Health & Fitness

MA Town-By-Town COVID-19: Case Rates Down In 86% Of Communities

The COVID-19 hospitalization rate also dropped about 26 percent over the last two weeks in Massachusetts.

MASSACHUSETTS — All key coronavirus metrics statewide continued heading in the right direction for a third straight week, according to data released by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health Thursday.

Coronavirus infection rates in Massachusetts continued declining over the last two weeks, as have positive test rates, hospitalizations and deaths.

On Thursday, state data showed COVID-19 continue to decrease at the community level, with just 33 cities and towns seeing rates increase. On Thursday, Massachusetts also saw 286 communities with decreasing COVID-19 rates and 17 with no change.

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

According to state COVID-19 data, the seven-day positive test rate also decreased from 7.29 percent two weeks ago to 5.5 percent Thursday. In Massachusetts, 59 communities saw the rate increase, 13 had no change, and 264 saw it drop, the public health department said.

The average hospitalizations went from 711.1 two weeks ago to 521.3. As of Wednesday, 478 Massachusetts residents were hospitalized with COVID-19.

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

As for deaths, there were 7.7 deaths per day over the last week, down from 8.1 two weeks ago.

The Department of Public Health on Thursday reported 1,662 new coronavirus cases, seven deaths and 4,263 vaccine doses administered.

The weekly average case count was 1,110.4 daily cases, down from 1,450.3 two weeks ago. At the early January peak of the omicron surge, the state reported more than 23,000 average daily cases.

The latest state vaccine report showed the number of fully vaccinated residents rose to about 5.4 million. Booster doses were given to about 3.09 million residents.

Community-Level Data

To use this map, zoom in and click on a pin to see that community's coronavirus vaccination rate or case numbers. You can also view the town-by-town coronavirus data here

Colors on the map represented if a community's case counts were decreasing, staying the same, or increasing. Blue dots meant a community had a lower case count from the previous week. Yellow meant they stayed the same, and red meant higher.

The data also did not include 1,649 of the state's cases because state health officials could not determine which communities the patients lived in.

Other Key Coronavirus Metrics

Of the 478 hospitalized patients, 40 were in intensive care Wednesday, down 40 from two weeks ago, state health officials said.

According to the Department of Public Health, 32 percent of the state's coronavirus hospitalizations over the last week were "primarily" hospitalized for the virus, versus "incidental" cases who tested positive while hospitalized for another reason. Fifty-nine percent of the state's hospitalized patients on Wednesday were vaccinated.

To date, there have been 1,746,713 confirmed cases and 19,593 deaths statewide since the pandemic began.

The state reported 37,359 new tests Thursday, bringing the total administered to about 45.7 million.

The data included coronavirus cases for all Massachusetts communities, except for those with populations under 50,000 and those with fewer than five cases. The department said the stipulation was designed to protect the privacy of patients in those towns and cities.

The state releases town-by-town testing data every Thursday, including the number of people tested, the testing rate, the positive test rate, cases and infection rates.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.