Health trust pays tribute to social worker who died due to coronavirus

Tributes have poured in for a Northern Ireland social worker and mother-of-two who sadly lost her life to coronavirus.
 
 
     
   
     
  Dec 24, 2020  
     
 

Good afternoon,

 

This is definitely going to be a Christmas none of us could have imagined.

 

On this Christmas Eve, people across Northern Ireland are curtailing their festive arrangements as a result of a pandemic that this time last year wasn't even on their radar.  We certainly never anticipated we would be sending out a daily newsletter like this one entirely dedicated to coronavirus news.

 

The heartache of not being able to be with family and friends as normal will be felt by many of us, but the season also gives us an opportunity to show kindness to a lonely neighbour or to someone going through a difficult time.

 

On behalf of everyone at the News Letter, I would like to thank you all for your support throughout 2020 and to extend good wishes for a happy, peaceful and healthy Christmas to you and your family.

 

We'll be with you right through the holidays so don't forget to check in at www.newsletter.co.uk for the latest news, features and opinion pieces.

 

Valerie Martin,

Head of Content.

 

 

Thanks for your support for our journalism this year. If you haven't already, then please consider taking out a digital subscription with us from just £1 a month.
And we are offering 20% off if you get someone a subscription as a gift this Christmas. Just use the code CHRISTGIFT20 - find out more here.

 

 

 
     
  NI Trust in tribute to mother-of-two social worker who died due to coronavirus  
     
  Tributes have poured in for a Northern Ireland social worker and mother-of-two who sadly lost her life to coronavirus.  
     
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Northern Ireland to share in extra £800 million coronavirus funding from UK government
 
The Treasury has announced a further £800 million in coronavirus funding to be shared among the devolved administrations.
 
     
 
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Confirmation that mutant strain of coronavirus present in Northern Ireland
 
The mutant strain of coronavirus that prompted travel bans with Great Britain and moves to stricter restrictions in the areas most affected has now been confirmed as present in Northern Ireland.
 
     
 
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Eleven more people with Covid-19 have died in Northern Ireland, the Department of Health has said.
 
There have also been 841 new confirmed cases of the virus in the last 24-hour reporting period.
 
     
 
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Artists break the Covid silence with Christmas album
 
Largely silenced due to the Covid pandemic restrictions, the Belfast music industry is fighting back with a special album of local artists performing both Christmas classics and original festive material.
 
     
 
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Wishing our readers a Merry Christmas at the end of a difficult year
 
So much of 2020 has been upended, and thrown out of the normal calendar of events, that it seems hard to credit the fact that it is Christmas.
 
     
 
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Schools might need to shut due to arrival of mutant strain of coronavirus, says NI's Chief Scientific Advisor Professor Ian Young
 
Northern Ireland's chief scientific officer Professor Ian Young has said it will be very difficult to keep schools open if the new variant of Covid-19 becomes dominant in the region.
 
     
 
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Covid-19 'starts the train of death' for 90% of patients who die with it
 
An in-depth report into the Province's record-keeping when it comes to coronavirus indicates that the overwhelming bulk of people who died with Covid, died of Covid.
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
 
   
 
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California Today: A Christmas Unlike Any Other

Thursday: Wishing you comfort, safety and rest.
People drove by a house decorated with Christmas lights in Pasadena on Dec. 22.Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Good morning.

As I type this, I’m sitting in my undecorated kitchen in Los Angeles, blasting Spotify’s “Christmas Favourites” playlist and trying to summon something resembling cheer. Instead, I started tearing up while Don Henley wailed about bells ringing “sad, sad news.”

Suffice to say, it’s still rough going for the Golden State.

On Tuesday, as Californians met their first Latino Senator and the first Black woman to be named secretary of state, hospital officials made an extraordinary plea for people to stay home, to resist the temptation to gather with loved ones.

Intensive care units across the state are at or near capacity, and tens of thousands more people are testing positive for the coronavirus every day. Even if the surge drops off sharply — not likely, given how things went after Thanksgiving, experts say — the state has predicted that patients will continue to flood intensive care units and emergency rooms well into January.

Health care workers are exhausted, overworked and feeling mounting “moral distress,” as Joanne Spetz, a professor at the Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies at the University of California, San Francisco, explained earlier this week.

And yet, as The Los Angeles Times reported, shoppers are still flocking to shopping malls, which are still allowed to be open, despite that in most of the state, nearly every other type of nonessential business is supposed to be closed.

Nevertheless, there are reasons to celebrate. More and more health care workers and their families are getting vaccine doses, giving them a peace they haven’t known since early this year.

There are still tamales and cookies and even Zoom parties. There’s the hope that next year will be better. And when it is, we can look forward to the holidays being even brighter.

(This article is part of the California Today newsletter. Sign up to get it delivered to your inbox.)

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Stay caught up over the weekend

Andrew Hoyt, a respiratory therapist, cared for a Covid-19 patient in the I.C.U. at Sharp Chula Vista Medical Center a few days before Christmas.Mario Tama/Getty Images
  • Track coronavirus cases by county in California, as well as hospitalizations and deaths. [The New York Times]
  • See how full intensive care units are at hospitals near you. [The New York Times]

And track the state’s alternate care sites. [CA.gov]

Here’s what else to know today

  • In a surprising turn, isolation and living outdoors have helped many who are homeless escape the virus. [The New York Times]
  • Sonoma County ranks worst among Bay Area counties in Covid-19 prevalence. But officials there have taken no enforcement action against at least 15 large wedding gatherings. [The San Francisco Chronicle]
  • Unfair ratings are costing some Instacart shoppers, even as they risk their lives. [The Los Angeles Times]
  • After a four-year investigation, the state’s department of justice reached a deal with the Kern County Sheriff’s Office, long the subject of complaints over excessive use of force. The deal requires several reforms. [The Bakersfield Californian]
  • Over decades, cities have lost control of police discipline. [The New York Times]
  • Retirement for Eddie Garcia, who was until recently San Jose’s police chief, didn’t last long. He was tapped to become Dallas’s next police chief. [The Mercury News]
  • The corrupt former congressman Duncan Hunter, from the San Diego area, was among the people President Trump pardoned this week. They weren’t the last, either. [The New York Times]
  • Rob Bonta, a State Assembly member, has gotten an array of endorsements to succeed Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who has been asked to join the Biden administration. [The Sacramento Bee]
  • For Los Angeles’s mayor, Eric Garcetti, there doesn’t appear to be an exit to the Biden administration. [Politico]
  • Cal’s football season is over. Now, all involved are asking if it was worth it. [The New York Times]
  • Tiki bars are beloved, but they have a painful and under-examined history. Can they be reformed? [The New York Times]
  • If you’ve been wondering what George Clooney’s been up to, he’s in Los Angeles. [The New York Times]
  • Need another visual escape? Here’s how to pretend you’re in a snowy Quebec City tonight. [The New York Times]

And Finally …

A sign reminded visitors to follow coronavirus precautions at the Foothills Christmas Trees lot in Sacramento on Dec. 5. Max Whittaker for The New York Times

We’ll be off tomorrow and Monday. We wish you comfort, safety and time to rest. Thank you, as always, for reading.

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California Today goes live at 6:30 a.m. Pacific time weekdays. Tell us what you want to see: CAtoday@nytimes.com. Were you forwarded this email? Sign up for California Today here and read every edition online here.

Jill Cowan grew up in Orange County, graduated from U.C. Berkeley and has reported all over the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she always wants to see more. Follow along here or on Twitter.

California Today is edited by Julie Bloom, who grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from U.C. Berkeley.

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