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Day-to-day figures on SF coronavirus cases: Validated cases up 1.8 percent and deaths remain at 36

Byindianadmin

May 18, 2020
Day-to-day figures on SF coronavirus cases: Validated cases up 1.8 percent and deaths remain at 36

The San Francisco Department of Public Health provides updates daily at 9 a.m. We will do the same.

The current count shows 37 new validated cases and no new deaths.

In the previous 2 weeks, we have actually balanced 35 brand-new cases a day and a total of seven deaths. Public health authorities wish to see brand-new cases drop to no more than 6.3 cases a day for 14 consecutive d ays and no new deaths for the same period.

The city also reported a 51- day low of 52 COVID-positive hospitalizations consisting of 21 clients in the ICU. This is the most affordable variety of COVID-19 verified hospitalizations given that March 27 when there were also 52 patients throughout San Francisco.

Those are great numbers and it is clear the city will go ahead with the partial re-opening that starts on Monday.

For those wishing to track the metrics that the city is using to inform its re-opening choices, Dr. Grant Colfax, the director of the Department of Public Health, showed this slide to the supervisors on Tuesday.

Source: SF Department of Health.

The better metrics cause Mayor London Type’s Tuesday statement that 95 percent of all companies in the city will be enabled to reopen tomorrow, May 18, for curbside pickup and shipment. This includes most retail businesses with street gain access to.

But specialists alert that “we might be taking a greater risk than we should be taking” with the soon reopening of the San Francisco Bay Location

Although screening rates have improved, they are still far listed below the city’s total capability of 5,800 citizens a day.

    Source: SF Department of Public Health.

Dr. Cofax and San Francisco Health Officer Dr. Tomas Aragón resolved this issu e on Tuesday, assuring “universal gain access to” at some time in the future.

At present, the Department of Public Health has the capability to run 2,100 tests through its labs with an overall public/private capability to run 5,800 evaluates a day.

The city’s objective is 2 tests per 1,000 citizens. “We’re plainly above that number,” said Aragón stated on Tuesday.

He called pharmacies being able to evaluate a “game-changer,” that will permit food handlers, for example, to get tested quickly and on a regular basis. Simply when that will begin is uncertain.

As the city re-opens, Dr. George Rutherford, a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at UCSF, said at UCSF’s town hall on Tuesday tha t “masks are going to become more and more and more crucial” in avoiding the spread of the infection.

Making them compulsory–

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