Rome News-Tribune

Ga. tops 300K cases; decline in new cases flattens

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ATLANTA — Georgia has surpassed 300,000 confirmed coronaviru­s infections amid hints that a decline in new cases may be leveling out.

With totals reported Thursday, Georgia is close to 301,000 COVID-19 cases. There also are now 6,474 confirmed deaths caused by the respirator­y illness.

Georgia’s numbers continue mostly to improve, although cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths remain elevated over June before numbers began to spike. Hospitaliz­ations continue to fall. The number of confirmed cases in hospitals is below 1,500, down more than half from the peak of 3,200 in late July.

And new deaths being recorded are also dropping, down about 40% since early September to below 40 a day.

But the seven-day rolling average of new cases has drifted up for several days, and Georgia remains the state with the 12th most new cases per capita in the past 14 days, according to data kept by The Associated Press.

“We seem to have hit a leveling point that might just be a bump on the continued trajectory down,” epidemiolo­gist Amber Schmidtke wrote Wednesday of Georgia’s case trend. “We need more time to know.”

Chattahooc­hee County, which contains much of Fort Benning, remains the top county nationwide for new cases per capita in the last 14 days. Athens-clarke County, home to the University of Georgia, ranks No. 14, while Stewart County, home to an immigratio­n detention center, ranks No. 20.

Those hot spots are reflected in larger statewide trends that show COVID-19 cases spiking among people aged 18-22, the age for traditiona­l college students and many military trainees.

Transmissi­on at schools remain high, according to state figures, accounting for 39 of the 93 outbreaks reported last week. Beyond young

Even after a one-day total of 79 new cases on Sept. 3 dropped off the two- week chart, the number of new COVID-19 cases continues to stay high in Floyd County. The test positivity rate was at 12.1% for the two- week period. Public health officials have said 10% is indicative of a significan­t community spread and would like to see numbers nearer the 5% mark. Hospitaliz­ations in Floyd County have seen declines. On Thursday there were 40 COVID-19 patients being treated in local hospitals, down from highs of 70-plus patients.

adults, COVID-19 remains high among school- aged children in some counties, with more than 5 infections

per 1,000 school-aged children reported in 10 counties, mostly in east central or southeast Georgia.

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