San Diego, CA
Hepatitis C falling in San Diego, but eliminating disease will take more work
Modern medicine can cure a hepatitis C infection with three doctor’s appointments and two prescription refills. For most, it is not a big ask to rid oneself of a deadly disease.
But for those without homes, keeping up with the required 12-week treatment regimen can be an overwhelming commitment.
Sitting on a metal folding chair at the edge of an empty parking lot in Balboa Park on a recent morning, Holly, a resident of San Diego’s nearby O Lot safe sleeping site, explained that visiting a doctor’s office miles away comes with significant risk.
A tent can never be fully secured, so leaving one’s possessions inside to go to the doctor’s office all but guarantees returning to find possessions missing.
“There is nobody that holds themselves accountable for your stuff, so it’s just hard for me to leave, knowing that,” she said. “Everything I have left in the world is in that campsite, and it’s easy for people to just walk right in.”
And yet Holly just completed her full hepatitis C treatment, not missing a dose over three straight months after a screening test detected her infection. Her friend, Chris, just started his second week. Like his companion, he said that because his infection had not yet progressed far enough in damaging his liver to start causing symptoms, there is pretty much no way he would have traveled to the clinic for treatment.
“You know, you just sort of put it on the back burner if it’s not causing any signs,” he said.
Finding and keeping housing trumps following up on test results. And that is the particular problem with hepatitis C, which may take decades to cause its first symptom. Often, by the time signs and signals such as easy bruising, fatigue, yellowing of the skin and weight loss appear, a person’s liver is significantly damaged, making life-altering consequences such as liver cancer much more likely.
In recognition of the disease’s slow and deadly burn, the county health department, several local medical providers and the Liver Coalition of San Diego County launched a hepatitis C elimination plan in 2021 with the goal of preventing new cases while simultaneously working to discover and treat so-called “chronic” cases that have gone undetected.
Though recent results are skewed slightly due to a change in how hepatitis C cases are counted, the overall case trend has been downward since 2019 when 4,249 chronic cases were confirmed or suspected compared with 2,298 in 2023.
A big part of driving that number down, said Dr. Christian Ramers, medical director for research and special populations at Family Health Centers of San Diego, has been more aggressive outreach to those at increased risk of hepatitis C infection. Because the virus transmits in human blood, injection drug users are at an increased risk as are those with HIV.
The crusade to eliminate hepatitis C started with increasing screening to detect chronic cases and with the region’s first needle exchange programs, helping drug users avoid re-using and sharing needles. Many have recently begun to realize that those techniques, while effective, are not enough.
Chris and Holly’s recent experience in a Balboa Park parking lot involved a physician assistant with Family Health Centers whose job is to take many services, including the checkups and medication delivery necessary to cure the disease, out of doctor’s offices and into the places where people with reduced mobility live.
“Really, the only way is to bring the care to this population,” Ramers said. “They’re not going to come in and meet us at the clinic, so we have to find a way to go to them.”
And, simply showing up in tent encampments for checkups and to fill prescriptions is not enough. Family Health Centers workers have learned that the usual practice of delivering one month’s worth of medication at a time does not work. Such a large supply is likely to be stolen before it can be consumed.
Instead, workers deliver seven pills at a time, making weekly visits and using those encounters to discuss other health matters that a person might also be experiencing.
But eliminating the disease will not be accomplished only by embracing street medicine for those experiencing homelessness. Scott Suckow, executive director of the Liver Coalition of San Diego County, said recent modeling by researchers at UC San Diego found that reaching intravenous drug users in many different types of venues will be key to winning this fight.
More work could be done, he said, in organizations that treat substance use disorder, often combined with mental health care, to screen for hepatitis C and to make sure that those who test positive are referred to medical providers for treatment.
The state, through the ongoing reform of its Medi-Cal health insurance system for needy residents, has recently approved paying substance use treatment and behavioral health providers for “enhanced care management” when treating patients with substance use disorder. This additional benefit allows for a more holistic set of services that can go beyond drug and alcohol treatment.
Driving hepatitis C infections lower, getting more people screened and treated, Suckow said, is likely to see a significant benefit from the enhanced care management benefit if the disease is included in the host of additional health problems that doctors look for when care management is engaged.
“The position we’re taking is that it’s the behavioral health and substance use disorder treatment community’s responsibility if they’re providing whole-person care, to make these linkages, especially if they know that a client has hepatitis C or they’re at risk for it,” Suckow said.
Why couldn’t this simply be a mandate of the county health department, which spends millions per year contracting with substance use treatment programs serving patients whose care is covered by Medi-Cal? Why couldn’t a mandate to test all substance use treatment patients for hepatitis C infection just be written into county contracts?
Dr. Nicole Esposito, chief population health officer for the county’s behavioral health department, said that contracting is not seen as the right solution for promoting better coordination between different types of medical providers serving Medi-Cal beneficiaries.
Better coordination of care is not, she noted, about only one disease.
“The goal of care coordination is to really assess all of the needs of the whole person, rather than programmatically calling out specific diseases in contracts,” Esposito said. “Then it becomes like a patchwork where we have the hepatitis C expectations and the HIV expectations and we have some that get missed.
“I think the goal is to put the person at the center and work across all of the various factors, whether it’s all of the illnesses they might have or housing needs or social needs or school needs, rather than trying to do it with line item contract language.”
Medi-Cal changes, she added, will make it easier for different types of providers to securely share patient information electronically, making it easier for referrals to be made across organizations that are engaged in different missions.
“I think the big hope for significant progress lies in the fact that, in the future, we’re going to have a lot more data sharing so that there will be more visibility of whether tests were done, what were the results, was treatment started, was treatment completed,” Esposito said.
Originally Published:
San Diego, CA
San Diego Zoo Safari Park’s Elephant Valley: Get closer to elephants
San Diego — Before we see elephants at Elephant Valley in the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, we come face to face with destruction, only the wreckage is beautiful. A long, winding path takes guests around and under felled trees. Aged gray tree hunks form arches, for instance, over bridges that tower over clay-colored paths with hoof prints.
The design is meant to reorient us, to take us on a trail walked not by humans but traversed and carved by elephants, a creature still misunderstood, vilified and hunted for its cataclysmic-like ability to reshape land, and sometimes communities.
“It starts,” says Kristi Burtis, vice president of wildlife care for the Safari Park, “by telling the story that elephants are ecosystem engineers.”
Elephant Valley will open March 5 as the newest experience at the Escondido park, its aim to bring guests closer than ever to the zoo’s eight elephants, which range in age from 7 to 36, while more heavily focusing on conservation. The centerpiece of the 13-acre-plus parkland is a curved bridge overlooking a savanna, allowing elephants to walk under guests. But there are also nooks such as a cave that, while not previewed at a recent media event, will allow visitors to view elephants on their level.
In a shift from, say, the Safari Park’s popular tram tour, there are no fences and visible enclosures. Captive elephants remain a sometimes controversial topic, and the zoo’s herd is a mix of rescues and births, but the goal was to create a space where humans are at once removed and don’t impede on the relative free-roaming ability of the animals by keeping guests largely elevated. As an example of just how close people can get to the herd, there was a moment of levity at the event when one of the elephants began flinging what was believed to be a mixture of dirt and feces up onto the bridge.
“Our guests are going to be able to see the hairs on an elephant,” Burtis says. “They can see their eyes. They can see the eyelashes. They can see how muscular their trunks are. It’s really going to be a different experience.”
Elephant Valley, complete with a multistory lodge with open-air restaurants and bars, boasts a natural design that isn’t influenced by the elephant’s African home so much as it is in conversation with it. The goal isn’t to displace us, but to import communal artistry — Kenyan wood and beadwork can be found in the pathways, resting spaces and more — as a show of admiration rather than imitation.
“We’re not going to pretend that we’re taking people to Africa,” says Fri Forjindam, now a creative executive with Universal’s theme parks but previously a lead designer on Elephant Valley via her role as a chief development officer at Mycotoo, a Pasadena-based experiential design firm.
“That is a slippery slope of theming that can go wrong really fast,” she adds. “How do we recognize where we are right now, which is near San Diego? How do we populate this plane with plants that are indigenous to the region? The story of coexistence is important. We’re not extracting from Africa, we’re learning. We’re not extracting from elephants, we’re sharing information.”
But designing a space that is elephant-first yet also built for humans presented multiple challenges, especially when the collaborating teams were aiming to construct multiple narratives around the animals. Since meetings about Elephant Valley began around 2019, the staff worked to touch on themes related to migration and conservation. And there was also a desire to personalize the elephants.
“Where can we also highlight each of the elephants by name, so they aren’t just this huge herd of random gray creatures?” Forjindam says. “You see that in the lodge.”
That lodge, the Mkutano House — a phrase that means “gathering” in Swahili — should provide opportunities for guests to linger, although zoo representatives say reservations are recommended for those who wish to dine in the space (there will also be a walk-up, to-go window). Menus have yet to be released, but the ground floor of the structure, boasting hut-like roofing designed to blend into the environment, features close views of the elephant grazing pool as well as an indoor space with a centerpiece tree beneath constellation-like lighting to mimic sunrises and sunsets.
Throughout there are animal wood carvings and beadwork, the latter often hung from sculptures made of tree branches. The ceiling, outfitted with colorful, cloth tapestries designed to move with the wind, aims to create less friction between indoor and outdoor environments.
There are, of course, research and educational goals of the space as well. The Safari Park works, for instance, with the Northern Rangelands Trust and Loisaba Conservancy in Kenya, with an emphasis on studying human-elephant conflict and finding no-kill resolutions. Nonprofits and conservation groups estimate that there are today around 415,000 elephants in Africa, and the African savanna elephant is listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
Studies of the zoo’s young elephants is shared with the Reteti Elephant Sanctuary in the hopes of delivering care to elephant youth to prevent orphanage. Additionally, the Safari Park has done extensive examination into the endotheliotropic herpes virus. “The data that we collect from elephants here, you can’t simply get from elephants in the wild,” Burtis says.
One of the two entrances to Elephant Valley is outfitted with bee boxes; bees are known to be a natural elephant deterrent and can help in preventing the animals from disrupting crops or communities. To encourage more natural behavior, the plane is outfitted with timed feeders in an attempt to encourage movement throughout the acreage and establish a level of real-life unpredictability in hunting for resources. Water areas have been redesigned with ramps and steps to make it easier for the elephants to navigate.
With Elephant Valley, Forjindam says the goal was to allow visitors to “observe safely in luxury — whatever that is — but not from a position of power, more as a cohabitor of the Earth, with as much natural elements as possible. It’s not to impose dominance. Ultimately, it needed to feel natural. It couldn’t feel like a man-made structure, which is an antiquated approach to any sort of safari experience where animals are the product, a prize. In this experience, this is the elephant’s home.”
And the resulting feel of Elephant Valley is that we, the paying customers, are simply their house guests.
San Diego, CA
Man fatally struck by hit-and-run vehicle in San Diego
A man in the Mission Bay Park community of San Diego was fatally struck Sunday morning by a hit-and run vehicle, authorities said.
The victim was also struck by a second vehicle and that motorist stayed at the scene to cooperate with officers, the San Diego Police Department reported.
The initial crash occurred at about 2:20 a.m. Sunday in the area of West Mission Bay and Sea World drives.
The pedestrian was in the southbound lanes of the 2000 block of West Mission Bay Drive when he was struck by a silver vehicle also in the southbound lanes. That vehicle fled the scene, continuing southbound, police said.
A 28-year-old man driving his vehicle southbound ran over the downed pedestrian.
“That driver remained at the scene and is not DUI,” according to a police statement. “The pedestrian was pronounced deceased at the scene.”
Anyone with information regarding the initial crash was urged to call Crime Stoppers at 888-580-8477.
San Diego, CA
Here are the 9 San Diego County communities that set or tied heat records
San Diego County is known for having wet, cold weather in February. But it had numerous hot spells this year. And when the month ended on Saturday a high pressure system produced heat that broke or tied temperature records in nine communities from the desert to the sea, the National Weather Service said.
The most notable temperature occurred in Borrego Springs, which reached 99, five degrees higher than the previous record for Feb. 28, set in 1986. The 99 reading is also the highest temperature ever recorded in Borrego in February.
Escondido reached 95, tying a record set in 1901.
El Cajon reached 92, three degrees higher than the record set in 2009.
Ramona topped out at 88, five degrees higher than the record set in 2009.
Alpine hit 88, four degrees higher the record set in 1986.
Campo reached 87, four degrees higher than the record set in 1999.
Vista hit 86, four degrees higher than the record set in 2020.
Chula Vista reached 84, one degree higher than the record set in 2020.
Lake Cuyamaca rose to 76, four degrees higher than the record set in 1986.
Forecasters say the weather is not likely to broadly produce new highs on Sunday. Cooler air is moving to the coast, and on Monday, San Diego’s high will only reach 67, a degree above normal.
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