COVID-19 Response in Jackson County

COVID-19 RESPONSE IN JACKSON COUNTY

JACKSON COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH’S COVID-19 RESPONSE

COVID-19 Basics

What is a coronavirus?

Coronaviruses are a large group of viruses that can cause illness in animals and humans. Some coronaviruses commonly circulate in the United States and usually cause upper respiratory symptoms such as cough or runny nose, although some can cause more serious illness. The 2019 novel (new) coronavirus causes the illness Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).

What is COVID-19?

Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a respiratory disease that was first identified in Wuhan, China and has now spread throughout the world.

How does COVID-19 spread and what are the symptoms?

Coronaviruses like COVID-19 are most often spread through the air by coughing or sneezing, through close personal contact (including touching and shaking hands) or through touching your nose, mouth or eyes before washing your hands. Learn more from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) about your risk of getting COVID-19 and how to protect yourself, your household, and your community from severe illness from COVID-19.

Symptoms of COVID-19 are fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell, sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, or diarrhea. Symptoms may appear 2-14 days after exposure.

Where can I find COVID-19 data specific to Jackson County?

Data specific to Jackson County can be accessed by visiting the North Carolina Respiratory Virus Summary Dashboard. This dashboard tracks information about North Carolinians with contagious respiratory viruses that can cause cold symptoms or severe breathing problems, including COVID-19, the flu (Influenza), and RSV.  Some dashboards include data specific to Jackson County.


TESTING for Covid-19

What COVID-19 testing options are available in Jackson County?

COVID-19 testing is available through many healthcare providers in Jackson County. If you suspect you have COVID-19 and need to be tested, begin by calling your healthcare provider.

  • Free home tests are available at the JCDPH with the receptionist, while supplies last.

  • Find additional places where you can get tested now or pick up tests to take at home at: covid19.ncdhhs.gov/FindTests. Some sites offer both testing and treatment. Some tests are free, even if you don’t have insurance.

  • Need more information about different types of tests? Read NCDHHS’s FAQs for answers to your questions about testing.

  • Can’t find a test nearby? Talk with your health care provider, if you have one, or  here or here to get free COVID-19 home test kits.


treatment of covid-19:

Have symptoms? Don't wait. COVID-19 treatments can lower your risk of hospitalization or death. 

  • Talk to your doctor about treatment. 

  • To find treatment options, go to covid19.ncdhhs.gov/FindTreatment

  • Go to a test to treat location where you can get tested and treated in one visit, even if you don't have insurance.

  • Home Test to Treat is a program that offers free tests and free treatment (if eligible) for COVID-19 at home 24/7. No insurance or appointments needed! Register on the website for free virtual care and treatment for COVID-19.

  • If you don't know where to go, call 800-232-0233 (TTY 888-720-7489).

  • Know your rights. Health care providers must treat you even if you don't have a government-issued ID or insurance. 

Treatments are not a substitute for vaccination. Vaccines offer the best protection against COVID-19. 

FDA authorized treatments for COVID-19.


COVID-19 Vaccines

The fall COVID-19 vaccine is now available to everyone 6 months and older in North Carolina.

There are three COVID-19 vaccines currently authorized and recommended in the United States.

  • Vaccine recommendations are based on age, the first vaccine received, and time since last dose.

  • People who are moderately or severely immunocompromised have specific recommendations for COVID-19 vaccines, including boosters.

  • Side effects after a COVID-19 vaccine are common, however severe allergic reactions after getting a COVID-19 vaccine are rare.

Click here to learn more about the COVID-19 vaccines.

Note that other providers in our area are also offer the COVID-19 vaccine. For a full list of vaccine providers, visit the Find a COVID-19 Vaccine website.

You will receive a COVID-19 Vaccination Record Card at your first vaccine appointment. Keep this card in a safe location as it serves as proof of your vaccination. If you misplace this card, follow these instructions to learn how to view your COVID-19 vaccination record in another fashion.

For more information or schedule an appointment for a COVID-19 vaccine call 828-586-8994.


Respiratory virus guidance

The CDC offers guidance to provide practical recommendations and information to help people lower risk from a range of common respiratory viral illnesses, including COVID-19, flu, and RSV. To learn more visit the CDC’s Respiratory Virus Guidance page.


COVID-19 Wastewater Surveillance

The COVID-19 Wastewater Alert for Regional Risk in NC (COVID-WARRN) project uses wastewater surveillance as an early warning system that allows Jackson County to anticipate new COVID-19 outbreaks. The project is a collaboration between the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, the Jackson County Department of Public Health, the Tuckaseigee Water & Sewer Authority, the McLellan Lab at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Dogwood Health Trust, and the private data analytics firm Mathematica.

 Wastewater surveillance can play a vital role in monitoring COVID-19 spread because it overcomes some key gaps in clinical testing through broad population coverage, the ability to detect asymptomatic infections, and the potential to show changes in infection rates up to two weeks earlier than confirmed case data. Through weekly wastewater surveillance for the SARS-CoV-2 virus and its new viral variants, the COVID-WARRN project is giving Jackson County public health officials a more complete picture of the scale of the COVID-19 pandemic locally, and how it compares to regional and national trends. Through the project, Jackson County is contributing data to a National Wastewater Surveillance System, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services have initiated to better understand the extent of COVID-19 infections across the country.

 Trends in Jackson County’s wastewater viral concentrations as well as updated information on the county’s community risk and vulnerability are available at https://wastewater.covid19.mathematica.org/

 Related News Releases:

The Role of Wastewater Data in Pandemic Management, April 2022

Traces of Novel Coronavirus in Wastewater Provide Early Signs of Changes in Local Infection Rate

Mathematica Partnership in WNC Informs Efforts to Establish National Wastewater Surveillance System