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From YouTube: Virtual Press Conference on April 24, 2020
Description
Mayor John Hamilton joins other community leaders in today's weekly Zoom conference at 1:15p.m. to share the most recent developments in the coordinated effort to mitigate and manage the COVID-19 crisis and present an opportunity for media representatives to ask questions.
In addition to Mayor Hamilton, the press conference will feature Monroe County Commissioner Julie Thomas, IU Health South Central Region President Brian Shockney, Monroe County Health Department Administrator Penny Caudill, Monroe County Emergency Management Director Allison Moore, and Indiana University Associate Vice President for Public Safety and Institutional Assurance Ben Hunter.
A
B
D
D
A
C
I
am,
as
always,
Chuck
Carney,
director
of
media
relations
for
Indiana
University
and
joining
us
again
on
this
virtual
news
conference
will
be
Mayor,
John
Hamilton,
Monroe,
County,
Commissioner,
Julie,
Thomas,
IU,
Health,
South,
Central
Region
president
Brian
shock
nee,
Monroe,
County,
Health,
Department,
administrator
penny,
Caudill,
Monroe
County,
healthy
Monroe,
County,
emergency
management,
director,
Allison,
Moore
and
IU,
associate
vice
president
for
Public
Safety
and
institutional
assurance,
Ben
hunter
and
to
start
off
with
we
welcome
back
this
week.
Mayor
Hamilton
thanks.
D
Very
much
Chuck,
it's
good
to
be
back
with
you
all.
Let
me
first
say
thanks
to
all
the
residents
who
continue
to
socially
physically
distance
as
I
like
to
call
it
helping
our
community
manage
spread
of
this
Cova
disease,
as
we
all
collectively
sent
out
that
message
this
week
appreciate
everybody
continuing
to
abide
by
those
guidelines.
They
really
do
make
a
difference,
and
on
a
quick
personal
note,
it's
nice
to
be
back
here.
I
wasn't
here!
D
Last
week
my
wife
had
been
in
the
hospital
she
spent
ten
nights
there
thanks
to
the
IU
Health
folks
who
helped
her
through
a
tough
disease
and
she's
back
home,
which
I
I
really
appreciate.
We
do
all
the
the
outpouring
of
support
and
I
know
that
many
families
are
going
through
that
and
just
from
the
bottom
of
our
heart,
thanks
to
the
health
care
providers
who
who
saved
her
life
frankly
and
are
saving
lives
every
day.
D
We
really
appreciate
that
and
that's
why
it's
so
important
that
we
continue
to
do
the
physical,
distancing
and
other
protocols
that
are
so
important
to
help
protect
our
health
care
system
and
all
those
who
end
up
in
it.
I'll
just
give
a
couple
quick
updates,
the
the
economic
side
of
all
this.
We
have
started
pushing
grants
and
loans
out
the
door
from
the
city
about
about
a
couple.
D
Dozen
entities
have
been
approved
for
a
little
over
half
a
million
dollars
of
loans,
support
business,
basically
bridge
loans,
to
help
them
get
to
success
and
get
to
other
financial
support.
That's
out
there
we're
really
pleased
with
the
work
that
a
whole
team
have
done
on
that
we've
actually
gotten
about
a
hundred
and
seventy
applications
that
have
begun
about
50
that
are
completed
and
again
about
half
of
those
have
been
approved
so
far
that
work
continues.
D
If
anybody
does
want
to
get
more
information
about
that,
there
was
a
10
o'clock
zoom
meeting
today
that
took
place
to
help
small
businesses
and
nonprofits
and
others
kind
of
a
navigate
this
complicated
world
in
front
of
them
and
on
the
city's
Facebook
page.
You
can
review
and
go
through
that
that
seminar,
if
you
want
to
that
meeting
that
took
place
so
we're
pleased
with
that.
D
We
have
that
set
up,
but
we're
all
so
now:
the
fiscal
agent
for
the
isolation
center,
a
six
County
isolation
center
set
up
a
Travelodge
that
has
started
to
be
used
to
help
isolate
people
who
don't
have
another
option
for
isolation
when
they're
facing
the
disease
or
recovery,
and
also
the
child
care
services
being
set
up
for
essential
workers
as
I
understand
it
are
gonna,
be
available
starting
Monday.
The
27th
is
coming
Monday
as
needed
for
private
sector
and
public
sector
workers
who
have
child
care
needs.
D
E
Did
and
I
will
do
it
again.
There
we
go
twice
twice
is
the
charm.
Thank
you,
sorry
about
that.
We
just
want
to
thank
everyone
and
best
wishes
for
Don
Johnson
for
continued
recovery.
It's
good
news
and
others
in
our
community
who
are
dealing
with
this.
We
wish
them
all
the
best,
but
clearly
social
distancing
is
working
and
it's
something
that
we
sent
no
doubt
about
this
week.
E
We
continue
in
county
government
to
work
with
our
community
to
provide
services,
and
so,
if
anybody
needs
anything
from
a
county
government
office
to
please
go
to
our
website,
seokmin
Road
on
us
and
log
in
and
find
out
what
the
contact
information
is.
It
could
be
an
email
phone
call
we're
here
to
serve
our
community
as
best
we
can
without
actually
meeting
them
face-to-face.
Just
a
note
from
our
County
Clerk
and
Nicole
Brown
that
absentee
ballots
too.
E
You
have
to
apply
to
get
one
for
the
June,
2nd
primary
and
those
ballots
will
have
to
come
back
by
May
21st
they've
decided
to
send
out
applications
to
everyone,
but
if
you
want
to
go
ahead
and
someone
you
can,
but
this
is
being
done
to
try
to
protect
the
safety
of
everyone
in
our
community
for
the
primary
election
season.
So
please
consider
mailing
in
your
ballot
this
year.
It
would
help
all
of
us
in
our
community
greatly,
and
we
appreciate
the
election
board
and
MS
rounds
work
on
this.
E
We
did
allocate
some
additional
support
for
a
couple
of
local
food
banks
on
Wednesday
and
we
also
offered
appropriated
some
grant
funding
for
some
of
the
local
businesses
in
Monroe
County
outside
the
city
of
Bloomington.
Those
grants
total
a
little
over
68
thousand
dollars
and
we
have
others
in
the
pipeline
to
consider
for
our
next
Wednesday
meeting.
E
We're
gonna
ask
folks,
because
we
don't
know
how
long
the
governor's
order
will
last,
but
this
money
is
only
available
while
the
governor's
orders
order
lasts
so
we're
asking
any
small
business
related
to
tourism
operating
in
Monroe
County
outside
the
city
of
Bloomington.
To
please
go
to
seokmin
Road,
ing
us
and
fill
out
the
application.
E
B
Got
some
sirens
going
on
here
in
the
background.
Just
give
me
a
second
okay,
I'm
gonna
cover
three
things
today,
the
first
one
being
the
presumptive
positive
cases
that
we
may
see
here
as
the
State
Department
of
Health,
starts
to
count
presumptive
positive
cases
in
our
community,
and
what
this
means
is
that
a
physician
who
listed
Kovac
19
as
an
underlying
cause
of
death
for
a
patient,
but
there's
no
documentation
of
that
positive
test.
B
So
this
may
show
our
numbers
differently
when
the
state
finally
starts
posting
those-
and
we
just
want
everyone
to
understand
that
those
numbers
may
change
and
we'll
provide
some
additional
information
as
we
go
forward.
That
there's
been
some
questions
coming
to
me
and
others
about
this.
We
want
to
sure
make
sure
everyone
understands
it's
these.
These
are
not
new
deaths.
We're
capturing
we're
just
capturing
those
in
a
different
way.
B
Health
is
doing
a
study
for
antibody
testing,
and
so
it's
called
serology
testing
and
so
we're
reaching
out
to
patients
who
have
a
cohort
of
patients
who
have
recovered
from
kovat
and
testing
them,
and
that's
one
cohort
and
we're
running
this
through
our
IRB
our
review
board
and
then
500
random
samples
that
we
will
be
then
working
with
the
Fairbanks
School
of
Public
Health
to
then
validate
some
testing
so
that
we
can
begin
to
do
more
of
this
antibody
testing
and
serology
testing
in
our
communities.
Where
are
you?
B
Health
has
hospitals
and
the
second
one
is
testing.
That's
going
to
occur.
This
Saturday,
the
State
Department
of
Health,
reached
out
to
IU
Health
across
its
regions,
because
we
had
cover
a
lot
of
the
Regents
of
the
state
and
they
will
be
bringing
their
teams
on
board.
We
will
be
they'll,
be
setting
up
at
one
of
our
office
locations
out
on
the
west
side
in
the
parking
lot
on
Saturday
from
9
a.m.
to
9
p.m.
and
it's
by
invitation
only,
but
they
will
be
testing
just.
B
Specifically
our
larger
regions
Bloomington
one
of
those
included
so
I
just
wanted
everyone
to
know
that
that
is
occurring
this
the
Department
of
Health
you,
individual
sygyt
citizens
will
get
emails,
they
may
get
postcards,
they
may
get
phone
calls
about
going
out
there
and
going
to
that
testing
site.
So
we
would
encourage
everyone
you
don't
have
to
have
had
covent
and
recovered,
it's
just
everyone
and
anyone.
B
If
you
get
contacted,
we
would
really
extremely
encourage
you
to
go
there
so
that
we
can
truly
get
some
prevalence
rates
and
in
our
community
as
well
as
across
our
state.
This
will
help
significantly
with
the
governor
and
our
county
government
and
others
looking
at
city
government
where
we
are
in
this
in
this
pandemic
and
where,
where
we
would
continue
to
go,
the
next
thing
is
the
open
for
business.
We've
announced
that
we
will
be
on
May
4th
starting
surgeries.
B
You
know
we
still
have
our
emergency
department
open
in
other
areas,
but
we've
got
a
backlog
as
patients,
as
you
can
imagine,
who
have
not
been
able
to
get
their
surgeries,
and
you
know
we've
got
people
living
in
pain
with
hip
pain
and
knee
pain
and
and
other
things
that
we
really
need
to
get
to.
But
we
have
to
be
very
careful
because
we
still
have
you
know:
27
patients
and
our
hospitals
with
kovat
and
that's
not
a
whole
lot
lower
than
some
of
the
numbers
we've
had
ongoing
and
so
we're
still
caring
for
those.
B
Our
resources
are
shifted
toward
the
toward
those
key
individuals
and
patients.
We're
caring
for
so
to
be
very
careful
also.
We
have
to
continue
to
make
sure
we're
practicing
social
distancing.
So
I
was
talking
to
another
administrator
of
a
hospital
in
this
region,
nan
IU
Health,
and
they
they
were
having
some
concern
around.
We
can
start
surgeries
again,
but
where
are
we
going
to
put
it?
B
You
know
they
have
to
have
someone
take
them
home
and
where
are
they
going
to
put
them
and
mask
them
and
all
those
those
things
that
you
have
to
do
and
consider,
as
we
start
back
up,
so
we're
asking
community
to
be
patient
with
us,
as
we
continue
to
be
very
methodical
about
this
and
be
sure
that
we're
protecting
our
patients
protecting
our
healthcare
workers
and
protecting
our
community
as
we
ramp
this
back
up.
It's
good
news.
B
You
know
primarily
for
those
patients
who've
had
to
postpone
their
treatment
and
we've
always
been
doing
emergent
conditions
and
those
have
been.
You
know
a
few.
Thank
goodness,
but
we
know
there
are
a
lot
of
non
urgent
or
elective.
That
doesn't
mean
they're,
not
serious.
It
means
that
they
could
be
put
off
until
such
a
time.
B
And
so
we
have
to
be
cognizant
of
that
and
ensuring,
as
we
put
the
communication
out
this
week,
that
we
don't
see
a
surge
and
where
we
continue
to
do
all
of
our
practices
that
are
important
and
then
the
last
thing.
We
are
hard
at
work
to
develop
IU
health
plan
for
restarting
non-urgent
clinic
visits
and
those
kind
of
things
as
well.
B
That's
going
to
be
later
down
the
road,
but
we
want
to
be
sure
that
we're
planning
for
the
you
know
that
we're
planning
for
that
and
we're
continuing
to
look
at
ramping
up
those
outpatient
clinics
and
other
ways.
Other
services
in
new
ways.
We've
found
that
many
of
our
patients
really
appreciate
the
video
visit,
the
virtual
visit
they
like
not
having
to
leave
their
home
or
work
place,
and
so
we're
gonna
honor
that
we've
been
able
to
you
know
when
in
crisis,
sometimes
some
great
things
come
forward
and
so
we're
gonna
be
doing.
B
We
went
from
maybe
10
or
12
video
visits
a
week
to
over
1200
video
visits
a
week
in
just
a
very
short
period
of
time,
and
so
we're
going
to
continue
that
and
make
sure
that
our
patients
have
the
access
that
they
want,
how
they
want
it
in
the
future.
And
so
it's
been
a
really
good
thing
for
us
as
a
health
care
organization
as
a
health
care
system
and
I'll.
So
we'll
take
questions
again.
B
F
Good
afternoon,
thanks
for
having
me
and
Brian
you
kind
of
stole
some
of
that
thunder,
you
got
to
go
before
me
and
share
some
of
the
those
things.
Thank
you,
I
know,
maybe
add
one
or
two
things
to
that.
So
our
health
department
I,
want
to
just
kind
of
start
off
with
some
of
the
things
that
we
have
continuing,
we're
still
doing
our
birth
and
death
certificates
or
septic
complaints
and
installs
were
issuing
various
permits,
but
these
are
all
managed
right
now,
through
the
mail
or
through
online
services.
F
Staff
are
available
and
they
respond
to
calls
and
emails,
although
it
may
take
longer
than
usual
because
of
our
also
responses
to
covet
19.
A
few
things
that
I
did
want
to
highlight
this
week
that
we've
really
could
have
been
working
on
and
I
may
have
mentioned
before,
but
kind
of
have
come
to
fruition
this
week
and
Chuck
I,
don't
know
if
you
have
that
one
picture
that
I
showed
you
yes.
F
Order
works,
but
one
of
the
things
that
we've
done
is
kind
of
start,
a
peer
outreach
education
program,
and
it's
really
in
regard
to
getting
information
out
to
people
who
may
be
experiencing
homelessness
and
not
have
this
information
or
things.
So
we
have
put
together
a
kit,
and
this
is
a
picture
of
it.
It
includes
a
bandana
and
some
hand,
sanitizer
and
kind
of
a
shout
out
to
the
mad
optimist
for
putting
those
labels
together
and
donating
those
to
the
kit
and
then,
more
importantly,
to
make
those
kits
available.
F
There's
also
information
in
there
reminder
on
how
to
do
social,
distancing
and
how
to
protect
yourselves,
but
we've
been
able
to
get
volunteers
to
do
the
outreach
for
us
and
wheeler
helped
us
identify
some
people
who
are
very
excited
and
they
have
already
started
their
work.
They've
reported
back
their
experiences
and
we
are
seeing
great
skills.
F
F
So
we're
trying
to
get
that
information
out
as
well.
The
co
add,
which
is
the
community's
active
in
disasters,
is
a
lot
of
organizations
and
businesses
in
our
community
and
they
have
prepared
a
resource
list
and
they've
got
a
flier,
but
they've
also
put
together
some
postcards
and
those
will
be
going
out
next
week
and
they
will
the
target
group
that
these
are
going
to
or
people
over
50
who
have
an
income
of
less
than
$35,000,
and
it
has
to
unwind
information
on
it.
F
Helping
Bloomington
Monroe
information
so
that
people
can
access
resources
and
see
they
need
food
or
shelter
or
help
with
transportation
or
some
whatever.
It
might
be,
that
they
have
access
to
that.
And
then
there's
just
some
general
information
as
well,
so
that
that's
a
great
undertaking
for
them
and
and
we're
happy
that
that
that's
occurring
kind
of
to
tag
on
to
what
Brian
was
talking
about
the
Indiana
State
Department
of
Health
and
I.
You
fear
made
School
of
Public
Health
announced.
Yesterday.
The
governor
announced
the
study
and
partnership
that
will
include
randomized
testing.
F
So
the
reason
that
you're
getting
that
invite
is
because
they
have-
because
this
is
a
research
study
in
part
to
look
at
prevalence
in
our
community,
we'll
get
a
snapshot
of
the
prevalence
of
Cova
19
in
our
state
in
our
community
they've
randomized,
who
they're
selecting
so
that
we
get
a
representation
for
our
community.
So
echo
Brian's
sentiments.
If
you
get
that
invitation,
please
take
them
up
on
that
and
be
a
part
of
them.
F
It
doesn't
matter
if
you've
been
diagnosed
and
recovered
or
you
haven't
been
diagnosed
at
all,
so
it
will
help
guide
a
lot
of
things
in
our
community,
but
certainly
that
information
to
re-open
and
how
we
phase
that
back
in
will
be
part
of
that.
It
is
a
year-long
study
and
so
there'll
be
different
phases
of
this
as
we
go
through
and
also
to
reiterate.
The
other
thing
that
Brian
talked
about
is
the
change
in
kind
of
those
clinical
deaths
and
clinical
diagnosis,
so
the
dashboard
will
look
different
going
forward.
F
We
don't
quite
know
exactly
how
that
will
be
represented
on
the
dashboard.
At
this
point,
some
of
that
information
will
come
off
death
certificates,
but
where
physicians
may
have
thought
it
might
be
Kovan
19,
but
they
didn't
have
the
ability,
maybe
at
the
time,
to
do
testing
that
sort
of
thing.
So
another
way
for
us
to
get
big,
complete
information
or
more
complete
information
about
what's
been
happening,
and
then
what
will
continue
to
happen?
F
The
state
and
local
communities-
and
we've
heard
this
already-
are
working
to
develop
a
strategic
phasing
of
how
we
can
get
into
that
new,
normal
I.
Don't
think
Allison
Moore
was
able
to
be
on
the
call
today.
But
she
let
me
know
that
the
main
thing
that
they're
focusing
on
right
now
is
kind
of
that
re-entry
and
what
that
new,
normal
looks
like
and
also
EMS
kind
of
prepare
preparing
for
possible
surges
or
second
waves.
So
we
we
hope
that
those
things
don't
happen,
but
we
have
to
be
prepared
for
them.
F
So
just
to
keep
in
mind
that,
as
we
think
about
next
steps-
and
we
think
about
what
happens
when
we
reopen,
then
it
will
have
to
be
incremental.
It
will
have
to
be
phased
in
Brian
used.
Good
examples
of
just
how
the
hospital
is
doing
that
and
we'll
one
all
of
our
businesses
and
agencies
and
individuals,
quite
honestly,
to
be
thinking
about
how
we
do
that
in
small
stages
and
kind
of
take
baby
steps
so
that
we
can
watch
what's
happening
and
watch
what
the
response
is
as
we
go
through.
G
Am
thanks
Chuck
just
to
follow
up
I
know
this
study's
been
talked
about
just
a
follow-up.
It
is
a
year-long
study
and
they'll
be
taking
place
throughout
all
of
Indiana.
We're
excited
to
partner,
as
always
with
the
state,
9u
health,
on
that
Eli
Lilly.
So
you'll
be
hearing
a
lot
more
and
a
lot
more
updates
about
that
to
come
for
Indiana
University,
our
general
planning
continues
to
move
forward.
We
have
several
committees,
as
I
discussed
last
week
that
are
in
place
that
are
following
lead
of
our
restart
committee.
G
The
president
Robbie
put
in
place
we'll
continue
to
look
and
monitor
how
other
institutions
are
doing
their
planning
for
for
any
type
of
presence
in
the
fall.
We
don't
know
how
that
will
pan
out
we've
been
looking
towards
our
partners
at
the
Big
Ten
and
of
any
institutions
of
higher
education
as
well.
G
We
will
continue
to
look
at
CDC
and
state
guidance
in
all
those
areas,
as
we've
talked
about
so
you've
talked
about
the
phase
ins
and
we'll
monitor
those
type
of
guidance
issues
and
then
we'll
work
at
Indiana
University
to
see
what's
best
for
the
institution,
our
faculty
staff,
students
and
visitors.
We
don't
really
have
answers
around
a
lot
of
that.
I
know.
I've,
gotten
questions,
I'm
sure
Chuck
has
gotten
questions
on
you
know:
will
there
be
football
it'll
be
basketball?
You
know
those
are
things
that
are
they're
still
out
there.
G
We
just
simply
don't
know
we'll
continue
to
work
with,
like
I
said
the
big
ten
on
that
and
for
IU
we
have
division,
two
sports
as
well,
and
the
regional
campuses
so
we'll
continue
to
work
throughout
the
state
to
monitor
any
guidance
that
we
get
from
that
standpoint,
our
if
the
most
up-to-date
guidance
for
IU
is
at
our
coronavirus,
dot
IU
eating
you
webpage
that
will
have
a
new
look
starting
next
week,
be
more
user
friendly.
It
would
encourage
you
to
continue
to
visit
that.
G
G
You
know
as
our
planning
efforts
ramped
up
I.
Just
you
know,
want
to
thank
our
local
and
state
partners.
You
know
the
city
of
Bloomington,
City
of
Indianapolis.
All
the
cities
that
were
located
throughout
the
state
have
been
great.
You
know,
I
think
the
big
question
for
for
IU
and
our
staff
is
that
we
want
to
continue
to
work
with
local
health
authorities.
The
state
and
the
CDC
were
anxious.
G
C
D
Well,
let's
use
the
word
cautious
to
start
with,
it
is
a
little
striking
that
we,
our
normal
process
for
the
2020
budget,
does
begin
sorry
for
the
2021
budget
does
begin
in
just
a
couple
weeks
with
that.
What
is
a
traditional
time
when
City
Council
members
expressed
their
interests
and
concerns
and
such
out
of
what
we
call
a
budget
advance,
but
but
more
generally,
let
me
just
talk
about.
We
we're
in
a
very
good
fiscal
position
in
a
city
I
believe
the
county
is
as
well
with
strong
reserves.
D
We
have
over
a
third
of
our
operating
accounts
in
reserves.
That's
been
a
standard
that
we
said
a
couple
years
a
few
years
ago
and
so
I'm
pleased
that
we're
in
good
fiscal
shape,
but
it's
a
very
uncertain
environment.
To
be
sure,
we
certainly
encourage
the
federal
government
to
take
significant
steps
to
support
state
and
local
governments.
That's
a
very,
very
important
thing
to
be
done
that
isn't
done
yet,
but
we're
going
to
be
going
into
a
budget
process
very
cautiously.
D
We
need
to
be
sensitive
to
a
lot
of
uncertainties
and
that's
going
to
be
kind
of
a
watchword.
I
think
as
we
go
forward,
that
being
said,
governments
are
anti
recessionary
are
counter
cyclical
organizations.
We
need
to
be
present
and
stepping
up
when
the
economy
is
in
trouble
when
people
are
in
trouble
and
we
certainly
look
forward
to
continuing
our
services
as
we
do
now,
County
in
the
city
to
help
provide
the
kind
of
back
stops
that
are
so
important.
D
C
D
Thank
you
for
asking
you
don't
need
to
ask
me:
I'm
I,
feel
I,
don't
feel
a
hundred
percent,
but
I
don't
feel
terrible
either.
I
do
have
some
fatigue
occasional
temperatures.
This
is
maybe
more
than
people
really
want
to
know.
I
have
actually
now
had
two
tests
for
Cova
just
to
be
sure,
and
both
of
them
have
been
negative,
even
though
my
household
has
obviously
had
kovat
but
I'm
I'm,
getting
there
I'm
getting
there
I'm
on
them
on
the
way
back
thanks
a
lot.
Alright.
C
For
Brian
and
shock
me,
a
few
outlets
have
reported
that
a
Monroe
County
patient
died
of
kovat
19
that
he
contracted
while
being
treated
at
IU
Health
for
an
injury
when
you
open
up
may
4th
to
elective
surgeries.
What
precautions
are
you
taking
to
make
sure
non?
Kovat
patients
remain
safe
aside
from
not
opening
at
complete
capacity.
B
Think,
mayor
Hamilton
used
the
right
word
and
uncertainty
with
this
virus.
You
know
trying
and
penny
can
probably
write
more
around
this
contract
tracing
how
people
are
getting
the
virus.
As
mayor
Hampton
said,
he
has
two
people
and
his
household
with
it
and-
and
you
know,
and
he's
tested
negative
twice,
so
we
really
don't
always
know
how
people
get
this
virus.
So
I'll
just
start
with
that.
B
Second
of
all
how
we
ramped
back
up,
you
know
it
is
complicated
and
that's
why
we're
only
going
to
wrap
up
at
25
percent
when
we
start-
and
we
will
stay
there
until
we
know
until
comfortable
that
the
data
is
demonstrating
that
we're
able
to
do
that
well,
how
we
protect
patients,
we
do
this
with
our
universal
precautions
or
standard,
and
we
have
since
this
virus
started
hitting
our
community.
We
started
setting
up
our
specific
Ovid
units,
and
so
specific
people
are
in
those
units
they're
all
that
air.
There
is
negative
pressure.
B
All
of
the
PPE
we've
always
had
good
supply
of
PPE
and
have
a
terrific
supply
going
forward.
So
we've
looked
at
that
we
can't
open
without
a
good
supply
of
that
going
forward
and
we
have
predictive
models,
but
not
only
Indiana
University
about
Purdue
University
and
the
Indiana
State
Department
of
Health
are
working
with
us
to
create
these
predictive
models
for
all
of
our
supplies.
As
we
ran
back
up
as
well,
and
so
every
patient
that
will
come
for
a
surgery
will
be
tested.
B
90
sit
within
a
96
hour
window
before
they
come
in
for
their
surgery,
so
they
will
get
a
test,
and
then
we
will.
We
treat
every
patient
who
walks
in
the
building
as
though
they
could
be
shedding
the
virus.
They
may
look
very
fine.
They
may
be
coming
to
our
emergency
department,
for
you
know
a
broken
finger,
but
we've
masked
them
when
they
walk
in
the
door
and
all
of
our
team
members
are
all
donned
up
with
PPE
and
they've
got
the
proper
PPE
masks
and
and
and
the
like.
B
So
we're
well
prepared
to
be
sure
that
there's
no
spread
of
this
virus,
while
people
are
caring
for
us,
but
I
will
go
back
to
the
very
beginning
of
my
comments.
Around
uncertainty
as
in
contact
tracing
and
Oh
penny
could
share
even
more
on
that
that
we've
learned
over
the
past.
You
know
a
few
months
about
this
virus.
I
can
continue
to
learn
and
will
continue
to
learn.
Hence
why
the
Fairbanks
and
the
State
Department
of
Health
Studies
that
we're
doing.
B
B
B
There
simple
things
like
if
we
haven't
used
an
operating
room
in
a
few
weeks
going
through
there
and
terminally
cleaning
that
operating
room,
checking
every
supply
on
a
supply
card
in
a
supply
room
that
may
not
have
been
used
and
turned
as
frequently
to
be
sure.
Nothing
is
outdated
on
that
supply.
Cart.
So,
as
you
can
imagine,
there's
a
lot
of
work
and
a
lot
of
detail
that
we
all
have
to
be
focused
on
to
be
sure
that
we
keep
our
patients
safe.
C
F
Even
we
plan
on
giving
out
at
least
a
hundred
of
those
I,
think
we've
got
over
a
hundred
that
are
prepared
and
ready
to
go
and
those
are
given
to
the
peer
educators
in
small
batches.
So
they
may
get
five
to
ten
at
a
time
to
take
out
so
that
we
can
kind
of
keep
track
of
how
they're
going
who
to
some
extent,
not
necessarily
who
exactly
they're
going
to.
But
what
areas
they're
going
to
and
and
we
talk
with
them
on
a
regular
basis,
so
we
can
get
that
feedback.
F
So
we
hope
to
give
out
a
hundred
or
more
and
we'll
see
how
that
goes.
Maybe
we
will
do
even
more,
maybe
we'll
have
to
put
together
more
kits
the
impact
we
hope
will
be
that
people
who
may
not
have
access
to
a
face
covering
will
have
one
a
bandana
may
not
be
the
perfect
thing
that
it
is
something
and
if
I,
if
I
don't
have
anything,
then
it
does.
Allow
me
to
do
my
part
to
protect
those
others
around
me
hand
sanitizer.
If
I
don't
have
access
to
hand-washing
then
hand
sanitizer.
F
Is
that
next
best
thing
so
we're
hoping
to
that
impact
to
be
able
to
give
people
things
that
they
need
to
keep
themselves
safe
so
that,
ultimately
we
can
prevent
the
spread
of
the
infection
that
they're
less
likely
to
be
infected
at
this?
You
know,
people
who
may
be
on
the
street
or
housing
is
vulnerable
for
them.
Maybe
they
don't
have
any
housing
at
all.
Maybe
they
stay
in
a
shelter,
maybe
on
the
street.
We
want
to
be
able
to
protect
them
as
much
as
possible
and
give
them.
The
information.
F
I
may
be
able
to
read
the
paper
or
go
online
in
and
see
the
paper
or
read
the
news,
but
not
everybody
has
that
access.
So
that's
the
kind
of
impact
that
we're
looking
for
and
on
a
side
note
to
that
just
already,
and
talking
with
these
individuals
and
the
staff
reporting
back
they've
already
identified
some
great
skills
in
the
peer
educators
that
we
have
problem
solving
and
just
good.
F
One
kind
of
this
person
is
a
natural
educator
and
that
kind
of
thing
so
we're
hoping
even
when
this
is
done,
that
we'll
be
able
to
give
them
something
that
says:
hey.
They
worked
on
this
project
with
us
and
these
are
the
skills
that
we
saw
in
them.
So,
if
they're
looking
for
a
job,
then
maybe
they
have
that
as
kind
of
a
reference
for
skills
that
they
have
that
we
saw
okay.
C
C
C
F
I,
don't
know
exactly
yeah.
That
is
a
change
that
is
coming
to
us
just
this
week
and
so
we're
still
waiting
to
see
a
little
bit
of
that.
The
FSSA
handles
the
dashboard
and
so
I,
don't
know
exactly
what
that
will
look
like
I
do
anticipate
that
they
will
that
they
will
become.
They
probably
won't
become
confirmed
cases,
but
they
will
be
identified
as
a
potential
case.
I,
don't
know
exactly
what
that
will
look
like,
but
I
do
think
that
there
will
be
some
reflection
now,
keep
in
mind
too.
F
That
testing
is
being
done
now,
the
coroner
or
the
hospital
if
someone
passes
and
they
were
not
tested,
but
they
think
that
they
may
have
coded
they
can
do
testing
and
those
would
be
confirmed
cases.
So
short
answers
are
not
exactly
sure
what
it's
going
to
look
like
and
but
we'll
keep
you
apprised
as
as
that
comes,
but
I
guess
just
be
aware,
because
it
could
change
on
the
dashboard
in
a
moment's
notice,
and
we
won't
have
a
lot
of
advance
warning
about
that,
but
we'll
certainly
share
it
as
it
comes
and.
C
F
Well,
I,
I,
don't
think
any
of
us
has
a
crystal
ball,
so
I
don't
think
we
know
what
that
exact
answer
is
other
than
that.
We
have
to
look
and
see
what's
going
right
now.
The
information
is
that,
especially
here
in
Monroe
County
we're
doing
a
really
good
job
of
kind
of
keeping
that
curve
low
and
flattening
it.
But
we
have
to
look
at
the
whole
state
and
not
just
our
County,
so
I
don't
know
what
will
happen.
F
I
would
not
be
surprised
to
have
it
be
extended
for
a
little
while,
but
I
truly
don't
know
and
wouldn't
want
to
make
a
real
gas
suit
and
I
don't
have
the
information
the
governor
has
and
well
we'll
have
to
see
what
what
comes
I
think
next
week.
We've
all
talked
about
things
changing
from
day
to
day
and
honestly,
they
change
from
moment
to
moment.
Sometimes
so.
F
D
I
might
just
add
a
couple
points
than
he
was
coddled
made
very
the
right
points.
I
would
just
say
one
that
it's
really
important
to
note
that
what
we
have
done
seems
to
have
really
helped.
The
community
has
helped
protect
the
healthcare
system.
Has
you
know
it's
terrific
news
that
the
healthcare
system
can
gradually
look
to
reopen
and
help
providing
other
important
health
services
that
they've
had
to
hold
off
on,
and
that's
because
the
community
has
done
the
right
things
and
flatten
that
curve.
D
D
It
almost
certainly
will
be
very
incremental,
very
detailed
and
and
step
by
step,
and
it
may
be
different
in
this
county
than
another
County
and
I
think
the
governor
is
working
closely
with
other
Midwest
governors
to
look
at
how
they're
doing
and
university
is
looking,
as
you
heard
to
other
universities,
so
I
think
will
almost
certainly
have
very,
very
incremental
and
granular
changes
over
the
weeks
ahead.
So
don't
expect
any
dramatic,
pull
the
curtain
and
everything's
going
to
return
to
what
it
was.
D
C
We
are
virtually
out
of
time
to
emphasize
the
point
that
was
just
made
about
the
the
progress
that
we've
made.
There
was
a
statement
that
came
out
yesterday
with
all
the
partners
here
on
this
call:
the
Bloomington
Provost
signing
off
for
Indiana
University,
noting
that
very
fact,
and
telling
everybody
to
keep
up
the
good
work.
So
that
is
it
for
our
virtual
news
conference
today
we
will
again
plan
on
meeting
again
next
Friday
at
1:15.
Thank
you
for
your
questions
and
your
time.