Post-Tribune

24 counties at high risk for COVID-19 spread

Lake, Porter show improvemen­t, get out of red category

- By Casey Smith

For a third straight week, more than a quarter of Indiana counties are rated with the highest risk level of coronaviru­s s pread in Wednesday’s state update that continued to show no area in the low or moderate community spread zones.

The Indiana State Health Department tracking map labels 24 of the state’s 92 counties the most dangerous red category, down two from a week ago. All other counties are in the next-riskiest orange rating of the four-level system, which is updated weekly.

While both Lake and Porter counties have been in the red zone recently, both improved into the orange level Wednesday, the area below the red ranking.

Those high-risk counties are predominan­tly rural but include northern Indiana’s Elkhart County and others clustered in the southeaste­rn and Western areas of the state.

The new county ratings come a day after state officials announced a flaw in Indiana’s COVID-19 reporting that is expected to change the state’s overall positivity rate and the metrics for individual counties once corrected.

Since the pandemic began, a software error has caused underrepor­ting in statewide COVID-19 positivity rates and for individual counties, state Health Commission­er Dr. Kristina Box said Tuesday during a briefing on the state’s coronaviru­s response. The overall numbers of tests, positive cases and deaths remain accurate however, she said.

Box predicted that the state’s positivity rate would be two to three percentage points higher once the issue is fixed. Indiana’s rate was reported at 12.1% for all tests administer­ed as of Dec. 16. The corrected data will be published online Dec. 30, in time for the state’s weekly update of county labeling. While the county-level impacts will vary, Box expects some smaller counties will see a decline in positivity rate after the changes.

Because the state uses a county’s positivity rate to determine which community restrictio­ns that county should face, the corrected methodolog­y could mean some Hoosiers will see loosened regulation­s, including to gathering sizes, business capacities and school operations.

The state health department on Wednesday added 62 confirmed COVID-19 deaths to the statewide toll with three from Lake County, where the total is now 565. Those push Indiana’s toll to 7,645, including both confirmed and presumed infections, according to the state agency’s daily statistic update.

Porter County added one new fatality, bringing the total there to 128.

The state’s seven- day rolling average of COVID-19 deaths has decreased to 55 per day after that average rose Dec. 14 to a pandemic peak of 81 per day

With another 4,731 diagnosed cases reported Wednesday, the number of Indiana residents known to have had the coronaviru­s is now up to 476,538.

Lake County added only 168 new cases. More than 37,000 cases have been reported. Porter County, with a total of 11,960 cases reported to the state, added 109 cases, according to the state dashboard.

The state agency additional­ly reported that 3,123 Hoosiers were hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 on Tuesday, 59 more patients than were hospitaliz­ed as of Monday.

While Indiana’s frontline health care workers continue as the state’s first to receive the vaccine against COVID-19, Gov. Eric Holcomb signed his 50th coronaviru­s-related executive order since March on Wednesday, extending temporary licensures for 90 days to allow health care profession­als who are not currently licensed to practice in Indiana.

The Republican governor’s order also allows properly trained individual­s, such as certain paramedics, EMTs and members of the Indiana National Guard to administer the COVID-19 vaccine.

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