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Sunday, Mar 22, 2020

Ballad Health confirms additional COVID-19 cases

Ballad Health has confirmed new cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Greene and Sullivan Counties.

Greene County:

  • Two new COVID-19 cases were confirmed on Sunday, March 22 in Greene County. The health department has been notified and Ballad Health CEOC is working with the appropriate officials to notify anyone that may have been in close contact with the cases. One case was treated, in isolation, at a Ballad Health facility and has since been discharged home for self-isolation. The other case was dispositioned from the emergency department home.

Sullivan County:

  • An additional new case was confirmed in Sullivan County on Sunday, March 22. This case was a team member serving at one of our hospitals. Investigators have determined that the positive case is linked to personal travel, not hospital exposure and has also confirmed that this case did not have any contact with patients. Ballad Health CEOC is working with the appropriate officials to notify anyone that may have been in close contact with this case.

Ballad Health continues to take additional steps to protect its patients, team members and communities.

Visitation restriction

Effective Saturday, March 21, Ballad Health restricted all visitation to its inpatient hospital units, long-term care facilities or behavioral health centers.  In accordance with recommendations from federal and state authorities, the  health system will also postpone certain non-emergent surgeries and procedures.  Patients should consult with their physicians to determine if their surgery or procedure will be impacted.

Exceptions to the visitation restriction include Ballad Health’s labor and delivery units, which will allow one visitor per room. The neonatal intensive care unit at Niswonger Children’s Hospital, as well as rooms with pediatric patients, will allow two visitors, but they must be parents or guardians.

Affected long-term care facilities include:

  • Francis Marion Manor Health & Rehabilitation, Marion, Va.
  • Laughlin Healthcare Center, Greeneville, Tenn.
  • Madison House, Kingsport, Tenn.
  • Mountain View Regional Hospital, Norton, Va.
  • Wexford House, Kingsport, Tenn.

The behavioral health centers with these restrictions are:

  • 5-East at Bristol Regional Medical Center, Bristol, Tenn.
  • Clearview Behavioral Health, Lebanon, Va.
  • Dickenson Community Hospital’s Green Oak Behavioral Health Unit, Clintwood, Va.
  • Greeneville Community Hospital West’s senior care unit, Greeneville, Tenn.
  • Ridgeview Pavilion, Bristol, Tenn.
  • Sycamore Shoals Hospital’s New Leaf Senior Care, Elizabethton, Tenn.
  • Woodridge Hospital, Johnson City, Tenn.

Non-emergent procedural cases

Upon consultation with the local medical community, Ballad Health is implementing the guidance from federal and state authorities, which recommend hospitals postpone certain non-emergent procedural cases.

Based on the recommendations, Ballad Health will follow the COVID-19: Guidance for Triage of Non-Emergent Surgical Procedures published by the American College of Surgeons on March 17.

“We understand this might be disruptive, but we concur with the reasoning behind the recommendation and believe it is appropriate at this time,” said Clay Runnels, MD, executive vice president and chief physician executive for Ballad Health. “Our decision to postpone non-emergent cases will free up healthcare workers, medical supplies and ventilators, so we are fully prepared to care for any high-risk COVID-19 patients.”

Public precautions for COVID-19

Ballad Health leaders continue to urge the public to practice social distancing to impede the spread of COVID-19. Social distancing involves limiting contact with other individuals as much as possible by avoiding groups of 10 or more people and deliberately increasing the physical space between people by at least three to six feet.

“Social distancing is the single best weapon we have to slow the spread of COVID-19 and keep local health care resources from becoming overwhelmed,” said Ballad Health Chief Executive Officer and President Alan Levine.

“This is serious. You can’t overreact to a virus nobody has immunity to – we have to take steps to prevent it. If we want to protect the people we love, we all must be serious about social distancing, hand washing and other preventive actions.”

Jamie Swift, infection prevention director at Ballad Health, said younger people need to especially follow the social distancing recommendations.

“This is not a virus that is just impacting the elderly and those with pre-existing conditions,” Swift said.

“As of Friday, more than half of the confirmed COVID-19 cases, around 55% of the 154 cases, were in people younger than 40 years old.”

If anyone experiences COVID-19 symptoms, including fever, cough and shortness of breath, please call Ballad Health’s Nurse Connect hotline at 833-822-5523 to be screened by a healthcare professional. The hotline is active 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

As always, anyone in an emergency situation should call 911 or visit the nearest emergency department.

To learn more about COVID-19 and read updated information, please visit our COVID-19 page.