About 80% of people with COVID-19 do not need to be hospitalized and experience very mild flulike symptoms. About 20% do require hospitalization, for oxygen or respiratory support and treatment. Those most at-risk for developing severe disease from COVID-19 are people over the age of 60, people with underlying health conditions or immunocompromised people and pregnant women. Last week, Inslee encouraged those at-risk to avoid large gatherings, if possible. Kathy Lofy, state health officer, stressed the importance of testing people who have symptoms and are at-risk of developing severe illness.
“I think what’s important is that people who are sick with fever, cough or at higher risk for having complications, people who are older, with chronic medical conditions or pregnant women, those people (should) call their health care providers to see if they need to be tested,” Lofy said at a news conference last week.
Last week, the state Department of Health went its own way, differing from the CDC on personal protective gear guidelines. Health care workers wear protective gear, including a mask, goggles, gown and gloves to treat COVID-19 patients. DOH has decided to require surgical, not N95, masks for most COVID-19 care, following the World Health Organization’s guidelines, prompting some questions from unions and health care workers.
DOH said that decision was a result of consultation with their infections team, health care providers and facilitators statewide “to address the issue in a way that worked best for our particular circumstances,” a statement from DOH said. “It did not have to do with supply shortages or resource conservation.”
Local health districts and hospitals can choose which guidelines they want to follow, however.