Health & Fitness

Braintree's Low COVID-19 Numbers Rise As MA Sees Rebound

Three Massachusetts towns have already brought back mask advisories.

Braintree's low numbers have stayed that way. There have only been seven reported cases in town in the last two weeks, although they're up slightly from the less than five cases the state Department of Public Health showed in last week's report.
Braintree's low numbers have stayed that way. There have only been seven reported cases in town in the last two weeks, although they're up slightly from the less than five cases the state Department of Public Health showed in last week's report. (Shutterstock)

BRAINTREE, MA — It appeared as if COVID-19 had bottomed out, not just here but across Massachusetts.

But COVID-19 is back, and while the pandemic's darkest days are still far behind us, there are shades of 2020 beginning to emerge.

Braintree's low numbers have stayed that way. There have only been seven reported cases in town in the last two weeks, although they're up slightly from the less than five cases the state Department of Public Health showed in last week's report. The 14-day positive test rate also rose from 0.25 to 0.43 percent. The average daily incidence rate rose from 0.7 to 1.3

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

Massachusetts reported 477 cases yesterday — the highest since before Gov. Charlie Baker replaced the mask mandate with an advisory.

Cambridge yesterday joined Provincetown and Nantucket in re-issuing mask advisories amid an uptick in cases.

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

There is no indication Braintree is considering a mask advisory.

"As of this date, the Town continues to monitor COVID -19 cases on a daily basis," town Health Director Marybeth McGrath said.

Gov. Charlie Baker said Thursday the state isn't planning on changing any COVID rules.

Nearly 71 percent of Braintree residents have at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

While "breakthrough" cases are still happening — more than 40 percent of Cambridge's confirmed cases this month were of fully vaccinated people — severe cases are almost exclusively happening to people who are unvaccinated.


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