Massachusetts health officials reported 5,569 new COVID-19 cases and 69 new deaths in the last week, with the new data released Thursday.
In total, there have been 1,915,290 cases and 20,614 deaths since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.
The state reported that as of Nov. 1 there were 179 people primarily hospitalized for COVID-19 and a total of 634 hospitalized patients who have the virus. Of the total hospitalizations, 56 were in intensive care and 24 were intubated.
Massachusetts’ COVID data, tracked on the Department of Public Health’s interactive coronavirus dashboard, has not seen any significant jumps moving into the flu and winter season, at least not yet. Doctors are still encouraging people to get vaccinated to protect against the virus. Pediatric hospitals are struggling with high numbers of RSV patients, raising concerns about any additional strain on the system.
Massachusetts COVID-19 wastewater data from the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority shows a dip in COVID-19 levels.
The state’s seven-day average positivity was listed at 5.90% Thursday, compared to 6.51% last week.
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This spring bump was well below the types of case counts and hospitalizations seen at height of the omicron surge in January, when average daily case counts reached over 28,000 and hospitalizations peaked at around 3,300.
Experts have said that case count reporting became a less accurate indicator during the omicron surge, given the difficulties in getting tested. Now, widespread use of rapid tests means that some results go unreported.
More than 15 million vaccine doses have now been administered in Massachusetts.