The Denver Post

State’s virus cases rose last week, first time since April

- By Meg Wingerter

The number of new COVID19 cases in Colorado rose during the week that ended Sunday — the first time that’s happened since late April.

It’s not clear whether the rise in confirmed cases is a blip or the start of a pattern. Boulder County reported a spike in cases on Wednesday, which health officials blamed on a mix of student parties, protests and out-of-state travel — but those infections don’t explain the full increase.

A Denver Post analysis of data from the state health department found 1,407 new coronaviru­s cases reported in Colorado between June 15 and Sunday, up from 1,087 in the previous week. New cases had fallen every week since the one that began April 20.

Few new coronaviru­s deaths have been recorded in the last week, though, with six reported to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t since June 15. It can take several days for death reports to reach the state health department, however, so that number could increase.

Hospitaliz­ations for COVID19 remain steady. The Colorado Hospital Associatio­n reported 149 people were receiving care for the virus as of Monday afternoon. That number had bounced around between 151 and 166 during the previous week, and is down significan­tly from the state’s mid-April peak, when the daily hospitaliz­ation figure hovered just under 900 people.

Nineteen coronaviru­s patients had been released or transferre­d to a lower level of care in the past 24 hours.

Only 271 of the state’s 1,096

critical-care ventilator­s were in use as of Monday afternoon, hospitals reported to the state.

No facilities reported that they expect to see ICU bed shortages within the next week.

Altogether, Colorado has seen 30,705 cases of the new virus, an increase of 166 from Sunday’s total reported by state health officials. Additional­ly, 5,343 people have been hospitaliz­ed since the coronaviru­s first was detected in the state in early March.

The state health department reports 1,438 people have died directly due to COVID-19, and another 213 had the virus but may have died of other causes.

More than 285,000 people now have been tested for the coronaviru­s statewide, according to data released Monday, including 6,252 people who were tested on Sunday.

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