Seven-day averages of new virus cases and covid-19 deaths in Kentucky reach new highs; Kavanaugh considers schools case
Kentucky Health News graph; dates are those on which deaths were confirmed.
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Kentucky Health News
The pandemic set no daily records in Kentucky Friday, but the seven-day rolling averages of new coronavirus cases and covid-19 deaths hit new highs.
The state reported 3,614 new cases, raising its seven-day average to 3,232, beating the previous record of 3,119 set on Thanksgiving day, Nov. 26.
It confirmed another 25 deaths from covid-19, making a total of 2,039. The seven-day average of deaths is 24; the 14-day average is 19.8.
The averages are the best rough measurements of the pandemic, since they smooth out daily fluctuations, which can be large, especially on weekends.
As usual for a Friday, Gov. Andy Beshear held no briefing but issued a press release, urging Kentuckians to stay on guard as the first vaccinations, of frontline health workers and nursing-home residents and staff, approach.
“These vaccines are right around the corner. Within the next 10 days or so we might be giving out the first vaccines,” Beshear said in the release. “That means every loss of life and every extra infection that happens between now and then is entirely avoidable. So let’s fight harder than we ever have.”
For the first time, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging “universal mask use” anywhere outside the home. The CDC has long encouraged indoor masking when with people outside the household; in its latest Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the CDC said the virus has entered “a phase of high-level transmission” and “consistent and correct” use of masks is essential. It recommended masking at home when a household member has been infected or potentially exposed to the virus.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh |
Beshear’s legal staff kept busy Friday, fighting Attorney General Daniel Cameron’s efforts to keep his ban on in-person schooling from applying to religious schools. They filed a brief with Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who may decide the issue this weekend.
The 25 covid-19 deaths confirmed Friday were a 76-year-old Boone County man; a 69-year-old Caldwell County woman; an 84-year-old Christian County woman; a 70-year-old Crittenden County woman; a 70-year-old Elliott County man; a 74-year-old Franklin County man; a 72-year-old woman and two men, 74 and 87 from Greenup County; an 87-year-old Hopkins County man; two men, 67 and 71, from Jefferson County; two women, 40 and 64, and a man, 99, from Johnson County; a 55-year-old Lawrence County man; an 82-year-old Lewis County man; a woman, 73, and a man, 81, from Madison County; a 94-year-old Marion County man; a 97-year-old Marshall County woman; a 91-year-old Martin County woman; an 83-year-old McCracken County woman; a 77-year-old Monroe County woman; and an 85-year-old Muhlenberg County woman.
- The share of Kentuckians testing positive for the virus in the last seven days is 9.93 percent, a drop of 0.14 points from the record percentage set Wednesday.
- Only six of the 120 counties were out of the state’s “red zone” for counties averaging 25 or more daily cases per 100,000 residents over the last seven days: Crittenden, Breckinridge, Green, Adair, Russell and Nicholas. For a map with each county’s rate, click here.
- Congressional leaders reported progress in talks on a coronavirus economic relief bill. “Compromise is within reach,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said.
- “Health-care advocates are raising concerns about logistical and ethical challenges that could complicate” coronavirus vaccinations of nursing-home residents and staff, report Christopher Rowland and Will Englund of The Washington Post. For one thing, “Families who have been physically cut off from residents — waving through windows and talking on cellphones — will need to be located and educated about the vaccines so they can decide whether to provide consent for relatives with dementia and other cognitive problems, said Mike Dark, staff attorney at California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform.”
- “Americans’ compliance with social distancing recommendations sank to new lows in October, according to a study that also documents a notable rise in risky behavior,” reports Antonia Farzan of The Washington Post. “The Covid States Project, a coalition of researchers from Harvard, Rutgers, Northeastern and Northwestern universities, has surveyed more than 15,000 people each month between April and November . . . Their findings back the anecdotal observations of public-health experts who suggested that the dramatic surge in coronavirus infections that began in October was preceded by ‘pandemic fatigue’ and people letting their guard down.” This fall, Kentucky ranked 16th in social distancing and 32nd in mask wearing; there was more difference among the states on distancing than masking.