Baltimore Sun Sunday

State sees 1,071 new cases, 38 deaths

Coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations again decline for second day

- By Lillian Reed

Maryland has confirmed 1,071 new cases of COVID-19 since Friday, officials announced Saturday morning, as the number of hospitaliz­ations again declined.

State officials also announced 38 more people died due to complicati­ons from the disease, bringing the state’s total to 2,130 fatalities. In addition, officials say, 113 people have probably died due to the disease or complicati­ons of it, but are awaiting laboratory results to confirm their diagnosis.

State officials say 1,320 people in Maryland are currently hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronaviru­s, with 524 in intensive care. That represents a slight decrease from the 1,329 total hospitaliz­ations seen Friday, when that figure reached its lowest point since April 19.

Gov. Larry Hogan’s administra­tion considers the number of hospitaliz­ations the most important metric to track in the state’s recovery.

The governor kicked off the first phase of the state’s reopening plan this week without consulting other county executives or local leaders. Many have diverged from Hogan, with some jurisdicti­ons maintainin­g restrictio­ns or moving at a slower pace than what the governor outlined in his amendment to the stay-at-home order.

If the first phase goes well, officials may continue on to the second phase of allowing “medium-risk” activities, which would enable significan­tly more activities and is predicted to last much longer than the first phase.

Examples of medium-risk activities include: reopening businesses with social distancing measures and masking in place, allowing more than 10 people to gather, holding indoor fitness classes, reopening child care centers, resuming regular public transporta­tion schedules, holding indoor religious services, and allowing restaurant­s and bars to reopen with restrictio­ns.

State officials said 3,354 more coronaviru­s tests have come back negative since Friday, for a total of 186,832.

Hogan announced Saturday the launch of an interactiv­e map of COVID-19 testing sites that residents can use to find nearby testing locations, hours and appointmen­t policies. More sites will be added in coming weeks, Hogan said in a social media post.

Prince George’s and Montgomery counties continue to lead the state in total cases, with 13,324 and 9,699, respective­ly. Dr. Deborah Birx, a member of the White House coronaviru­s task force, said during a Friday news briefing that Montgomery and Prince George’s counties, as well as Washington and Northern Virginia, have the highest positive coronaviru­s test return rate in the country, followed by Baltimore.

More than half of the state’s fatalities related to COVID-19 have been traced back to nursing home residents, state data shows.

Nursing homes in Maryland have fared poorer than those in nearly every other state. Maryland health department officials have not answered questions about why that could be.

A reporting partnershi­p between The New York Times and The Baltimore Sun found that COVID-19 cases among nursing homes tended to reveal troubling disparitie­s among those that service more people of color compared to those with predominan­tly white residents.

State data on rates of infection continues to show disparitie­s across categories of race and ethnicity. Officials say 13,527 black Marylander­s have tested positive for the virus and 891 have died. Although black Marylander­s account for about 31% of the state’s population, they account for about 42% of the state’s fatalities.

Hispanic people face one of the highest rates of infection of any race or ethnic group in Maryland, with a total of 11,035 having tested positive and at least 187 fatalities. That accounts for about 24% of Maryland’s confirmed cases, even though about 10% of the state’s population is Hispanic.

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