State’s positivity rate decreases again, remains below 8 percent
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[January 13, 2021]
By GRACE BARBIC
Capitol News Illinois
gbarbic@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The statewide seven-day
rolling COVID-19 case positivity rate remained below 8 percent for a
third consecutive day Tuesday after decreasing for a fourth straight
day.
Tuesday’s seven-day rolling positivity rate was 7.5 percent, a decrease
of one-tenth of a percentage point from Monday.
The state reported 6,642 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19
Tuesday, with an additional 117 deaths recorded over the previous 24
hours. The state has reported 1,040,168 cases of COVID-19 since the
pandemic began, and the death toll climbed to 17,743 across the state’s
102 counties.
As of Monday night, 3,554 COVID-19 patients were reported to be in the
hospital, an increase of 14 from the day prior, and 757 patients were in
intensive care unit beds, a decrease of two from the day prior. There
were 409 patients reported to be on ventilators, an increase of eight
from the day prior.
The state reported 93,491 test results over the previous 24 hours for a
total of more than 14.2 million tests completed since the pandemic
began. That made for a one-day positivity rate of 7.1 percent.
On Tuesday, the Illinois Department of Public Health began reporting
data regarding the delivery and administration of vaccines on its
website.
As of Monday, 638,159 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines had
been delivered to the state in addition to 231,475 doses that had been
allocated to the federally mandated Pharmacy Partnership for Long-Term
Care program aimed at vaccinating people in congregate settings in
Illinois.
A total 353,791 doses had been reported administered as of Friday,
including 41,075 as part of the pharmacy partnership.
Gov. JB Pritzker said Monday that health care providers have up to 72
hours after administering a vaccination to report the data according to
federal guidelines, so the number of vaccines reported administered lags
behind the number of vaccines reported distributed.
Over the past seven days, the state reported averaging 24,232 vaccines
administered daily.
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Some Republicans on the House Executive Committee
said the bill’s requirement that the state Board of Elections
provide guidance, rather than rules, for securing collection sites
does not go far enough to provide security.
IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike on Tuesday received her first dose of
the Pfizer vaccine at the Cook County Health’s North Riverside
Health Center in Riverside.
On Monday, Ezike stressed the importance of being vaccinated as a
variant of the coronavirus that has been tracked in the United
Kingdom becomes a potential threat in the U.S.
“If it’s not here yet it’s only a matter of time,” Ezike said. “It
is likely already in the state, but it’s probably circulating at
such low numbers right now that we have not identified the
significance.”
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has reported
that multiple COVID-19 variants are circulating globally. The CDC
reported a new variant has emerged in the UK with an unusually large
number of mutations.
This variant was first detected in September and is now highly
prevalent in London and in southeast England, the CDC reported. It
has since been detected in numerous countries around the world,
including the U.S.
Two cases of the UK variant COVID-19 were identified in Maryland as
of Tuesday, according to multiple news reports. The variant is
believed to spread more easily and quickly than other variants, but
there is no evidence that it causes more severe illness or increased
risk of death, according to the CDC.
Ezike warned that this new variant could quickly become the dominant
strain of the virus in the states.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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