difficulty in getting test kits for their offices and the lengths they have to go to actually administer a test.  Then it often takes five to seven days to get results.  Many times those results are “inconclusive” and DPH requires retesting.

Every medical professional I have spoken with tells me they feel they have seen patients that are positive, but without testing they can’t be certain.  They are all becoming very frustrated by the slow and drawn out testing.

Local Bulloch County Story of Trying to Get Tested

One individual whom I know personally and have spoken with by text, who is very sick, visited a local urgent care and was tested.  But her test came back seven days later as inconclusive and they want to retest.

“I am a very healthy  30 year old Bulloch County resident and COVID-19 has knocked me down, fast.  We traveled to Atlanta to celebrate my child’s birthday a few weeks ago.  I began feeling ill the night we returned to Statesboro.  I just thought it was allergies.  By Wednesday, March 11th, I was convinced a full-blown sinus infection was coming.  My head was hurting and a horrible cough.  I didn’t have any mucus output which is unusual for a sinus infection.  One of my children is fine, the other and my husband have low grade fevers and cough.  I went to Statesboro Urgent Care on Sunday, March 16th, and was tested for COVID-19.  Before they would test me, I was told it would cost $200 – $500 to be tested and that insurance would not cover it.  I went ahead with the test because I wanted to know if I was positive. They tested me for strep, flu and COVID-19.  I was sent home and told not to leave until they called me with results which should be 48-72 hours.  They gave me a breathing treatment and two other prescriptions to take for five days.

My symptoms worsened over the week.  I have a VERY HARD time breathing. (I am healthy, a runner, always outside and on the go).  My fever was constant low grade and my energy level was as if I had been though a month of Black Friday adrenaline…exhausted.  Seven days later they called to tell me that the test was inconclusive and I needed to be retested.

I have had the flu, I have had strep and I have given birth, nothing has made me more exhausted than my current illness.  There is no energy, body aches and you can not sleep due to not being able to breathe.  If this virus was to get into a nursing home or even an older person with some health issues, they would struggle to survive.”

Erin Spillman, Director of Marketing for EGRMC, confirmed today that they they are testing sick inpatients and “as of 4PM, March 26th the hospital has no positive cases returned.”  NO OUTPATIENT TESTING IS BEING DONE IN THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT.

Share Your Story

Do you have a story that you feel needs to be shared?  A medical professional, patient or family member of someone suffering from COVID-19 in Bulloch or surrounding Counties who want to share your story, anonymously is fine as long as we can verify your information.  Email us and we will be in touch.

DPH March 26, 2020 12 noon Status Report

These data represent confirmed cases of COVID-19 reported to the Georgia Department of Public Health as of 7:00pm 03/25/2020. A confirmed case is defined as a person who has tested positive for 2019 novel coronavirus.

This map of Georgia shows the distribution of confirmed COVID-19 cases by county. The highest rates are in and around the metro Atlanta area, with 204 confirmed cases in Fulton County, 125 confirmed cases in DeKalb County and 109 confirmed cases in Cobb County.
COVID-19 Confirmed CasesNo. Cases (%)
Total1387 (100%)
Hospitalized438(31.58%)
Deaths47 (3.39%)
This chart shows confirmed cases by age group: ages 0-17 make up 1% of cases, ages 18-59 make up 60% of cases, ages 60+ make up 36% of cases, and the remaining 6% of cases are of an unknown age. By sex: females make up 50% of cases, and males make up 48% of cases; 2% of cases are of an unknown sex.
LabNumber of Positive TestsTotal Tests
Commercial Lab11724697
GPHL2151482
CountyCases
Fulton204
Dekalb125
Dougherty123
Cobb109
Bartow82
Gwinnett69
Carroll50
Cherokee36
Clayton29
Lee25
Clarke21
Henry20
Hall19
Douglas18
Floyd14
Fayette12
Lowndes12
Columbia10
Coweta10
Forsyth10
Richmond10
Rockdale10
Spalding10
Gordon9
Polk9
Newton8
Chatham7
Laurens7
Troup7
Bibb6
Early6
Houston6
Oconee6
Paulding6
Glynn5
Peach5
Sumter5
Tift5
Mitchell4
Muscogee4
Pickens4
Terrell4
Whitfield4
Baker3
Bryan3
Butts3
Crisp3
Effingham3
Lamar3
Lumpkin3
Monroe3
Worth3
Baldwin2
Barrow2
Coffee2
Colquitt2
Irwin2
Jasper2
Madison2
Miller2
Seminole2
Twiggs2
Washington2
Ben Hill1
Burke1
Camden1
Catoosa1
Charlton1
Chattooga1
Clinch1
Dawson1
Decatur1
Dodge1
Fannin1
Greene1
Harris1
Heard1
Jackson1
Jones1
Liberty1
Lincoln1
Long1
Macon1
Meriwether1
Morgan1
Pierce1
Pulaski1
Randolph1
Stephens1
Tattnall1
Taylor1
Thomas1
Turner1
Ware1
White1
Wilkes1

Unknown

160

*Based on patient county of residence when known

Report generated on: 03/25/2020 18:28:06

Unknown160