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The United States has reached a milestone in the long struggle against Covid: The total number of Americans dying each d...
17/07/2023

The United States has reached a milestone in the long struggle against Covid: The total number of Americans dying each day — from any cause — is no longer historically abnormal.

By David Leonhardt

Measuring Covid deaths

Excess deaths, as this number is known, has been an important measure of Covid’s true toll because it does not depend on the murky attribution of deaths to a specific cause. Even if Covid is being underdiagnosed, the excess-deaths statistic can capture its effects. The statistic also captures Covid’s indirect effects, like the surge of vehicle crashes, gun deaths and deaths from missed medical treatments during the pandemic.

During Covid’s worst phases, the total number of Americans dying each day was more than 30 percent higher than normal, a shocking increase. For long stretches of the past three years, the excess was above 10 percent. But during the past few months, excess deaths have fallen almost to zero, according to three different measures.

The Human Mortality Database estimates that slightly fewer Americans than normal have died since March, while The Economist magazine and the C.D.C. both put the excess-death number below 1 percent. Here is the C.D.C. data:

After three horrific years, in which Covid has killed more than one million Americans and transformed parts of daily life, the virus has turned into an ordinary illness.

The story is similar in many other countries, if not quite so positive:

The power of immunity
The progress stems mostly from three factors:

First, about three-quarters of U.S. adults have received at least one vaccine shot.

Second, more than three-quarters of Americans have been infected with Covid, providing natural immunity from future symptoms. (About 97 percent of adults fall into at least one of those first two categories.)

Third, post-infection treatments like Paxlovid, which can reduce the severity of symptoms, became widely available last year.

“Nearly every death is preventable,” Dr. Ashish Jha, who was until recently President Biden’s top Covid adviser, told me. “We are at a point where almost everybody who’s up to date on their vaccines and gets treated if they have Covid, they rarely end up in the hospital, they almost never die.”

That is also true for most high-risk people, Jha pointed out, including older adults — like his parents, who are in their 80s — and people whose immune systems are compromised. “Even for most — not all but most — immunocompromised people, vaccines are actually still quite effective at preventing against serious illness,” he said. “There has been a lot of bad information out there that somehow if you’re immunocompromised that vaccines don’t work.”

That excess deaths have fallen close to zero helps make this point: If Covid were still a dire threat to large numbers of people, that would show up in the data.

One point of confusion, I think, has been the way that many Americans — including we in the media — have talked about the immunocompromised. They are a more diverse group than casual discussion often imagines.

Most immunocompromised people are at little additional risk from Covid — even people with serious conditions, such as multiple sclerosis or a history of many cancers. A much smaller group, such as people who have received kidney transplants or are undergoing active chemotherapy, face higher risks.

With vs. from
Covid’s toll, to be clear, has not fallen to zero. The C.D.C.’s main Covid webpage estimates that about 80 people per day have been dying from the virus in recent weeks, which is equal to about 1 percent of overall daily deaths.

The official number is probably an exaggeration because it includes some people who had virus when they died even though it was not the underlying cause of death. Other C.D.C. data suggests that almost one-third of official recent Covid deaths have fallen into this category. A study published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases came to similar conclusions.

Even so, some Americans are still dying from Covid. “I don’t know anybody who thinks we’re going to eradicate Covid,” Jha said.

Dr. Shira Doron, the chief infection control officer at Tufts Medicine in Massachusetts, told me that “age is clearly the most substantial risk factor.” Covid’s victims are both older and disproportionately unvaccinated. Given the politics of vaccination, the recent victims are also disproportionately Republican and white.

Each of these deaths is a tragedy. The deaths that were preventable — because somebody had not received available vaccines and treatments — seem particularly tragic. (Here’s a Times guide to help you think about when to get your next booster shot.)

Yet the number of Covid deaths has now dropped low enough that they are difficult to notice in the overall death data. They can be swamped by fluctuations in other causes of death, such as the flu or vehicle crashes.

Almost a year ago, President Biden angered some public health experts when he declared, “The pandemic is over.” He may have been premature to make that declaration. But the excess-deaths milestone suggests that it’s true now: The pandemic is finally over.

16/03/2023

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the weeks of March 8-14, there were 688 new COVID-19 infections, 11 hospitalizations and 0 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at:

09/03/2023

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the weeks of March 1-7, there were 698 new COVID-19 infections, 89 hospitalizations and 8 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at:

23/02/2023

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the weeks of February 15-21, there were 951 new COVID-19 infections, 61 hospitalizations and 52 deaths*** reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at: www.alleghenycounty.us/COVID-19

*** The majority of reported deaths (29 of which are from 2022 or prior) were backlogged state case matching with vital statistics data (or death certificate files) and cannot be accurately credited to the week of February 15-21.

09/02/2023

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the weeks of February 1-7, there were 871 new COVID-19 infections, 148 hospitalizations and 15 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at:

26/01/2023

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the weeks of January 18-24, there were 753 new COVID-19 infections, 260 hospitalizations*** and 11 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at: www.alleghenycounty.us/COVID-19

***The majority of reported hospitalizations were backlogged data from health care providers and cannot be accurately credited to the week of January 18-24.

29/12/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the week of December 22-28, there were 1,021 new COVID-19 infections, 115 hospitalizations and 3 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at: alleghenycounty.us/covid-19

22/12/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the week of December 15-21, there were 1,219 new COVID-19 infections, 183 hospitalizations*** and 15 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at: alleghenycounty.us/covid-19

***Due to a reporting issue last week, this week’s hospitalization data includes two weeks of information.

08/12/2022

For the week of December 1-7, there were 914 new COVID-19 infections, 93 hospitalizations and 12 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at: alleghenycounty.us/covid-19

03/12/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the week of November 23-30, there were 1,191 new COVID-19 infections, 76 hospitalizations and 7 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at: alleghenycounty.us/covid-19

06/10/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

For the week of September 29-October 5, there were 1,118 new COVID-19 infections, 60 hospitalizations and 8 deaths reported to the Allegheny County Health Department.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID-19 community level in Allegheny County is “low.”

To learn more about how the different elements of the pandemic, such as variants, wastewater data and re-infections, are affecting the county, visit the Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage at: alleghenycounty.us/covid-19

08/09/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

CASES: For the week of September 1-7, there were 1,759 new infections reported. To date, there have been 313,648 infections. Additionally, 144 positive home tests were self-reported to the Health Department. To date, 5,048 positive home tests have been self-reported.

HOSPITALIZATIONS: There were 122 hospitalizations reported this week. To date, there have been 15,212 COVID-related hospitalizations.

DEATHS: There were 12 deaths reported this week. To date, there have been 3,433 COVID-19 related deaths.

COMMUNITY LEVELS: According to the CDC, Allegheny County is currently at a “medium” community level; for health care facilities in the county, transmission level is “high.”

Learn more about the current state of COVID-19 in Allegheny County by visiting: https://www.alleghenycounty.us/Health-Department/Resources/COVID-19/COVID-19-Dashboards.aspx

01/09/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

CASES: For the week of August 25-31, there were 2,054 new infections reported. To date, there have been 311,889 infections. Additionally, 132 positive home tests were self-reported to the Health Department. To date, 4,904 positive home tests have been self-reported.

HOSPITALIZATIONS: There were 112 hospitalizations reported this week. To date, there have been 15,090 COVID-related hospitalizations.

DEATHS: There were eleven (11) deaths reported this week. To date, there have been 3,421 COVID-19 related deaths.

VARIANTS: Based on limited county specimen sequencing, BA.5 accounts for about 84 percent and BA.4 accounts for about 16 percent of COVID-19 cases in the week ending August 13. The CDC’s Nowcast feature estimates that in HHS Region 3, where Allegheny County resides, during the week ending August 27, 87 percent of infections were due to BA.5, 9 percent were due to BA.4.6, and 4 percent were due to BA.4.

WASTEWATER TESTING: SARS Co-V 2 concentrations in wastewater have continued to increase between 6 and 7 percent daily August 16-24. Omicron remains the dominant variant.

VACCINATIONS: An estimated 82.4 percent of all people 5 and older have at least one dose of vaccine and 73 percent are fully vaccinated. Of those persons 12 and older who are eligible for a booster dose, an estimated 55.7 percent have received one.

COMMUNITY LEVELS: According to the CDC, Allegheny County is currently at a “medium” community level; for health care facilities in the county, transmission level is “high.”

*Those viewing or receiving the weekly COVID-19 report will see a change to it beginning next week. The Health Department is moving to a format that will provide the basic data on cases, hospitalizations, deaths and community levels. All other information will still be available on the ACHD’s interactive dashboards and we will issue a release next week with more detailed information to help you find the information you need.

25/08/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

CASES: For the week of August 18-24, there were 2,302 new infections reported. To date, there have been 309,835 infections. Additionally, 140 positive home tests were self-reported to the Health Department. To date, 4,772 positive home tests have been self-reported.

HOSPITALIZATIONS: There were 240 hospitalizations reported this week. However, the majority of the reported hospitalizations were backlogged data from health care providers and cannot be accurately credited to the week of August 18-24. To date, there have been 14,978 COVID-related hospitalizations.

DEATHS: There were 27 deaths reported this week. To date, there have been 3,410 COVID-related deaths.

VARIANTS: During the week of August 7, and based on limited county specimen sequencing, BA.5 accounted for about 74 percent, and BA.4 for 26 percent of COVID-19 cases. The CDC’s Nowcast feature is estimating that in HHS Region 3, where Allegheny County resides, in the week ending August 20, 87 percent of infections were due to BA.5, 4 percent to BA.4, and 8 percent to BA.4.6, and 1 percent to BA.2.12.1.

WASTEWATER TESTING: SARS Co-V 2 concentrations in wastewater have continued to increase between 2 and 12 percent daily August 7-15. Omicron remains the dominant variant.

VACCINATIONS: An estimated 82.4 percent of all people 5 and older have at least one dose of vaccine and 73 percent are fully vaccinated. Of those persons 12 and older who are eligible for a booster dose, an estimated 55.7 percent have received one.

COMMUNITY LEVELS: According to the CDC, Allegheny County is currently at a “high” community level; for health care facilities in the county, transmission level is “high.”

Additional Resources:
The Allegheny County Health Department has significant resources on its COVID-19 webpages. Visit https://alleghenycounty.us/COVID for quick links to report a positive at-home test, a testing site locator map, and more. Visitors can also select the COVID-19 Dashboards tile for more detail on infections, hospitalizations and deaths, geographic data, demographics and vaccine and booster data.

Nowcast data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -heading

CDC wastewater data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -surveillance.

Community levels: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels.html

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.CASES: For the week of August 11-17, there were 2,354 new infections reported. T...
19/08/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

CASES: For the week of August 11-17, there were 2,354 new infections reported. To date, there have been 307,533 infections. Additionally, 148 positive home tests were self-reported to the Health Department. To date, 4,632 positive home tests have been self-reported.

HOSPITALIZATIONS: There were 19 hospitalizations reported this week. To date, there have been 14,738 COVID-related hospitalizations.

DEATHS: There were 15 deaths reported this week. To date, there have been 3,383 COVID-related deaths.

VARIANTS: During the last week of July, and based on limited county specimen sequencing, BA.5 accounted for about 83 percent, BA.4 for 6 percent, BA.4.6 for 6 percent, and BA.2.12.1 for 6 percent of COVID-19 cases. The CDC’s Nowcast feature is estimating that in HHS Region 3, where Allegheny County resides, in the week ending August 13, 87 percent of infections were due to BA.5, 5 percent to BA.4, 7 percent to BA.4.6, and 1 percent to BA.2.12.1.

WASTEWATER TESTING: SARS Co-V 2 concentrations in wastewater have continued to increase between 1 percent and 4 percent daily August 4-12. Omicron remains the dominant variant.

VACCINATIONS: An estimated 82.2 percent of all people 5 and older have at least one dose of vaccine and 73.0 percent are fully vaccinated. Of those persons 12 and older who are eligible for a booster dose, an estimated 55.6 percent have received one.

COMMUNITY LEVELS: According to the CDC, Allegheny County is currently at a “medium” community level; for health care facilities in the county, transmission level is “high.”

Additional Resources:
The Allegheny County Health Department has significant resources on its COVID-19 webpages. Visit https://alleghenycounty.us/COVID for quick links to report a positive at-home test, a testing site locator map, and more. Visitors can also select the COVID-19 Dashboards tile for more detail on infections, hospitalizations and deaths, geographic data, demographics and vaccine and booster data.

Nowcast data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -heading

CDC wastewater data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -surveillance.

Community levels: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels.html

Community transmission: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -view?list_select_state=all_states&list_select_county=all_counties&data-type=Risk

CDC’s home for COVID-19 data. Visualizations, graphs, and data in one easy-to-use website.

11/08/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

CASES: For the week of August 4-10, there were 2,542 new infections reported. To date, there have been 305,179 infections. Additionally, 226 positive home tests were self-reported to the Health Department. To date, 4,484 positive home tests have been self-reported.

HOSPITALIZATIONS: There were 169 hospitalizations reported this week. To date, there have been 14,719 COVID-related hospitalizations.

DEATHS: There were three (3) deaths reported this week. To date, there have been 3,368 COVID-related deaths.

VARIANTS: Based on limited county specimen sequencing, BA.5 accounts for about 83 percent, BA.4 for 6 percent, BA.4.6 for 6 percent, and BA.2.12.1 for 6 percent of COVID-19 cases in the week ending July 30. The CDC’s Nowcast feature is estimating that in HHS Region 3, where Allegheny County resides, in the week ending August 6, 85 percent of infections were due to BA.5, 7 percent to BA.4, 7 percent to BA.4.6, and 2 percent to BA.2.12.1.

WASTEWATER TESTING: SARS Co-V 2 concentrations in wastewater have continued to increase between 12.6 and 33.4 percent daily from July 31 through August 8. Omicron remains the dominant variant.

VACCINATIONS: The ACHD did not receive updated vaccine/booster data from the Pennsylvania Department of Health for the past week, so vaccination numbers remain as of July 31. An estimated 82.2 percent of all people 5 and older have at least one dose of vaccine and 73.0 percent are fully vaccinated. Of those persons 12 and older who are eligible for a booster dose, an estimated 55.6 percent have received one.

COMMUNITY LEVELS: According to the CDC, Allegheny County is currently at a “high” community level; for health care facilities in the county, transmission level is “high.”

05/08/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

The CDC raised Allegheny County’s community level of COVID-19 from ‘medium’ to ‘high.’ It is recommended that residents wear masks while indoors in public, stay up to date on COVID-19 vaccines, get tested if they have symptoms and maintain improved ventilation throughout indoor spaces when possible.

Learn more: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels.html

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.The CDC raised Allegheny County’s community level of COVID-19 from ‘low’ to ‘med...
29/07/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

The CDC raised Allegheny County’s community level of COVID-19 from ‘low’ to ‘medium.’ It is recommended that residents stay up to date on COVID-19 vaccines, get tested if they have symptoms and maintain improved ventilation throughout indoor spaces when possible.

Learn more: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels.html

COVID-19 Community Levels help you decide your prevention steps.

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.CASES: For the week of July 21-July 27, there were 2,623 new infections reported...
28/07/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

CASES: For the week of July 21-July 27, there were 2,623 new infections reported. To date, there have been 299,946 infections. Additionally, 154 positive home tests were self-reported to the Health Department. To date, 4,000 positive home tests have been self-reported.

HOSPITALIZATIONS: There were 46 hospitalizations reported this week. To date, there have been 14,434 COVID-related hospitalizations.

DEATHS: There were six (6) deaths reported this week. To date, there have been 3,361 COVID-related deaths.

VARIANTS: Based on limited county specimen sequencing, BA.5 accounts for about 66 percent, BA.4 for 15 percent, and BA.2.12.1 for 13 percent, and BA.2 for 6 percent of COVID-19 cases in the week ending July 9. The CDC’s Nowcast feature is estimating that in HHS Region 3, where Allegheny County resides, in the week ending July 23, 79 percent of infections were due to BA.5, 15 percent were due to BA.4, and 6 percent were due to BA.2.12.1.

WASTEWATER TESTING: SARS Co-V 2 concentrations in wastewater have continued to increase between 3 and 8 percent daily between July 14-22. Omicron remains the dominant variant.

VACCINATIONS: As of July 24, an estimated 82.1 percent of all people 5 and older have at least one dose of vaccine and 73 percent are fully vaccinated. Of those persons 12 and older who are eligible for a booster dose, an estimated 55.7 percent have received one.

COMMUNITY LEVELS: According to the CDC, Allegheny County is currently at a “low” community level; for health care facilities in the county, transmission level is “high.”

Additional Resources:
The Allegheny County Health Department has significant resources on its COVID-19 webpages. Visit https://alleghenycounty.us/COVID for quick links to report a positive at-home test, a testing site locator map, and more. Visitors can also select the COVID-19 Dashboards tile for more detail on infections, hospitalizations and deaths, geographic data, demographics and vaccine and booster data.

Nowcast data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -heading

CDC wastewater data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -surveillance.

Community levels: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels.html

Community transmission: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -view?list_select_state=all_states&list_select_county=all_counties&data-type=Risk

CDC’s home for COVID-19 data. Visualizations, graphs, and data in one easy-to-use website.

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.CASES: For the week of July 14-July 20, there were 2,156 new infections reported...
21/07/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

CASES: For the week of July 14-July 20, there were 2,156 new infections reported. To date, there have been 297,323 infections. Additionally, 195 positive home tests were self-reported to the Health Department. To date, 3,846 positive home tests have been self-reported.

HOSPITALIZATIONS: There were 145 hospitalizations reported this week. To date, there have been 14,388 COVID-related hospitalizations.

DEATHS: There were three (3) deaths reported this week. To date, there have been 3,355 COVID-related deaths.

VARIANTS: Based on limited county specimen sequencing, all were omicron subvariants during the week ending June 25; BA.2.12.1 accounted for about 51 percent, BA.5 for about 32 percent, BA.4 for 9 percent and BA.2 for 9 percent. The CDC’s Nowcast feature is estimating that in HHS Region 3, where Allegheny County resides, in the week ending July 16, 88 percent of infections were due to BA.4 and BA.5 together and 11 percent were due to BA.2.12.1.

WASTEWATER TESTING: SARS Co-V 2 concentrations in wastewater have continued to increase between 12-14 percent daily between July 5-13. Omicron remains the dominant variant.

VACCINATIONS: As of July 17, an estimated 82 percent of all people 5 and older have at least one dose of vaccine and 72.9 percent are fully vaccinated. Of those persons 12 and older who are eligible for a booster dose, an estimated 55.6 percent have received one.

COMMUNITY LEVELS: According to the CDC, Allegheny County is currently at a “low” community level; for health care facilities in the county, transmission level is “high.”

Additional Resources:
The Allegheny County Health Department has significant resources on its COVID-19 webpages. Visit https://alleghenycounty.us/COVID for quick links to report a positive at-home test, a testing site locator map, and more. Visitors can also select the COVID-19 Dashboards tile for more detail on infections, hospitalizations and deaths, geographic data, demographics and vaccine and booster data.

Nowcast data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -heading

CDC wastewater data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -surveillance.

Community levels: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels.html

Community transmission: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -view?list_select_state=all_states&list_select_county=all_counties&data-type=Risk

CDC’s home for COVID-19 data. Visualizations, graphs, and data in one easy-to-use website.

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.CASES: For the week of July 7-July 13, there were 2,303 new infections reported....
14/07/2022

This is a message from Allegheny Alerts.

CASES: For the week of July 7-July 13, there were 2,303 new infections reported. To date, there have been 295,167 infections. Additionally, 211 positive home tests were self-reported to the Health Department. To date, 3,651 positive home tests have been self-reported.

HOSPITALIZATIONS: There were 41 hospitalizations reported this week. To date, there have been 14,243 COVID-related hospitalizations.

DEATHS: There were 10 deaths reported this week. To date, there have been 3,352 COVID-19-related deaths.

VARIANTS: Based on limited county specimen sequencing, nearly all were omicron subvariants during the week ending June 25; BA.2.12.1 accounted for about 46 percent, BA.5 for about 29 percent, BA.4 for 8 percent and BA.2 for 8 percent. The CDC’s Nowcast feature is estimating that in HHS Region 3, where Allegheny County resides, in the week ending July 9, BA.5 now accounts for 56 percent of cases, BA.2.12.1 for 23 percent, BA.4 for 20 percent, and BA.2 for 1 percent.

WASTEWATER TESTING: SARS Co-V 2 concentrations in wastewater have increased during the last week of June and into July, June 23 to July 1, between 8 to 37 percent daily. Omicron BA.2 and BA.1 remain the dominant variants in wastewater samples.

VACCINATIONS: As of July 10, an estimated 81.9 percent of all people 5 and older have at least one dose of vaccine and 72.9 percent are fully vaccinated. Of those persons 12 and older who are eligible for a booster dose, an estimated 55.6 percent have received one.

COMMUNITY LEVELS: According to the CDC, Allegheny County is currently at a “low” community level; for health care facilities in the county, transmission level is “high.” The CDC updates its community level data on Thursdays by 8 p.m. (not yet updated).

Additional Resources:
The Allegheny County Health Department has significant resources on its COVID-19 webpages. Visit https://alleghenycounty.us/COVID for quick links to report a positive at-home test, a testing site locator map, and more. Visitors can also select the COVID-19 Dashboards tile for more detail on infections, hospitalizations and deaths, geographic data, demographics and vaccine and booster data.

Nowcast data: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -heading

Community levels: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels.html

Community transmission: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ -view?list_select_state=all_states&l

CDC’s home for COVID-19 data. Visualizations, graphs, and data in one easy-to-use website.

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