Coronavirus

Mass. COVID Hot Spots: 97 Communities Now in High-Risk Red Zone

Seventeen communities will have to move back to Phase 3, Step 1 of Massachusetts reopening plan, based on the data in this week's town-by-town report.

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There are now 97 communities considered at the highest risk for transmitting the new coronavirus in Massachusetts, according to the latest weekly community-level data on the pandemic.

It's an increase of 16 from the 81 towns and cities in the report's red zone last week -- the numbers have steadily been increasing for weeks. (See this week's full red zone list below.)

Seventeen communities will have to move back to Phase 3, Step 1 of Massachusetts reopening plan, based on the data in this week's report.

The weekly data, from the Department of Public Health, includes a breakdown of the total number of coronavirus cases in each Massachusetts city and town, transmission rates, data on clusters and more.

The weekly report was issued as the Department of Public Health reported in its daily coronavirus report more than 6,000 new cases, shattering the record set the previous day, though delayed reporting from one laboratory was responsible for 680 of the cases.

See Thursday's full Department of Public Health report here.

See the Town-by-Town Mass. Coronavirus Risk Data

The following 97 communities are in the highest risk level as of Thursday: Abington, Acushnet, Attleboro, Barnstable, Bellingham, Berkley, Billerica, Blackstone, Boxford, Brockton, Charlton, Chelmsford, Chelsea, Chicopee, Clinton, Dartmouth, Dighton, Douglas, Dracut, Edgartown, Everett, Fall River, Fitchburg, Framingham, Freetown, Gardner, Georgetown, Granby, Hampden, Hanover, Haverhill, Holden, Holyoke, Hopedale, Hudson, Lancaster, Lawrence, Leicester, Lenox, Leominster, Littleton, Lowell, Ludlow, Lunenburg, Lynn, Malden, Marion, Mendon, Merrimac, Methuen, Middleton, Milford, Millbury, Monson, New Bedford, Newbury, Norfolk, North Attleborough, North Brookfield, Palmer, Paxton, Peabody, Pittsfield, Plainville, Randolph, Rehoboth, Revere, Rutland, Salisbury, Saugus, Seekonk, Shirley, Somerset, Southborough, Southbridge, Southwick, Spencer, Springfield, Sterling, Stoneham, Stoughton, Sturbridge, Sutton, Swansea, Taunton, Tewksbury, Tyngsborough, Upton, Uxbridge, Wareham, Wenham, West Boylston, West Springfield, Westport, Whitman, Wilmington and Woburn.

Of those communities, 23 are newly in red on the list: Abington, Acushnet, Billerica, Charlton, Granby, Hanover, Holden, Hudson, Newbury, North Attleborough, North Brookfield, Palmer, Pittsfield, Plainville, Randolph, Southborough, Spencer, Stoneham, Stoughton, Sturbridge, Tewksbury, Wareham and Wilmington.

Seven community dropped out of red on the list: East Longmeadow, Fairhaven, Oak Bluffs, Templeton, Tisbury, Westminster, Winchendon.

Seventeen communities have been consistently in the red zone long enough to have to move back to Phase 3, Step 1 of Massachusetts' reopening plan on Monday, according to the state's updated list: Barnstable, Blackstone, Dartmouth, Douglas, Edgartown, Hampden, Lancaster, Ludlow, Lunenburg, Peabody, Rehoboth, Salisbury, Southbridge, Southwick, Sterling, Sutton and Taunton. It means a series of new restrictions for businesses in those communities.

To qualify for the red category under the new metrics, communities with populations under 10,000 must have more than 25 cases. For mid-size communities of between 10,000 and 50,000 people, they must have an average of more than 10 cases per 100,000 people and a positive test rate of more than 5%. And for larger communities of greater than 50,000 people, they must have more than 10 cases per 100,000 people and a positive test rate of more than 4%.

Previously, the state used the number of cases detected on average each day over two weeks to determine if Massachusetts' communities are at high risk for coronavirus transmission. The new list factors in population size and positive test rate.

State health officials have identified 9,883 new coronavirus clusters between Nov. 1 and 28, each accounting for an average of 2.68 COVID-19 cases. That's 1,562 more new clusters than were identified in the previous report, with data from Oct. 25 through Nov. 21.

Read this week's full report here, with data on communities' percent positivity, county- and state-level data and more.

The Department of Public Health is no longer including a map of the community-level risk in the weekly report. An official told NBC10 Boston that the map is no longer seen as being as helpful as it once was, now that coronavirus cases are being reported in most communities.

Massachusetts changed which communities it considered at high risk of coronavirus transmission, which dropped the number from 121 to 16 on Friday. Officials said the change allows more schools to hold in-person classes.

Changes to Massachusetts' Hot Spot Map

Massachusetts has changed its coronavirus metrics for the weekly report over time, including three significant revamps in a recent three-week span.

The most recent changes, last month, produced a major shift: knocking the number of communities in the red zone from 121 to 16 as what defined a high-risk community changed, though the numbers have grown as the weeks passed. Officials said the adjustment brought Massachusetts more in line with risk levels in other states.

That week's report also dropped the map that displayed the town-by-town coronavirus data. It showed where in the state communities were at high, moderate or low risk of transmission, but officials said it was no longer very informative.

In the weeks before that, officials added information on COVID-19 clusters, both on where major clusters have been identified -- they're listed in the report with an asterisk -- and on trends among clusters.

The color-coded town-by-town data was introduced in August, and the Baker administration announced that the state would focus its strongest COVID-mitigation efforts on towns in the red category. Communities can only move to Step 2 of Phase 3 of Massachusetts' reopening plan, announced in late September, if they are not consistently in the red.

Before that data's introduction, the positive COVID test rate over the preceding 14 days was the standard for measuring hot spots. The Department of Public Health's weekly report still includes that information, along with other metrics like how many tests are being conducted locally and how many cases have been reported locally.

Some of Massachusetts' smaller towns took issue with having their risk assessed based on cases per capita alone. They had said that, when a town only had a few thousand people, an outbreak in just one household could send it into red under the criteria at the time: 8 cases of COVID-19 per 100,000 residents.

Officials said last week that the latest change to the data addressed those concerns.

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