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- 1,458 active cases of COVID-19 in Contra Costa County.
- 218 cases added to the total number of cases since yesterday in Contra Costa County.
- 10,270 people have fully recovered from COVID-19 in Contra Costa.
- 99 of the 158 deaths were in long-term care facilities.
- There are currently 33 active outbreaks of COVID-19 at Contra Costa County long-term care facilities.
- 86 of the 158 deaths have been people over the age of 81.
- 6 people under the age of 50 (two in the 31-40 age group, and four in the 41-50 age group) have died from COVID-19 in Contra Costa County.
- Nobody under the age of 12 has died from COVID-19 in the State of California.
- 1,621 tests were conducted yesterday in Contra Costa County. The seven day positive average is not available at this time, according to the county.
- There are currently 138 occupied ICU beds in Contra Costa County. 34 of those are occupied by COVID-19 patients. 43 ICU beds are currently available.
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CASES BY CITY:
PRIOR DAY TOTALS:
The population of Contra Costa County is about 1.1-million.
Studies have shown a correlation between affluent and less affluent cities in regards of infection rates. Such gehettos like Richmond, Bay Point, and Concord vs Alamo, Danville, San Ramon.
Not sure why you make the same comment every day.
@ Sam – thank you!
The point is right on top of TraumaRx’s head.
Why does it say 97 hospitalized for Covid and in the body of the message it says only 34. Confused.
Of the 97 in the hospital, 34 were so sick they had to be treated in the Intensive Care Unit. It’s worth noting that the overall number of covid-19 patients in the hospital has been pretty stable for more than a week.
Apparently some people do not think highly of the less fortunate. By the way, people well off get this Covid as well.
This smoke is likely to kill more people than Xi Corona Virus!!!
And for Trauma RX, if you actually follow and understand the science and statistics, people with multiple co-morbidities and people over the age of 70 are most likely to die or have serious complications with this virus. Living in close proximity to a lot of different people is another factor in infection. And, we have to wear face masks because so many people, apparently, are asymptomatic, meaning the virus doesn’t hurt them.
The highest risk group is older people living in LTCF in New York.
@chuckie – People over 70 and those with multiple health issues are more likely to die from any infection (flu, pneumonia, common cold, shingles, others) than younger people with no know health issues. Cause and effect, but no one reason for death.