July 24, 2020

Media Release

Local Health Officials Urge Mask Wearing and Other Safety Precautions to Prevent Further Restrictive Actions

COVID-19 spread is increasing at an alarming rate in the Kansas City metro area. In a letter to the Kansas City metro community, Health Officers and Health Department Directors from the “Core 4” – Jackson County,
Johnson County, Kansas City, Missouri, and Wyandotte County – are urging residents to take seriously safety precautions to prevent additional steps to stop the spread of the disease.

The letter outlines several key points about the seriousness of COVID-19 in the Kansas City metro area, and what community members can do:
• COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations have increased dramatically around the metro, impacting the health of our residents and putting strain on front-line workers and our health system
• It is crucial for communities in the metro to work together to reduce the spread of COVID-19
• Mask-wearing mandates are extremely important to help us reduce our COVID-19 numbers. Recent data from Goldman Sachs show mask mandates can slow the rate of new COVID-19 infections and are better for the economy than more restrictive steps like lockdown measures
• It will also be important to limit interactions in settings like bars, restaurants, and other places where people will have their masks off. Businesses are encouraged to use creative strategies like serving
patrons in different outdoor settings whenever possible.
• We need everyone’s help now by wearing masks when in public, along with other measures like social distancing, and limiting interactions with those outside of our own households. This is our best chance at avoiding additional restrictions, which we all want to avoid if we can.
• Health officials will continue to closely monitor the data and use that to make collaborative decisions on how to protect our community

See the latest COVID-19 data for the metro area on the KC Region COVID-19 Resource Hub

7.24.20
Dear Kansas City metropolitan community,
The Health Officers and Health Directors of the Kansas City metropolitan Core 4 jurisdictions have been meeting regularly and making every effort to
preserve the health of our communities over the last 4 1/2 months. As a
group, we are thankful to have seen prior efforts successfully mitigate some
impacts of this pandemic. Unfortunately, recent data suggests that we are
now again losing the battle with COVID-19.

We are seeing a dramatic increase in the number of new cases across the
entire metropolitan area, and our front-line workers are having difficulty
keeping up with the vast and increasing numbers of COVID-19 cases. Each
case requires disease investigation, contact tracing, and educational support for those affected by COVID-19. In addition to swiftly increasing cases, we are also seeing the number of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 increase dramatically. In fact, data from hospitals across the region show that the number of patients admitted for complications from the virus is at an all-time high. The number of hospitalized patients is higher than the numbers we saw in March and April.

Access to hospitalization information is an important part of monitoring
COVID-19, but pulling together these data from hospitals across the bi-state
region has been challenging. This matters because KC residents from around the region are often hospitalized in jurisdictions outside those in which they reside. Hospitals began reporting this information to a new federal system in June. Last week, however, the hospital data stream became unavailable based on decisions made at the Federal level. This decision has hobbled the efforts of local medical officers and front-line workers to track the spread of COVID- 19 and respond accordingly to our region’s needs.
Having learned these disturbing facts, we believe we must work more closely together than ever to make every effort to slow the spread and reverse the impact of this virus on the health of Kansas City residents. We are extremely concerned that hospitalizations will continue to escalate in the coming weeks and months, and that the uncontrolled spread of COVID-19 will lead to increasing ventilator use and deaths. Despite hoping this would not occur, we predicted that this was a possibility at some point after the relaxation of the stay-at-home orders.

Current mask-wearing mandates are an extremely important part of our
efforts to once again flatten the curve.
We must work together and encourage all of our communities to make maskwearing indoors, and when social distancing cannot be guaranteed, the “new normal.” This is our best option right now for protecting our friends, families, neighbors, and the economy. Research from Goldman Sachs suggests a national mask mandate would slow the growth rate of new COVID-19 infections and prevent a 5% GDP loss caused by additional lockdown measures.
The researchers go on to estimate that a national mandate would increase the portion of people wearing masks by 15 percentage points and cut the daily growth of new cases by 1.0 percentage point to 0.6%. Reducing the spread of the virus through mask-wearing, the analysts found, could be a substitute for strict lockdown measures that would otherwise shave $1 trillion off the U.S. GDP.1
If we do not act quickly as a community and region, future shutdowns will be inevitable. It may be important in the coming days to limit the interactions of individuals in bars, restaurants, and other indoor shopping venues – particularly where masks cannot be worn when eating and drinking.

We prefer these businesses provide patrons with curbside or outdoor service whenever and wherever possible as they have done before. We support creative ideas such as serving patrons in new outdoor spaces such as car-side in parking lots, or on sidewalks wherever possible.
Regional health officers and department directors will continue to work
together, but we need your help too. The efforts we make in mask-wearing,
social distancing, and restricting our overall interactions with others now,
1 Hansen, Sara (2020). A national mask mandate could save the U.S. economy $1 trillion, Goldman Sachs says. Forbes, online. doi: https://www.forbes.com/sites/sarahhansen/2020/06/30/a-nationalmask-
mandate-could-save-the-us-economy-1-trillion-goldman-sachs-says/#1a12c39d56f1
especially when indoors, may help us avoid further shutdowns. We must all
do what we can in the hope that tighter restrictions will not be necessary.
We will continue working together diligently to analyze data and attempt joint decision making whenever possible across the metropolitan area. We
appreciate the support of our residents and those who realize that we are
truly one metropolitan community. By being sensible and working together,
we will save lives and build new models for ensuring the future health of our community, while preserving the people and things we hold most dear.
Thank you for your support and attention to these serious public health
efforts.
Sincerely,
Core 4 Public Health Officers and Directors,
Rex Archer, MD, MPH
Director of Health
Kansas City, Missouri
Sanmi Areola, PhD
Director, Department of Health and Environment
Johnson County, Kansas
Erin Corriveau, MD, MPH
Deputy Health Officer, Public Health Department
Wyandotte County, Kansas
Allen Greiner, MD, MPH
Health Officer, Public Health Department
Wyandotte County, Kansas
Joseph LeMaster, MD, MPH
Health Officer, Public Health Department
Johnson County, Kansas
Bridgette Shaffer, MPH
Health Director
Jackson County, Missouri
Juliann VanLiew, MPH
Director, Public Health Department
Wyandotte County, Kansas

Share