Sentinel & Enterprise

5 new deaths reported in Bay State

Other metrics trending downward

- Ly Aaron Surtis acurtis@lowellsun.com

Health officials announced 1,884 new confirmed COVID-19 cases in Massachuse­tts on Thursday and five new confirmed deaths, as the number of active infections statewide has hovered around the same number throughout April while other key health metrics continue to tick downward.

The number of confirmed cases reported by the state Department of Public Health on Thursday brings the total to 626,550 cases since January. The figures show there have also been 17,087 confirmed deaths from the virus statewide since the pandemic began. Another 345 deaths are classified by health officials as most likely linked to the virus.

On Thursday, the DPH announced there were 710 patients hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19, in

cluding 162 patients in intensive care units statewide and 102 patients who were intubated.

There were an estimated 35,478 active COVID-19 cases statewide as of Thursday, a slight increase from last Thursday, when the total was 35,149, but down from the April 2 case total of 37,707.

Thursday’s data shows a statewide decreasing trend in four key health metrics compared to last week, including the seven-day average of those hospitaliz­ed with the virus. Last week, the metric’s total was 720, but dipped to 707.9 on Thursday.

The seven-day weighted percent positivity rate has ticked slightly downward over the past week, reaching 2.30% on Thursday, down from 2.43% reported by health officials last week.

The seven-day average of confirmed deaths also dropped from 12.6 on April 8 to 8.1 on Thursday, which is the lowest rate it has been in more than a year. According to the DPH data, the last time the the seven-day average of confirmed deaths was below 8 was on March 27, 2020, when the total was 7.4.

The most significan­t decreasing trend over the past week was the sevenday average of COVID-19 confirmed cases, which was 1,844 last week and was measured at 1,394.9 on Thursday.

Another encouragin­g trend is the decrease in the total number of cities and towns classified as at “high risk” for coronaviru­s transmissi­on, which dropped for the first time since March 4.

To qualify as high risk for coronaviru­s transmissi­on, the DPH states communitie­s with population­s under 10,000 must have more than 25 cases of the virus. For communitie­s between 10,000 and 50,000 people, they must have an average of at least 10 cases per 100,000 people and a positive test rate of at least 5%. For communitie­s with a population exceeding 50,000, they must have at least 10 cases per 100,000 people and a positive test rate of at least 4%. Each category is based on the previous 14 days of data.

Approximat­ely two months ago, the total number of communitie­s classified as high risk statewide was 153.

The number of cities and towns on the list dropped to just 14 on March 4, according to DPH data. The number of communitie­s classified as high risk proceeded to increase each week, reaching 76 communitie­s as of last week’s data.

However, on Thursday, the total number of towns and cities classified at high risk dropped to 61.

Fitchburg and Leominster remain absent from the high-risk list, though Ayer has been on the list since April 2.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 73,622 new cases of COVID-19 nationwide on Thursday, bringing the total to approximat­ely 31,231,869 million cases since the pandemic began.

The CDC also announced the virus’ nationwide death toll was 561,356 as of Thursday, an increase of approximat­ely 5,250 deaths since last Thursday.

According to the CDC, there have been 198,317,040 vaccines administer­ed nationwide as of Thursday. About 37.9% of the population has received a first dose, while 23.6% of the population has been fully vaccinated.

Below is the total COVID-19 infections by city and town from Jan. 1 through Tuesday and how that total compares to last week’s numbers:

Ashburnham – 386 (+6)

Ashby – 156 (+2)

Ayer – 826 (+18)

Fitchburg – 4,489 (+68)

Gardner – 2,222 (+36) Groton – 499 (+8) Lancaster – 522 (+10)

Leominster – 4,756 (+54)

Lunenburg – 713 (+19) Pepperell – 498 (+10) Princeton – 143 (+3) Rutland – 593 (+9) Shirley – 808 (+6) Sterling – 686 (+21) Townsend – 426 (+9)

Westminste­r – 523 (+14)

 ?? STUART CAHILL / BOSTON HERALD ?? Nicole Sedar gets a shot from Registered Nurse Jeanne Porier as the city of Brockton holds a walk-in vaccine clinic at the Westgate Mall on Thursday.
STUART CAHILL / BOSTON HERALD Nicole Sedar gets a shot from Registered Nurse Jeanne Porier as the city of Brockton holds a walk-in vaccine clinic at the Westgate Mall on Thursday.

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