Whatcom 27 new confirmed cases of COVID-19, state says Saturday
Whatcom County saw 27 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 reported on the Washington State Department of Health’s coronavirus dashboard on Saturday, March 6. The state does not release deaths on weekends.
Overall, Whatcom County has seen 6,798 confirmed cases and 85 related deaths during the pandemic, according to state data as of 11:59 p.m. Friday, March 5. An additional 155 probable cases — an increase of one from Friday’s report — have been reported in Whatcom County during the pandemic, resulting from positive antigen tests not confirmed by a molecular test.
That means that 1.2% of Whatcom’s 6,953 total cases (confirmed and probable cases combined) have resulted in death — better than the statewide 1.5% average of total cases.
The 27 new confirmed cases reported Saturday mean Whatcom County has had 3,326 cases — or 48.9% of its pandemic total — reported during the first 65 days of 2021 (an average of 51.1 cases per day). The county’s daily average of newly reported cases the past seven days increased to 31.1 per day.
The state Department of Health data Saturday showed Whatcom County has had 317 hospitalizations during the pandemic, which is no change from Friday’s report.
The state also reported that a total of 184,894 molecular tests have been administered in Whatcom County during the pandemic — an increase of 754 tests from Friday’s report — meaning 3.67% of all reported tests in the county during the pandemic have come back positive. The state cautioned that negative test results from Nov. 21-30 remain incomplete.
St. Joseph hospital in Bellingham, which is licensed and staffed for 241 beds, reported to The Herald on Saturday morning it was treating five patients for COVID-19, a decrease of one from Friday’s report.
Whatcom vaccination update
Friday’s vaccination report said that as of 11:59 p.m. Wednesday, March 3, Whatcom County had administered 41,500 37,753 vaccinations — an increase of 3,747 vaccinations (up 9.92%) from Wednesday’s report. Vaccination data is released Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
The state estimates that 15.67% of the county (or 35,257 residents) has received its first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 7.85% of the county (or 17,662 residents) is fully vaccinated. The number of vaccines given and people vaccinated may not match, according to the dashboard, because people may be vaccinated in counties other than where they live.
Whatcom’s risk assessment
The state’s Risk Assessment Dashboard was last updated Friday evening for data as of 11:59 p.m. Thursday. With a shift to “Healthy Washington” goals to resume business activities, the state is more specific on reporting dates for some metrics. The dashboard does not update on the weekends.
Whatcom County was missing the marks on two key metrics:
▪ Whatcom is missing the target rate of fewer than 25 new cases per 100,000 residents Feb. 10-23 with a rate of 240.69 — a decrease from 241.9 reported Thursday.
▪ Whatcom had an average COVID-19 molecular testing rate per 100,000 people Feb. 9-15 of 276.1. No goal was stated for this metric, however, the overall statewide number was 208.8, and Whatcom’s average was a decrease from the 298.6 reported Thursday.
▪ Whatcom is missing the target of less than 2.0% of individuals testing positive for COVID-19 Feb. 9-15 with a rate of 4.4% — no change from Thursday.
The latest Healthcare System Readiness risk assessment dashboard, updated Friday evening for data through Thursday, shows for the North region, which combines Whatcom, Skagit, Snohomish, San Juan and Island counties:
▪ Occupied beds: 1,048 of the region’s 1,257 adult hospital beds (83.4%) were occupied, missing the state’s goal of 80% or less but a decrease of 10 occupied beds from data Thursday.
▪ COVID occupied beds: 37 of the region’s 1,257 adult hospital beds (2.9%) were occupied by COVID patients, making the state’s goal of 10% or less but an increase of three occupied bed from data Thursday.
▪ Occupied ICU beds: 91 of the region’s 137 adult ICU beds (66.4%) were occupied. The state does not have a goal for this metric, but it’s an increase of 10 beds in use from data Thursday.
▪ COVID occupied ICU beds: 13 of the region’s 137 adult ICU beds (9.5%) were occupied by COVID patients. The state does not have a goal for this metric, but it was a decrease of one occupied bed from data Thursday.
Numbers elsewhere
New coronavirus cases and deaths according to Johns Hopkins University Saturday evening:
▪ The U.S. has more than 28.94 million reported cases, the most of any nation, and more than 524,175 deaths.
▪ Worldwide, there are more than 116.4 million reported cases and 2.58 million deaths.
Washington state reported these numbers from the Department of Health Saturday evening:
▪ 325,053 confirmed cases, an increase of 584 from reported cases on Friday.
▪ 19,479 probable cases, an increase of 80 from Friday’s data.
▪ 19,599 coronavirus-related hospitalizations, an increase of 43 from data Friday.
▪ 5,369,716 total molecular tests, an increase of 24,040 from Friday’s data.
▪ 5,041 deaths related to COVID-19 were reported. That means 1.5% of all Washington residents who have tested positive for coronavirus have died.
According to the state’s latest vaccination report, which is updated Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays:
▪ 1,865,640 vaccinations had been given as of Wednesday, according to the report, an increase of 104,971 from the previous report.
▪ The state has averaged administering 45,221 doses of vaccines the past seven days — over the Department of Health’s stated daily goal of 45,000, and an increase from the average 43,765 reported Wednesday.
▪ The state estimated Friday that 15.68% of the state’s residents have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 8.97% percent of residents are fully vaccinated.
▪ 2,227,970 doses have been delivered to Washington state providers (an increase of 119,520 from Wednesday’s report) and 186,030 doses have been delivered for the CDC’s long-term care program (an increase of 5,850 from Wednesday’s report).
▪ Of the 2,414,000 doses delivered, 77.28% have been given, according to Friday’s report.
Washington state actions
In the “Healthy Washington” plan introduced by Gov. Jay Inslee Jan. 5, business resumption is tied to targets by health system regions.
All regions began in Phase 1 on Jan. 11, and the North region, which includes Whatcom, Island, San Juan and Skagit counties moved to Phase 2 Feb. 14, along with the East, North Central, Northwest and Southwest regions. On Feb. 26, Inslee said the state would stay in Phase 2, with no areas slipping back to Phase 1. But new metrics for Phase 3 and what activities will be allowed in that phase have not yet been released by Inslee.
Phase 2 allows for live entertainment with ticketed groups of up to 10 people and very limited fitness activities such as appointment-based training in gyms.
Phase 2 also allows restaurants and indoor fitness centers to open indoors at 25% capacity and allows for sports competitions to resume with limited spectators, and wedding, and funeral ceremonies can increase capacities.