Free Covid test site at the West Tisbury School remains open for business.
Ray Ewing

Covid Case Spike Shows No Sign of Letup on Island

<p>Vineyard Covid-19 case counts have neared their highest levels since the pandemic began, with new clusters identified at businesses across the Island as the Delta variant continues its spread. Boards of health reported 97 new cases from August 15-21.

Vineyard Covid-19 case counts have neared their highest levels since the pandemic began, with new clusters identified at businesses across the Island as the Delta variant continues its spread.

In a weekly case update, the Island boards of health reported 97 new cases of Covid-19 between Sunday, August 15 and Saturday, August 21 — the third most since the pandemic began but only four fewer than the weekly peak in early April.

Of those cases, 44 are symptomatic, six are asymptomatic and 47 are unknown.

Case counts have neared their 2021 weekly high.
Island Boards of Health
Case counts have neared their 2021 weekly high.
Island Boards of Health

About half the cases continue to come among vaccinated people as breakthrough cases, according to the report, with 41 among people who were fully vaccinated, two among people who were partially vaccinated, 28 among people who are unvaccinated, and 26 unknown.

Overall, 48 per cent of cases in July and August have been among fully vaccinated people. According to state DPH data, approximately 88 per cent of the Island’s year-round population total is fully vaccinated, accounting for about 17,000 people.

The upward creeping case counts have come to a fever pitch during the busiest month of the year on the Island, closing businesses and disrupting summer events as a pandemic that began more than 18 months ago continues to have wide-ranging impacts across the Vineyard.

According to the report, three new case clusters were identified among Island businesses, with four employees at the Charlotte Inn in Edgartown testing positive for the virus, four at the Fine Fettle marijuana dispensary in West Tisbury and three among staff at Fishbones restaurant in Oak Bluffs.

Speaking to the Gazette by phone, owner of the Charlotte Inn Gerry Conover said the cases were among staff at The Terrace restaurant, which is normally closed on Monday. The inn currently remains open, and the restaurant plans to reopen Tuesday after staff are cleared for work.

“Nobody [at the inn] has Covid,” Mr. Conover said.

Fishbones restaurant remains open, owner Michael Santoro told the Gazette. Mr. Santoro said in a text message that he instituted a mandatory mask rule for staff two weeks ago.

“I believe this has helped me to date keep all my businesses open,” Mr. Santoro said.

Businesses are not required to close if staff test positive for Covid, although staff who test positive and their close contacts are required to comply with quarantine rules that have been in place throughout the pandemic.

August has inched close to April and January as the months with the highest case counts on the Island, with 232 cases reported over the first three weeks of the month. Over the past three weeks, at least six restaurants have closed due to Covid-19 cases among staff.

The vast majority of cases continue to come from tests at Martha’s Vineyard Hospital, with 69 positive tests coming from hospital PCR testing, 24 from TestMV — the Island’s asymptomatic testing site — and four from other providers.

According to the report, the state epidemiology lab has sequenced two additional positive Covid-19 test samples for the Delta variant on the Island. The state has now tested nine patients for the more contagious virus strain, with six coming back positive and three indeterminate.

A disproportionate percentage of cases continue to impact the Island’s young population, with 26 of the recent 97 cases, or 27 per cent, among people in their twenties. Overall, only 19 per cent of the Island’s 1,793 total cases have been among people in their twenties.

But recent cases have also spanned the age gamut, with 18 among people in their thirties, 15 among people in their forties, 12 among people in their fifties, 11 among people in their sixties and eight over the age of 70 testing positive last week.

Two patients remain hospitalized with the virus, according to the most recent Martha’s Vineyard Hospital website update. Hospital officials did not immediately provide information on patient conditions, or an update on a Covid-positive patient who was critically airlifted to Boston last week.

In a follow-up email, hospital spokesman Marissa Lefebvre said that the hospital has had two Covid-related transfers over the past week, both in fair condition. She could not provide an update on the prior critical transfer. 

Statewide, case counts continue to climb as well, with 1,459 new positive tests reported Sunday and a rising seven-day case average. 

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/23/2021 - 17:44

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Stefan W Vineyard Haven

How do we know if people are vaccinated or not ? Are they simply asked? It seems to me that having that verified data point is important.

Lil Dove Vineyard Haven

The MV Health Agents reported that 50% of covid cases on MV are vaccinated. Vaccinated people still carry the germs, spread them, and contract covid. Maybe the word "vaccine" is misleading, making people think they are immune to COVID-19. The covid shot is a flu shot - a coronavirus preventative that can reduce symptoms. If 100% of people on MV were vaccinated, we would still have a lot of covid cases because visitors are bringing it from all over.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/23/2021 - 20:01

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here we go again edg

There is no way to know If someone visits the island and gets exposed and tests positive for covid upon return to their home state. Perhaps this sort of contact tracing should be encouraged for visitors with some sort of signage at the SSA ports and airport

Susanna J. Sturgis West Tisbury

Good idea. Contact tracing and testing were crucial in tracking the 4th of July Covid-19 cluster in Provincetown. Not surprisingly, many of those affected didn't show symptoms or test positive till after they got home, but contacts got traced anyway. At the beginning of July, it wasn't widely known how contagious the Delta variant is, or how readily vaccinated people can spread (and catch) it. There's plenty of info out there about what the CDC learned from this particular outbreak and how well it was tracked, but here's an NPR story about it. https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2021/07/30/102286…

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/24/2021 - 15:37

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Carol Vineyard Haven

Despite the fact 88% of Islanders are vaccinated, and nearly 70% of US population overall are vaccinated, we still have the surge of positive Covid tests, illness, hospitalizations, here and elsewhere. So, carded or not, it is clear that vaccinated persons are still getting covid and spreading it. Is there no end in sight?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/24/2021 - 17:56

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BS Oak Bluffs

One person a day died from covid in Mass last week. How many heart attacks or lung cancer deaths? Why aren't we outlawing cigarettes and oreos?

David Edgartown

Are you really this clueless after 18 months of this pandemic? Forgetting the fact that 13 people died in MA from COVID yesterday alone, last I checked neither cancer nor diabetes were easily transmissible. And you can’t protect yourself from them by getting a shot or wearing a mask. Take your false analogies and misinformation somewhere else.

Doug Aquinnah

This makes no sense. I cannot INFECT someone else with my morbid obesity from eating too many Oreos. Isn’t that plain to see?? And actually, smoking is banned in public places, because others are subjected to inhaling the smoke. Kind of like being contagious. Smoke and germs are airborne. Cookies, not so much! Thank you for playing, bye!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/25/2021 - 13:23

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Larry W. Boston, & NYC

Please include more detailed information/ data breakdown to your readers in your reports about these increased numbers of cases/ infections and the actual numbers and specific percentages amongst the vaccinated vs unvaccinated and overall, you will see in MA, even with the break through cases amongst the vaccinated, it is actually a “tiny” percentage and death from covid as a vaccinated individual with no underlying issues is an even a smaller percentage (per the report below). Bottom line, the vaccinated are considerably better off and highly protected against serious illness/ death, even in rare break through cases, compared to the unvaccinated. Boosters when eligible, will be an added protection for those who qualify. Please get vaccinated if you are eligible, that is the most important thing we can do to stop this in its tracks.

https://www.mass.gov/doc/weekly-report-covid-19-cases-in-vaccinated-ind…

https://apple.news/AZY2sLHCTQXq4DmkylHYIiw

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/26/2021 - 08:03

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JayEff Edgartown

Can't the reports disclose more of the contact data? Where are these cases coming from?

The 88% fully-vaxxed on the island is terrific. Do we conclude that the virus is coming mostly from visitors? The clusters don't account for more than a quarter of of the new infections.

When do the alarm bells go off? It looks like everyone is waiting for mid-September with hopes that the contagion will subside on its own. Is it "the beaches are open even though there are sharks in the water". Or, is it a nuisance as long as no one has died? All of this is scary and it seems like it should be treated as a public health emergency.

We don't want another lockdown. Maybe there needs to be strict procedures implemented, mostly to insure only fully vaccinated are permitted on the island. Last year the MV and Nantucket hospitals wrote a letter to the public saying they do not have the resources to cope with a big outbreak. Looks like they are being hammered.

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