PARKERSBURG Local hospitals are seeing an increase in respiratory illnesses which have put some emergency departments on diversion where they cannot accept
PARKERSBURG Local hospitals are seeing an increase in respiratory illnesses which have put some emergency departments on diversion where they cannot accept
ebevins@newsandsentinel.com Parkersburg Municipal Building maintenance worker Westley Lockhart cleaned the handles of the doors to City Council chambers on March 13, 2020, as officials in Parkersburg and other municipalities were grappling with how to respond to the burgeoning pandemic. (File Photo) The parking lot at Grand Central Mall in Vienna was mostly empty on April 10, 2020,more than two weeks after it temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. (File Photo) Parkersburg City Council met in its chambers for the first time in more than a month on June 2, 2020, and approved the final reading of an ordinance creating a $500 B&O tax exemption to assist businesses impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. (File Photo)
Arthur James Sweet WVU Medicine Camden Clark’s Emergency Department Director Brian Richardson received the first COVID-19 vaccine shot in Parkersburg by health manager Elizabeth Bennett on Tuesday morning. (Photo Provided) President of Parkersburg Cardiology Associates David Gnegy receives a vaccine shot by health manager Elizabeth Bennett on Tuesday morning. (Photo Provided) COVID-19 vaccine shot supplies. (Photo Provided) David Pickering of Mountain State Diabetes receives a vaccine shot by WVU Medicine Camden Clark’s Shelly West on Tuesday morning. (Photo Provided) Hannah Newhouse, a physician assistant, receives a vaccine shot from WVU Medicine Camden Clark’s Shelly West on Tuesday morning. (Photo Provided)