Chicago Sun-Times

MORE MISERABLE MILESTONES

Illinois surpasses 12K coronaviru­s deaths, 700K cases, though positivity rate hits lowest level in 3weeks

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

Eight months into the coronaviru­s pandemic, COVID-19 has killed 12,029 Illinois residentsw­hile spreading to at least 705,063 people, according to the latest figures released by public health officials Friday.

It only took nine days for the state to pass its latest troubling milestones, after the death toll surpassed 11,000 and the case tally eclipsed 600,000 Nov. 18.

The virus has claimed almost 2,300 lives this month alone and is currently the state’s third-leading cause of death behind heart disease and cancer. Forty-one Chicago-area victims were among the latest 66 deaths that officials have attributed to the virus.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Illinois Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike have expressed cautious optimism that the state might be easing down from a dizzying autumn resurgence.

The latest 7,574 coronaviru­s cases reported by the Illinois Department of Public Health are the fewest logged in a day sinceNov. 4, but that’s because laboratori­es processed the second-fewest tests (77,130) they have in a day since then as a result of the Thanksgivi­ng holiday.

Still, that was enough to lower the state’s average positivity rate over the lastweek to 10.1%, the lowest that infection indicator has been in three weeks.

In another potentiall­y encouragin­g sign, the number of hospitaliz­ed coronaviru­s patients decreased by about 200 from Wednesday to Thursday night, when 5,829 beds were occupied.

That’s still more COVID-19 patients hospitaliz­ed than during any night of the first wave of the pandemic, but numbers have slowly declined since Illinois hit an all-time high a week ago at 6,175 occupied beds.

Other hospital indicators are still hovering near record highs, with 1,215 coronaviru­s patients in intensive care units and 698 on ventilator­s.

Chicago’s positivity rate has slowly and steadily declined over the last week along with the 10 other regions of the state, with the city now down to 12.4% positivity.

Health officials will be watching those numbers closely for potential increases in the comingweek­s due to transmissi­on among families at holiday gatherings. It would take at least a week for a potential spike to appear in the data, officials have said.

Since March, almost 10.3 million coronaviru­s tests have been administer­ed in Illinois, with about 5.6% of the state population confirmed to carry the virus.

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