Health & Fitness

MA Town-By-Town Coronavirus Stats: Positive Rate Declines Further

The death rate continues to rise gradually, but other metrics indicate the latest wave may be waning.

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health reported 1,885 new coronavirus cases, 23 deaths and 5,904 vaccine doses administered Thursday.
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health reported 1,885 new coronavirus cases, 23 deaths and 5,904 vaccine doses administered Thursday. (Rachel Nunes/Patch)

MASSACHUSETTS — Coronavirus metrics continued to paint a mixed picture in Massachusetts over the last week, with the positive test rate falling but death rate rising.

At the town level, the majority of communities reported falling positive test rates, according to town by town data released Thursday. Sixteen Massachusetts communities didn't report a single positive test over the last two weeks, down four from the last report.

The Department of Public Health reported 1,885 new coronavirus cases, 23 deaths and 5,904 vaccine doses administered Thursday.

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The seven-day average number of hospitalized patients was 653.1, down slightly from 659.6 the week prior.

There were 12.1 deaths per day on average over the last week, up from 10.9 a week before.

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The average weekly case count was 1,204.7 daily cases, down from 1741.7 a week earlier.

The weekly average positive-test rate declined from 2.27 percent to 2.11 percent.

The lowest positive rate was just 0.31 percent on June 25.

Vaccines

The latest vaccine report shows the number of residents who are fully vaccinated has risen to 4.6 million. Another 492,734 residents have received one dose of the two-dose Moderna or Pfizer vaccine.

Over two-thirds of the state's population, 67.5 percent, is fully vaccinated, but some communities lag behind, according to state data. Sixteen communities continue to report that fewer than half their residents are even partially vaccinated. Compare that with the more than 90 percent of residents fully vaccinated in eight cities and towns.

How to use this map: Zoom in on the map below and click on a pin to see that community's coronavirus vaccination rates. You can also view the town-by-town coronavirus vaccination data in the spreadsheet we used to create this map.

Colors reflect the percentage of the population fully vaccinated, from under 50 percent, red, to more than 70 percent, green. The state did not report vaccination numbers for the two gray communities. Some communities are grouped together for the purpose of vaccination data.


Note: For dozens of communities, up to 30 vaccinations may be missing from the data, as the state does not report totals for demographic subgroups with fewer than 30 vaccinated. No vaccination data is available for two communities with particularly low populations: Gosnold and Monroe.

The data also does not include 952 of the state's cases because state health officials could not determine which communities the patients lived in.

Other Key Coronavirus Metrics

Of 606 hospitalized patients, there were 165 patients in intensive care Wednesday, down from 173 a week prior.

The positive test rate over the last two weeks fell in 178 — or 50.7 percent — of the 351 communities in the state. The rate rose in 127 — or 36.2 percent — of the communities. It held steady in the remaining 46.

More than two-thirds of communities reported positive test rates higher than 2 percent during the past two weeks, including 64 with test rates above 5 percent — unchanged from last week. The highest rate, 33.3 percent, was reported by Mount Washington.

Statewide, there were 23.8 average daily cases per 100,000 residents over the last two weeks, up from 23.1 in last week's report.

To date, there have been 747,656 cases and 18,141 deaths statewide since the pandemic began.

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The state reported 109,695 new tests Thursday, bringing the total administered to 28.1 million.

The data includes coronavirus cases for all Massachusetts communities, except for those with populations under 50,000 and where there are fewer than five cases. The department said the stipulation was designed to protect the privacy of patients in those towns and cities.

The state releases town-by-town testing data every Thursday, including the number of people tested, the testing rate, the positive test rate, cases and infection rates.

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