South Central Region Moves to Phase 2 of Roadmap to Recovery Plan

Kittitas County, WA – 02/14/2021 –
In accordance with Washington State’s Roadmap to Recovery Plan, the South-Central Region of that plan will move to Phase 2. The move to Phase 2 is effective today. The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) sent a letter today to the region with the updated information.

According to DOH, after the South-Central Region did not move to Phase 2, DOH was informed that there was incorrect information that was being input within the region regarding hospital data.  Based on the corrected data, the region qualified for Phase 2.

“I would like to thank everyone in Kittitas County, our partners in the South-Central Region, and other agencies and personnel who worked to advocate for our county,” states Kittitas County Public Health Department Director Tristen Lamb.  “I believe everyone in our county continues to work at the highest level for our residents and it shows.”

Please access the Washington State Department of Health or the Washington State COVID-19 website pages for more information regarding Washington State’s Roadmap to Recovery Plan for details on the plan’s restrictions.

For questions regarding the COVID-19 vaccine, please call 509-933-8315. To read about COVID-19 vaccine, please visitwww.doh.wa.gov or www.cdc.gov.  If you have questions about COVID-19 testing, you may contact your healthcare provider or the KVH COVID clinic at 509-933-8850. If you have questions about your health, please contact your healthcare provider.  If you are having a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the Emergency Department at KVH.

South Central Region hospital misreports COVID admissions; Department of Health moves South Central region to Phase 2

OLYMPIA — The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) announced that a hospital in the South Central Region of the Healthy Washington Plan misreported data which led to a determination that the region remain in Phase 1 of Governor Jay Inslee’s Roadmap to Recovery phased reopening plan. When the region did not move to Phase 2, it was brought to the attention of DOH that a hospital in the region appeared to be incorrectly reporting its hospital admission data.

After learning that the hospital, Providence St. Mary Medical Center, in Walla Walla was reporting COVID hospital admission data incorrectly, the Department of Health began working with the facility to correct the reporting mistake by the hospital.

Utilizing the facility’s updated information, the hospital admission metric for the South Central region was re-calculated and DOH concluded the region did meet the required metric criteria and will now advance to Phase 2 effective immediately. The Roadmap to Recovery dashboard will be updated with this information on Tuesday.

“On Friday, Feb. 12, Providence St. Mary Medical Center discovered an error in its reporting of COVID-19 positive patients admitted to the hospital, and immediately provided corrected data to the Washington Department of Health. The error was unintentional, and we acted as quickly as possible to provide corrected data to the state. We hope this corrected information will be helpful in assessing whether our communities are ready to move to Phase 2 of the Governor’s reopening plan, and we appreciate our partnership with the state that has allowed us to correct this error,” said Susan Blackburn, Chief Executive at Providence St. Mary Medical Center.

“When errors like this happen, our DOH team is committed to getting things corrected as quickly as possible. We are pleased that partners in the South Central region brought this issue to our attention and we were able to resolve the matter quickly,” said Umair A. Shah, MD, MPH, Secretary of Health.

Earlier in the week, DOH determined that five regions could move to Phase 2. Two regions had already advanced to Phase 2, bringing the total regions in Phase 2 to seven. At that time, South Central remained in Phase 1.

Regions are required to meet criteria for three of the four metrics outlined in the Roadmap to Recovery plan in order to move into or remain in Phase 2. The four metrics include:

  • Trend in 14-day rate of new COVID-19 cases per 100k population
  • Trend in 14-day rate of new COVID-19 hospital admissions per 100k population
  • Average 7-day percent occupancy of ICU staffed beds
  • 7-day percent positive of COVID-19 tests

DOH reassesses the metrics for all eight regions every two weeks and announce any phase adjustments on Thursdays. The next announcement will be Thursday, February 25, 2021 for implementation and possible phase movement on March 1, 2021.