Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

2- MONTH LOW OF NEW CASES AS TESTING DIPS ON CHRISTMAS

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@ suntimes. com | @ mitchtrout

The coronaviru­s has killed an additional 66 Illinois residents and spread to 3,293 more, state public health officials announced Saturday.

That’s the smallest number of new COVID- 19 cases announced in a day by the Illinois Department of Public Health since Oct. 19, mostly because laboratori­es processed only 54,462 tests on Christmas — far below the state’s daily testing average of more than 91,000 in the last month.

Despite the holiday testing dip, the two- month- low case count kept Illinois’ pandemic numbers trending downward after a record- breaking autumn resurgence. The average statewide positivity rate, which indicates how rapidly the virus is spreading, has fallen to 6.8%, its lowest point since Oct. 29.

Hospital numbers are heading in the right direction too, with 4,021 coronaviru­s patients occupying beds as of Friday night, including 874 receiving intensive care and 494 on ventilator­s. Those figures all have declined to levels comparable to early November, before the state’s surge went into overdrive.

The death total Saturday also was the lowest reported by the state since Nov. 29, but the virus still has claimed a brutal average of 107 lives each day in the last week.

Illinois weathered its worst stretch of the pandemic in the first week of December, when about 154 Illinoisan­s were dying of COVID- 19 every day.

Since March, about 934,000 people have been diagnosed with the virus across the state and 15,865 of them have died.

Gov. J. B. Pritzker’s health team has warned of a potential spike in cases due to transmissi­on at holiday gatherings, though Illinois mostly avoided an uptick after Thanksgivi­ng.

Meanwhile, hospitals are working to immunize their health care workers. More than 100,000 Illinoisan­s had received COVID- 19 vaccine doses as of Wednesday, while a federal effort to vaccinate nursing home residents is scheduled to launch next week.

Several months remain before shots will be available to the vast majority of Illinois’ 12.7 million residents.

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