MUSC Health weekly COVID-19 report (June 1)

CHARLESTON, S.C. (June 1, 2021) – At MUSC Health, the safety of patients, families, care team members, students, faculty and staff remains the number one priority. The MUSC Public Affairs and Media Relations (PAMR) department issues regular COVID-19 updates on Monday of each week. If a federal or state holiday falls on a Monday, then a report will be issued the following day. Please read the report in its entirety; information can change quickly. 

The Path Forward / Recovery

COVID-19 VACCINATION UPDATE

MUSC Health has opened vaccine appointments to all eligible individuals as defined by SCDHEC. Eligible individuals can visit muschealth.org/get-vaccine to make an appointment; while appointments are encouraged, walk-ins are welcome at all MUSC COVID-19 vaccine clinic locations. View information and a video with directions on how to schedule a vaccination appointment. The community is encouraged to monitor muschealth.org for COVID-19 vaccine availability criteria, updates and FAQs. 

For more information related to public, community vaccination sites operated by MUSC Health throughout the state, please visit https://vaxlocator.dhec.sc.gov/Appointments are encouraged, but walk-ins are welcome.

SCDHEC has announced a June 1, 2021 start date for the Homebound Vaccination Program.  Homebound individuals who need in-home COVID-19 vaccination services should contact DHEC’s COVID-19 vaccine information line by calling 1-866-365-8110. Please note that community members should not directly contact the vendorsAll calls must be routed through the DHEC COVID-19 vaccine information line to access this program.  

In partnership with the Spoleto Festival USA , MUSC Health will offer vaccination clinics at 292 Meeting Street, near the Spoleto Box Office kiosk. Open during the hours of 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. from May 28 to June 13 (closed on Sundays), the clinic can be accessed via appointment by registering through MUSC Health and walk-ins are also welcome. 

The federal government is currently providing the vaccine to MUSC for free, so there is no charge for the vaccine itself to either MUSC or the patient. MUSC will charge governmental payers (Medicaid/Medicare) and individual and employer-sponsored private health plans for the administration.  This helps cover costs associated with obtaining, storing, scheduling, and providing trained staff and supplies for vaccination administration. Patients should consult their insurance providers to determine what their company will or will not require them to pay for related to the administration of the vaccine.

The Department of Health and Human Services has provided a mechanism for providers to bill the COVID-19 Provider Relief fund for the cost of vaccine administration for uninsured patients. Uninsured patients will be able to receive the vaccine with no out of pocket cost.

The mRNA COVID-19 vaccine series consist of two doses administered intramuscularly:

  • Pfizer-BioNTech (30 µg, 0.3 ml each): 3 weeks (21 days) apart 
  • Moderna (100 µg, 0.5 ml): 1 month (28 days) apart 

Individuals should not be scheduled to receive the second dose earlier than recommended (i.e., 3 weeks [Pfizer-BioNTech] or 1 month [Moderna]). However, second doses administered within a grace period of 4 days earlier than the recommended date for the second dose are still considered valid. Doses inadvertently administered earlier than the grace period should not be repeated. The second dose should be administered as close to the recommended interval as possible. However, if it is not feasible to adhere to the recommended interval, the second dose of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines may be scheduled for administration up to 6 weeks (42 days) after the first dose. For more information, visit this page.

  • Total number of COVID-19 vaccinations administered by MUSC Health: 255,276
    • 81.36% doses administered of supply received (accounts for extra doses found per vial)
    • Note: This data is from May 24, 2021. An update was not available at the time of release. 

MUSC Health COVID-19 Vaccination Expectation for all care team members

All MUSC Health leaders and care team members are now required to have the COVID-19 vaccine. Religious and medical exemptions may apply for some care team members. All new care team members should receive a single dose vaccine prior to starting work or the first dose of a two-dose vaccine prior to starting work. The second dose must be completed within three weeks as a condition of employment. 

Leaders had until April 30 to complete a single dose vaccine or the first dose of a two-dose vaccine. As part of this phase 1 rollout of the new policy, 100% of MUSC Health system’s leaders adhered to the new COVID-19 vaccination policy and 97% have received the vaccine (3% of leaders submitted a religious or medical declination) as part of phase 1. 

All MUSC Health care team members are expected to receive the vaccine by June 15, unless an individual provides a religious or medical declination. 

MUSC Health has established this policy for the following reasons: 

1. The safety of our care team – While the number of COVID-19 cases is going down in most areas, we are dealing with variants across the world as well as people returning in large numbers to normal activities. Since the MUSC Health care team is a microcosm of the community, the likelihood of coming down with COVID-19 rises for all care team members. Vaccination is a very effective means of blunting the spread of variants and COVID-19 in general as public activities resume.

2. The safety of our patients – For similar reasons, as our care team becomes more at risk, patients will become more at risk. For us to optimize patient and care team member safety, we must have higher vaccination rates across MUSC Health. Additionally, we are seeing large numbers of patients NOT coming to health care facilities because of the lower vaccination rates. We must provide an environment where patients feel safe to receive care. Finally, we have been very locked down in the past year. Patients want family members to accompany them more often when they are staying with us. 

3. The safety of our patients’ family and visitors – Once again, as the risk rises for our care team and patients, it puts families and visitors at risk. High vaccination rates combat this risk. We are also looking at establishing a policy that family members and visitors be vaccinated. We are still evaluating this policy and will let you know more about it in the near future. 

FOR UPDATED DATA:

Downward Trend

As the temperature outside rises, the COVID case rate is falling in the Tri-county area.

The MUSC COVID-19 Epidemiology Intelligence Project is a digital dashboard that provides leading indicators related to the COVID-19 epidemic to enable informed decisions. Current situation assessments for MUSC Health – Charleston (Charleston, Berkeley and Dorchester counties), MUSC Health Florence, and MUSC Health Lancaster divisions are available on this site. 

HELPFUL WEB LINKS FOR THE GENERAL PUBLIC: 

General information

General information

Information about testing options

MUSC Virtual Urgent Care

COVID-19 vaccination

MUSC COVID-19 mobile diagnostic testing 

MUSC Health, in partnership with the state legislature, is rotating mobile screening and collection sites in rural and underserved areas throughout the state, for both walk-up and drive-through patients. Prescreening is not required and there is no cost to patients. Patients will be contacted within two days with the results of their test, if not sooner. Patients are asked to bring photo identification and an insurance card if they have one. The CARES Act requires MUSC to bill insurance providers if patients do have insurance. Patients may email drivethruresults@musc.edu if they have questions regarding their results. If they do not have an email address, they may call 843-985-8888.

Sites may close early or operate with reduced hours if weather conditions become unsafe for care team members or if volume exceeds site safety capacity. 

NORTH CHARLESTON: The Charleston International Airport and MUSC Health have collaborated to offer a mobile COVID-19 diagnostic testing site. The site will open on Wednesday, June 2,  Friday, June 4, Wednesday, June 9 and Friday, June 11 from 2:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. and is located on the 4th floor of the airport’s Daily Parking Garage, 5500 International Blvd., North Charleston, S.C. 29418. “Rapid’ nasopharyngeal swab testing is now available at this site, with results available via email within 30 minutes of the test. Information related to Healthy Me — Healthy SC free, statewide mobile testing sites for each week can be found here.

MUSC Health antibody testing

MUSC Health is offering voluntary COVID-19 serologic testing through musc.care. Results will be available in MyChart within 48-72 hours. Testing is available at select locations in the Charleston, Florence, and Lancaster divisions and by appointment only.  Repeat testing, for those who test negative, will be offered no more than every 30 days for qualified candidates. The cost of the test will be billed to insurance carriers. Based on the recent CARES Act, insured patients will not have an outstanding balance for this test. It is important to make sure individuals and the media understand what the test results mean.

MUSC COVID-19 follow-up story ideas

Student Shots

“We’ve been waiting for this,” says one mother at first in series of middle school COVID-19 vaccine clinics.

Far-Away Family

COVID-19’s impact in India is much more than a news story for one MUSC dean. It’s personal.

COVID Research Retreat

COVID-19 researchers from across S.C. talk treatments, variants, vaccines and more at SCTR-sponsored retreat.

New Mask Guidelines

The unmasking of vaccinated America is based on sound science, expert says. But it raises some tricky new issues.

Basic stats / COVID-19 positive cases 

Previously reported data points, such as the number of telehealth screenings, total number of specimens collected at various mobile sites, or the number of COVID-19 positive MUSC care team members are available upon request. Information related to vaccinations is at the top of this release.

  • Total number of COVID-19 community screening tests completed by MUSC Health-Charleston: 366,284

(MUSC Health system-wide: 429,401) 

  • Total Number of COVID-19 positive greater Charleston community screening tests: 29,739

(MUSC Health system-wide: 36,799) 

    • It is important to understand, and to avoid duplication in reporting, that these cases are reported to, and included in, the DHEC statewide COVID-19 numbers.
    • The majority of these individuals may not require hospitalization in a South Carolina hospital. 
  • Number of COVID-19 inpatients currently in the hospital (MUSC Health-Charleston): 5
    • MUSC Health monitors this number to determine that we have current and future capacity in terms of health care providers, supplies, ventilators and PPE. Please see the IHME graph here. These numbers are consistent with the modeling and expectation that MUSC Health will have appropriate resources to manage these patients. 
    • Of the 5 patients currently in the MUSC Health-Charleston location, 0 are in MUSC Health COVID-19 intensive care, with 0 of the 5 total inpatients currently receiving ventilator care for disease progression.

For specific information about MUSC Health Florence or Marion Medical Centers, please contact Kim Geiger at geigerki@musc.edu. For information about MUSC Health Chester or Lancaster Medical Centers, please contact Ashley Shannon at shannona@musc.edu.

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About MUSC 

Founded in 1824 in Charleston, MUSC is home to the oldest medical school in the South as well as the state’s only integrated academic health sciences center, with a unique charge to serve the state through education, research and patient care. Each year, MUSC educates and trains more than 3,000 students and nearly 800 residents in six colleges: Dental Medicine, Graduate Studies, Health Professions, Medicine, Nursing and Pharmacy. MUSC brought in more than $271 million in biomedical research funds in fiscal year 2020, continuing to lead the state in obtaining National Institutes of Health funding, with more than $129.9 million. For information on academic programs, visit musc.edu.

As the clinical health system of the Medical University of South Carolina, MUSC Health is dedicated to delivering the highest quality patient care available while training generations of competent, compassionate health care providers to serve the people of South Carolina and beyond. Comprising some 1,600 beds, more than 100 outreach sites, the MUSC College of Medicine, the physicians’ practice plan and nearly 275 telehealth locations, MUSC Health owns and operates eight hospitals situated in Charleston, Chester, Florence, Lancaster and Marion counties. In 2020, for the sixth consecutive year, U.S. News & World Report named MUSC Health the No. 1 hospital in South Carolina. To learn more about clinical patient services, visit muschealth.org.

MUSC and its affiliates have collective annual budgets of $3.2 billion. The more than 17,000 MUSC team members include world-class faculty, physicians, specialty providers and scientists who deliver groundbreaking education, research, technology and patient care.