Massachusetts

Mass. COVID-19 Cases on the Rise as Delta Variant Spreads

The more contagious Delta variant of COVID-19 appears to be gaining traction in Massachusetts as in the rest of the country

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Provincetown, Massachusetts, has seen a “handful” of new coronavirus cases in the past few days, Town Manager Alex Morse said on Facebook Monday.

Though the metrics remain near their recorded low points, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are rising in Massachusetts as the Delta variant continues to spread.

The Department of Public Health confirmed 322 cases of COVID-19 across Friday, Saturday and Sunday compared to 269 total new cases confirmed during the four-day July 4 holiday weekend. After counting about 1,000 new cases for the two-week period that ended July 6, state health officials have confirmed more than 650 new cases in the last six days.

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Since falling to a low of 64 on June 25, the average number of daily new cases confirmed by the Department of Public Health has climbed to 93.1 as of Monday's update from the public health agency. Over the same period of time, the state's seven-day average positive test rate has increased from its recorded low of 0.31% to 0.55%.

Hospitalizations also increased in the latest report from the state, rising above the 100-patient threshold for the first time since the end of June to 101 COVID-19 patients as of July 11, DPH said. At 87.75, the seven-day average patient count is just slightly above its recorded low of 84.75.

The rise in cases and hospitalizations comes despite increases in the number of people fully vaccinated against COVID-19. In the last seven days, providers have administered 56,456 vaccine doses and 33,114 more people became fully vaccinated. There are now 4,273,587 people vaccinated against COVID-19 in Massachusetts.

The latest CDC data shows that the Delta variant is now the dominant coronavirus strain in the U.S.

At the same time, the more contagious Delta variant of COVID-19 appears to be gaining traction in Massachusetts as in the rest of the country. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control said the variant was responsible for about 30% of all U.S. cases from June 6 through June 19.

In New England, the variant caused an estimated 12% of cases during that time, about double its share for the prior two-week period. Data for the two weeks ending July 3 was not immediately available Tuesday, but Politico reported last week that the CDC said the Delta variant was responsible for 51.7% of all U.S. cases between June 20 and July 3.

Copyright State House News Service
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