Showing posts with label COVID-19. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COVID-19. Show all posts

Local COVID update as of Friday March 18, 2022

Sunday, March 20, 2022

COVID-19 Case Numbers
as of Friday, March 18, 2022

The numbers reported in this article are still being verified as the reporting agencies strive to confirm cause of death, remove duplicates, verify residence, and catch up to a huge backlog from January's surge.

Anecdotally, I am hearing a lot of stories of breakthrough cases, where vaccinated people get COVID. Often they are the only one in their household to be sick. They recover at home, sometimes with the assistance of the new Pfizer antiviral drug. These cases may or may not be reported in the case numbers below. 

- Diane Hettrick

King county

King county cases
  • Total confirmed cases - 348,067
  • Cases in past 7 days - 1,131
King county hospitalizations
  • Total hospitalizations - 11,232
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 19
King county deaths
  • Total deaths - 2,657
  • Deaths in past 14 days - 43
Seattle

Cases in Seattle
  • Total confirmed cases - 96,096
  • Cases in past 7 days - 521
Hospitalizations
  • Total hospitalizations - 2,370
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 1
Deaths
  • Total deaths - 630
  • Deaths in 14 days - 9
Shoreline

Cases in Shoreline
  • Total confirmed cases - 8,168
  • Cases in past 7 days - 28
Hospitalizations
  • Total hospitalizations - 289
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 0
Deaths
  • Total deaths - 128
  • Deaths in 14 days - 1
Lake Forest Park

Cases in Lake Forest Park
  • Total confirmed cases - 1,464
  • Cases in past 7 days - 9
Hospitalizations
  • Total hospitalizations - 32
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 0
Deaths
  • Total deaths - 6
  • Deaths in 14 days - 0


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What King County's mask mandate rollback means for you

Sunday, March 13, 2022

Photo courtesy King County Public Health
Starting Saturday, March 12, King County stopped requiring masks in many indoor public spaces. 

Individuals will now be able to make their own choices as to whether they want to continue wearing masks, and businesses may decide whether they want to require employees and customers to wear masks.

In practice, what does this mean for you?

It’s a good sign. Coronavirus cases and hospitalizations have fallen and according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the spread of the virus in the community is now low in King County. Our high vaccination rates are providing important protection against severe COVID-19. We will continue working towards getting as many people boosted as possible to further protect us.

It doesn’t mean the pandemic is over. There may be future surges or new variants that will lead us to reassess the need for additional masking recommendations and other measures to protect our community.

Certain people may still want to wear masks. COVID-19 is still circulating and some risk remains, especially for vulnerable people. For this reason, the use of high-quality, well-fitting masks still makes sense for certain people, particularly in crowded indoor settings with poor ventilation. It is reasonable to continue to wear a mask in indoor public spaces if you are immunocompromised or at increased risk for severe disease, unvaccinated, or are in contact with someone at high risk.

Some people may choose to wear a mask out of consideration for people who may be at high risk in public settings, or if they want to further reduce their own risk for any reason.

And with COVID-19 still circulating, anyone who wants to further reduce their risk for any reason may choose to continue to mask in indoor public spaces.

It’s a good idea to still keep that mask handy. Masks are still required on public transit, in healthcare settings, long-term care settings and correctional facilities. So whether you’re taking the bus to work, visiting grandma at her nursing home or going to the doctor, you’ll still want to bring along a high-quality mask.

Masks will still be required here
Businesses can choose to require masks. While King County no longer requires masks, individual businesses can implement their own requirements for mask wearing and vaccine verification. Keep an eye out for posters in shop windows that explain what the rules are in that business and be respectful of their requirements. Many businesses are trying to be sensitive to the needs of both their customers and employees and will appreciate everyone’s patience and cooperation during this period.

Masks are required here
You can still choose to wear a mask. If you don’t feel ready to take that mask off yet, that’s perfectly understandable and reasonable. COVID-19 has been part of our lives for two years and there are important reasons why masking still makes sense for some people.

Keep taking steps to protect yourself and the community. Get a booster shot when you become eligible, vaccinate yourself and your family, wear masks where required and gather in places with good ventilation. These measures will help continue lowering the spread of coronavirus and keep us safer.

The bottom line: familiarize yourself with where masks are still required, respect the rules that businesses set, and make the decisions you feel are best for you and your family.

--Public Health Insider - King / Seattle Public Health



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Masks are optional in most Shoreline schools

Saturday, March 12, 2022


Masks are no longer required in K-12 schools, effective Saturday, March 12, 2022. Masks are no longer required on campus, on buses, or in district facilities.

Exceptions where masks are still required: self-contained classrooms with medically fragile students, isolation and health rooms, and Edwin Pratt Early Learning Center and on preschool buses due to Head Start federal requirements)

Superintendent Susana Reyes says that,

All students, staff, and visitors, however, have the right to continue to wear a mask
Big changes can bring big feelings in all of us, and we ask everyone to enter next week with the spirit of mutual respect, concern, and kindness that makes our schools welcoming to all.

The Shoreline Center Administrative Offices will be open to the public during business hours.

Staff will still maintain, as much as possible, the six-foot physical distancing, and frequent hand washing.



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Masks required at LFP City Hall through March 31

The Lake Forest Park City Administration has decided the mask rules at City Hall will remain in effect through March 31, 2022 requiring all visitors to City Hall to wear masks. 

Employees moving through the halls and in public spaces will also be required to wear a mask. 

Effective April 1, neither masks nor social distancing will be required at City Hall. Visitors and employees may, of course, continue to wear masks if they wish to after April 1.


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Local COVID-19 case updates for Friday, March 11, 2022

 COVID-19 Case Numbers as of Friday, March 11, 2022

The numbers reported in this article are still being verified as the reporting agencies strive to confirm cause of death, remove duplicates, verify residence, and catch up to a huge backlog from January's surge.

King county

King county cases
King county cases

Total confirmed cases - 346,746
Cases in past 7 days - 1,511

King county hospitalizations
King county hospitalizations

Total hospitalizations - 11,201
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 41

King county deaths
Death in King county

Total deaths - 2,629
Deaths in past 14 days - 50


Cases in Seattle
Cases in Seattle

Seattle

Total confirmed cases - 95,498
Cases in past 7 days - 641

Total hospitalizations - 2,367
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 5

Total deaths - 625
Deaths in 14 days - 10

Shoreline

Cases in Shoreline

Total confirmed cases - 8,142
Cases in past 7 days - 48

Total hospitalizations - 289
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 1

Total deaths - 126
Deaths in 14 days - 0


Lake Forest Park

Cases in Lake Forest Park

Total confirmed cases - 1,453
Cases in past 7 days - 10

Total hospitalizations - 32
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 1

Total deaths  - 6
Deaths in 14 days - 0



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Local COVID-19 case updates Friday, March 4, 2022

Sunday, March 6, 2022

 COVID-19 Case Numbers as of Friday, March 4, 2022

The numbers reported in this article are still being verified as the reporting agencies strive to confirm cause of death, remove duplicates, verify residence, and catch up to a huge backlog from January's surge.

King county

King county cases

King county cases

Total confirmed cases - 345,261
Cases in past 7 days - 1,922


King county hospitalizations

King county hospitalizations

Total hospitalizations - 11,182
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 75

King county deaths

King county deaths

Total deaths - 2,591
Deaths in past 14 days - 69


Seattle

Total confirmed cases - 94,865
Cases in past 7 days - 735

Total hospitalizations - 2,367
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 10

Total deaths - 621
Deaths in 14 days - 15


Shoreline

Shoreline cases


Total confirmed cases - 8,095
Cases in past 7 days - 59

Total hospitalizations - 290
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 2

Total deaths - 125
Deaths in 14 days - 0


Lake Forest Park

Lake Forest Park cases


Total confirmed cases - 1,449
Cases in past 7 days - 4

Total hospitalizations - 33
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 3

Total deaths  - 6
Deaths in 14 days - 0



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Writing While Masked: Seven writers capture life during the 2020 pandemic

Saturday, March 5, 2022

PULLMAN, Wash.— Once a week, the seven authors of the newly published Writing While Masked: Reflections on 2020 and Beyond (Mary Ann Gonzales, Tyson Greer, Wanda Herndon, Laura Celise Lippman, Jane Spalding, Suzanne Tedesko, and Beth Weir) — all retired from professional careers — spend two hours together. 

The purpose of their gathering is to discuss what they wrote the previous week. For a number of years prior to 2020 the group met in their homes over coffee, but the pandemic changed that to Zoom meetings. 

Then on May 25, a white policeman pressed his knee to a Black man’s neck. A seventeen-year-old girl captured it all on her cellphone, and the world exploded.

The group recognized the aftermath as the cry of the marginalized, the disrespected, and those in visceral pain. 

They cried, too, and they wrote. “As time goes on, we often forget the little things — the details of an event or year. As this kaleidoscopic year progressed, we wrote as a way to make sense of it all. We want to remember this watershed year, and to learn from it what to keep and what to keep from happening again.” 

The process of putting down their thoughts about the cascading events of the year helped them weather the challenges of 2020 and beyond.

Inside Writing While Masked are personal pieces — writings of the moment, essays that reflect, and poems that express raw emotion. They include thoughts about what the authors experienced and learned, and what they want for the future.

Initially self-published, this updated edition is the first title released under Washington State University’s new trade imprint, Basalt Books. It begins in January 2020 and is organized by month—each with its own timeline—as a reminder of the tumultuous events happening across the United States and the world. 

The 2021 Postscript adds a timeline for January to June, as well as ten new works that were not part of the original book.

Topics comprise those common to many people: isolation, interrupted travel, masks, backyard reunions, caring for a grandchild, and more. There is the grief of lost holidays and milestones, but also the joy of new discoveries. In addition, the authors tackle a variety of themes related to politics, protests, oppression, and dealing with opposing viewpoints.

Writing While Masked is paperback, 6" x 9", 208 pages, and lists for $18.95. It is available through bookstores nationwide, direct from Basalt Books at 800-354-7360, or online at basaltbooks.wsu.edu

The trade imprint of nonprofit academic publisher Washington State University Press in Pullman, Washington, Basalt Books concentrates on general interest titles about cooking, nature, history, science, and more for young children to older readers — all with a connection to the Northwest.

More about the authors

Mary Ann Gonzales has a long history of working with nonprofit social organizations, from the Seattle AIDS SUPPORT GROUP to the Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Tyson Greer (Lake Forest Park resident) has undertaken a broad array of endeavors including directing documentaries, teaching screen writing at the University of Washington, and authoring a book on technology for Microsoft Press. She is now writing fiction.

Wanda Herndon has enjoyed a successful corporate career in marketing, retiring from Starbucks as senior vice president, Global Public Affairs, after which she founded W Communications.

Laura Celise Lippman is a retired medical doctor and administrator whose poems have appeared in Crosswinds, Poontoon Poetry, Mobius, The Journal of Social Change, and other publications.

Jane Spalding started out as a teacher, and then served as development director for several nonprofits, including Harborview Medical Center and Seattle University.

Suzanne Tedesko worked at KCTS/9, producing two national PBS documentaries, and has written Seattle guidebooks for Fodors and a screenplay.

Beth Weir (Lake Forest Park resident) was a professor of education at Meredith College in Raleigh for seventeen years and after moving to Seattle, the executive director of the Dunn Gardens.


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Face mask still required to ride ferries after state’s mandate ends March 12

Friday, March 4, 2022

Federal mask guidelines will remain in place for all public areas of public transit
after the state’s mandate ends next week. Photo courtesy WSDOT

A face covering will still be required for all our ferry riders and employees in public areas of our vessels and terminals after the state’s mask mandate ends on Saturday, March 12, 2022. 

That’s because our ferry system is regulated by the federal government, like airlines and rail service, and falls under the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) public transportation order.



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More free COVID-19 tests - while supplies last

Wednesday, March 2, 2022


Need at home COVID-19 tests for yourself or your family? http://SayYesCovidHomeTest.org now allows up to 2 orders per household every month, while supplies last. 

Each order contains 5 tests. That's 10 tests/month for people in WA! If you already ordered from SYCT, you can order again.



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Local COVID-19 case updates Friday, February 25, 2022

Saturday, February 26, 2022

COVID-19 Case Numbers as of Friday, February 25, 2022

The numbers reported in this article are still being verified as the reporting agencies strive to confirm cause of death, remove duplicates, verify residence, and catch up to a huge backlog from January's surge.

King county

Level of community transmission HIGH*

King county cases

King county cases

Total confirmed cases - 342,980
Cases in past 7 days - 2,639


King county hospitalizations

King county hospitalizations

Total hospitalizations - 11,101
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 72

King county deaths

King county deaths

Total deaths - 2,551
Deaths in past 14 days - 80


Seattle
Level of community transmission HIGH*

Total confirmed cases - 94,076
Cases in past 7 days - 853

Total hospitalizations - 2,355
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 14

Total deaths - 609
Deaths in 14 days - 20


Shoreline
Level of community transmission: HIGH*


Total confirmed cases - 8,043
Cases in past 7 days - 89

Total hospitalizations - 287
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 1

Total deaths - 125
Deaths in 14 days - 1


Lake Forest Park
Level of community transmission: SUBSTANTIAL*


Total confirmed cases - 1,437
Cases in past 7 days - 13

Total hospitalizations - 31
Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 0

Total deaths  - 6
Deaths in 14 days - 0

*Level of Community Transmission is based on the number of new cases per 100,000 residents in the past 7 days:

High: ≥ 100
Substantial: 50-99
Moderate: 10-49
Low: < 10


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UW Med: Vaccines can keep kids in school after mask mandate lifts

Source: UW Medicine
As COVID-19 restrictions start to lift in Washington state, the latest data reveals that many children still need to be vaccinated. 

According to the Washington State Department of Health, less than 30% of children ages 5 to 11 years in Washington state are fully vaccinated against COVID-19. 

The rates improve with older children (53.7% for ages 12 to 15; 61.1% for ages 16 to 17), but lag behind all adult groups in the state.

UW Medicine pediatrician Dr. Beth Ebel is calling for families with unvaccinated children to begin their COVID-19 shot series before Washington’s mask mandate expires on March 21.

“As those masks come off, getting your child vaccinated is safe. It’ll protect them from getting COVID, and will help them stay in school with their friends so they can continue to learn,” said Ebel, who practices at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle.

Appointments for vaccines and booster shots are widely available through UW Medicine.

“The vaccine has been shown to protect against kids getting really sick, and also spreading [COVID] to their families. That's a critical factor,” said Ebel. 
“The vaccine dose for younger kids between 5 and 11 is reduced. What we've also found is that even with that lower dose, those kids get a better antibody response, and presumably better protection than even adults. So, it's a good situation. They have fewer effects from getting the shot, and they get better protection.”

In King County, an updated data tool shows vaccinated and boosted people face much lower risk of a serious COVID-19 illness than do unvaccinated people.



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State announces changes to mask requirement

Saturday, February 19, 2022

Gov. Jay Inslee
Gov. Jay Inslee announced Thursday that most indoor masking requirements will lift March 21, 2022 thanks to dropping hospitalization rates, improving vaccination rates, and broad access to masks and tests.

“The virus has changed significantly over the past two years, and so has our ability to fight it. While caution is still needed, we are entering a new phase of the pandemic,” Inslee said. 
“Vaccination remains our most essential protection against severe illness and death from COVID-19. 
"It’s also crucial to prevent our hospitals from being overwhelmed again. If you’ve been procrastinating, now is the time to get the shot.”

Inslee was joined in the announcement by Washington Superintendent of Public Instruction Chris Reykdal, Department of Health Secretary Umair Shah, and Department of Health Deputy Secretary Lacy Fehrenbach.

“Our students, educators and school employees, and families have been incredibly resilient as we’ve navigated the impacts of the pandemic,” said Superintendent of Public Instruction Chris Reykdal. 

“Our efforts over the past two years have led us to this moment. Nearly all of our school employees are vaccinated, the number of vaccinated students increases each day, and we have one of the most robust COVID-19 school testing programs in the country. Moving away from a statewide mask mandate to masks being encouraged is a safe next step as we move from pandemic to endemic.”

Beginning March 21, face masks will no longer be required in most settings, including K-12 schools and childcare facilities. Masks will still be required in health care settings such as hospitals, outpatient and dental offices, long term care settings, and correctional facilities. 

In addition, beginning March 1, vaccine verification for large events will no longer be required.

Businesses and local governments can still choose to implement vaccination or face mask requirements for workers or customers, and school districts can still choose to have students and teachers wear masks. 

Federal law still requires face masks in certain settings such as public transportation and school buses.


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Local COVID-19 case updates February 18, 2022

King county case report 

After a huge wave of cases starting in mid-December and peaking January 9, 2022 with over 2,000 cases that day in King county, cases are steadily dropping, with 200 cases in the last reported day.

Mask requirements and proof of vaccination orders are being dropped at state and county levels, with local businesses and cities left to make their own decisions.

The numbers reported are still being verified as the reporting agencies strive to confirm cause of death, remove duplicates, verify residence, and catch up to a huge backlog.

King county

Level of community transmission HIGH*
  • Total confirmed cases - 340,678
  • Cases in past 7 days - 5,152
King county hospitalizations
  • Total hospitalizations - 11,112
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 154  

King county deaths
  • Total deaths - 2,524
  • Deaths in past 14 days -98  

Seattle 
  • Total confirmed cases - 83,997 
  • Cases in past 7 days - 1,277   
  • Total hospitalizations - 2,224
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 22    
  • Total deaths - 578
  • Deaths in 14 days - 21     
  • Level of community transmission HIGH*  

Shoreline  
  • Total confirmed cases - 7,515 
  • Cases in past 7 days - 163    
  • Total hospitalizations - 272    
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 2
  • Total deaths - 121
  • Deaths in 14 days - 4 
  • Level of community transmission: HIGH*

Lake Forest Park 
  • Total confirmed cases - 1,364   
  • Cases in past 7 days - 34 
  • Total hospitalizations - 30    
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 1
  • Total deaths 6  - 0 
  • Deaths in 14 days - 0
  • Level of community transmission: HIGH*

*Level of Community Transmission is based on the number of new cases per 100,000 residents in the past 7 days:

High: ≥ 100
Substantial: 50-99
Moderate: 10-49
Low: < 10



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AG Ferguson: Center for COVID Control blocked from operating testing centers in Washington while case continues

Friday, February 18, 2022

Unprocessed test kits were shoved
into plastic bags. Previous article here.
OLYMPIA — Attorney General Bob Ferguson today announced that his office obtained a preliminary injunction in a case against Illinois-based testing company Center for COVID Control. 

Under the order, the court blocked the company from providing COVID-19 testing services or collect consumer health information in Washington while the case is litigated.

In addition, as part of the court order, the company agreed to never again operate in Washington. 

The company shut down its Washington-based testing centers on or about January 13, 2022 and has not reopened them since.

The case will now enter the discovery phase, and will continue on the merits of the legal claims.

“Calling this conduct a ‘scam’ is an understatement,” Ferguson said. “It was unethical, illegal, and jeopardized the health of thousands of Washingtonians. Our investigation put a stop to Center for COVID Control’s Washington operations.”

More information here



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King county ends order requiring proof of COVID-19 vaccination for entry into restaurants and bars - but local business may implement their own policies

Thursday, February 17, 2022

With new COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations decreasing, and nearly 80% of all King County residents fully vaccinated, King County is ending the local health order requiring proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative test for entry into restaurants and bars, indoor recreational events and establishments, or outdoor events. 

The vaccination verification policy will no longer be in effect as of March 1. 

Businesses and organizations may continue to implement their own vaccination verification rules for their establishments.




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COVID-19 vaccination clinic at Shoreline Community College closes

The vaccine clinic was held in the PUB at SCC
Photo by Steven H. Robinson

The COVID-19 vaccine clinic on the campus of Shoreline Community College closed down on Wednesday, February 16, 2022.

This decision was made by the partners who staff the clinic--the UW and the Shoreline Fire Department-- due to diminished demand.

A spokesperson for the college said "We are proud that thousands of vaccines and boosters were administered to our community throughout the life of the clinic."



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UW Med: Hospitals brim even as COVID-19 cases plummet

Dr. John Lynch
Today fewer than 50 inpatients are being treated for COVID-19 across UW Medicine’s four hospital campuses. This is down from a pandemic high of 204 in January. Yet hospitals are brimming with patients, as demand remains high for care beyond COVID-19.

“For the most part, every bed is full,” said UW Medicine’s Dr. John Lynch, an infectious diseases physician and medical director of Harborview Medical Center’s infection-control program. 
"It is not just the decision to have care, it's care that is desperately needed by people."

Lynch encourages everyone to decide their own level of continuing caution. “Surgical masks, medical masks, K95s, N95s and similar shouldn't go anywhere, if you feel that’s the right move for you,” he said.


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Shoreline Mayor and City Manager are featured guests at ELNA Zoom meeting Tuesday to discuss the city's response to COVID-19

Tuesday, February 15, 2022


The Echo Lake Neighborhood Association (ELNA) will hold their regular 3rd Tuesday meeting February 15, 2022 at 7pm on Zoom.

Guest speakers are Shoreline Mayor Keith Scully and City Manager Debbie Tarry, who will discuss the city's response to the COVID-19 epidemic over the past two years and what they see for the future.

The link for the meeting is available upon request to ELNABoard@gmail.com



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Gov. Inslee says pandemic ‘turning point’ could see mask requirements lifted soon

Saturday, February 12, 2022

Gov. Inslee, summer 2020
Gov. Jay Inslee welcomed declines in COVID hospitalizations this week as evidence the state is at a turning point in the pandemic. 

COVID-19 hospitalizations and case counts remain high, but Inslee on Wednesday said the trends indicate we are at a turning point in the pandemic that could result in mask requirements being relaxed.

Inslee announced a series of actions that will be lifted February 18, 2022. 

Washington National Guard service members will begin to wind down deployment to hospitals; hospitals will be able to resume non-urgent procedures; and outdoor mask requirements at large events with more than 500 attendees will also end.

Conversations are also being had about when and how to safely change indoor mask requirements. Inslee said he would announce a decision next week.

"For the millions of Washingtonians who have quietly been doing all the right things these past two years to protect themselves, their families and their communities, thank you. You have helped save lives. We will continue to move forward carefully and cautiously, together," Inslee said.


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Case updates February 11, 2022

COVID-19 Updates - increases are reported in 7 or 14 day periods 

 

United States  

  
  • Total cases 77,345,683
  • Cases in past 7 days - 1,332,810
  • Total deaths 912,757

Washington State

  • Friday, February 11, 2022: Due to the current surge in COVID-19 cases, Department of Health is experiencing substantial slowdowns in our data systems


King county

Level of Community Transmission is based on the number of new cases per 100,000 residents in the past 7 days:

High: ≥ 100
Substantial: 50-99
Moderate: 10-49
Low: < 10

  • Total confirmed cases - 339,149
  • Cases in past 7 days - 8,931 
  • Total hospitalizations - 11,093
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 191  
  • Total deaths - 2,465
  • Deaths in past 14 days -106  
  • Level of community transmission HIGH  

Seattle 
  • Total confirmed cases - 91,444 
  • Cases in past 7 days - 2,291   
  • Total hospitalizations - 2,400
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 45    
  • Total deaths - 603
  • Deaths in 14 days - 29     
  • Level of community transmission HIGH  

Shoreline  
  • Total confirmed cases - 7,912 
  • Cases in past 7 days - 241    
  • Total hospitalizations - 295    
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 5
  • Total deaths - 125
  • Deaths in 14 days - 2 
  • Level of community transmission: HIGH

Lake Forest Park 
  • Total confirmed cases - 1,403   
  • Cases in past 7 days - 63 
  • Total hospitalizations - 31    
  • Hospitalizations in past 7 days - 1
  • Total deaths 6  - 0 
  • Deaths in 14 days - 0
  • Level of community transmission: HIGH


Read more...
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