Las Vegas Review-Journal

The state added 2,400 COVID-19 cases and 20 deaths in three days

2,400 cases, 20 deaths reported over weekend

- By Jonah Dylan

Nevada on Monday reported

2,400 new coronaviru­s cases and 20 deaths over the preceding three days — the highest totals in both categories since the state ceased weekend reporting in mid-april — and another jump in the test positivity rate.

Data posted by the state Department of Health and Human Services on the state’s coronaviru­s website for Friday through Sunday showed new COVID-19 cases were more than 300 above the 2,067 reported on July 19.

The two-week moving average of new cases rose to 778 per day, up 65 from the 713 cases a day reported Friday. The state’s case total reached 351,443.

The two-week moving average of new cases has been climbing since it reached a low of 132 on June 5, with much of that growth occurring in Clark County.

Fatalities reported Monday pushed the state death toll to 5,837. The 20 reported deaths also were above the two-week moving average of five per day when spread over three days. The moving average was unchanged from Friday.

Deaths from the disease caused by the coronaviru­s have remained mostly flat while the other major metrics tracked by the state have been climbing steadily. But it also

has inched higher in recent weeks from a two-week average of two deaths a day as of June 1, according to the state data.

The updated data showed that 1,046 people were hospitaliz­ed with either confirmed or suspected cases of COVID-19 in the state as of Sunday, an increase of 45 from the previous report. That number has been rising for weeks and is starting to approach the 1,147 peak reached during the second wave of infections last summer.

The state’s two-week positivity rate, which essentiall­y tracks the percentage of people tested for COVID-19 who are found to be infected, increased by 0.7 percentage point to 13.5 percent, according to state data.

The rate has risen more than 10 percentage points in just over a month after reaching a low of 3.3 percent on June 9.

Nevada no longer reports numbers over the weekend, and public health officials have said that reporting on Monday and sometimes Tuesday can be inflated as a result of the delayed compilatio­n of local reports.

State and county health agencies also often redistribu­te the daily data after it is reported to better reflect the date of death or a test or onset of symptoms, which is why the moving-average trend lines frequently differ from daily reports and are considered better indicators of the direction of the outbreak.

Amid the rising metrics, the Clark County Commission last week instituted a mask mandate for all employees in the county. But it stopped short of mandating masks for everyone, something that had been recommende­d by the Southern Nevada Health District.

The health district reported 2,123 new cases in Clark County for Friday through Sunday, bringing the local case total to 275,983. It also reported all 20 of the state’s deaths, bringing the number of deaths in the county to 4,636.

The county’s 14-day positivity rate also climbed to 14.7 percent, a level last seen in early February.

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