RWHS Chief Medical Officer Encourages COVID Vaccinations

RWHS Chief Medical Officer Encourages COVID Vaccinations
May 3rd, 2021 | Panhandle COVID Unified Command

Dr. Matthew Bruner, OB/GYN and Chief Medical Officer at Regional West Health Services based in Scottsbluff joined the regular Monday briefing to discuss COVID vaccines and answer questions from attendees. Bruner has been involved regionally and statewide in COVID response and addressed an array of misconceptions and information circulating. 

One misconception has been commonly shared around the vaccine causing infertility. 

“We’ve seen people into their second trimester who have received the vaccine prior to pregnancy. The concern has been debunked and this has been affirmed by reproductive endocrinologists,” said Dr. Bruner. 

As a freedom-loving American, he believes people are able to make their own decisions, but those decisions involve the safety of the person and the safety of the population which is improved with vaccinations. 

When asked about encouraging older people to get the vaccine, Dr. Bruner relayed the importance of weighing the risk and benefits. Some people find that 24-36 hours of potentially not feeling good is not worth it but what they don’t realize is this could keep them from having a very serious bout of COVID. Potential side effects are true with getting your shingles, whooping cough, and measles shots as well.

While he acknowledged the reluctance, he shared the importance of more people needing to get the COVID shot, or we must continue with social distancing and masking as it just prolongs the pandemic.

“The vaccines are safe and the ability of the vaccine to cover the disease is excellent. I encourage everybody to take the leap and get the vaccination. Finish the course, don’t skip it just with one [specific to a two-dose series]. Don’t be afraid of it, patients that we have seen recently in medical care have been unvaccinated individuals,” Dr. Bruner concluded.

Ample COVID vaccine supply and appointments are available. Panhandle residents 18 and older can self-schedule with two easy steps:

The two steps are encouraged to ease the vaccine process. There is no charge for the vaccine. Pfizer will be coming soon to the Panhandle. Teens ages 16 & 17 can register now at vaccinate.ne.gov. For the Moderna shot, the second dose is needed to produce the best immunity results. 

People who are fully COVID vaccinated will not be required to quarantine due to close contact. If you have lost your COVID vaccine card, go to https://tinyurl.com/2zh7uhhu

Unified Command confirms 20 more cases of COVID in the Panhandle since last reporting on Monday, April 26. The investigations are underway, all close contacts will be quarantined.

All Ages: 20
CountyCases
Banner0
Box Butte2
Cheyenne6
Dawes0
Deuel2
Garden1
Grant0
Kimball0
Morrill2
Scotts Bluff2
Sheridan5
Sioux0
Exposure Type
Community40%
Close Contact25%
Travel0%
Under Investigation35%

March 2, 2020-May 3, 2021

  • Total Tests Conducted: 38,191
  • Positive: 9,020
  • Last 14 days (active) cases: 31
  • Last week’s cases: 20
  • Last week’s positivity rate: 5.3%
  • Deaths: 191
  • Active Hospitalizations: 2
  • Total Cumulative Hospitalizations: 546
  • Doubling time (November 15, 2020 – May 3, 2021): 169 days

Current COVID testing access can be found at www.pphd.org. The Panhandle COVID dashboard is now being updated on Mondays only prior to the 3:30pm MT briefing and available at www.pphd.org. For the most up to date information from the CDC, visit https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/index.html.

Share:

© 2024 Nebraska Rural Radio Association. All rights reserved. Republishing, rebroadcasting, rewriting, redistributing prohibited. Copyright Information