Health & Fitness
Falmouth Coronavirus Rate Drops: Latest State Report
Falmouth's coronavirus threat was at the"green" community designation, meaning it averaged less than four daily cases per 100,000 people.
FALMOUTH, MA — Seventy-seven Massachusetts communities were designated high-risk in the new town-by-town data released by the state Thursday. Falmouth wasn't one of those communities and actually saw its case counts and positive test rates drop over the last two weeks,
State rules mean that high-risk communities, plus others that were high-risk in the last two updates, cannot move on to the next phase of reopening. Towns were marked high-risk, or red, if they reported more than eight confirmed COVID-19 cases per 100,000 residents over the past two weeks.
Those 77 communities kept the state's own coronavirus threat to red as a whole for a second straight week The state has reported over eight average daily cases per 100,000 residents over the last two weeks.
Find out what's happening in Falmouthfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The state kept Falmouth's coronavirus threat at the"green" community designation, meaning it averaged less than four daily cases per 100,000 people over the last two weeks. Falmouth averaged 2.1 new daily cases per 100,000 residents.
The positive test rate over the last two weeks increased in 130 — or 37 percent — of the 351 communities in the state. The rate fell in 90 — or 25.6 percent — communities and held steady in the remaining 131.
Find out what's happening in Falmouthfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Falmouth's case count over the last 14 days was nine, bringing the total number of cases to 289, according to state data. The town has conducted 2,479 tests over the past two weeks, nine of which came back positive. There have been 18,140 tests conducted overall in Falmouth.
The town's percent positive rate over the last two weeks rose to .36 percent. Health officials say positive test results need to stay below 5 percent for two weeks or longer and, preferably, be closer to 2 percent, for states to safely ease restrictions.
View the state's interactive COVID-19 map.
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