Virginia COVID-19 cases rise by 1,615 in a day
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As of Tuesday, May 26, Virginia has had 39,342 total cases of COVID-19, including confirmed lab tests and clinical diagnoses, according to the Virginia Department of Health.
That's a rise of 1,615 cases since Monday, alongside 8,691 newly reported tests, which comes out to 18.6% of the newest tests coming back positive – a higher proportion than the current total state average and than the daily averages of the past several days.
The governor and state officials have said all decisions about moving into each phase of reopening, or increasing restrictions in the case of potential spikes, are based on 7-day and 14-day trends in the data – so a one-day spike like the one we saw last Thursday can be absorbed into days of lower numbers.
Most parts of Virginia (excluding
and
) entered Phase 1 of the 'Forward Virginia' plan for reopening on May 15, allowing restaurants to open up outdoor seating at 50% capacity, personal grooming services to open up with many safety restrictions in place, houses of worship to operate at 50% capacity, and more business changes outlined in detail
.
Governor Ralph Northam has suggested that he'll have an announcement regarding timing for Phase 2 on Tuesday, the day after Memorial Day.
Over the past week, there were 763 new cases (at a 7.5% positivity rate) reported from Tuesday, May 19, to Wednesday, May 20, 1,229 (at an 18.2% positivity rate) from Wednesday to Thursday, 813 (at a 10.2% positivity rate) from Thursday to Friday, 799 new cases from Friday to Saturday, 495 from Saturday to Sunday, and then 1,483 (at an 8.6% positivity rate) from Sunday to Monday.
Both the case number and the test numbers were surprisingly high from Sunday to Monday, though fewer of the most recently reported tests came back positive, but it wasn't due to a sudden spike in tests reported—it was due to a technical change in the Virginia Department of Health's system.
According to the health department, they performed maintenance on their disease reporting system on Sunday, which contributed to Sunday's surprisingly low numbers. Once the technical maintenance was complete, when the system updated on Monday, all COVID-19 data that was reported during the maintenance time was added to Monday's numbers as well.
Keep in mind that most tests still take two or three days to process, so the test results reported each day generally reflect what the situation looked like a few days before. According to the Virginia Department of Health, the day on which the highest number of tests were conducted was Friday, May 22, with 13,452 tests.
So far in May, on an overall "trend" level, total cases have been increasing anywhere from 500 to 1,000 cases a day, but testing has significantly increased, so the moving 7-day average, which tracks the number of cases confirmed as a ratio of the amount of testing, has been heading down.
That 7-day average is key to any future reopening plans from the governor's office.
Virginia has been meeting the governor's benchmark of steady PPE supplies and open hospital capacity for around three weeks now, with 4,508 hospital beds available and no Virginia hospitals reporting any supply problems – although
are reporting PPE supply problems. The governor has said in recent press conferences that those facilities need to reach out to the Virginia Department of Emergency Management to request more supplies from the state's stockpile.
The commonwealth increased from around 2,000 tests a day in late April to the 5,000 range in the start of May, and now has been steadily hitting anywhere from 7,000 to 10,000. Dr. Karen Remley, head of Virginia's testing task force, has said the goal for
is around 10,000 tests a day. So far, that has not been consistently met.
As testing increases, the rate of tested Virginians who received positive results has been slowly but surely dropping.
By May 26, the Virginia Department of Health had received reports of 37,440 confirmed and 1,902 probable cases of COVID-19 across the commonwealth.
"Probable" cases are cases that were diagnosed by a doctor based on symptoms and exposure without a test – also known as clinical diagnoses.
Those positive test results are out of 298,270 total tests administered in Virginia, which included 265,279 PCR tests and 32,991 antibody tests (The Dept. of Health announced last Thursday that
, following criticism for initially reporting the two together.)
Last week, there were 10,208 tests reported from Tuesday to Wednesday, 6,758 test results reported from Wednesday to Thursday, and 7,983 new test results from Thursday to Friday. From Sunday to Monday, 17,246 new test results were reported – though, as noted near the top of this article, Monday's numbers included data from Sunday that was missed due to technical maintenance on the VDH system. Now, from Monday to Tuesday, 8,366 new PCR tests were reported and 325 new antibody tests.
As Virginia's testing capacity has ramped up, with more community testing offered by local health districts, state health officials say the goal is to get tests to the areas in most need of them, with at-risk communities identified by the state health department. Testing events sponsored by health districts are not turning anyone away, however.
Overall, considering testing numbers and positive results, about 13.2% of Virginians who have been tested have received positive results. At the start of May, that percentage was standing steadily around 17%, but with increased testing, it's come down over time. However, some localities have much higher percentages, as outlined in our "local cases" section below.
At this point, 4,325 Virginians have been hospitalized due to the disease caused by the virus, and at least 1,236 have died of causes related to the disease.
The hospitalization and death numbers are totals confirmed by the Virginia Department of Health, which are always delayed by several days due to the logistics of medical facilities reporting information to local health districts, which then report it to the state health department.
The hospitalization numbers are cumulative — they represent the total number of people hospitalized due to the disease throughout the pandemic and not the total number currently in the hospital. For current hospitalization stats,
.
The
shows a lot of detail by locality, including hospitalizations and deaths for each city or county, and are
, if you want to track cases on a neighborhood level.
Overall, according to the Virginia Department of Health's May 26 breakdown, 298,270 tests have been run for the virus in Virginia, with 39,342 positive results.
The department's breakdown and location map, available to the public
, shows the number of cases confirmed each day, number of people tested, total hospitalizations, total deaths, demographic breakdowns, and testing numbers, as well as breakdowns by health district.
Here's a breakdown of cases for our region as of 9 a.m. on May 26. You can find the breakdown for the entire state in the chart at the bottom of this article.
• Augusta County - 100
• Buena Vista - 13
• Harrisonburg - 742
• Highland County - 3
• Lexington - 6
• Rockbridge County - 17
• Rockingham County - 478
• Staunton - 36
• Waynesboro - 41
13, with 4 in long-term care facilities, 1 in a healthcare setting, 6 in congregate settings, 1 in a correctional facility, and 1 in an educational setting
6,800
21.1%
• Clarke County - 22
• Frederick County - 272
• Page County - 199
• Shenandoah County - 378
• Warren County - 117
• Winchester - 147
16, with 7 in long-term care facilities, 3 in healthcare settings, 5 in congregate settings, and 1 in a correctional facility
3,408
33.3%
• Albemarle County - 161
• Charlottesville - 90
• Fluvanna County - 87
• Greene County - 25
• Louisa County - 73
• Nelson County - 15
7, with 4 in long-term care facilities, 1 in a correctional facility, and 2 in congregate settings
8,260
5.5%
• Culpeper County - 638
• Fauquier County - 300
• Madison County - 37
• Orange County - 86
• Rappahannock County - 13
6, with 1 in a long-term care facility, 1 in a healthcare setting, and 4 in congregate settings
6,294
17.1%
As numbers have climbed in parts of the Shenandoah Valley, much of the increase has been attributable to outbreaks within particular facilities. By May 25, the Central Shenandoah Health District had identified 13 outbreaks and the Lord Fairfax Health District had 16.
Health department officials have not specified the majority of the locations of our outbreaks, because the Virginia Department of Health has interpreted Virginia code as treating facilities the same as "persons," meaning their anonymity has to be protected. So information about outbreaks is only released to the public if a facility grants permission for that to be released, and that has not been often.
Of the outbreaks in our area, several have been confirmed at long-term care centers, including at
;
" target="_blank">Skyview Springs, where there have been 16 confirmed deaths
;
, where Augusta Health has confirmed a "COVID situation" but no exact numbers have been provided; and three outbreaks in Shenandoah County, including one at an unnamed nursing home and two at unnamed assisted living facilities.
The largest of those outbreaks was the one at
, where 81 residents and 12 staff members tested positive for COVID-19 in April. By Tuesday, May 5, the facility
due to coronavirus. By a little later in May,
.
In Page County, the outbreak at
resulted in 59 residents and 23 staff members testing positive for the virus. By May 13,
" target="_blank">16 people there had died of COVID-19-related causes
.
The facility has 115 residents total.
Dr. Colin Greene, with the Lord Fairfax Health District, told WHSV on May 11 that the Skyview Springs outbreak was the only major outbreak in the Page County area.
However, he said they were monitoring five active outbreaks in Shenandoah County. Due to Virginia code preventing the identification of facilities with outbreaks, he could not identify the exact locations, but said two were at businesses, two at assisted living facilities, and one at a nursing home.
Outbreaks have also been confirmed at
,
, with at least 25 positive cases, and
, which had at least six cases by the end of April but then stopped providing updates on their employee hotline so that media outlets would not have access to the information, which was not publicly provided.
Also, New Market Poultry Products, which has more than 100 employees working on a daily basis,
– though an exact number was not provided and no update has come since then.
None of the other Shenandoah Valley poultry plants have released any information about COVID-19 cases to the public, though
and Cargill in Dayton has confirmed the death of one employee due to COVID-19 – though never any information on the number of cases at the facility.
Poultry plants and other meat processing facilities have been hotspots for the virus across the country and a focus of Gov. Northam's in Virginia. State health commissioner Dr. Norm Oliver has also referenced the situation at poultry plants in Harrisonburg leading to a disproportionate number of cases among the Latino community in the Shenandoah Valley, though, again the facilities themselves have released no information publicly.
Many of the local outbreaks that do not have confirmed locations have been identified in congregate settings, which could include workplaces, apartment complexes, churches, gyms, or any setting with a group of people in one place.
Of the state's 4,325 total hospitalizations, at least 114 have been in the Central Shenandoah Health District. Of those, 2 have been in Augusta County, 1 in Buena Vista, 53 in Harrisonburg, 51 in Rockingham County, 5 in Staunton, and 2 in Waynesboro.
In the Lord Fairfax Health District, there have been at least 104 hospitalizations. Thirty-six of those have been in Shenandoah County and 23 in Page County.
As far as deaths, there have been 17 reported in Shenandoah County, 21 in Page County, one in Augusta County, 21 in Harrisonburg, and six in Rockingham County.
Deaths, like all health department data, are reported by a person's listed residence.
Dr. Norm Oliver, the state's health commissioner, has said that it often takes several days before local health districts are able to enter death information into the state database. Dr. Laura Kornegay, director of the Central Shenandoah Health District, told WHSV that deaths first have to be reported to them by medical facilities, which is a major cause for delays that have often been seen on the numbers reported for our area.
Dr. Kornegay also explained that if someone has tested positive for COVID-19, that's what goes on their death certificate. Those death certificates have a space to list secondary causes of death, and that's where ongoing health issues like heart disease and cancer are listed. Some people have accused medical facilities of artificially inflating death tolls by doing that, but it's the same process by which flu deaths are reported every year.
In the part of West Virginia we cover, there have been 11 confirmed cases in Grant County, 37 confirmed cases in Hardy County, and 9 confirmed cases in Pendleton County.
Wondering about the number of people who have recovered from COVID-19 in Virginia? Recovery information is not required to be sent to the Department of Health, so there is no accurate way to track that data for every single confirmed case. Individual health districts may track cases as "active" and "non-active," but that data is not published anywhere in aggregate.
But there is a way to track the number of patients who were hospitalized due to COVID-19 and have since been discharged – effectively tracking how many people have recovered from the most severe cases.
The Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association updates their own dashboard of data each day on hospital-specific statistics, including bed availability, ventilator usage, and more. Their
indicates that, as of May 26, at least 5,227 COVID-19 patients have been discharged from the hospital.
Unlike the VDH data that reports cumulative hospitalizations, their data on hospitalizations reflects people currently hospitalized for COVID-19 (whether with confirmed or pending cases), and that number is at 1,403.
The data used by the VDH to report
hospitalizations is based on information reported in hospital claims. On the other hand, the numbers reported by the Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association are based on a current census from hospitals, which provides a separate data set.
The
is updating with the latest statewide numbers somewhere between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. each day. In recent days, that has steadily creeped closer to 10 a.m.
The numbers that appear on that list are based on the cases that had been submitted to the department by 5 p.m. the previous day, so there is always some lag between when local health districts announce positive test results and when the department's numbers reflect those new results.
Our Virginia counties are primarily served by the Central Shenandoah Health District, which covers Augusta, Bath, Highland, Rockbridge and Rockingham counties, as well as the cities of Buena Vista, Harrisonburg, Lexington, Staunton and Waynesboro; and the Lord Fairfax Health District, which covers Shenandoah, Page, Frederick, Warren, and Clarke counties, as well as the city of Winchester.
Most of Virginia officially entered
on May 15, but the commonwealth remains under a series of public health orders and executive orders designed to slow the spread of COVID-19.
, which closed many non-essential businesses across Virginia and established Virginia's 10-person gathering limit, no longer applies in its original form as businesses originally deemed non-essential begin gradually reopening, but the 10-person gathering limit is still in place and still enforceable.
, the 'Stay at Home' order signed by Northam on March 30, is now a 'Safer at Home' order, instructing all Virginians to continue staying home as the safest way to prevent COVID-19's spread and specifically telling Virginians vulnerable to the virus to stay home except for essential needs.
Virginia's state of emergency runs until June 10.
The Virginia Supreme Court's judicial emergency, which suspended all non-essential, non-emergency court hearings, expired on May 17 and
on Monday, May 18. In light of that, with some eviction cases resuming, Gov. Northam's office
while still with income affected by COVID-19.
DMV offices in Virginia began gradually reopening on Monday, May 18, and will soon
by appointment only for specific reasons. During the closure, Virginia State Police have not been enforcing inspections and extensions have been granted to people with expiring credentials for themselves or their vehicles.
Elective procedures and related offices, like dentists, were able to resume on May 1 after Gov. Northam
.
Of the orders in place, Executive Order 53 is enforceable by law, so someone who hosts a gathering of more than 10 people can be charged with a Class 1 misdemeanor. You can learn more about what police enforcement of Northam's executive orders looks like
.
Virginia's
and the
have each been postponed by two weeks. Virginia officials are encouraging all voters to request absentee ballots.
Most people don't suffer much from COVID-19, but it can cause severe illness in the elderly and people with existing health problems.
It spreads primarily through respiratory droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneezes. Those droplets may land on objects and surfaces. Other people may contract the virus by touching those objects or surfaces and then touching their eyes, nose, or mouth.
The coronavirus that causes COVID-19 can cause mild to more severe respiratory illness. In a small proportion of patients, COVID-19 can cause death, particularly among those who are older or who have chronic medical conditions. Symptoms include fever, cough, and difficulty breathing. Symptoms appear within 14 days of being exposed to an infectious person.
To lower the risk of respiratory germ spread, including COVID-19, the Virginia Department of Health encourages the following effective behaviors:
• Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. Use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer only if soap and water are not available.
• Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth.
• Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue or your sleeve (not your hands) when coughing or sneezing.
• Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces.
• Stay home when you are sick.
• Avoid contact with sick people.
• Avoid non-essential travel.
There is currently no vaccine to prevent or antiviral medication to treat COVID-19. The best way to avoid illness is preventing exposure, which is why governments around the world have implemented Stay at Home orders.
For the latest factual information on COVID-19, you're encouraged to check both the
and the
.