Coronavirus

Mass. Reports 2,611 New COVID Cases

There were 1,161 COVID-19 hospitalizations reported Thursday, with 213 patients in intensive care and 121 patients intubated

Massachusetts Coronavirus
NBC10 Boston

Massachusetts on Thursday reported another 2,611 confirmed coronavirus cases and 61 new deaths.

This puts the state's COVID-19 cases at 1,516,170 since the start of the pandemic and its death toll to 22,069.

Case numbers have dropped significantly from peaking numbers at the beginning of last month, prompting some towns and cities to relax safety restrictions. For context, state health officials reported a single-day record on Jan. 5, topping 27,000 cases, followed by the second-highest single-day total on Jan. 7, with more than 26,000 cases.

Massachusetts' COVID metrics, tracked on the Department of Public Health's interactive coronavirus dashboard, have dropped significantly in recent weeks after spiking in January, which health officials attributed at least in part to the omicron variant.

The 7-day average test positivity came in at 3.80% Thursday, down from the 4.08% reported Wednesday.

There were 1,161 hospitalizations reported Thursday, with 213 patients in intensive care and 121 patients intubated. As recently as Jan. 14 there were 3,300 patients in hospitals. The worst period in the pandemic for hospitalizations continues to be April 2020, when nearly 4,000 people with COVID were in Massachusetts hospitals.

The state has started releasing a new breakdown of virus hospitalizations, data that indicates whether COVID-19 is the primary cause of hospitalization, or incidental. This data shows that from Jan. 13 to Feb. 9, roughly 50% of COVID-19 patients were primary cases.

Experts have said that case count reporting may have become a less accurate indicator during the omicron surge, given the difficulties in getting tested and widespread use of rapid tests that often go unreported. Officials also warn that hospitalizations, which may be a better metric to measure by, often lag behind case counts, which means even if COVID-19 cases are dropping, health care systems could still be stressed by patient influx and staffing shortages. Still, the state has seen a slow decline in hospitalizations for several weeks.

More than 13.7 million vaccine doses have now been administered in Massachusetts. That includes more than 5.7 million first doses of either Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, 4.9 million second shots, and over 340,000 Johnson & Johnson one-dose shots. Over 2.7 million booster shots have been administered.

Health officials on Thursday reported that a total of 5,240,562 Massachusetts residents have been fully vaccinated.

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