Coronavirus

2,501 More COVID-19 Cases, 46 New Deaths in Mass.

There have now been 10,487 confirmed deaths and 217,163 cases, according to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health

NBC Universal, Inc.

It was fairly busy at Boston Logan Airport Saturday despite repeated warnings from the CDC to not gather or travel for the Thanksgiving holiday. Still, travel is down by more than 1 million passengers compared to the same time last year.

Massachusetts health officials reported just over 2,500 new confirmed coronavirus cases Sunday, as the average positivity rate continues to climb toward 4%.

The 2,501 new confirmed positive cases brings the total to 217,163 in the state since the start of the pandemic, according to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.

Forty-six new deaths were also reported, meaning 10,487 in all have died in Massachusetts. There have been another 235 deaths among probable cases of COVID-19 at this time.

The percentage of coronavirus tests coming back positive, on average over the past seven days, rose to 3.8% Sunday from 3.57% the day before, according to the latest daily report.

In the state, there are an estimated 43,709 active cases, while 1,081 people are hospitalized with confirmed COVID-19 infections.

Of those patients in hospitals, 238 were listed as being in intensive care units and 110 are intubated, according to the DPH.

The most cases over the past two weeks were reported among the 20-29-years-old age group, with 7,051. More than a third of all cases over that stretch, 38.2%, were people 29 years or younger. This percentage has remained relatively steady since the beginning of July.

Meanwhile, the average age of those who have died from COVID-19 is 81.

Exit mobile version