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Some Chicago high school students head back to their classrooms
Monday marked the start of the fourth academic quarter and for the first time in 11 months all 515 of Chicago’s non-charter schools — including high schools — were open for in-person learning.
With 36% of high schoolers and nearly half of elementary school students planning to return, Chicago Public Schools could have up to 44% of its 279,000 students at non-charter schools in classrooms this week. Those 122,000 students would be by far the most since the start of the pandemic, although the 157,000 continuing remotely still represents a number larger than all but 15 districts in the nation.
About 26,000 high school students opted to return to in-person learning. Only three schools — all selective enrollment — will see a majority return, while half of the district’s 93 schools will welcome about one-third of students.
William Kingsbury is a senior, but he said it felt like his very first day as he stepped onto the vast Lane Tech College Prep campus Monday morning. Kingsbury, 17, said he had no idea what to expect.
“I remember the first week (of lockdown). Nobody thought it was going to last this long,” he said. “Then a year later, here we are.”
He said he felt a little bit cheated. Before lockdown, he and other members of the robotics team had just finished their project and were getting ready to enter it into a competition. The pandemic killed that dream.
“It is what it is,” he said. “No one can control it.”
He unzipped his jacket to reveal a freshly laundered shirt.
“There are only 18 days of school,” he said, with smiling eyes. “I’m going to try to make sure I look good for each and every one of those days.”
News
10:53 a.m. Urgent-care OB-GYN clinics for women offer an alternative to waits for appointments, ER visit
Last spring, weeks into the pandemic, Christina Garcia was spending her days struggling to help her two young sons adjust to online schooling when she got such a heavy, painful period she could barely stand. After a few days, her vision began to blur, and she found herself too weak to open a jar.
Garcia’s regular OB/GYN’s office — like most medical offices at the time — was closed. And she was terrified by the prospect of spending hours waiting in an emergency room with people who might have COVID-19.
By the time she stumbled in to the new Bascom OB-GYN urgent care clinic at the Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, clutching a pillow to her belly, Garcia was pale and dehydrated from blood loss and certain she was dying. “If I didn’t get to the clinic when I did, I think things could have ended up very different,” said Garcia, 34, who underwent an emergency hysterectomy for uterine fibroids.
For years, many women with common but urgent conditions like painful urinary tract infections or excessive bleeding in the aftermath of a miscarriage have faced a choice: Wait weeks for an appointment with their regular OB-GYN, or spend hours in an hospital emergency department waiting room.
Urgent-care OB-GYN clinics have begun popping up around the country in recent years, and the coronavirus pandemic has increased demand. While no data are available on the number of urgent-care clinics for women, they are part of a surge of interest in urgent-care clinics in general and other alternative models, such as retail clinics and digital-first healthcare startups. One of these, the New York women’s health startup Tia (“aunt” in Spanish), got $24 million in venture capital funding last spring and is opening physical clinics nationwide.
Read the full story from Kaiser Health here.
8:33 a.m. Chicago set to expand COVID-19 vaccine eligibility to all adults Monday
All Illinois residents 16 or older have been eligible for the coronavirus vaccine since last week, with the exception of Chicago. City providers are set to expand eligibility to all adults, beginning Monday.
“I am encouraged by our increased vaccination rates, but we also continue to see a slow and persistent increase in COVID-19 case counts, especially among younger Chicagoans,” Chicago public health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said in a statement. “As we expand eligibility, we can increase vaccination for younger populations to slow the spread of the virus. Hopefully, our vaccine supply from the federal government will increase.”
Chicagoans can book appointments at zocdoc.com/vaccine or by calling (312) 746-4835. Residents can also use the city’s COVID-19 Vaccine Finder to identify additional vaccine providers, including Costco Pharmacies, CVS, Jewel Osco, Mariano’s and Walgreens, who handle their own scheduling.
For additional help finding an appointment, visit coronavirus.illinois.gov or call (833) 621-1284.
Read Madeline Kenney’s full story here.
New cases and vaccination numbers
- More than 8 million COVID-19 vaccine shots have now gone into the arms of Illinoisans, state health officials announced Sunday. Since mid-December, Illinois has doled out 8,054,634 coronavirus vaccines, including another 115,330 doses Saturday.
- State health officials on Sunday reported 2,666 new coronavirus cases were diagnosed among the 70,106 tests processed by the Illinois Department of Public Health in the last day. That lowered the statewide seven-day positivity rate to 4%, a hopeful sign the virus’ spread is once again starting to slow in Illinois.
- Statewide, coronavirus hospitalizations have increased nearly 90% over the last month. As of Saturday night, 2,127 beds were occupied by COVID-19 patients, with 409 of those patients in intensive care units and 173 on ventilators, officials said.
- The virus is still claiming an average of about 20 lives per day this month. State health officials reported an additional 10 virus-related deaths Sunday — half of which were recorded in the Chicago area.