Chicago Sun-Times

OFFICIALS SAY IT’S ‘TIME TO DOUBLE DOWN’ ON MASKS AMID LATEST SURGE OF COVID-19

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

A steady, monthlong surge in COVID-19 infections and hospitaliz­ations took its latest troubling step up in Illinois Tuesday as officials reported 2,931 new cases of the virus, and positivity rates soared to levels not seen in months.

The latest infections were diagnosed among 51,625 tests, meaning 5.7% of samples came back positive — the highest proportion of new cases reported by the Illinois Department of Public Health in a single day since Jan. 19.

The state appeared well on its way to snuffing out the pandemic less than a month ago, when most key metrics sank to pandemic lows and a historic vaccinatio­n campaign started gaining steam.

But since March 12, Illinois’ seven-day average statewide testing positivity rate has ballooned from 2.1% up to 3.9% — its highest point since Feb. 2. Chicago’s regional positivity rate is even higher, at 5.1%.

At the same time, hospitals statewide have seen a 52% uptick in COVID-19 admissions, with 1,648 beds occupied Monday night.

Nearly 600 Chicagoans are testing positive every day on average, a figure that has more than doubled since the start of March.

Cook County officials warned over the weekend that the region is already “at the beginning of a surge.” It marks the state’s third wave of the virus, following the initial wave that hit last spring and an even more devastatin­g resurgence in November.

The latest spike comes even as 19% of the state population has been fully vaccinated. How bad it gets depends on whether residents follow the basic protocols that have been in place for over a year, officials say.

“This is a time to double down on what we know works to prevent the spread of COVID-19,” the Chicago Department of Public Health said in a statement. “This includes wearing a mask, maintainin­g social distancing, washing your hands and staying at home as much as you can.”

The virus is claiming an average of 18 Illinois lives per day, but that could soon rise along with growing daily case counts, experts have said. The state reported 13 more deaths Tuesday, including those of two Cook County men in their 40s.

Illinois’ death toll is up to 21,395, among almost 1.3 million residents who’ve tested positive since last March.

With 95,188 COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns administer­ed Monday, more than 2.4 million residents have been fully immunized so far.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is sending another $124 million to the state to bolster vaccinatio­n efforts, with about $33 million of that going to Chicago. About 75% of the money is dedicated to “underserve­d communitie­s and those disproport­ionately affected by COVID-19 to help ensure individual­s are equitably vaccinated,” according to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office.

Eighty-four of the state’s 102 counties — all outside the Chicago area — have already taken Pritzker up on his OK to open vaccine eligibilit­y to all residents 16 and up in areas where demand has waned. The governor will make eligibilit­y universal across the rest of the state April 12, a week ahead of the latest directive issued by President Joe Biden. Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Chicago will follow Biden’s deadline to open eligibilit­y April 19.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Union members line up last week for COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns at Internatio­nal Union of Operating Engineers Local 399 on the South Side.
SUN-TIMES FILES Union members line up last week for COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns at Internatio­nal Union of Operating Engineers Local 399 on the South Side.

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