Las Vegas Review-Journal

Number of COVID-19 cases in state passes 50,000

Clark County records 980 new infections

- By Max Michor Las Vegas Review-journal

The number of COVID-19 cases in Nevada surged past 50,000 on Sundayasst­atehealtho­fficials reported 1,131 new cases.

Sunday’s figures brought the total number of cases in Nevada to 50,205.

Data released by the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services on Sunday showed three fewer COVID-19 deaths in Clark

County than previously reported. Itwasn’tclearwhyt­hedeathswe­re subtracted, but the total number of deaths stood at 832 for the state.

Thestate’srevisedde­athcount comes two days after Nevada recorded a one-day record for COVID-19 deaths with 29.

The Southern Nevada Health District reported 980 new cases in Clark County and no additional deaths, bringing the total number of cases in the county to 43,147 with 688 deaths.

The health district also reported that 10 more Clark County residents were hospitaliz­ed from COVID-19.

The state’s infection rate, which is considered a better indicator of the outbreak, continued to rise for the 25th day in a row and stood at 10.34 percent as of Sunday. The rate is calculated by dividing the number of people tested for COVID-19 with the number of positive test results statewide.

Because of the rising caseload, Gov. Steve Sisolak on Friday extended several pandemic-related emergency directives that were set to expire, including limits on the size of public gatherings and business occupancy.

On July 27, Sisolak announced the

continued closure of bars in certain Nevada counties, including Clark and Washoe.

The state is changing how it assesses trends on COVID-19 infection spread, hospitaliz­ations and other metrics to better identify which counties “are getting progressiv­ely better or worse” and which “should tighten up or loosen mitigation efforts,” according to a statement from the governor’s office. That new assessment framework is being rolled out this week, the governor’s office said.

An advisory group of public health, hospital, business enforcemen­t and local government representa­tives will assess the data to make statewide and local recommenda­tions and suggest “increased enforcemen­t mechanisms.”

The changes will make policy changes more predictabl­e for local jurisdicti­ons, and the group will work directly with localities on enhanced enforcemen­t, focused targeting and next steps to reduce COVID-19 spread.

Contact Max Michor at mmichor@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0365. Follow @Maxmichor on Twitter.

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