The Day

States investigat­e virus spread via youth hockey

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Exeter, N.H. — Public health officials in multiple northeaste­rn U.S. states are investigat­ing the possible spread of the coronaviru­s among youth hockey players.

The New York State Amateur Hockey Associatio­n said last week that some of its players tested positive for the virus after attending a skills clinic in New Hampshire and playing in a tournament in Connecticu­t. Some players are “very sick,” the associatio­n said, and have passed the virus to family members.

While ice hockey competitio­ns are allowed in Connecticu­t and New Hampshire, they are prohibited in New York and Massachuse­tts. In a letter distribute­d last week, the New York associatio­n criticized “overzealou­s coaches and parents” for traveling across state lines.

“Participat­ing in out-ofstate tournament­s, with players from other states, is not a very smart decision,” it wrote.

“These reckless actions resulting in sick players and others will not help our cause at all.”

Chet Murch, general manager of The Rinks at Exeter in New Hampshire, told the Boston Globe that at least a dozen players from New York tested positive after the July 31-Aug. 2 tournament in Connecticu­t, as did a Massachuse­tts teenager who competed with a New York team and later attended the New Hampshire clinic.

He said his facility has followed all safety protocols, but the New Hampshire attorney general’s office said it is reviewing complaints.

“Any breach of public health guidance that puts individual­s at risk will not be tolerated. End of story,” Gov. Chris Sununu told WMUR-TV.

Connecticu­t public health officials did not respond to the Globe’s requests for comment, but the Massachuse­tts Department of Public Health said it is working with other New England states to coordinate contact tracing.

Dr. Shira Doron, an infectious disease specialist at Tufts Medical Center, said coaches and athletes may consider infection rates in neighborin­g states low enough to participat­e in contact sports, but there is inherent danger.

The teenager “cheated the system by leaving the state and, lo and behold, there was a risk associated with close contact sports,” she said.

In other coronaviru­s developmen­ts:

Maine

More than two dozen people tested positive for the coronaviru­s and another person died, the Maine Center for Disease Control reported Saturday

The number of deaths increased to 127 while the number of people who’ve tested positive has topped 4,100.

The true number of cases is likely higher because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected and not feel sick.

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