Friday, May 1, 2020

Worcester County Announces Second COVID-19 Death

(WBOC)

Posted: May 01, 2020 8:26 AM EDTUpdated: May 01, 2020 10:01 AM EDT
SNOW HILL, Md.- The Worcester County Health
Department has confirmed the second death of a 
county resident this week from COVID-19.

The department said late Thursday afternoon that the 
resident was a woman in her 80’s with several 
underlying medical conditions.

The department announced the county's first COVID-19
death on Tuesday, a woman in her 80’s who was  a 
hospice patient at a county long-term care facility prior
to the onset of COVID-19 illness.

As of Thursday, the Maryland Department of Health was 
reporting 61 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Worcester
County.

For more information on COVID-19 in Worcester County,

Time Machine Preview

This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye..

2007  ..  A rare mosquito-borne virus has surfaced in Worcester County.

1938  ..  The new post office has been dedicated in Pocomoke City.

1916  ..  The celebration of Wilson Day in Princess Anne brings the largest political celebration ever held in Somerset County.

1940's ..  (Picture) The Outten Theater in Snow Hill (originally Mason's Opera House). 

Thursday, April 30, 2020

Worcester County Library Goes Digital.


By Morgan Pilz, Staff Writer
(April 30, 2020) Even though the Worcester County

Library branches remain closed under Gov. Larry 

Hogan's order that only essential businesses can be 

open, books are still being offered to the public - 

virtually.

View article:

5 Layfield unit is hub of Coronavirus care at PRMC

(Salisbury Independent)


The 5 Layfield unit at Peninsula Regional Medical Center is the medical care area for Covid-19 patients, who come to them either straight from the Emergency Department after being identified as a possible virus patient or after they have been cared for in the Covid- 19 Intensive Care Unit.


View full article: 
https://salisburyindependent.net/coronavirus/5-layfield-unit-is-hub-of-coronavirus-care-at-prmc/?utm_source=Salisbury&utm_campaign=436f7010be-sby-mc+weekly&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_48b606ed7c-436f7010be-359976609&mc_cid=436f7010be&mc_eid=884ce5b26e

Coronavirus Era Brings Scams

(FRAUDARMOR+)
Scams Targeting Your SSN
The Social Security Administration is warning Social Security benefits recipients of scams during the COVID-19 crisis. Scammers may pose as the U.S. Treasury Department, the Internal Revenue Service, the Social Security Administration, and other government agencies through phone calls, emails, text messages, or other communications to collect your personal information and Social Security number. Disregard any requests for personal financial information, an advance fee, or charges of any kind, including the purchase of gift cards.
Beware of nine coronavirus scams targeting your identity, including your personal, financial, and medical information:

Social Security Scams Lead to Identity Theft

When criminals get their hands on your Personally Identifiable Information (PII), they can use your sensitive data to commit credit card fraud and tax fraud. With tax deadlines extended until July 15, 2020, scammers now have more time to file tax forms using stolen information to collect tax returns. The identity theft may also escalate to medical identity theft, where a fraudster uses your sensitive information to receive free medical care, goods, or prescription drugs. 
In these days of COVID-19 concerns, scammers can be particularly compelling, and it’s more important than ever to check in with your elderly friends and neighbors by phone or video chat, to warn them of these coronavirus scams.

Tips to Protect Your Social Security Number

  1. Never share personal information through unsolicited phone calls. Remind your loved ones that they should never give personal, financial, or medical information over the phone.
  2. Don’t believe your caller ID. Scammers can spoof phone numbers to show up on your phone, disguising who they really are. Don’t make any decision to share information with a caller based on what the caller ID says.
  3. Keep important documents stored safely. Store documents containing your Social Security number and other personal and medical information in a safe, locked place.
  4. Report Social Security scams. If you think you are the victim of a scam, file a report with the SSA Inspector General online at oig.ssa.gov.
  5. If you are worried about Tax Identity Theft, you can request an Identity Protection PIN from the IRS, as well as file an Identity Theft Affidavit if your return is rejected as a duplicate filing. .

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Coronavirus And Our Pets

homeoanimal.com


CORONAVIRUS: SHOULD WE BE WORRIED ABOUT OUR DOGS AND CATS?

Coronavirus: Should we be worried about our Dogs and Cats?


The coronavirus 2019 (or COVID-19) disease, caused by the 

SARS-CoV-2 virus, is now on the lips of all news readers 

around the world. The epidemic which started in Wuhan, 

China, is now raging across the planet and was therefore 

declared a pandemic on March 11 by the director of the World 

Health Organization.

Perhaps you have followed the news and know that a tiger from the New York zoo tested positive for the SARS-CoV-2 virus on April 5? In fact, several zoo cats have shown symptoms of respiratory illness following the probable contact with an employee infected with COVID-19.

As this kind of test requires a general anesthesia on such exotic animals, and since these animals had a high anesthetic risk due to their symptoms, it was agreed to test only one tiger for COVID-19, for their safety. It is therefore assumed that these other zoo felines may also have been affected by this coronavirus.
  
  • So, what does this mean for our dear pets?

Until now, we thought they were safe from this highly contagious virus. Is this still the case?

Do we need to take extra precautions to protect our dogs and cats from COVID-19?

Certainly, the large family of coronaviruses includes around 40 different viruses and some can actually infect cats and dogs. But what about the dreaded COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2)?

The rest of this article will answer your questions.

CAN HUMANS TRANSMIT COVID-19 TO ANIMALS?

Now that coronavirus is much more common in society, it has been reported that there is a possibility of infection in animals who are in close contact with humans infected with COVID-19.

As there had been no study on the subject and no case had been reported until recently in animals, the scientific community assumed that the risk of transmission of COVID-19 from a human to an animal was minimal, or even non-existent. However, the recent case of the tiger in New York, the first animal that tested positive for the virus in the United States, has changed this theory.

In addition, a certain number of cases of COVID-19 in dogs and cats have also been reported worldwide.

That said, although it’s possible, the risk of pets being infected with this disease still seems very low. The cases that exist to date are very isolated.

Studies are underway to better understand the transmission of COVID-19 in animals, but for the moment, no scientific study officially confirms the risk of transmission of the virus to our pets.

As of March 25 2020, tests have been done on 17 dogs and 8 cats living in families affected by COVID-19, and only two dogs have tested positive for the virus. However, it is not prudent to draw conclusions from such an experiment, given the low number of subjects tested.

Gang Member Arrest

(WMDT)

U.S. Marshals capture wanted 

Eastern Shore Gang Member in Pocomoke City




Northan
NORFOLK, Va.  – A Bloods gang member on the run from attempted murder charges in Accomack County since March 25 was captured on Thursday, April 23, in Pocomoke City.

View article:

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Time Machine: 2010(x2), 1930, 1954, 1886.




February, 2010
 





Daily Times (Salisbury)



BarryB said...

Must have been an interesting election since Bob and Harvey 

lived across the street from each other.




Anonymous said...
10 years later and people running for office are still trying
 to do the same thing. Has anyone really accomplished
anything? Has anything changed? Is there any movement on
these campaign ideas? This makes me sad.  

Anonymous said...
No one has accomplished anything. Nothing has changed.
The only movement regarding campaigns is the Mayor and 
Council have discovered they don't have to hold elections if
they don't want to. That is what makes me sad.




April, 2010


                                                                              Daily Times (Salisbury)


June, 1930

                                                                        Evening Sun (Baltimore)


January, 1954                                                                                          


                                                                                The Denton Journal

October, 1886
                                                                                 Peninsula Enterprise


1960  ..  

Anonymous Anonymous said...

WDMV was originally licensed as WDVM and went on the air 1n 1955 and was 

housed in a tiny cinder block building on Stockton Road, just behind where Choppy 

Layton lives now. The main DJ was Eddie Matherly who was known as "Mama's 

Country Youngin". The call sign was changed to WDMV somewhere around 1959 or 

1960 to represent "Wonderful Delmarva".

  tk for ppe said...
When Cuban dictator Batista was overthrown WDVM listeners got the news from 

Eddie Matherly in these words: "Batista high-tailed it out of Cuba this morning."

Matherly and his "Hoedowners" performed around the lower Eastern Shore. His 

"Hillbilly Haven" promoted country music shows on the Eastern Shore of Virginia at 

Red Hill near Horntown.  He left the Eastern Shore in 1960.  In 1964 Matherly was 

stricken with a fatal heart attack after he mc'd a country music show at the 

Washington Coliseum. It was a month before his 37th birthday.  At the time he was 

general manager of a Warrenton, Va. radio station.  



1977  ..



The Time Machine is a weekly feature I've enjoyed researching and compiling on The Pocomoke Public Eye since 2011.  I have fond memories of growing up in Pocomoke City and welcome reader contributions we can share about things you've read, remember, or were told relating to our Pocomoke/Eastern shore area...a sentence, a paragraph, or more all fine. Just email it.