Missouri Governor ? Michael L. Parson Office of Communications ????????_____________________________________________________________________________________ FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE July 30, 2021 State Continues Support for Springfield-Greene County to Relieve Strain on Local Health Care System State and Federal Partners Met Today to Continue Advanced Planning to Meet Potential Health Care Needs (JEFFERSON CITY, MO) ? The State of Missouri?s effort to relieve the strain of COVID-19 on the Springfield region?s health care system continued today with more patients being treated at the state-supported Monoclonal Antibody Infusion Center, ambulance strike teams transporting additional COVID-19 patients out of the region, and planning efforts with local health care officials to provide additional support if necessary.? On Thursday July 29, the advanced life-support ambulance strike teams transported an additional 20 patients to hospitals outside the Springfield area to reduce hospital censuses in the region. Through Thursday, the 10 ambulance teams had transported a total of 107 COVID-19 patients outside the area. The transports have included some roundtrips of seven to nine hours or more. The Missouri State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) arranged for the ambulance teams through an Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC) request, which was fulfilled by the State of Arkansas Division of Emergency Management. On Thursday July 29, the Monoclonal Antibody Infusion Center served a total of 25 additional patients.?The infusion center had served a total of 113 patients, who previously would have required treatment in a hospital setting, since it opened on July 23. The infusion center is supported by the Missouri Disaster Medical Assistance Team (MO DMAT-1). It has served patients from around southwest Missouri, including Joplin, Branson, and Bolivar. Monoclonal antibodies are proteins that help the body fight off COVID-19 and reduce the risk of severe disease and hospitalization to high-risk patients.? Springfield hospital leaders have called the strike teams ?a life-line for us? and the infusion center ?hugely helpful? because it has freed up as many as 10 beds a day for one hospital. On Friday, state team members met with Springfield-Green County health care leaders and a team from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to continue?to be proactive and plan for additional health care needs if conditions change in the region. The HHS team is providing technical assistance to help rapidly?meet challenges posed by the Delta variant?in the?Springfield area.? ?Our state health and emergency management teams continue to work closely with Springfield-Greene County and federal partners to promote vaccination and meet critical health care needs,? Governor Parson said. ?In recent weeks, we saw an increase in the number of vaccines requested by vaccinators, and it is encouraging to see a drop in the 7-day average for new COVID-19 cases in Greene County."? On Thursday July 29, the Springfield-Greene County Health Department and the Springfield-Greene County office of Emergency Management withdrew their request to the state for an Alternate Care Site. Here is a timeline of the actions SEMA and the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services took to respond to the request.
"Vaccinations are a critical way we combat this disease, and we encourage anyone age 12 and up to get vaccinated to help protect themselves and those around them,? Governor Parson said. ###
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