A6 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 2021 Medicine: Clinic can serve between 300 and 350 people Hospital: Mask up Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 Noice said — couldn’t get established before in-person meetings were discontinued. The clinic’s doors remained open, medica- tion went to everyone who needed it, new peo- ple signed up and care never ceased. Patients still underwent urine analyses, met with coun- selors — if only briefl y — and scheduled lon- ger therapy sessions to take place later by phone or video. “But we didn’t build a community the way that you normally see a community develop in a clinic like that,” Noice said. The pandemic has so defi ned the experi- ence of Seaside’s staff and patients that it is hard to tell whether unforeseen challenges — for instance, the patient population has not increased as fast as CODA had expected — are due to COVID or the newness of the clinic. Noice said the Seaside Recovery Center did not see an unusually high rate of relapse or ongoing opiate use among patients. What CODA has seen across their clinics, including Seaside’s, is that once people get into treatment, they generally stay and do well. “We just didn’t see people initiating treatment at the rate that we anticipated we would,” she said. The clinic can serve between 300 and 350 people. At the moment, they have about 120 patients, about 110 of whom are actively com- ing, and 60% of those pass through the clinic daily, according to Staci Donley, the senior clinical manager . “If you’re a person who has been struggling with the idea of whether or not you want to be sober, COVID was a lousy time to get sober,” Noice said. “And so I worry a lot about how many people out there could have benefi ted from our help — maybe didn’t know that we were still available — and I really hope we can help more.” ‘Zoom fatigue’ When Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare’s medication-assisted treatment took its group counseling virtual, attendance remained at nearly its normal level, hovering between eight Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian The Seaside Recovery Center had to adjust operations due to the coronavirus pandemic. and 12 patients — at least at fi rst, according to Rick Martinez, the lead clinician. Most patients were used to participating in group sessions twice a week. “Zoom was very productive in the begin- ning,” Martinez said. “Clients just wanted some kind of contact.” As the pandemic dragged on, however, “Zoom fatigue” began to set in and fewer patients began showing up at sessions. “Not having that (in-person) interaction and peer support was really diffi cult for them,” Martinez said. The program, which works with prescrib- ing doctors at Columbia Memorial Hospital in Astoria and Oregon Health & Science Uni- versity’s Primary Care Clinic in Scappoose, has about 60 patients on the roster, about 45 of whom work with Martinez. Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, Clatsop County’s mental health and substance abuse contractor, has served about 200 patients since the program opened in 2018, according to Dave Hsiao, an agency pro- gram manager. Suboxone contains buprenorphine and nal- oxone, which, like methadone, are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat opioid abuse. The medicine is intended to reduce cravings and withdrawal from opioids. Martinez was doing assessments by phone, trying to bring in new patients that way, but that also started to slow down. “Folks didn’t appear to be seeking treatment like they were when we were open,” he said, adding that his case- load has recently increased. Some patients who had managed to stay sober for a while before COVID started using again during the pan- demic, Martinez said. When vaccinations got underway and Ore- gon started opening up, patients began meet- ing for group therapy again. “People were very happy to be back — be back in the offi ce and be back in the groups,” Martinez said. The nearby Shilo Inn donated a large conference room for their sessions to help them spread out. Now, as the delta variant circulates and virus cases climb, Martinez is watching attendance drop again. At least two of his patients recently contracted COVID, though not, he said, from the group therapy. Brown said she would deploy up to 1,500 Oregon National Guard personnel later this month to help at hospitals across the state. Clatsop County stopped providing updates on local hospitalizations when new virus cases are reported. The county’s COVID-19 Public Information Hub has posted a weekly total. From July 31 to Aug. 6, there were 10 local hospitalizations. “Maintaining open inpatient beds for emergencies, as well as COVID-19 patients, requires that all elective procedures be delayed at this time,” Erik Thorsen, Colum- bia Memorial’s CEO, said in a statement . The hospital has created a panel of administrators and surgeons to determine which scheduled surgeries are necessary and which can be rescheduled . Hospital offi cials urge people who test positive for the virus to only seek care at the emergency room if they are experienc- ing severe symptoms. For those only mildly ill or asymptomatic, they should quarantine at home . They also urge people not to go to the emergency room or urgent care to be tested, rather to contact the county P ublic H ealth D epartment . Starting Wednesday, the county will provide testing by appointment only. “We cannot stress enough the impor- tance of vaccination and masking,” Dr. Chris Strear, Columbia Memorial’s chief medical offi cer, said in a statement. “The most serious COVID cases we are treating are those who are unvaccinated.” Brown had ordered hospitals early in pandemic to stop nonemergency proce- dures to conserve medical supplies for virus patients. Columbia Memorial also pulled back on elective surgeries in November during a wave of virus cases across the state. Since the pandemic began, Clatsop County recorded 1,475 virus cases and 11 deaths. The health authority recorded 42 new virus cases in the county on Friday and 35 new cases on Thursday. Outbreak: Clatsop County has reported more than a dozen outbreaks Continued from Page A1 T he staff members who tested positive are not direct caregivers and are believed to have come in contact with the virus from family members outside of the facility, John- son said . Since learning of the out- break, staff at the center have transitioned to wearing N95 masks and face shields and have stopped allowing out- side visitors and vendors as they wait for additional test results. “One diffi cult thing that we’re having to do is keep the residents from doing any com- munal activities until we can verify that all tests have come back negative,” Johnson said. Prior to the outbreak, staff and residents wore sur- gical masks and were able to engage in socially-distant activities within the facility. Visitors had to wear masks and submit to screening for symptoms, temperature checks and a questionnaire assessing their potential for virus exposure. Clatsop County has reported more than a dozen recent outbreaks, but has declined to provide details. “We have 15 outbreaks at this time. It’s a lot for Clatsop County, but it’s not unique to Clatsop County,” Margo Lalich, the county’s interim public health director, said at a county Board of Com- missioners work session on Wednesday. “Those out- breaks are multi sector: We’re seeing it in the clinical set- ting. W e’re seeing it in con- gregant living. W e’re seeing it in long-term care facili- ties, as well as that sporadic spread.” Starting Wednesday , the county Public Health Depart- ment will end walk-in virus testing and off er testing by appointment only, Lalich said. “Testing is less of a pri- ority now, and it’s becom- ing quite a challenge. We’re doing hundreds of tests a day in our community,” Lalich said. “Some individuals pre- fer to use testing as a way of monitoring their status versus getting vaccinated. It’s over- whelming the system, not just here but in other places.” One reason for requiring appointments is to determine whether a person is appropri- ate for testing. “We want to be able to test those most at risk and those most vulnerable. We do not want to be testing those who are frequently showing up just for screening because they do not want to get vac- cinated,” Lalich said. “Right now, with our shortage of resources, that’s not an appro- priate use.” Erick Bengel contributed to this report. Get to The Point. Expert Service. Guaranteed. Homeless: ‘The city cannot solve this problem’ Continued from Page A1 services agencies and vol- unteer groups. The liai- sons help the homeless fi ll out government forms and medical documents and provide vouchers to those in need. Even when housing is found, the work often continues. “Working with the unsheltered population, we do measure if they go into housing and retain hous- ing after six months,” Mat- thews said. “The people that do fi nd housing, we try to support them as much as we can. So they stay housed, with any kind of services that we might be able to pro- vide. Any we don’t provide, we look someplace else. But our goal is to, when some- body goes into housing, to stay in housing.” Seaside’s push to address homelessness grew amid reports of people living in cars, the streets and in the woods. The topic was among the top identifi ed issues at a City Council goal-setting meeting in January. City Councilor Tita Mon- tero and Mayor Jay Barber, who organized the home- lessness forums, met with Police Chief Dave Ham, Fire Chief Joey Daniels, Public Works Director Dale McDowell and Library Director Esther Moberg in late June to get a bet- ter understanding of how homelessness aff ects city management and staff . “What are they having to do?” Montero asked. “What are they having to face?” The think tank — a smaller group designed to consider strategies — will consist of Matthews, Mon- tero, Barber and McDowell. Homeless advocates Rick Bowers and Nelle Mof- fett and Monica Steele, the assistant county manager, are also signed on. Ariel Nelson, a lobby- ist from the League of Ore- gon Cities, will participate, Montero said. “We’re going to make recommendations for which strategies we think the City Council should consider for implementation,” Montero said. “We hope to have that to the City Council by the end of October.” A Facebook page will aim to bring diverse voices together to meet the need. “This was not an eff ort to solve the homeless prob- lem,” Barber said. “It is an eff ort to gain greater under- standing of the homeless issue in our community, and to help us to begin to work together. The city cannot solve this problem. It takes a village and takes all of us working together to really begin to address the issue in a way that progressively helps. “But that’s really what this is all about.” Trust your vehicle safety to the professionals at DEL’S O.K. 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