Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• 135 new county virus deaths result of state backlog, Allegheny officials say,

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A backlog of data at the state level meant Allegheny County saw a sharp increase in the number of COVID-19 deaths reported Thursday, the county Health Department said.

In the most recent 24-hour period, the county reported 135 new deaths — significan­tly higher than the eight deaths reported Wednesday, which the county attributed to a backlog in the state’s Electronic Death Reporting System.

The latest deaths occurred between Dec. 16 and Jan. 24. Among them were one person in his or her 40s, three in their 50s, 11 in their 60s, 29 in their 70s, 46 in their 80s, 40 in their 90s and five in their 100s.

According to the county, 70 of the 135 deaths were associated with long-term care facilities.

With the latest data, the county

• Take the brief online quiz to see if you are eligible to receive the shot.

• If eligible, check the map of vaccinatio­n locations and providers.

• Contact the vaccine provider to make an appointmen­t. has reported 1,412 deaths since the pandemic began in March.

The county also reported 358 new cases, increasing its total to 68,445, and 4,199 hospitaliz­ations as a result of the virus.

In Pennsylvan­ia, 198 new deaths and 6,036 new cases were reported by the state Department of Health. With the increases, the state has recorded 824,405 cases and 21,303 deaths. More than half the deaths — 11,170 — are associated with nursing or personal care homes.

The Health Department said 3,768 people were hospitaliz­ed throughout the state, with 759 being treated in intensive care units.

So far, the state has administer­ed 837,817 doses of COVID-19 vaccine to 678,618 people — 519,419 have received a first dose, and 159,199 of them have received a

second dose.

Carnegie Mellon University on Thursday said daily surveys conducted by its Delphi Research Group indicate racial disparitie­s in both access to and trust in the vaccines.

The surveys are conducted daily as part of Facebook’s Data for Good program, but the results for those who have been vaccinated is based on the response of 300,000 people from Jan. 9-15, the university said.

When asked whether they had received a vaccine, 9.3% of white people said yes, compared with 6.8% of Hispanics and 6.4% of Black people. American Indians/ Alaska Natives (12.9%) and people of Asian descent (12.3%) had the highest rates of vaccinatio­n.

Trust in medicine and the vaccine also was an issue for Black respondent­s.

Just 58% of Black respondent­s said they trusted the vaccine, as opposed to 73% of Hispanics and 76% of whites. Asian Americans had the highest level of acceptance, at 88%, the university said.

The responses also noted that, in some states, Black people were more than twice as likely than white people to worry about the vaccine’s side effects.

The wide racial and ethnic disparitie­s among those who received the vaccine are due to several factors, including affordable access to health care and distrust in medicine because of “decades of discrimina­tion,” the university said in a release.

“These disparitie­s highlight long-standing gaps in Americans’ access to and trust in medicine, and show that much work remains to be done to ensure everyone has access to health care they trust,” said Alex Reinhart, an assistant teaching professor in CMU’s Department of Statistics and Data Science and one of the researcher­s who helped to analyze the data.

According to CMU, the Delphi Research Group began daily surveys related to COVID-19 in April, with an initial focus on self-reported symptoms. The surveys were later expanded to include factors such as mask use and vaccine acceptance.

Delphi researcher­s use the data to forecast COVID19 activity at state and county levels, informatio­n that then is reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The findings are updated daily and made available to the public on CMU’s COVIDcast website, delphi.cmu.edu/covidcast/survey-results/.

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