Health & Fitness
NC Coronavirus: 289 Dead, Nearly 600 New Cases
North Carolina reported 20 new deaths and 571 new cases of novel coronavirus as of Saturday.
NORTH CAROLINA — North Carolina's outbreak of novel coronavirus, which causes COVID-19, has now claimed at least 289 lives, North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services said Saturday morning. The increase is 20 more coronavirus-related deaths reported in the state since Friday.
The cumulative number of known COVID-19 cases in the state jumped by 571 overnight, and is now at 8,623. NC DHHS reported that 456 are hospitalized as of Saturday morning.
The new batch of data released April 25 by state public health officials shows that laboratories in the state have completed at least 105,265 tests.
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The number of outbreaks confirmed in congregate living facilities in the state, such as nursing homes and residential care facilities, continues to rise as deaths reported in these facilities claim nearly half — 49 percent — of the state's death toll.
Find out what's happening in Across North Carolinafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
As of Saturday, at least 2,313 people have tested positive at North Carolina congregate living facilities as COVID-19 outbreaks were reported in 46 nursing homes, 18 residential care facilities and at least 13 correctional facilities, NC DHHS said.
According to NC DHHS, a survey of almost 90 percent of the state's hospitals shows that 656 of the available 2,909 ventilators in North Carolina are in use as of Saturday.
In an attempt to provide as much information to our readers as possible, Patch is publishing a county-by-county breakdown of the coronavirus cases in 93 of North Carolina's 100 counties, along with the number of cases by county and the number of deaths.
North Carolina's statewide stay-at-home order put in place last month to slow the spread of novel coronavirus will be extended until May 8, with the future gradual reopening of the state determined by what happens over the next two weeks, Gov. Roy Cooper said Thursday afternoon.
"After thorough analysis, it's clear that we are flattening the curve but our state is not ready to lift restrictions yet," he said.
North Carolina public schools have been closed since March 16 and are not scheduled to reopen before May 15. Last month, Cooper also ordered all restaurant dining areas and bars to close. By late March, the state was under a stay-at-home executive order through April 29 that limited gatherings to no more than 10 people and encouraged social distancing of at least 6 feet.
The extension of the stay-at-home order applies to dine-in restaurants, as well as close contact businesses, such as hair and nail salons.
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