Health & Fitness

Coronavirus: 1 Death, 42 Cases Added In Contra Costa County

Dozens are hospitalized as the case count hits 600 in CoCo.

Although illnesses and deaths continue, people are looking for reasons for hope.
Although illnesses and deaths continue, people are looking for reasons for hope. (Feroze Dhanoa/Patch)

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY — Another person has died, and an additional 42 people have been confirmed to have COVID-19, caused by coronavirus, in Contra Costa County, Contra Costa Health Services reports Tuesday. That brings the total number of cases to 600.

In addition, 44 people are hospitalized for treatment of complications from the virus.

At 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Johns Hopkins University reported that California has 24,579 confirmed cases of coronavirus. Worth noting is that the Golden State has now slipped to sixth place for the total number of cases behind New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.

Find out what's happening in Walnut Creekfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

As for deaths, California reports 734. The county with the most deaths is Los Angeles with 326, followed by Santa Clara with 60, Riverside has 50, San Diego is next with 47, and rounding out the top 5 is San Bernardino with 31.

Nationwide, the United States leads the world in both confirmed cases and deaths. Confirmed cases have reached 589,048, and 25,163 deaths.

Find out what's happening in Walnut Creekfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Around the world, there have been 125,123 deaths and 1,956,077 confirmed cases.

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Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday outlined a plan to lift the California's stay-at-home order. The state unveiled six "indicators" Tuesday that officials will consider before lifting current restrictions:

  1. If the state has expanded testing, contact tracing of COVID-19 patients, and the ability to isolate and support people who have tested positive or were exposed to COVID-19.
  2. Whether the state protect its most vulnerable residents — the elderly and medically vulnerable — from COVID-19 by quickly containing outbreaks in facilities such as nursing homes and prisons.
  3. How well the state's hospital and health systems can handle surges in COVID-19 patients.
  4. Whether the state has developed new treatments for the coronavirus by working with private, public and academic partners.
  5. If businesses, schools and child care facilities can maintain social distancing, including state guidelines requiring health checks for employees and customers who enter.
  6. Whether the state has determined when it will reinstitute virus containment measures, including stay-home orders, by tracking the right data and quickly communicating those measures to the public.

Meanwhile, the San Francisco 49er's Super Bowl loss may have prevented a "Coronavirus Catastrophe" according to experts. If the team had won, San Francisco would have thrown a victory parade with, presumably, hundreds of thousands of spectators. As coronavirus was already spreading in the community by the Super Bowl, the parade could have become a super-spreader event.

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