Coronavirus

122 More Coronavirus Deaths in Massachusetts, 1,184 More Test Positive

Two closely watched statistics mentioned by Gov. Charlie Baker Tuesday are holding steady

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Gov. Charlie Baker toured a Fall River manufacturing facility that is shifting its focus to produce PPE.

Massachusetts' coronavirus death toll rose by another 122, health officials said Tuesday, while another 1,184 people have tested positive for the virus.

Both are higher what the Massachusetts Department of Public Health reported Monday, when the single-day deaths reported were under 100 for the first time in weeks, but lower than the totals being reported last week. Tuesday's report puts the death toll at 4,212 people, while a total of 70,271 have now tested positive for the virus.

On two closely watched metrics, there was good news Tuesday. The hospitalization rate remains at 5% while the percentage of tests to come back positive was 13%, slightly higher than the past few days but still far below what was being seen in mid-April.

Governor Baker said Monday's daily update included the lowest rate of new tests that came back positive in several weeks

Gov. Charlie Baker highlighted both of those statistics as positive signs in Massachusetts' coronavirus fight at his news conference earlier Tuesday. He noted that Massachusetts had just seen its lowest rate of new tests come back positive in several weeks, 10%, and that the number of patients in the hospital with the highly infectious virus is on a "pretty steady downward trend."

There were 3,542 people in the hospital, according to Tuesday's report, nearly identical to the prior day's number, and 5% of the people who've tested positive for the virus are hospitalized, steady since it ticked down from 6% on Saturday.

Massachusetts is one of the epicenters of COVID-19 in the U.S., with the third-most cases and fourth-most fatalities. Baker and other health officials have said that may be due in part to a strong commitment to testing -- more than 333,000 tests had been conducted as of Tuesday, according to the Department of Health.

Middlesex County on Tuesday became the first in the state to surpass 1,000 deaths. Its 1,028 remains the most in Massachusetts, but it doesn't have the highest death rate.

That's Hampden County, which has seen 87 deaths per 100,000 residents. That's followed by Norfolk (81 per 100,000), Suffolk (75 per 100,000) and Essex (66 per 100,000) counties.

Middlesex County also continues to have the most coronavirus cases, with 15,980, followed by Suffolk at 14,173, Essex at 9,979 and Worcester at 6,597. But Suffolk County leads the way in terms of cases per capita, with 1,745 cases per 100,000 residents. No other county has more than 1,264 cases per 100,000.

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