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A
All
right
thanks,
everybody
for
joining
us
again
for
a
virtual
news
conference
actually
should
just
say
we're.
We
were
assuming
for
a
news
conference
virtual
we're
actually
having
it
just
to
be
clear,
but
this
will
be
a
weekly
update
that
we'll
do
for
the
foreseeable
future,
as
we
did
on
Monday.
Just
regarding
the
current
circumstances
regarding
kova
19,
with
updates
from
the.
A
Indiana
University
Monroe
County,
Health,
Monroe,
County,
Emergency,
Management
and
IU
Health.
Today
we
have
a
bit
of
a
lighter
crew,
responding
to
questions
today
because
of
schedules,
but
we
do
have
Mayor
John
Hamilton
I
will
be
speaking:
I'm
Chuck
Kearney,
the
director
of
media
relations
for
Indiana,
University
and
spokesperson
I'll,
be
speaking
on
the
Indiana
University
behalf.
A
B
Good,
thank
you.
This
is
John
Hamilton
I
appreciate
all
who
are
here
and
Chuck
and
I.
You
thanks
for
the
logistics
of
this
I,
appreciate
on
Friday
the
27th
here
in
the
afternoon.
Given
an
update,
I
think
we
don't
have
health
department
available
today
they
will
be
I,
know
again
and
we
have
constant
meetings
going
on
and
they're
probably
doing
some
of
that
you
probably
have
seen.
We
have
eight
confirmed
cases
in
Monroe
County.
B
Now
the
health
system
is
preparing
for
a
surge
that
is
expected,
as
those
cases
are
rising
and
continue
to
rise
and
working
closely
with
all
of
our
partners
on
that.
We
are,
in
the
third
day
of
the
official
stay
at
home
order
that
came
from
the
governor,
effective
midnight
Tuesday
night
into
Wednesday,
and
that
has
been
a
substantial
change
in
the
state
and
we
appreciate
that
I
think
that's
been
a
good
thing.
That's
happened
to
try
to
step
in
and
early
and
create
the
physical
distancing
and
the
reductions
in
opportunity.
B
We
know
the
coronavirus
is
probably
all
across
Indiana.
We
know
it's
in
our
County
and
we
don't
have
a
lot
of
testing
going
on.
So
we're
not
as
sure
of
how
many
and
where,
but
we
know
it's
here,
and
so
this
stay
at
home
order,
which
says,
unless
you're
working
for
an
essential
business
or
doing
an
essential
activity,
you
must
stay
home.
That
is
a
mandatory
order
over
the
next
two
weeks
to
early
April
and
it
could
be
extended
by
the
state.
It
could
be
extended
locally.
B
Even
if
the
state
doesn't
and
I
think
that
effort
to
tamp
down
the
spread
of
the
virus
is
really
important.
We
we
know
it's
going
to
get
worse
before
it
gets
better.
Here
we
can
see
the
previews
in
some
ways
of
different
parts
of
the
world
or
different
parts
of
our
own
country,
of
some
of
the
pressures
that
can
come
on
a
health
system.
If
we
don't
do
this
right,
the
the
continuity
of
city
government
continues.
We
have
a
group.
B
They've
now
met
seven
times
in
the
last
less
than
two
weeks
really
digging
in
in
in
a
detailed
way
to
make
sure
our
city
government,
essential
services
do
continue
that
that
group
is
changing
a
lot
of
protocols
and
what
we
do
in
city
government.
Well,
our
people
remain
working,
whether
they're
remote
workers
or
whether
they're
frontline
workers
to
provide
the
essential
services
and
we're
changing
a
lot
of
protocols
from
dispatch
to
police,
to
fire,
to
parks,
to
water
services,
to
the
animal
shelter
and
many
other.
You
know
you've
seen
buildings.
B
Closed
playgrounds
are
now
wrapped
with
yellow
tape
to
indicate
those
are
a
that's
a
place
where
a
lot
of
virus
can
get
transmitted.
So
we're
doing
a
lot
of
things
to
adapt
to
that.
While
we
continue
to
provide
these
services
that
are
so
important,
city
council
met
this
week,
Wednesday
night,
the
first
time
that
I
expect
in
history
they
met
remotely,
as
they
did
all
all
remotely
and
took
some
important
actions.
They
approved
a
bond
refinancing.
B
B
Stabilization
and
recovery
efforts
to
help
our
small
businesses
and
their
employees
get
through
these
challenges.
I
know
we
continue
to
meet
with
from
the
city
side,
with
our
County
Partners,
IU,
IU,
health
and
other
partners
regularly
to
identify
ways.
We
can
help
each
other
where
we
see
mutual
challenges
and
I'll
just
end.
B
My
my
brief
opening
statement
by
making
a
report
that
last
time
we
talked
about
the
importance
of
integrating
and
aligning
services
outside
the
pure
health
care,
the
health
care
focused
effort
with
the
Department
of
Health
and
Penny
Caudill,
our
commissioner
of
health
and
Indiana
University
Health,
which
provides
so
many
services
for
Public
Health
our
front
and
center
in
trying
to
protect
us
on
the
medical
and
health
front.
But
we
have
some
really
important
other
challenges
in
parallel.
B
B
They
would
be
things
like
housing
for
populations
and
people
at
risk
and
making
sure
that
we've
got
a
place
for
people
to
go
if
they
need
to
isolate
if
they
need
to
safe
protection.
In
that
way,
another
area
would
be
food
security,
making
sure
with
all
these
disruptions,
that
we
assure
basic
food
necessities-
and
a
third
would
be
child
care
thinking
about
all
of
our
essential
workers,
whether
they're
health
care,
public
safety
dispatch,
others
grocery
store,
clerks,
etc.
How
do
we
make
sure
they
have
the
health
care?
I'm?
B
B
That
group
is
going
to
be
working
hard
to
identify
a
plan
to
develop
responses
there
in
the
in
the
short
days
ahead
and
then
a
second
group,
economic,
stabilization
and
recovery
similar
assess
accumulation
of
some
of
the
leadership
locally
to
identify
immediate
steps
that
need
to
be
taken,
as
well
as
some
medium
and
long
term
steps,
and,
as
many
of
you
probably
know,
there
was
a
first
three
hundred
thousand
three
hundred
fifty
thousand
on
the
social
service
side.
That's
going
out
the
door
in
the
next
few
days
through
a
round.
B
One
of
that
and
I
want
to
thank
everybody
who
helped
coordinate
that
and
then
they'll
be
round
2.0
and
3.0.
Looking
at
how
we
keep
that
going
and
on
the
economic
side,
both
the
county
and
the
city
have
been
asking
to
put
some
resources
right
on
the
street
quite
quickly
to
help
folks
deal
with
that.
We
are
I
spoke
to
City
Council
Wednesday
night.
One
of
the
things
I
said
is
it's
going
to
get
worse
before
it
gets
better.
B
A
D
Thanks
Chuck-
and
it's
really
nice-
that
you're
putting
this
together
so
that
we
can
stay
in
touch
with
a
community
for
the
people
that
get
the
HT
the
tent.
That
was
pictured
on
the
front
page
today
outside
the
hospital
is
from
the
county's
Emergency
Management
Group.
We're
really
happy
that
we're
able
to
do
those
kinds
of
things
helps
to
keep
our
health
care
workers
safer.
D
Hopefully,
in
many
many
ways
on
Tuesday
the
food
and
beverage
tax,
Advisory
Commission
approved
two
hundred
thousand
dollars
of
the
food
and
beverage
tax
that
is
allocated
to
the
county
to
be
used
to
help
support
different
groups
economically,
we
will
specifically
be
targeting
people
involved
outside
the
Bloomington
City
Limits,
who
are
involved
in
tourism,
with
especially
focus
on
restaurants.
We
have
an
application
up
at
the
Rock
County
website
for
people
that
are
interested
in
applying
for
some
support
and
we've
had
that
approved
also
by
the
County
Council.
D
So
we
should
be
good
to
go
we'll
start
with
looking
over
things
this
weekend,
because
we
do
want
to
get
things
out
there.
We
don't
want
people
to
be
removed
from
there
housing.
We
want
to
make
sure
that
people
have
food
and
we
want,
to,
like
I,
said,
support
people
as
much
as
we
can
we're,
also
trying
to
push
as
hard
as
we
can
for
a
complete
response
to
the
2020
census.
I
know
mark
fig
who's
on.
D
D
We
have
also
been
part
of
the
child
care
group.
That's
been
talking
so
that
we
are
really
aware
of
the
needs
that
we
have
for
these
essential
employees
that
is
going
to
be
covering
their
children,
who
are
zero
to
five
who've,
been
impacted
by
the
shutdowns.
As
the
mayor
mentioned,
many
of
the
child
care
centers
and
then
the
school-aged
kids,
especially
those
six
to
twelve.
We
need
people
at
Catalans
and
Boston,
Scientific
and
Cook
and
others
at
work
to
help
fight.
D
What's
going
on
in
this
crisis,
we've
been
having
daily
calls
among
people
within
the
county,
including
penny
Caudill.
The
part
Health
Director
and
Allison
Moorer,
director
of
Emergency
Management,
trying
to
stay
on
top
of
things
as
much
as
possible,
and
the
county
very
early
on
provided
$25,000
to
help
with
the
food
issues
at
the
Hoosier
Hills
Food
Bank,
and
we
also
provided
$25,000
to
the
social
service
group,
that's
being
led
by
the
United
Way
that
the
mayor
also
referenced.
D
A
A
C
C
B
D
A
A
C
A
This
week
a
letter
to
students
yesterday-
and
she
made
several
points
in
there,
among
them
being
that
classes
the
summer
have
moved
online.
But
the
first
point
you
made
was
simply
about
students
who
have
been
elsewhere
may
be
returning
to
Bloomington,
and
we
had
I
know
that
the
Bloomington
Police
Department
had
to
respond
to
at
least
one
gathering
of
30
students
around
that
earlier
this
week.
A
So
we
are
emphasizing
to
parents
for
one
to
emphasize
emphasize
to
their
students
that
if
they
do
come
back
to
Bloomington,
they
need
to
isolate
just
as
everyone
else,
and
they
cannot
continue
to
have
these
sort
of
gatherings,
so
something
that
colleges
across
the
country
of
course
are
battling
and
we're
trying
to
make
sure
that
that
message
gets
through
the
move
in
or
move
out
rather
for
students
at
the
IU
representants
halls
has
been
halted.
As
of
the
governor's
order
that
was
supposed
to
start
on
Tuesday.
A
That
is
halted,
at
least
through
April
6th
and
those
were
to
refresh
your
memory.
If
you're
not
familiar,
those
were
to
be
individual
appointments
for
those
who
are
in
residence
halls
to
move
out
the
rest
of
their
belongings
by
May
1st,
so
we're
in
the
process
of
rescheduling
some
of
those
we
may
have
to
reschedule
further.
A
Of
course,
the
border
does
extend
further
as
well
and
campus
is
not
closed,
but
essential
personnel
only
working
on
campus
at
this
time
and
we
are
truly
spreading
everyone
out,
as
you
can
tell,
I
am
in
my
home
office
and
the
Emergency
Operations
Center
at
IU.
Bloomington
is
operating
with
as
few
people
in
person
as
possible.
They
are
actually
located
in
Franklin
Hall,
which,
as
you
probably
know,
is
a
large
space
and
they're
spread
out
at
least
six
feet
apart
and
as
few
people
in
person
as
are
needed
to
be
there.
A
C
A
C
We're
good
yeah,
so
from
the
hospital
standpoint,
we
continue
to
ramp
up
operations
as
we
continue
to
see
more
and
more
positive
tests
more
and
more
impatience.
Coming
into
the
hospital.
Our
search
plans
are
in
place.
We
have
search
plans
with
IU
Health
that
connect
with
not
only
our
local
hospital
here
in
our
regional
hospitals,
but
also
with
the
state
all
IU
hospitals
across
the
state.
C
First
of
all,
I'd
like
to
say
thank
you
for
all
the
donations
we've
had
restaurants
and
vendors
reach
out
to
us
on
a
regular
basis
and
they're
bringing
food
to
our
employees.
We've
had
to
scale
back
our
food,
as
you
can
imagine
our
food
choices,
no
salad
bars
those
nothing
that
can
be
touched,
and
so
the
packaged
items
that
were
able
to
provide
to
our
employees.
You
know
2,000
employees
that
are
here
on
the
Bloomington
campus
and
across
the
state
5,000
across
the
region.
C
So
we
appreciate
that
in,
if
you
know
of
a
group
that
quilts
or
wants
to
make
make
masks,
we
would
certainly
appreciate
that
and
they
can
get
their
patterns
and
information.
I've
got
connections
on
the
website,
but
also
Carol
Weiss
Kennedy
at
our
Miller
Drive
location
can
also
provide
support
there.
I
guess
the
biggest
thing
is
our
testing.
C
So
last
time
we
talked
about
three
phases
and
testing
and
the
first
phase
was
patients
who
would
come
to
us
and
we
were
using
the
Indiana
State
Department
of
Health
testing
site
for
all
of
our
patients
and
then
last
week
about
this
time,
we
were
standing
up.
The
IU
Health
in
Indianapolis
central
lab
pathology
lab
to
be
able
to
start
testing
our
own
patients
and
also
testing
our
healthcare
workers.
C
That's
been
going
on
for
a
week
and
now
we
are
moving
that
to
another
site
where
it
will
be
a
drive
through
site,
as
we
see
more
and
more
people
coming
forward,
more
of
our
health
care
workers
and
more
of
our
patients
needing
testing.
We
are
doing
a
drive
through
site
at
our
landmark
location
that
will
be
coming
up
next
week.
So
the
second
phase
is
our
patients
all
right
that
we
care
for
here
in
our
Hospital.
C
It
will
be
our
health
care
workers
who
were
seeing
increased
their
community-acquired
at
this
point
and
then
we
also
then
we'll
be
providing
screening
for
all
healthcare
workers
in
this
region,
police
and
fire
as
well.
So
if
they
will
go
through
our
virtual
hub
they'll
dial
into
virtual
hub,
the
virtual
hub
will
screen
them
and
then
they
will
direct
them
to
this
drive-through
testing
site,
which
will
take
right
now
we're
using
the
yellow
tint
that
the
county
has
been
able
to
provide
for
us
outside
of
our
emergency
room.
C
And
now
we
know
we'll
be
seeing
a
lot
more.
We
need
to
move
to
a
off-site
location
where
we
can
take
care
of
more
people
and
do
testing
on
more
people,
so
that
will
be
coming
up
the
next
week,
so
the
tent
will
remain
because
that
remains
and
as
penny
said,
it
provides
us
an
opportunity
to
protect
healthcare
workers,
as
people
come
to
our
emergency
department
and
on
our
campus,
but
all
of
the
testing
this
referring
from
the
hub
and
the
healthcare
workers
and
emergency
workers
in
our
communities.
C
They
will
be
forwarded
to
this
new
location
at
our
landmark
office,
so
one
that
everyone
to
know
that
and
to
get
the
the
word
out.
I
can't
stress
enough,
as
Chuck
said
regarding
congregating,
you
know:
Singapore
is
a
good
example
of
how
they
were
able
to
avoid
rampant
disease
and
virus
spread,
how
they
really
really
crack
down
on
people
coming
together
in
locations
and
practice,
good
hand,
hygiene
and
I.
Just
can't
stress
enough
that
need
in
our
in
our
communities
and
our
families
that
that
will
definitely
stop
the
spread
of
this
virus.
C
And
when
we
see
when
we
find
someone
who's
positive,
then
we
start
doing
the
tracers
and
trace
back
who
they've
come
in
contact
with
and
how
its
spread.
It
was
because
they
did
not
practice
good
social
distancing
for
the
most
part
and
hand
hygiene.
So
if
we
can
get
the
word
out
more
and
more
on
that
I
think
heightened
awareness
of
that
is
going
to
be
what
is
going
to
as
we
could
talk
about
flat
and
the
curve
here
in
our
south-central
region
and
I'll.
Stop
there
with
my
remarks
and
we
can
entertain
question
yeah.
A
And
we
have
quite
a
few
that
have
come
in
on
chat
and
on
Facebook
I
want
to
get
to
the
immediate
questions.
First
here
question
first,
this
is
for
you
Brian
for
Dave
askance
with
the
b-squared
beacon.
Can
you
confirm
the
total
number
of
beds
at
the
hospital
at
270,
and
can
you
confirm
the
hospital
has
the
capacity
to
make
all
those
rooms
in
those
beds,
negative
pressure
for
environments?
C
Yeah,
so
yes,
we
do
have
those
beds,
but
we've
also
expanded
our
bed.
So
our
sleep
study
unit
is
we
closed
that
unit,
and
that
is
now
capacity
for
beds
as
part
of
our
surge
capacity
plan.
We
also
have
executed
an
agreement
with
Ivy
Tech
in
their
nursing
school
and
their
area
there
for
patients
who
need
to
be
discharged
from
our
facility.
C
So
if
you're
just
you
can't
go
home
because
someone
has
kovat
at
your
house
or
they
need
to
be
quarantined,
Ivy
Tech
has
provided
us
their
facilities
so
that
we
can
take
patients
there
and
they
be
discharged
from
our
facility,
but
we
can
help
them.
We
have
our
pharmacy,
our
community
pharmacy
up
and
running,
we'll
be
able
to
give
them
their
meds
that
they
need
and
be
able
to
take
them
there
and
help
them
stay
there
until
they
can
get
to
another
location.
So
that
gives
us
capacity.
C
We
continue
every
day
to
bring
more
and
more
rooms
up
under
negative
pressure
and
based
on
our
projections.
We
believe
we
have
what
we
need
to
be
able
to
take
care
of
those
those
negative
pressure
rooms.
So,
yes,
we
do
have
the
272,
but
we're
actually
expanding
that
beyond
over
the
years,
we've
had
different
locations
here
in
the
hospital
that
we've
turned
into
outpatient
areas
or
surgical,
check-in
and
recovery
areas,
and
now
that
we've
gone
to
all
all
only
emergency
surgeries.
C
A
C
Yeah
from
a
number
standpoint,
I
can't
give
you
an
exact
number,
because
we're
still
looking
at
all
those
different
areas,
but
we
will
be
up
over
300
beds
and
what
we're
projecting
now
will
be
what
we
need
again
we're
looking
at
everyday
we're
looking
at
what
the
potential
could
be
based
upon
what
others
are
seeing
in
other
communities
our
size.
You
know
I,
think
that
here
in
here
in
our
region,
for
example,
we're
seeing
what's
happening
across
the
state.
A
C
So
we
have
backup
plans
for
external
sites
as
well.
We
won't
disclose
where
those
are,
but
we
have
that
plan,
but
we
always
will
expand
within
our
within
our
Hospital
first
and
then,
because
we
are
part
of
a
system
here
at
IU
Health
and
we
have
veteran
Hospital
Paoli
Hospital
Morgan
Hospital.
We
have
the
statewide
hospitals
as
well,
so
we've
got
the
capacity
to
move
patients
where
we
need
them
to
be
and
open
beds
that
may
not
have
been
utilized
or
not
being
utilized.
Currently.
A
B
Thanks
for
the
question,
we
are
not
generally
issuing
parking
tickets.
As
you
know,
we
made
a
ton
of
to
our
free
for
everybody,
and
while
we
do
monitor
situations
where
there's,
for
example,
parking
in
front
of
a
hydrant
where
they
may
need
to
be
towed
or
if
there's
a
car,
that's
just
abandoned
or
left
for
a
long
time,
we
may
need
to
tow
it.
We
are.
We
are
available
to
do
that.
B
Like
many
employees
in
the
city
government,
the
parking
facility,
folks
parking
personnel
are
being
redeployed
and
reassigned
to
do
some
different
things
we'll
go
into
the
detail
on
that,
but
one
thing
when
we
have
a
lot
of
vacant
areas
or
vacant
apartments
or
lower
population
apartments.
Sometimes
it's
useful
to
have
a
presence
there
to
be
seen
just
to
help
protect
public
safety,
but
those
they
are
not.
Generally
writing.
Tickets.
B
It's
not
generally
been
a
problem
that
we've
seen
if
there
are
particular
problems,
residents
or
business
owners
can,
let
us
know-
and
we
can
intercede
in
that.
I
can
also
note.
We
will
just
note
the
overall
crime
calls
are
down
a
little
bit,
which
is,
which
is
a
thing
too,
and
we're
able
to
assign
our
people
to
help
protect
and
provide
services
wherever
we
can.
B
Thank
you.
Yes,
the
farmers
market
opens
April,
4th
I,
think
that's
the
Saturday,
and
there
will
be
information
coming
out
quite
soon
in
the
next
coming
days
about
the
plans
for
that
market.
As
you
might
imagine,
and
those
who
follow
the
winter
market,
that's
a
privately
run
market.
Their
protocols
have
changed.
I
will
tell
you,
I
wouldn't
expect.
I
would
expect
that
our
protocols
for
the
April
market
likely
will
change
in
light
of
the
the
situation
we're
in,
but
we
do
treat
the
farmers
market
as
a
grocery
store.
B
It
provides
essential
services
and
food
to
people.
It
also
is
an
essential
business
for
the
food
producers
and
so
we're
working
very
hard
to
identify
how
we
do
that
safely.
I
will
also
just
note
that
the
April
market,
as
tends
to
be
it's
a
little
bit
different
from
the
full
summer
market
which
kicks
in
in
May,
early
May
and
we'll
be
we'll,
be
sharing
information
about
both
of
those.
But
you
should
hear
about
those
details.
In
the
next
couple
days.
A
Thanks
and
emily
has
a
question
posted
me:
is
there
any
modeling
being
done
to
estimate
when
in
Indiana
Monroe
County
the
region
may
hit
its
peak,
and
the
answer
to
that
generally
is
yes
and
our
emergency
management
people
are
in
the
county
and
the
University
are
certainly
looking
at
that.
I
would
point
you
to
a
resource
and
I
can
send
you
a
direct
link.
There
is
news
honey,
you,
a
story
on
this
under
news
at
IUPUI,
the
O'neil,
School
or
I'm.
A
Sorry,
it's,
the
School
of
Science
dying
Pui
has
been
putting
together
data
for
statistical
models
for
the
co
bedspread.
The
story
we
have
up.
There
is
March
18,
so
it's
a
few
days
old,
but
they
have
continued
to
to
look
at
this
and
there
is
a
link
in
that
story
to
the
latest
research
online
and
where
that
is
so,
that's
a
it's.
A
good
resource
for
that.
A
A
C
The
good
thing
about
Monroe
County,
we
don't
see
in
a
lot
of
counties
around
the
state
of
Indiana,
is
the
partnership.
That's
been
over
20
years
and
the
making
so
the
County
contracts
with
the
hospital
for
the
provision
of
nursing
care
and
so
Amy
meek.
Who
is
our
manager
for
that?
She
also
is
an
employee
of
of
IU
Health,
and
so
we
work
hand-in-hand
Amy
as
a
part
of
not
only
our
as
a
command
and
our
briefings
that
occur
twice
a
day
but
she's
also
working
with
penny
and
others
at
the
County
Health
Department.
C
So
whenever
we
test
someone,
whenever
we
find
we,
you
know
we
send
someone
back
to
the
community
who
tested
positive
and
there's
no
longer
contagious.
Orb
has
tested
negative,
all
of
that
is
shared
and
they
know
who
those
patients
are
and
where
they're
going
to
and
then
Amy
and
Penny
and
their
team
keep
us
informed
about
how
they
reach
out
to
the
other
health
departments
around
the
counties
near
us
in
the
region
as
well.
C
So
there's
I
would
say
we
are
I,
don't
know
of
another
County,
that's
probably
better
linked
to
their
health
care
provider
or
to
the
surrounding
County
Health
Department's
than
what
our
county
has
county
officials
and
Health
Department
have
put
into
place
here
in
the
south-central
region,
I've.
Never
in
my
you
know,
35-year
career
seen
this
and
it's
serving
this
county
and
this
region
very
well.
C
Excuse
me:
yes,
so
when
we
first
started
last
week,
our
number
of
tests
were,
you
know,
just
in
the
hundreds
and
as
we've
continued
to
grow,
we've
been
able
to
test
more
and
more
and
expand
that
capability,
and
that
goes
back
to
that
phase.
Those
three
phases
of
testing
we're
in
the
initial
phase.
We
didn't
have
the
ability
to
test,
and
so
it
was
all
dependent
upon
the
state.
The
second
phase
was,
you
know,
going
to
our:
u
Health
Laboratory
in
Indianapolis,
and
then
the
third
phase
will
be.
C
She
gets
all
of
that
information
and
has
access
to
that
information.
So
it's
a
very
quick
process
and
much
better
than
what
the
other
corporate
labs
are
able
to
turn.
Some
of
their
turnarounds
are
three
to
five
days,
so
that's
serving
us
well
to
be
able
to
quickly
discharge
patients
and
and
more
importantly,
give
confidence
and
some
release
some
anxiety
and
reduce
anxiety
for
our
patients.
When
you
get
when
the
provider
says,
you
may
have
Kovan,
because
we
are
learning
so
much
more
about
this
virus.
It's
it's
not
a
good
thing.
C
It's
a
very
devastating
word
to
hear,
and
so
we're
treating
it
like
that
and
making
sure
that
our
patients
and
their
families
understand
even
if
they're
negative
what
signs
and
symptoms
they
should
continue
to
look
for.
But
having
that
quick
turnaround
is
really
alleviating
the
anxiety
in
a
very
quick
period
of
time.
A
C
So
there
are
two
types
of
people
that
will
show
two
different
tracks.
One
track
is
you've
called
the
virtual
hub
and
that's
what
we're
asking
people
to
do
is
called
the
Indiana
University
Health
virtual
hub.
They
will
do
a
screening
and
then
they
will
say
yes,
you
screen
in
you
probably
should
go
be
tested.
We
actually
get
a
warm
handoff
as
what
we
call
it.
C
If
you
need
to
be
seen
further
into
the
hospital,
because
your
symptoms
are
more
severe,
we
then
bring
you
into
the
emergency
department
and
you
become
an
emergency
department
patient
if
your
symptoms
are
not
severe
enough
to
be
in
the
emergency
department,
and
we
provide
you
education
on
what
you
need
to
do
at
home
about
isolating
those
types
of
things
until
your
test
comes
back
and
you
know
if
you
have
tested
positive
or
negative
and
then,
if
you
haven't
contacted
the
hub,
you
come
into
the
emergency
apartment.
Just
straight
up.
C
We
immediately
put
a
mask
on
every
patients,
get
them
given
a
mask.
We
screen
you
the
same
as
the
virtual
hub
does
for
the
same
question,
and
then
we
would
either
take
you
right
back
to
the
emergency
department
or
we
would
take
you
to
that
tent,
where
you
could
be
tested,
depending
on
how
you
screen
and
our
triage
by
our
providers
in
the
front
of
the
emergency
department
and
all
that
is
done
in
the
emergency
department.
We've
converted
those
front
rooms
to
negative
air
pressure
rooms
just
to
be
safe.
C
C
So
the
community
members
who
are
making
masks
we
are
actually
using
those
not
only
for
our
employees,
but
my
wife
made
me
one
right
here
that
I
use
when
I
go
out
and
I
have
a
supply
of
those
that
I
can
use
and
then
discard
so
masks
are
our
most
valuable
resource
and
those
go
from
green
to
yellow,
sometimes
depending
on
our
deliveries.
So
the
governor's
issuance
has
been
has
been.
C
Terrific
I'll
also
do
a
shout
out
to
the
school
corporation
to
IU
and
University,
there's
also
some
other
local
businesses
who
utilize
in
95,
mass
and
other
kinds
of
masks
that
have
given
us
their
supplies,
which
has
been
fantastic
and
we're
using
those
supplies
as
well.
So
we
we
have
what
we
need.
We
know
where
at
least
45
days
out
in
the
current
usage,
but
we
also
know,
as
we've
seen
in
other
communities
around
the
globe
and
around
the
state.
As
we
continue
to
see
more
patients,
we
will
need
more
masks.
A
B
Is
this
is
John
I
would
just
say
as
an
employer.
We
we're
always
monitoring
that
and
particularly
sensitive
to
a
police
department
or
a
fire
department
or
Water
Works
and
knows,
and
we
have
protocols
in
place
in
the
event
that
someone
is
identified.
That's
not
been
the
case
yet
and
I
know
many
of
our
employers
are
essential
like
cook
and
cattle
and
Baxter
and
others,
and
they
too
I'm
sure
have
protocols
for
first.
B
Of
course,
if
you
feel
sick,
don't
come
to
work
and
check
out
your
symptoms,
but
if
it
is
identified
as
somebody,
then
there
will
be
protocols
to
protect
both
that
employee
and
then
others
who
may
have
been
in
contact
with
them,
and
for
that
for
all
of
us
we
have,
you,
know
the
not
only
taking
care
of
each
employee
but
also
making
sure
that
we
have
redundancies
and
protocols
to
try
to
diminish
the
spread
of
that,
whether
it's
simple
things
like
our
police
shifts.
We
no
longer
have
roll
call
at
the
police
department.
B
A
We
are
running
close
on
time,
we're
going
to
try
to
the
Facebook
questions.
We've
had
come
in
and
try
to
answer
some
of
those
offline
on
Facebook,
so
we
will
try
to
get
to
all
those
questions
afterwards,
but
I
do
have
one.
Other
question
relates
a
little
bit
to
what
I
was
saying
earlier
about.
The
breakup
of
the
student
party
is
Bloomington,
Police
writing
citations
for
obvious
violations
of
stay
at
home.
Orders
such
as
student
house
parties,
I,
don't
know
if
there's
a
citation
issue
the
other
night
but
I
do
know
that
was
broken
up.
B
Yes,
I
think
I
know.
Bloomington,
police
and
IU
police
are
coordinating
very
closely
on
that.
Even
conversations
today
about
that
the
police
are
intervening.
I,
don't
know
that
we've
had
to
issue
a
citation
to
protect
public
health.
Normally
we
will.
We
will
respond
to
these
with
instructions
and
and
counseling
and
guidance.
A
Okay,
well
we're
right
up
at
two
o'clock.
Thank
you,
everybody
for
participating,
and
thank
you
for
your
time.
We
will
do
this
again.
Next
Friday
again,
we're
planning
in
115
we'll
send
out
an
advisory,
at
least
by
Friday
morning
to
advise
of
that
with
the
information
to
log
in
thanks
everyone
for
your
time,
I
appreciate
it.
Thank.