Donna McElroy directs traffic at TestMV. Free testing site at the Ag Hall is a hive of activity again as cases surge.
Ray Ewing

Case Surge Fuels Heavy Demand for Testing, Booster Shots

Islanders are queuing up in large numbers for Covid-19 tests and booster shots, as an early winter case surge swells on the Vineyard and public health officials keep close eye on the numbers.

Islanders are queuing up in large numbers for Covid-19 tests and booster shots, as an early winter case surge swells on the Vineyard and public health officials keep close eye on the numbers with the approach of the Christmas holiday.

And with the recent proliferation of over-the-counter test kits, a new local website has launched for at-home testers who test positive. The site address is rapidtestmv.org.

Lea Hamner at TestMV.
Ray Ewing
Lea Hamner at TestMV.
Ray Ewing

In their weekly update Monday, the Martha’s Vineyard boards of health reported 112 new cases from Dec. 12 through Dec. 18. Of those, 64 patients were fully vaccinated, 34 were unvaccinated and 14 were unknown.Reports for Sunday and Monday added another 19 confirmed cases. Case counts continue to be the highest they have been since early April.

Three people are hospitalized with the virus, hospital spokesman Marissa Lefebvre confirmed Monday.

Ms. Lefebvre declined to comment on the vaccination status of the hospitalized patients.

Late last week, Ms. Lefebvre said seven people had been hospitalized in recent weeks, and one person had been flown off Island.

In an email to the Gazette Monday, Tisbury health agent Maura Valley said no single factor is driving the latest case surge.

“I don’t believe there are Island-specific reasons for the continued increase. As in other communities we have people gathering indoors and many people traveling to and from the Island to celebrate the holidays,” Ms. Valley wrote.

She also said health officials have not yet confirmed the presence of the Omicron variant on the Island. “But I believe it’s just a matter of time,” Ms. Valley wrote. “Two samples were sent for sequencing late last week but we haven’t yet received the results,” she added.

Cases are climbing.
Courtesy Island board of health
Cases are climbing.
Courtesy Island board of health

Meanwhile, activity has been brisk at TestMV, the free test site located at the Agricultural Hall in West Tisbury. Spokesman Mary Breslauer said the site administered close to 300 tests last week, a significant increase from the roughly 150 tests it has been giving weekly for the last few months.

“[We] have just started to see numbers climb up, although nowhere near at the peak of the beginning of the pandemic,” she said.

Ms. Breslauer explained the new website that allows people who test positive using an at-home test to register the result online so it goes to the Island boards of health.

“What we want to do is capture those positives and inform people what their responsibility is post-test,” Ms. Breslauer said.

Ms. Valley said contact tracing will continue on the Vineyard, despite an announcement by the Massachusetts Department of Health last week that it would end contact tracing except for cluster cases, in order to shift the focus to vaccines.

“At this time we’re not changing our contact tracing procedure,” Ms. Valley wrote. “Local health will continue to reach out to individuals who test positive. We feel it’s important to speak with positive individuals to let them know how to take care of themselves and the people around them that might be at high risk. Many people disregard public health information so it doesn’t hurt to reinforce the appropriate steps they should take and will continue to do so through contact tracing for as long as we’re able to.”

At the hospital, vaccination activity is also brisk, especially for booster shots, according to Ms. Lefebvre. She said the hospital had administered 4,325 booster shots as of Dec. 17, with high demand continuing.

“We’ve pretty much had a pretty constant stream of patients looking for booster appointments. They’ve basically been full since we started to do boosters and I don’t think it’s necessarily been impacted by [Omicron] specifically,” Ms. Lefebvre said. “We’ve been pretty booked-out for boosters for awhile now.”

Capacity at the Island hospital remains manageable, she said, with so far no need to cancel elective surgeries or take other measures. The hospital does very few elective surgeries where patients need to be admitted, Ms. Lefebvre said.

Wreath of thanks for volunteers.
Ray Ewing
Wreath of thanks for volunteers.
Ray Ewing

“We’re keeping an eye on that,” she said, speaking about capacity, “and right now we’re okay.”

Ms. Valley said the recent distribution of at-home tests by the government, including on the Vineyard, will continue to ramp up in the coming weeks.

“The Oak Bluffs and Chilmark boards of health have received tests that are currently being distributed to eligible individuals Islandwide,” she wrote, adding: “Island Health Care, as a federally qualified community health center, will be ordering kits through the federal government for widespread Island distribution in partnership with the boards of health.”

She said the website for at-home testers is the result of a collaboration between Island Health Care and the boards of health. The website also contains isolation and quarantine guidance as well as contact information for the local boards of health.

Ms. Valley advised people traveling to the and from the Island for the holidays to take all available protective steps, including getting vaccinated and getting a booster, if eligible.

“Get tested before attending holiday gatherings. Wear masks when indoors at public places, in social setting with people outside of your immediate family or in congested areas where social distancing isn’t possible,” she wrote.

The TestMV site is now at the front of the Agricultural Hall in West Tisbury. The site will be closed on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve, but will otherwise operate on a normal schedule from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. The new website to log positive rapid test results is rapidtestmv.org.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 12/20/2021 - 21:38

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Marie Laursen Tisbury

It's hard to see things going the wrong way after so much effort to escape this pandemic. God bless the people who are providing all this support, and God help the unvaccinated, who will suffer the most in this next surge. Please let's encourage each other to get vaccinated and bolstered. Someone's life depends on it.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 12/21/2021 - 07:07

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Xander Brown Oak Bluffs

Cities and communities all over the world, the latest being Boston, are requiring people to show their vaccination cards before entering a restaurant or large public gathering. With our COVID numbers consistently high and more people coming and going from the island now, it’s time we institute that policy with our restaurants here on the Vineyard. It is an added layer of security and a part of the social contract that the current status pandemic forces us to take.

Tom Edgartown NYC

It’s a complete waste of time. I manage a restaurant in NYC anyone can get a Covid card and scratch whatever they want on it. We don’t have time or staff to police this… maybe the politicians who mandate the rules could donate there staff that “work from home to help us out” just a thought…

Jackie Chilmark and NYC

NYC has had proof of vaccination requirements in restaurants and public venues for months, and omicron is now spreading like wildfire. It's reported that 94% of all surging new cases are omicron. Boosters do seem to help better than just the 2 vaccines or the 1 J&J. As before vaccines, take-out is again safer than indoor restaurant dining, vaxed or not, and rapid covid tests are the best bet when you are gathering with vaccinated friends and family. N95 or KN95 masks are recommended at all times in public. What is going on in the rest of the country, even in highly vaccinated areas, is what will happen (is happening) on-island. In that regard, the Vineyard is not special. Please mask up and be careful. Hopefully the omicron is a milder illness, even though it spreads more easily.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 12/22/2021 - 08:56

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Jill Turner W Tisbury

Amazing! Test more and we get more positive results. Come on people, let’s just face the facts here. We can try and micromanage and test and reflect and study etc. At the end of the day, we’re left with the fact that this is a virus and is here for a long time. Thankfully viruses mutate and weaken with time. Masks must be working because positivity is up and still no serious illness and/or death? Or are we saying the positive case count would be much higher without masks? Masks do work but not the homemade type 99% of us are walking around town wearing. This performative masking is just ridiculous. It’s silly for adults and cruel for the kids. Get vaccinated, get boosted, wash your hands, and get on with your life. Merry Christmas.

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