Health & Fitness
Coronavirus: Santa Clara County Reports 37 New Cases, 4 Deaths
Latest report brings countywide total of COVID-19 cases to 1,870.
SANTA CLARA COUNTY, CA — Santa Clara County's Public Health Department reported 37 additional cases of the new coronavirus Friday, bringing the countywide total of those who tested positive for COVID-19 to 1,870.
The county also announced four new COVID-19-related fatalities, bringing the death toll to 73.
Here is a breakdown of cases by city as of Friday:
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· Campbell: 28
· Cupertino: 22
Find out what's happening in Los Gatosfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
· Gilroy: 35
· Los Altos: 22
· Los Altos Hills: Less than 10
· Los Gatos: 23
· Milpitas: 59
· Monte Sereno: Less than 10
· Morgan Hill: 31
· Mountain View: 42
· Palo Alto: 63
· San Jose: 1,232
· Santa Clara: 83
· Saratoga: 10
· Sunnyvale: 101
· Other/Unknown: 107
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Johns Hopkins University reported that California has 28,888 confirmed cases of coronavirus as of 1:45 p.m. on Friday. The states reporting more cases than California are New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Michigan.
California reports 1,021 deaths. The county with the most deaths is Los Angeles with 495, followed by Santa Clara with 69, San Diego has 63, Riverside has 59, and San Bernardino has 47.
Nationwide, the United States leads the world in both confirmed cases and deaths. Confirmed cases have reached 686,991, and 34,575 deaths.
Around the world, there have been 153,177 deaths and 2,218,332 confirmed cases.
Full coronavirus coverage: Coronavirus In California: What To Know
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In other news on COVID-19 around the Bay Area, Stanford University Provost Persis Drell said the next academic year could start in the winter, The Stanford Daily reports.
The city of San Francisco and the counties of Marin and Contra Costa are now requiring residents to wear face coverings while not at home in order to further prevent the spread of coronavirus. The order extends to all residents, including anyone going to essential businesses and public facilities, performing essential work, or riding public transit.
Sonoma County Health Officer Dr. Sundari Mase Thursday issued a new health order that requires staff and visitors at group care homes and emergency first responders to wear medical grade masks and be checked for symptoms of the COVID-19 disease before starting work.
Berkeley Public Health Officer Dr. Lisa Hernandez issued an order on Thursday mandating masks, temperature screenings and symptom checks for workers and visitors at skilled nursing and residential care facilities to control the spread of the coronavirus.
In order to help slow the spread of the novel coronavirus in its cities' homeless population, Contra Costa County is delivering sanitation stations to encampments this week.
Patch editors Gideon Rubin and Bea Karnes, and Bay City News contributed to this report
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