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Regional public-health updates: flu surge, staffing, CPR training, water concerns and nicotine-policy hearing

Charles River Public Health District Shared Services Advisory Committee · January 27, 2026

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Summary

Shared-services nurses reported a December influenza spike and distribution of combo flu/COVID test kits (funded with contact-tracing funds), updates on staffing and CPR-instructor training, environmental-health capacity work, and town updates including Dover's nicotine-free-generation hearing and discussion of private-well PFAS/nitrate testing.

Regional nursing staff reported a sharp December influenza increase across the four towns and local response measures.

Jenny Gatherin, regional public health nurse, said Needham had 181 reported flu cases in December compared with 26 the previous year; Medfield had 38 versus 9. Staff ran outreach messaging about hand-washing, masking in crowded spaces and vaccine availability, and free combo flu/COVID test kits were ordered and distributed to towns after verifying allowable fund use with state contacts. Chair Carrie Janell clarified the kits were purchased with contact-tracing and case-investigation funds, not Charles River discretionary funds.

Nursing and training updates included quarterly case-acknowledgement assessment results (reported as 'A' grades for all towns), completion of local hands-only CPR clinics at the Carroll Center, and several staff members completing steps toward CPR instructor certification. The group also confirmed a preferred candidate (assistant with epidemiology background) has accepted an offer and is expected to start in mid-February.

Environmental-health agent James (Jay) Smith briefed the committee on turf-field and stormwater research, and said he will follow up on a Title 5 database demonstrated by a town official. The regional capacity assessment was reported at about 85% with a pass threshold of 100% to unlock additional program work.

Town updates covered several local items. Medfield reported quarterly select-board meetings and ongoing use of opioid-abatement funds to support postpartum and harm-reduction work. Sherburne cited fee-analysis revenue projections to help the local budget. Needham described a project to revise antiquated health regulations and adopted three updated regulations in January. Dover highlighted water-quality concerns in tight-lot neighborhoods (nitrate detection on property transfers) and described a recent nicotine-free-generation hearing that drew roughly two dozen attendees with split testimony; Dover also reported a FOIA request from a convenience-store trade association following the hearing.

The committee confirmed next steps on the community health needs assessment (BME Strategies will run a regional core survey with optional town-specific questions), asked each town to name a primary reviewer for survey questions, and scheduled next meetings for February and March with a project officer expected to attend.

Ending: The committee adjourned after approving routine business and noting follow-up items for staffing, candidate interviews, the community-health survey, and continued conversation about medical-director scope.