CONCORD, NH – Another user died and on Monday 57 other positive effects were revealed through New Hampshire fitness officials.
The recent maximum COVID-19-related death concerned a woman 80 years of age or older who connected to a long-term care center in Merrimack County. It’s death number 468 in the state.
Approximately two-thirds of the new positive effects of the control were discovered by polymerase chain reaction controls, the remainder through antigen controls. Fewer than 4,900 samples were collected on Sunday, while 945 controls are in progress. figures to bring Monday’s positivity rate to 1. 1%.
Just over 57 new instances were men, while 4 were children. Fourteen citizens in Rockingham County, 12 live in Merrimack County, 8 live in Hillsborough County on the outskirts of Manchester and Nashua and five live in Nashua.
New Hampshire recorded 9,746 cumulative positive effects with 1,020 active instances, the peak since mid-June. Approximately 85, according to the percentage of people, 8,258 have recovered from the virus.
“No new cases of hospitalization have been reported,” the State Joint Information Center said. “Lately there are 16 other people hospitalized with COVID-19. One of the new cases had no known threat factors. “
Identified threat points come with close contact with a proven diagnosis of COVID-19, which has recently traveled, or a related epidemic environment, such as a long-term care center.
Nearly 315,000 other people were tested using PCR tests and more than 543,000 tests were issued.
About 4,175 more people are under public fitness surveillance.
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Up-to-date information
Several new cases reported on Monday.
Gilsum STEAM Academy reported its first case; Merrimack Middle School reported its active case; Riddle Brook Elementary School in Bedford has its fourth active case with 3 recoveries; and St. John in Concordia has his first case.
There are 107 active infections similar to K-12 schools and school activities in New Hampshire.
Influenza, pneumonia mortality in NH
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, New Hampshire has one of the lowest COVID-19 mortality rates in the country: 42 degrees, with 468 deaths, New York first with 20826 and Massachusetts 9 on the list with 8128.
So far, as of 2020, more than 9,300 granite sters have died for reasons. Of these deaths, 554 were caused by pneumonia with or without COVID-19. Only 120 COVID-19-related deaths also had pneumonia. However, these other people do hicieron. no have the flu. Approximately 31 other people died in 2020 from influenza, with or without COVID-19 or pneumonia. According to the data, 906 granite states, or approximately 10% of deaths in the state, related to COVID-19, influenza or pneumonia.
In the United States, according to the CDC website, there have been 206,172 COVID-19-like deaths, less than 10% of the 2. 2 million people who died like this in 2020.
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Stop COVID-19
The COVID-19 virus is transmitted through respiratory droplets, coughing and sneezing, and through exposure to others who are in poor health or at risk of symptoms.
Health officials insist that citizens follow these recommendations:
Avoid domestic travel and especially by public transport, such as buses, trains and planes.
Practice social estinement. Stay at least 6 feet away from others, adding to stay away when in waiting spaces or queues.
When you can’t practice 6 feet away, use a face cover.
Anyone who is told to quarantine and remain at home due to the exposure of a user with an alleged or suspected case of COVID-19 will remain in the house and not faint in public places.
If you are 60 years of age or older or have chronic and underlying fitness problems, you will need to stay home and not faint.
Avoid meetings of 10 or people.
Employers paint from home as much as possible.
There is growing evidence that the virus may remain for hours or even days on surfaces. People deserve to regularly leave the affected surfaces blank, adding door handles, supermarket carts and grocery basket handles, etc.
Take the same precautions as if you were sick:
Stay home and public places.
Wear a face mask.
Cover your mouth and cough and sneeze.
Wash often.
Disinfect the affected surfaces.
More information from the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services on coronavirus can be found here on the department’s website.
Tips for being discovered here.
Instructions for travelers to return to self-observation of COVID-19 symptoms can be found here.
For more information on COVID-19 in NH, their online page here.
For the latest CDC data, your online page here.
To access the state’s COVID-19 knowledge dashboard, click this link here.
To access the state COVID-19 interactive map dashboard, click this link here.
Do you have a new trick? Send him to tony. schinella@patch. com. Watch it on Tony Schinella’s YouTube channel.
This article was originally published in the Concord patch.