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GOVERNOR HOCHUL UPDATES NEW YORKERS ON STATE’S PROGRESS COMBATING COVID-19
97,135 Vaccine Doses Administered Over Last 24 Hours
166 COVID-19 Deaths Statewide Yesterday
Governor Kathy Hochul Tuesday updated New Yorkers on the state’s progress combating COVID-19.
“The slowdown in new cases gives us a glimmer of hope, but cases still remain high and we are nowhere near the end of the winter surge,” Governor Hochul said. “Let’s not undo all of the hard work we’ve put in to get to this point. Please make sure to get your second dose and booster shot. Parents and guardians, the best way to protect our children is to get them vaccinated and boosted, once they’re eligible. And let’s continue to use the tools we know will help stop the spread: Wear a non-cloth mask and stay home if you’re feeling sick.”
Today’s data is summarized briefly below:
Each region’s 7-day average of cases per 100K population is as follows
| Region | Sunday, January 9, 2022 | Monday, January 10, 2022 | Tuesday, January 11, 2022 |
| Capital Region | 242.13 | 252.44 | 246.12 |
| Central New York | 288.05 | 288.27 | 280.62 |
| Finger Lakes | 207.03 | 211.27 | 209.46 |
| Long Island | 402.63 | 394.70 | 372.58 |
| Mid-Hudson | 359.58 | 349.94 | 332.27 |
| Mohawk Valley | 210.47 | 212.06 | 209.62 |
| New York City | 487.21 | 482.20 | 462.65 |
| North Country | 182.90 | 190.16 | 193.84 |
| Southern Tier | 201.07 | 204.01 | 210.55 |
| Western New York | 251.29 | 250.77 | 254.98 |
| Statewide | 381.66 | 378.30 | 364.35 |
Each region’s 7-day average percentage of positive test results reported over the last three days is as follows:
| Region | Sunday, January 9, 2022 | Monday, January 10, 2022 | Tuesday, January 11, 2022 |
| Capital Region | 19.53% | 19.48% | 19.30% |
| Central New York | 21.97% | 22.01% | 21.51% |
| Finger Lakes | 19.94% | 19.94% | 19.72% |
| Long Island | 25.58% | 25.14% | 24.33% |
| Mid-Hudson | 22.59% | 21.96% | 21.09% |
| Mohawk Valley | 17.64% | 17.53% | 17.63% |
| New York City | 20.63% | 20.15% | 19.38% |
| North Country | 17.26% | 17.62% | 17.49% |
| Southern Tier | 15.44% | 15.29% | 14.94% |
| Western New York | 22.36% | 22.71% | 22.77% |
| Statewide | 21.30% | 20.91% | 20.22% |
Each New York City borough’s 7-day average percentage of positive test results reported over the last three days is as follows:
| Borough in NYC | Sunday, January 9, 2022 | Monday, January 10, 2022 | Tuesday, January 11, 2022 |
| Bronx | 24.00% | 22.96% | 21.81% |
| Kings | 19.24% | 18.64% | 17.80% |
| New York | 16.25% | 16.20% | 15.73% |
| Queens | 23.41% | 22.99% | 22.34% |
| Richmond | 22.44% | 21.74% | 20.56% |
Yesterday, 58,770 New Yorkers tested positive for COVID-19 in New York State, bringing the total to 4,298,809. A geographic breakdown is as follows:
| County | Total Positive | New Positive |
| Albany | 48,640 | 575 |
| Allegany | 7,502 | 47 |
| Broome | 38,090 | 364 |
| Cattaraugus | 12,613 | 157 |
| Cayuga | 13,218 | 161 |
| Chautauqua | 19,761 | 199 |
| Chemung | 17,405 | 294 |
| Chenango | 7,534 | 57 |
| Clinton | 11,909 | 138 |
| Columbia | 8,156 | 203 |
| Cortland | 8,373 | 111 |
| Delaware | 6,324 | 60 |
| Dutchess | 55,009 | 654 |
| Erie | 177,332 | 2,708 |
| Essex | 4,370 | 58 |
| Franklin | 7,285 | 82 |
| Fulton | 10,112 | 119 |
| Genesee | 11,532 | 122 |
| Greene | 7,134 | 148 |
| Hamilton | 724 | 5 |
| Herkimer | 11,449 | 169 |
| Jefferson | 15,433 | 210 |
| Lewis | 5,279 | 55 |
| Livingston | 9,594 | 131 |
| Madison | 10,412 | 113 |
| Monroe | 131,209 | 1,518 |
| Montgomery | 9,671 | 121 |
| Nassau | 361,426 | 3,987 |
| Niagara | 40,675 | 527 |
| NYC | 2,005,104 | 31,183 |
| Oneida | 44,484 | 421 |
| Onondaga | 87,307 | 1,343 |
| Ontario | 16,175 | 211 |
| Orange | 92,487 | 1,182 |
| Orleans | 7,262 | 103 |
| Oswego | 20,002 | 211 |
| Otsego | 7,812 | 176 |
| Putnam | 20,671 | 232 |
| Rensselaer | 25,358 | 336 |
| Rockland | 80,991 | 1,020 |
| Saratoga | 37,305 | 471 |
| Schenectady | 26,871 | 297 |
| Schoharie | 3,926 | 55 |
| Schuyler | 2,787 | 56 |
| Seneca | 4,548 | 75 |
| St. Lawrence | 16,724 | 170 |
| Steuben | 16,123 | 174 |
| Suffolk | 383,816 | 3,942 |
| Sullivan | 15,355 | 282 |
| Tioga | 8,727 | 124 |
| Tompkins | 13,721 | 219 |
| Ulster | 26,093 | 374 |
| Warren | 10,883 | 154 |
| Washington | 9,677 | 129 |
| Wayne | 13,919 | 137 |
| Westchester | 222,732 | 2,474 |
| Wyoming | 7,081 | 88 |
| Yates | 2,697 | 38 |
Below is data that shows how many hospitalized individuals who have tested positive for COVID-19 were admitted for COVID-19/COVID-19 complications and how many were admitted for non-COVID-19 conditions:
| Region | COVID-19 Patients currently hospitalized | Admitted due to COVID or complications of COVID | % Admitted due to COVID or complications of COVID | Admitted where COVID was not included as one of the reasons for admission | % Admitted where COVID was not included as one of the reasons for admission |
| Capital Region | 399 | 307 | 77% | 92 | 23% |
| Central New York | 302 | 224 | 74% | 78 | 26% |
| Finger Lakes | 711 | 438 | 62% | 273 | 38% |
| Long Island | 2,254 | 1,403 | 62% | 851 | 38% |
| Mid-Hudson | 1,375 | 906 | 66% | 469 | 34% |
| Mohawk Valley | 158 | 108 | 68% | 50 | 32% |
| New York City | 6,523 | 3,362 | 52% | 3,161 | 48% |
| North Country | 103 | 64 | 62% | 39 | 38% |
| Southern Tier | 214 | 121 | 57% | 93 | 43% |
| Western New York | 632 | 415 | 66% | 217 | 34% |
| Statewide | 12,671 | 7,348 | 58% | 5,323 | 42% |
The Omicron variant now represents more than 95% of the viruses in circulation. For more information on variant tracking, please visit here: (COVID-19 Variant Data | Department of Health (ny.gov).
Yesterday, 166 New Yorkers died due to COVID-19, bringing the total to 49,955. A geographic breakdown is as follows, by county of residence:
| Deaths by County of Residence | |
| County | New Deaths |
| Albany | 1 |
| Bronx | 20 |
| Cayuga | 1 |
| Clinton | 1 |
| Dutchess | 3 |
| Erie | 7 |
| Essex | 1 |
| Franklin | 1 |
| Fulton | 1 |
| Herkimer | 1 |
| Kings | 31 |
| Manhattan | 14 |
| Monroe | 3 |
| Nassau | 8 |
| Niagara | 1 |
| Oneida | 2 |
| Onondaga | 2 |
| Ontario | 1 |
| Orange | 4 |
| Oswego | 1 |
| Putnam | 1 |
| Queens | 22 |
| Rensselaer | 1 |
| Richmond | 5 |
| Rockland | 2 |
| Saratoga | 1 |
| Schenectady | 2 |
| Schoharie | 1 |
| Seneca | 1 |
| St. Lawrence | 1 |
| Steuben | 2 |
| Suffolk | 17 |
| Warren | 1 |
| Westchester | 5 |
All New York State mass vaccination sites are open to eligible New Yorkers aged 5 and older, with walk-in vaccination available at all sites on a first-come, first-serve basis for people aged 12 and older. Information on which sites require appointments for children in the 5-11 age group is available on our website. People who prefer to make an appointment at a state-run mass vaccination site can do so on the Am I Eligible App or by calling 1-833-NYS-4-VAX. People may also contact their local health department, pharmacy, doctor or hospital to schedule appointments where vaccines are available, or visit vaccines.gov to find information on vaccine appointments near them.
New Yorkers looking to schedule vaccine appointments for 5-11-year-old children are encouraged to contact their child’s pediatrician, family physician, county health departments, Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), rural health centers, or pharmacies that may be administering the vaccine for this age group. Parents and guardians can visit vaccines.gov, text their ZIP code to 438829, or call 1-800-232-0233 to find nearby locations. Make sure that the provider offers the Pfizer-BioNTechCOVID-19 vaccine, as the other COVID-19 vaccines are not yet authorized for this age group.
Visit our website for parents and guardians for new information, frequently asked questions and answers, and resources specifically designed for parents and guardians of this age group.
Yesterday, 21,484 New Yorkers received their first vaccine dose, and 17,375 completed their vaccine series. A geographic breakdown of New Yorkers who have been vaccinated by region is as follows:
| People with at least one vaccine dose | People with complete vaccine series | |||
| Region | Cumulative Total | Increase over past 24 hours | Cumulative Total | Increase over past 24 hours |
| Capital Region | 948,374 | 937 | 863,595 | 782 |
| Central New York | 633,685 | 415 | 584,950 | 377 |
| Finger Lakes | 845,808 | 823 | 780,357 | 730 |
| Long Island | 2,115,170 | 3,490 | 1,864,450 | 2,541 |
| Mid-Hudson | 1,654,652 | 2,513 | 1,441,523 | 1,920 |
| Mohawk Valley | 319,154 | 265 | 295,144 | 241 |
| New York City | 7,752,191 | 11,307 | 6,772,137 | 9,356 |
| North Country | 296,679 | 302 | 267,550 | 187 |
| Southern Tier | 430,558 | 446 | 392,868 | 333 |
| Western New York | 933,656 | 986 | 851,790 | 908 |
| Statewide | 15,929,927 | 21,484 | 14,114,364 | 17,375 |
| Booster/Additional Shots | |||
| Region | Cumulative Total | Increase over past 24 hours | Increase over past 7 days |
| Capital Region | 392,045 | 3,874 | 24,698 |
| Central New York | 248,960 | 2,549 | 16,965 |
| Finger Lakes | 397,765 | 3,590 | 26,731 |
| Long Island | 764,482 | 8,805 | 56,954 |
| Mid-Hudson | 617,314 | 7,066 | 44,863 |
| Mohawk Valley | 135,109 | 1,129 | 8,080 |
| New York City | 1,905,812 | 19,544 | 135,207 |
| North Country | 116,204 | 1,424 | 8,070 |
| Southern Tier | 182,349 | 1,744 | 12,567 |
| Western New York | 436,835 | 4,138 | 25,041 |
| Statewide | 5,196,875 | 53,863 | 359,176 |
The COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker Dashboard is available to update New Yorkers on the distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine. The New York State Department of Health requires vaccinating facilities to report all COVID-19 vaccine administration data within 24 hours; the vaccine administration data on the dashboard is updated daily to reflect the most up-to-date metrics in the state’s vaccination effort. New York State Department of Health-reported data from NYSIIS and CIR differs slightly from federally-reported data, which is inclusive of federally-administered doses and other minor differences. Both numbers are included in the release above.
| As of 1/11 | Hospital | Nursing Home | ACF | LHCSA | Hospice | CHHA | Total | |||||||
| Total employee terminations due to being unvaccinated | 5,823 | 1.13% | 2,477 | 1.64% | 334 | 1.08% | 8,107 | 2.87% | 90 | 1.47% | 139 | 1.04% | 16,970 | 1.70% |
| Total employee resignations and retirements due to being unvaccinated | 2,315 | 0.45% | 52 | 0.03% | 11 | 0.04% | 3,121 | 1.10% | 80 | 1.31% | 116 | 0.86% | 5,695 | 0.57% |
| Total on furlough/unpaid leave due to being unvaccinated and unwilling to get vaccinated | 1,382 | 0.27% | 657 | 0.44% | 80 | 0.26% | 7,798 | 2.76% | 8 | 0.13% | 67 | 0.50% | 9,992 | 1.00% |
| Total on furlough/unpaid leave due to being unvaccinated BUT now awaiting first dose | 113 | 0.02% | 1,515 | 1.00% | 512 | 1.66% | 2,489 | 0.88% | 11 | 0.18% | 4 | 0.03% | 4,644 | 0.46% |
| Total INACTIVE employees from categories above | 9,633 | 4,701 | 937 | 21,515 | 189 | 326 | 37,301 | |||||||
| Total ACTIVE employees reported 1/11/22 | 505,748 | 146,084 | 29,986 | 261,448 | 5,923 | 13,097 | 962,286 | |||||||
| Grand Total | 515,381 | 150,785 | 30,923 | 282,963 | 6,112 | 13,423 | 999,587 |
Percentages are estimates. They are based on self-reported data for 1/11/22. The denominators are active employees reported for 1/11/22 plus the inactive categories above; they do not include workforce fluctuations that may have occurred in addition to these categories above.
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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. January 13, 2021:
GREENBURGH TOWN BD DISCUSSES BRONX SPACE HEATER/FAULTY CLOSED DOORS TRAGEDY WITH DEPUTY BUILDING INSPECTOR—we want to make sure that this never happens in Greenburgh
(LINK BELOW)
We plan to sponsor a Zoom community educational initiative for residents, property managers to discuss action steps we can all take to make sure Bronx tragedy does not ever happen in Greenburgh–date, time of meeting to be announced once program is finalized
_ Following the devastating fire in a Bronx complex this (past)weekend that started due to a space heater and spread due to faulty self-closing doors, the Deputy Building Inspector, Bob Dam assured the Town Board at Tuesday’s work session that the town exceeds state code requirements with safety measures and provided information on what more they can do to feel safe in their homes.
Building Inspector Bob Dam said the town, by law, follows New York State fire code requirements. However, it often surpasses them with even more restrictions. When the state required commercial spaces to have sprinklers on buildings with three or more floors, the town required it for all; we are also very strict about sprinklers, Dam said. We require an alarm to sound when the sprinklers are flowing, so everyone would know when there’s a fire. The town regularly issues violations for sprinklers and alarms that aren’t up in compliance, which is expensive.
There are self-closing fire doors required on any multi-family building outside each apartment and for the general stairs. To check to see if your door is functioning properly, open it and let it go. Does it close automatically? If there were a fire inside an apartment, these doors prevent it from spreading to other apartments. If it doesn’t close, contact the building inspector or your building owner to get it fixed. It’s not expensive to get a self-closer if needed.
Self closing doors should protect residents for at least one hour.. On the jam side of the door, there should be a tag that will say how long it is rated for. If it is painted over, you may feel a bump where a tag is.
Officials recommend getting in the habit when the clocks change twice a year to not only check fire detector batteries but also check the functioning of the self-closing doors.
I am working with our Fire Chiefs and plan to organize an educational forum for the community (by zoom). Safety measures that building owners and apartment dwellers can take to reduce the chances of a Bronx tragedy here in Greenburgh will be discussed. We will post the date/ time of this important forum when final plans are made.
Please see this discussion on YouTube here: https://youtu.be/bYB_x-eA6ck
Fairview Fire Chief Howard Reiss later explained more about the annual inspections conducted by our local fire departments:
All three Fire Districts conduct Fire Safety Inspections annually. These safety inspections include all public assemblies and multiple dwelling buildings (two or more living units) as well as any commercial business properties.
Part of the inspection is meeting with the owners/management agents/landlords and to review safety procedures, inspect the premises for any issues that may make the property unsafe (expired fire extinguishers, blocked exits, alarm system and sprinkler system tested and inspected, emergency doors operate properly – including automatic doors and elevator recalls, etc).
The process is documented and key property personnel are given a formal list of issues to correct and we of course follow up to make sure that all questionable issues are corrected in a timely manner. In the rare event that we have an issue with compliance we have reached out to the building department and they have always been able to get the necessary corrections made.
PAUL FEINER Greenburgh Town Supervisor
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| WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. From County Legislator Benjamin Boykin. January 12, 2022: At the Westchester County Board of Legislators, we do our work through a committee system.Every decision we make — about budgets, parks, roads, new laws, and more — begins with consideration in our committees. And each of our 14 committees has a particular area of oversight over the rest of County government.I’m excited that in the 2022-2023 legislative term I will be chairing the Boards’ Economic Development Committee.Economic Development is crucial to the County’s recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. The committee will be working to address COVID recovery for our businesses. We will be examining macroeconomic issues like how the changing nature of the workforce is impacting hiring, development and retention of workers and what policy responses are needed to respond to this social change. The committee will also provide oversight of the County’s economic development programs as we work together to solidify and grow the County’s economic base. I want to thank Chairwoman Catherine Borgia for the opportunity to Chair this committee, and I want to stress how seriously I, our committee members, and staff, take our duties and responsibilities.Committee meetings are expected to begin the week of January 24. As always, committee meetings will be streamed live on our website. You can check the “Meeting Calendar” section at www.westchesterlegislators.com For a list of upcoming meetings, links to agendas and other documents, as well as live streaming and archived video.I look forward to keeping you informed about the committee’s upcoming work, and invite you to reach out to me with any thoughts about matters you think our committee should be considering.For more about this year’s BOL committee assignments, please visit: https://bit.ly/3zN3tbUA complete list of this term’s committee assignments is available at https://www.westchesterlegislators.com/images/PDF/2022-23-BOL-Committees.pdf Sincerely, ![]() |
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COVID-19 Booster Vaccine Clinics at County Center today
The Westchester County Department of Health is holding vaccine booster clinics for eligible individuals,by appointment only, at the Westchester County Center in White Plains.
Schedule a Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson Booster Shot
Those who have had a recent COVID infection are eligible to receive a booster shot as long as they are fully recovered from their illness and have completed their primary vaccination series as follows:
First Dose COVID-19 Vaccination Clinics for Ages 5 and Up
The Westchester County Department of Health is holding first dose vaccine clinics for ages 5 and up, by appointment only, at the Westchester County Center in White Plains.
Schedule a First Dose Pfizer Vaccine (Ages 5 and over)
Schedule a First Dose Moderna Vaccine (Ages 18 and over)
Schedule a Johnson & Johnson Vaccine (Ages 18 and over)
Frequently Asked Questions about the COVID-19 Vaccine for Children ages 5 to 11 Years Old (en español)
COVID-19 Testing Resources
COVID-19 Home Test Kits
Interim Updated Isolation & Quarantine Guidance Per New York State and CDC for the General Population
**This Guidance Does Not Apply to Health Care Settings, Congregate Settings and Schools at the time of posting**
If you have tested positive for COVID-19:
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WPCNR COVID MONITOR. From the New York Presbyterian Hospital. (Unedited) January 11, 2021:

Columbia researchers found that babies born during the pandemic’s first year scored slightly lower on a developmental screening test of social and motor skills at 6 months—regardless of whether their mothers had COVID during pregnancy—compared to babies born just before the pandemic.
The study, which included 255 babies born at NewYork-Presbyterian’s Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital and Allen Hospital between March and December 2020, was published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.
“Infants born to mothers who have viral infections during pregnancy have a higher risk of neurodevelopmental deficits, so we thought we would find some changes in the neurodevelopment of babies whose mothers had COVID during pregnancy,” says Dani Dumitriu, MD, PhD, assistant professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and lead investigator of the study.
( FROM THE STUDY: Cohort studies of the generation born during the 1918 influenza A virus subtype H1N1 pandemic found lower child educational level attainment and adult socioeconomic status.24 The 1964 rubella pandemic led to a 10- to 15-fold increase in autism spectrum disorder or schizophrenia in offspring.25,26 There is a need to determine the associations between fetal exposure to maternal SARS-CoV-2 infection and child neurodevelopmental status,27–31 especially given the well-established benefits of early identification of at-risk children.32–34)
“We were surprised to find absolutely no signal suggesting that exposure to COVID while in utero was linked to neurodevelopmental deficits. Rather, being in the womb of a mother experiencing the pandemic was associated with slightly lower scores in areas such as motor and social skills, though not in others, such as communication or problem-solving skills. The results suggest that the huge amount of stress felt by pregnant mothers during these unprecedented times may have played a role.
“These were not large differences, meaning we did not see a higher rate of actual developmental delays in our sample of a few hundred babies, just small shifts in average scores between the groups,” Dumitriu says. “But these small shifts warrant careful attention because at the population level, they can have a significant public health impact. We know this from other pandemics and natural disasters.”
When the first wave of COVID hit New York City in early 2020, Dumitriu led a group of pediatric researchers at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian in organizing studies investigating the impact of the virus on infants through the COVID-19 Mother Baby Outcomes (COMBO) Initiative.
In one early study, the researchers discovered that mothers do not pass the COVID virus to their fetus.
However, it is known that viral illnesses during pregnancy increase the risk of neurodevelopmental delays in children through activation of the mother’s immune system, which in turn affects fetal brain development.
“The developmental trajectory of an infant begins before birth,” says Dumitriu, who is a pediatrician in the Well Baby Nursery at NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital. “With potentially millions of infants who may have been exposed to COVID in utero, and even more mothers just living through the stress of the pandemic, there is a critical need to understand the neurodevelopmental effects of the pandemic on future generations.”
In the current study, the researchers analyzed responses from a questionnaire that pediatricians give to parents to evaluate aspects of infant development, such as communication and fine and gross motor, problem-solving, and social skills.
Nearly half of the mothers in the study had COVID at some point during their pregnancies, though most of the illnesses were mild or asymptomatic.
No differences were found in scores between infants who were exposed to COVID in utero and those born during the pandemic whose mothers did not contract COVID during pregnancy.
However, average scores among infants born during the pandemic—whether their mothers had COVID during pregnancy or not—were lower than the gross motor, fine motor, and social skills of 62 pre-pandemic infants born at the same hospitals.
“We want parents to know that the findings in our small study do not necessarily mean that this generation will be impaired later in life,” Dumitriu says. “This is still a very early developmental stage with lots of opportunities to intervene and get these babies onto the right developmental trajectory.”
Though the study did not measure maternal stress during pregnancy, Dumitriu says it’s possible that the stress caused by the pandemic and experienced by the mothers during pregnancy explains the drop in motor and social skills found in babies born during the pandemic.
Previous studies have shown that maternal stress in the earliest stages of pregnancy has a bigger effect on socioemotional functioning in infants than stress later in pregnancy, and a similar trend was found in the new study: Infants whose mothers were in the first trimester of pregnancy at the height of the pandemic had the lowest neurodevelopment scores.
Other factors, including fewer play dates and altered interactions with stressed caregivers, may help explain why babies born during the pandemic have weaker social and motor skills than babies born before the pandemic.
The researchers will continue to follow these infants in long-term studies.
The study, titled “Association of birth during the COVID-19 pandemic with neurodevelopmental status at 6 months in infants with and without in utero exposure to maternal SARS-CoV-2 infection,” was published online Jan. 4, 2022, in JAMA Pediatrics.
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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER, News and Analysis By John F. Bailey. January 11, 2022:
County Executive George Latimer in his briefing Monday, said he was opening the County Center for vaccinations of boosters, and would continue testing there in an effort to stem what he again termed was an “explosion” of covid cases across the county. He reported hospitalizations were up by 200 cases a week, rising from 225 three weeks ago to 393 last Monday, and yesterday 626.
WPCNR notes that 3,408 persons tested positive on Monday, December 27. The 626 infections Mr. Latimer announced Monday may not all be hospitalization of persons who got the disease that Monday two weeks ago.
That week of Monday December 27 through Saturday January 1 resulted in 26,002 covid infections. If you choose to divide the hospitalizations last week(393) and Monday’s (626) a total of 1,019 by 26,202 you get a very rough 4% hospitalization rate for persons getting infected two weeks ago.
This would mean that if we exceed the 26,000 at the conclusion of last week Saturday ( official state figures are not in yet on the State covid tracker, on 2-day delay) This may generate another 1,000 hospitalizations. If the spread does not slow down, but continues to increase due to reckless socializing and no masking, we could be dealing with full houses at all the hospitals in the county. In infections soar to 30,000 a week the county hospital bed cannot handle it. That would mean at 4% of 120,000 infections in 3 weeks you would have 4,800 hospitalizations of covid patients.
Mr. Latimer called for more detailed statistics from the state for the second covid briefing in a row. He particularly wants a break down of whom were hospitalized for covid by wht=ether they were vaccinated with 1, 2, or 3, or had no shots, so the county can make more decisions on handling the spread. Of course the mystery around the hospitalizations has gone on for months. Mr. Latimer also said he would be asking the state for a breakdown of how many students under 18 are vaccinated, and how many adults over 18 were vaccinated.
However the failure for the state and county officials to clarify the hospitalization rate when the official hospitalizations are announced, underplays and most certainly does not clarify how fast hospitals in the county may fill up and how quickly hospital personnel will burn out. This failure of the state to breakdown hospitalizations has kept the public in the dark since this Third Wave began after the 5th of July, as to who is getting it.
Will medicines be in adequate medical supply at a 4% hospitalization rate?
The hospitals in the county have 2,700 beds. Mr. Latimer said he expected the hospitalizations to continue to rise steadily. 3 weeks more of 20,000 infections a week which is what the county had through January 7 and if most of the hospitalizations are unvaccinated people, the deaths will go up and the misery compounded.
Sixty thousand new infections of County residents (20,000 a week) will yield 2,400 hospitalizations in the county by Mid February just before winter Presidents week vacations..
Failure to vaccinate will only make infections more serious for those who get the disease and are unvaccinated.
Mayor Tom Roach of White Plains said White Plains infections of covid were more by far than any other point in the pandemic.