How Can Parents Safely Get Children Outdoors This Summer?

As the number of COVID-19 positive cases continue to decrease across New York State, many families are wondering how to resume activities in their children’s lives. We spoke with Catherine Spaulding, MD, a pediatrician at Mount Sinai Urgent Care, to get advice on how parents can safely host playdates, have children attend summer camp, and otherwise get their children outdoors.

Overnight camps have officially been cancelled in New York State for this summer. What precautions should parents take if they are sending children to a day camp?

The New York Health Department has laid out a number of measures for day camps and other child care facilities to follow to ensure children’s safety. These steps include but are not limited to social distancing practices—such as having fewer campers together at a time—staggering drop off and pick up times, limiting non-essential employees and visitors to the camp, and mandating that all employees and campers wear a face mask when they are less than six feet apart. Other mandatory practices include enhanced cleaning and hygiene practices, improved access to hand sanitizer throughout the camp, and encouragement of frequent hand washing during the day.

Camps are also required to screen all employees, vendors, visitors, and children for  symptoms or known exposure to a person with confirmed COVID-19 within the past 14 days. However, you can also keep your children and others safe by watching for signs of illness in your child. If you think they are getting sick for any reason, keep them at home, inform the camp, and talk with your doctor about next steps.

For more information about day camps in New York, check out these guidelines from the New York State Office of Children and Family Services.

How can parents safely organize playdates and trips to the playground?

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention still recommends against playdates with children from other homes. However, if you choose to host a playdate, it is best to keep the group of kids as small as possible. Encourage outdoor playtime and handwashing for at least 20 seconds with soap and water throughout the day, especially after being in a public setting such as a playground. If the playdate involves transportation, try to space the kids as far from one another as possible in the car and drive with the windows down. As in any public space, it is always recommended that any child above the age of two wears a face covering.

Now that larger gatherings are allowed, can children attend birthday parties, cookouts, or other get-togethers?

Large gatherings are safest if they can be held outdoors and if social distancing is respected. A face covering should be worn, and everyone should use hand sanitizer or wash hands frequently throughout the event. If your child has any signs of illness, such as a cough or fever, they should stay home and avoid contact with other children. If you are hosting an event, it may be helpful to talk with other parents beforehand and encourage them to keep their kids at home if they have any symptoms.

Also, it is important to keep in mind that different parts of New York are in different phases of reopening, which changes the number of people allowed at one time. For instance, Phase One allowed ten-person gatherings while in Phase Three allows up to 25 people to gather. Before organizing any event, find out what phase of reopening your region is currently in on the New York Forward site.

If parents are uncomfortable connecting with other families for playdates or get-togethers, what outdoor activities can parents arrange to keep their children active?

Keeping your kids active and promoting time outdoors is really important for their physical and mental health. Outdoor activities such as riding a bike, going for a walk or run, or taking a hike are great ways to keep your children healthy and safe while simultaneously encouraging physical activity. It is best to avoid group activities like basketball or football since these sports require close contact with other kids. However, kicking a soccer ball around is a great option for outdoor play—just remember to wipe the ball clean before and after use.

For more ideas about how to safely engage in outdoor activities, check out this piece from HealthyChildren.org, a website from the American Academy of Pediatricians. 

Mount Sinai Queens Nurses Share Memories With COVID-19 Patients’ Survivors

From left: The Rev. Dr. Rachelle Zazzu, Chaplain; Melissa Farmer, RN; Stefanie Dimitriadis, RN; Amparo Sullivan, RN; Jonathan Nover, RN, MBA, Senior Director of Nursing for the Emergency Department; and Francelia Thomas, RN, Nurse Manager.

The nurses of Mount Sinai Queens are giving a precious gift to families of patients who succumbed to COVID-19 during the height of the pandemic—their memories of the patients’ last days.

In one letter, carefully hand-written on lined paper, Amparo Sullivan, RN, reached out to the family of a patient who had “a nice smile behind her oxygen mask” and had spent peaceful moments chatting and holding her hand. “This courageous woman wasn’t just thinking about herself but was deeply concerned about how the pandemic was affecting us,” Ms. Sullivan wrote. “Her bravery and thoughtfulness gave me inspiration.”

Since May, Mount Sinai Queens nurses have been writing such letters to family members, in a program that arose from their determination to console families and their own need to remember the patients they worked so hard to save. The hospital is now returning to normal operations. But in April and early May, Mount Sinai Queens was hard hit by the pandemic; visitors were not allowed at that time, out of an abundance of caution, to help protect patients and staff.

“Our nurses were caring for people as they died, and I was praying for people as they died, and no family was present. And it’s heartbreaking,” says the Rev. Dr. Rachelle Zazzu, MA, DDS, Staff Chaplain for Mount Sinai Queens. “So we have been writing letters to the families, fundamentally saying, ‘Your mother was not just patient No. 1234. We cared for her, and we saw beauty in her, and we want you to know that when she died, she was taken care of with a lot of care.’”

So far about a dozen letters have been written by nurses including Ms. Sullivan, Melissa Farmer, RN, Stefanie Dimitriadis, RN, and Tamara Boncic-Heins, RN. The program began with a suggestion from Ms. Sullivan, says Jonathan Nover, RN, MBA, Senior Director of Nursing for the Emergency Department (ED) at Mount Sinai Queens.

“It was a very emotional time for everyone in the ED. So what Ampy Sullivan envisioned was this: If you are with a patient who is at an end-of-life moment and there is something you would like to share later with the patient’s family, jot down a note with the details and drop it into our Daisy box,” Mr. Nover said, referring to an awards program at the hospital. “Then the goal would be, when things calm down a little bit, to create a procedure for getting those letters to the patients’ families.

From left: Amparo Sullivan RN, Melissa Farmer RN, and Stefanie Dimitriadis RN.

That is indeed what happened. In addition to compiling the notes, Dr. Zazzu and Mr. Nover reached out to nurses for more remembrances during the daily huddles of departments such as the ED and Preoperative, Postoperative, and Palliative Care. Even after many weeks, the nurses had “amazing, vivid memories,” Mr. Nover says.

The nurses were told, “We don’t want this to be a burden, because you have a lot to do,” Dr.  Zazzu says. “We are just saying that if writing a letter can help relieve a burden for you, all you have to do is write it, and I will take care of the rest, make sure it gets to the family.”

After receiving the letters, family members have been writing back in profound gratitude. One family called the Mount Sinai Queens nurses “RN angels” and offered to pray for their safety as they cared for patients.  The letter-writing program is now well-established at Mount Sinai Queens, Mr. Nover and Dr. Zazzu say. And they hope it can spread through the Health System and beyond, because even though the crisis has waned in New York City, patients can still die without family members, far from home.

“It’s nice that we can tell families about their loved ones, and their stay, and how it affected us,” Ms. Sullivan says. “We hope it will give them a little peace of mind, and it’s therapeutic for us to share these experiences.”

Here are some of the messages from nurses to families, from heart to heart.

“Your mother was in no distress when she passed peacefully. I spoke to her, and told her how much her family loves her.”

“Your father was so, so brave. I won’t forget him.”

“People show you who they are down to the core when they are in life-and-death situations. Your mother was so kind. I prayed for her on my lunch break.”

Mount Sinai Receives $6.3 Million Federal Grant to Find Drugs That Protect Against COVID-19

In this plaque assay, the cell culture has been stained purple so that the infectious SARS-CoV-2 particles, or virions, can be seen clearly. The circles represent single infectious virions that have poked holes in the cell culture.

The race to identify U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs that can be repurposed to prevent or treat COVID-19 is advancing toward the finish line, under a $6.3 million federal grant that was recently awarded to Benjamin tenOever, PhD, Irene and Dr. Arthur M. Fishberg Professor of Medicine, Icahn Professor of Microbiology, and Director of the Virus Engineering Center for Therapeutics and Research (VECToR) at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

Dr. tenOever’s lab is currently testing a group of 20 promising drugs that were narrowed down from thousands over the course of several months by teams led by Donald Ingber, MD, PhD, at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, and Matthew Frieman, PhD, at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. All three institutions are working together under a one-year $16 million umbrella grant from the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).They have created a full drug-testing pipeline with the goal of finding effective treatments for COVID-19 or prophylactics that prevent the SARS-CoV-2 virus from entering human cells. None exist at this time.

The institutional collaboration loosely resembles a relay race, with a baton that has now been passed from Harvard and the University of Maryland to Dr. tenOever’s lab.

“Both groups have provided me with a small list of drugs from their respective screens, with quite a bit of overlap, and we will decide together and with DARPA to prioritize the ones that are the most promising,” says Dr. tenOever. “We are running the last set of tests here.” The drugs have all been FDA-approved for a range of different treatments.

Members of Benjamin tenOever’s lab, postdoctoral fellow Ben Nilsson-Payant, PhD, left, and PhD candidate Skyler Uhl, enter Mount Sinai’s Biosafety level 3 laboratory to begin testing the SARS-CoV-2 virus in a batch of drugs that may protect against viral replication.

Each participant in the DARPA grant has contributed to a specific leg of the drug-discovery process. The Wyss Institute provided the human organ chip technology. The University of Maryland provided high-throughput screening. And Mount Sinai is testing the drugs in animal models using the actual virus.

Currently, Dr. tenOever’s lab is testing the drugs in lung organoids—tiny replicas of the human lung that are composed of multiple cell types. In July, his lab will begin to test the drugs in a more sophisticated human organ chip technology, which was developed by a Wyss Institute spinoff, Emulate, Inc. After that, Dr. tenOever’s lab will test the finalists in animal models.

He says his timeline is flexible. Largely, it depends on how quickly his lab finds something that appears to be really promising. “If we find a drug that looks fantastic, then we will probably focus on that one and learn everything we can about it and start a human trial because it’s already FDA-approved. But if none of the first batch of drugs work, we move onto the next batch,” Dr. tenOever says. “In cell culture, some drugs look like miracles. But when you move them into more complex systems like human organ chips, things really fall apart. Just because a drug works in cells doesn’t mean it works in animals. That’s exactly the kind of situation we want to avoid and exactly what my lab is trying to parse out.”

The goal of the DARPA project is to find drugs that can be used in the very early stages of the disease cycle to either prevent the virus from entering cells or dismantle the virus before it has a chance to replicate in the lungs. The drugs being tested in Dr. tenOever’s lab would focus on the early aspects of the disease prior to the respiratory complications of COVID-19. Once that occurs the disease is more about inflammation than viral infection and, for that reason drugs such as dexamethasone would be used to diminish inflammation.

Public Health Students Continue Training during COVID-19 Pandemic

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Master of Public Health (MPH) students from the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have stepped up to the challenge of balancing their training in public health, continuing their in-progress research and outreach work, and taking on new responsibilities in managing the spread of the virus. Students have been involved in COVID-19 clinical care, research and the development of therapies, as well as volunteer work. This includes placing update calls to patients’ families, directing calls to resource hotlines, and coordinating food drop-offs to New York City residents. Showing resilience in the face of an unprecedented situation, students continued to meet the milestones of their professional degree program, and in May, the students celebrated yet another major accomplishment—the presentation of their MPH Culminating Experience project at Public Health Research Day.

More than 50 MPH students presented their graduate-level research at the first-ever virtual meeting of Public Health Research Day on Thursday, May 28. To bring the Mount Sinai community together, the Graduate Program in Public Health kicked off this year’s event with a timely lecture by Jessica Metcalf, PhD, Assistant Professor of Ecology, Evolution and Public Affairs at Princeton University, on the use of serology in monitoring health during the pandemic. Afterward, four students were given the honor of presenting their research in long-form oral presentations to more than 100 attendees on Zoom.

Sofia Bengoa presented work on the East Harlem built environment and its effects on adolescent well-being. Charles Sanky described results of the social determinants of health and patients’ lifetime experiences of discrimination as surveyed within an emergency department. Rui Jiang shared work on leveraging hyperlocal epidemiology to capture missed breast cancer screening opportunities. The last honored speaker was Shivani Rathi, who discussed the effects of early childhood stress, adult resilience, and sexual orientation in Gujarat, India. The afternoon followed with each student’s virtual poster presentation in specialty areas like health care management, epidemiology, global health, health promotion, and other public health fields. The following MPH candidates were recognized for their outstanding poster presentations: Debjyoti Datta, Salvatore Crusco, Erona Ibroci, Kayla Jaeckel, Charles Sanky.

The Graduate Program in Public Health united the student community for a uniquely heartfelt virtual gathering in which three MPH alumni candidly shared their post-graduation experiences. Molly Libou, MPH, Research and Surveillance Manager in the Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Use Prevention, Care and Treatment, NYC Department of Health & Mental Hygiene, walked students through her job search strategies and encouraged students to jump at opportunities to learn and advance in the field. Michael Smith, MPH, HIV Consultant, United Nations World Food Programme, earnestly shared how grueling work projects, like writing and rewriting a master’s thesis, were learning experiences that better prepared him for more significant challenges in his career. Finally, Erica Palladino, MPH, Public Engagement and Strategic Communications Fellow in the Office of the Surgeon General, illustrated the importance of preparing for your future workplace, but also acknowledged that learning will happen on the job as well.

“These are historic times for Public Health,” said Nils Hennig, MD, PhD, MPH, Director of the Graduate Program in Public Health. “We are all reminded how important the role of public health education, practice, and leadership is during this time. I have never been more proud of our students, faculty, and staff than in their response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In our program, I see an unwavering dedication to the public’s health.”

Staying Safe During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond: A Guide for IPV Survivor Well-Being

Isolation, uncertainty about tomorrow, and fear of consequences that are out of their control can be common experiences, especially for those in abusive relationships. According to Angela Fernandez, Assistant Director of the Sexual Assault and Violence Intervention (SAVI) Program at Mount Sinai, the voluntary seclusion that many have been practicing in order to prevent the spread of COVID-19 may be compounding these realities for survivors of intimate partner violence.

“Abusers will often isolate a survivor and disconnect them from their support network,” says Ms. Fernandez. “COVID-19 is just another factor that makes these challenges harder for a survivor.”

How can survivors remain safe and connected to support when physical distance is essential for safety? As we weather the current pandemic, Ms. Fernandez provides safety tips for survivors—and their loved ones—that are applicable now and as we enter a new normal due to COVID-19.

Identify a “go to” person or network of people in your physical or digital community.

As much as possible, create scheduled check-ins with your support network, and identify at least two people you can contact with an established code word or phrase that will let them know that you are in trouble. Using this word or phrase will indicate that you need an immediate help or intervention.

Discuss with your support network what “getting help” means to you.

“Getting help” is a catch-all phrase that could mean any number of things. Be sure to let your support network know what should happen immediately after you use a code word/phrase/sentence. Would you like someone to help de-escalate a situation, should someone call 911, or do you need to leave?

“Every survivor’s situation is unique and evolving,” says Ms. Fernandez. She notes that physical violence is often seen as the main threat to a survivor’s safety, despite the prevalence of psychological, emotional, and sexual abuse—which are often concurring and are equally damaging to their well-being. “Using a code word or phrase could very well indicate the immediate need for emotional first-aid as much as a physical intervention.”

Be prepared to leave if your situation escalates.

Think about the easiest and safest routes for you to get out of your home quickly, if necessary. Keep an emergency bag that you can quickly fill (or, pre-packed if safe to do so) with a portion of your medication, money, important documents, and food and that you can access on your own time. Keep your identification on you as much as possible.

Identify the “safest” spaces inside.

To protect yourself during times of escalation, think ahead about what spaces feel safest. This might mean a room where there are no weapons (i.e. avoiding the kitchen) and/or has easy access to a door or window to exit the house or apartment. Identifying the safest areas within the home can at least reduce the risk of harm.

If you are part of a survivor’s support network, remember that the person experiencing intimate partner violence knows their situation best.  

What you believe to be best may differ from the survivor’s lived experience. In fact, for a survivor, the risks of leaving can often outweigh the risks of staying—especially during a pandemic that has exacerbated economic instability.

Supporters should be careful not to take control away from survivors, which is what the abuser is doing on a daily basis.

“When we look at the power and control dynamics, just because you think you are taking action with good intentions, doesn’t make it any less disempowering for a survivor,” says Ms. Fernandez. “We should be helping to re-empower that person by making sure they have space to consider what is best for them.”

This is especially important now when there are fewer resources available due to the pandemic but holds true during “normal times,” Ms. Fernandez says. Seeking police intervention should be the exception and not the general practice for supporting survivors of intimate partner violence, she says, but this calculation changes if there is a threat of serious and imminent harm.

If you or a loved one needs advice, assistance, or support regarding sexual assault or intimate partner violence; the Sexual Assault and Violence Intervention (SAVI) Program at Mount Sinai is available to help. For more information, visit the SAVI website or call 212-423-2140. 

Additional resources include the National Domestic Violence Hotline and Safe Horizon, which provides social services for survivors throughout the five boroughs.

People With Down Syndrome May Experience Severe Forms of COVID-19

Individuals with Down syndrome, the nation’s most common genetic disorder, represent a small, vulnerable segment of the U.S. population whose comorbid conditions may make them particularly susceptible to severe forms of COVID-19.

In fact, people with Down syndrome who are over the age of 30 appear to be about nine times as likely as the general population to be hospitalized for COVID-19, and their hospital stays tend to be more than twice as long, with a median of 17 days, according to a recent study from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai that was uploaded onto the pre-print server medRxiv. Approximately 250,000 people in the United States have Down syndrome.

“When you don’t have a critical mass of people who are able to advocate for themselves, which is the case with Down syndrome, then people start falling through the cracks,” says the study’s senior author, Dusan Bogunovic, PhD, Associate Professor of Microbiology, and Pediatrics, and Director of the Center for Inborn Errors of Immunity, which is part of the Mindich Child Health and Development Institute. “We did not want that to happen. We felt that particular attention should be paid to the prevention and treatment of COVID-19 in individuals with Down syndrome.”

From left: Dusan Bogunovic, PhD, and Louise Malle, MD/PhD candidate

Dr. Bogunovic and MD/PhD candidate Louise Malle led a research team that examined the electronic medical records of 4,615 patients with COVID-19 who were hospitalized within the Mount Sinai Health System. They expected to find one or perhaps even two patients with Down syndrome based on the syndrome’s low prevalence within the population. Instead, they identified six adults, all of whom were in their 50s except for one, who was in her 30s. Two of the six patients, both in their 50s, succumbed to the disease. By comparison, Dr. Bogunovic says, 2 out of 30 cases were fatal in an age, sex, and race-matched control group of people who did not have Down syndrome.

Four of the six Down syndrome patients with COVID-19 were also diagnosed with sepsis, which is a marker of extreme inflammation, according to Ms. Malle. The individuals with Down syndrome were more likely to be hospitalized in an intensive care unit and to have been placed on a ventilator. In addition, she says, a constellation of other health issues associated with Down syndrome, such as autoimmune disease, epilepsy, and dementia, may have played a role in the severity of COVID-19. Further studies will be needed to determine whether these patients were more likely to produce higher levels of inflammatory markers.

Over the past 20 years, improved health care for individuals with Down syndrome has led to increased longevity, with many now living into their early 60s. That however, is still roughly 20 years shorter than individuals without the disorder. The median age of the hospitalized patients with Down syndrome was 54, roughly 12 years younger than the rest of the population that was hospitalized as a result of the disease.

Dr. Bogunovic says one positive finding was that “none of the patients we looked at were pediatric patients, so it does follow the trend of the general population that the older you are the more likely you are to be hospitalized with COVID-19.” He adds that the current study points to the need for “additional research into the medical conditions of marginalized patients with rare genetic conditions,” particularly during a pandemic.

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