WILD 102 Radio is Roseau Minnesota's Good. Local. Radio

Today’s Covid-19 Update for Thursday, October 15 2020

10/15/2020

Roseau County has 175 Positive Cases; with 7 new cases reported today; 22  ACTIVE Cases; 153 having recovered (out of isolation).

The World Health Organization says that a 14-day positive test rate of below 5 percent is the key to keeping businesses open.

The latest figures from the Minnesota Department of Health show a further 19 people have died from COVID-19 and 1,100 more people have tested positive.

Among the latest deaths is a resident in Anoka County who is aged between 30-34. Eleven of the latest deaths have occurred in long-term care facilities.

Under changes to data reporting introduced on Wednesday, MDH now includes “probable” deaths from COVID-19 in its total figure. This describes someone who has died from COVID-19 after testing positive via a rapid antigen COVID test, which is less accurate than the more common PCR test.

The latest figures show 19 total deaths, of which one is classed as a “probable” death as it was from a patient who was positive using the antigen test.

That brings Minnesota’s death toll to 2,199, of which 1,546 have occurred in long-term care settings.

To make matters more confusing, what was previously classed as a “probable” COVID-19 death – when a doctor is confident that their patient’s death was a result of the virus but they weren’t tested before they died – is now known as “non-laboratory confirmed” deaths. These deaths, of which there have been 53, are not included in Minnesota’s total death toll.

Nonetheless, the rate of deaths appears to be rising in Minnesota, with the 29 deaths reported Wednesday and the 19 on Thursday the highest numbers Minnesota has seen since June.

There were 1,169 positive tests reported on Thursday, of which six were removed for a total of 1,163 cases. Of these, 61 are considered “probable” cases as they used the antigen test.

These positive tests come after 10,045 people were tested, a positivity rate of 11.57%.

The positive test rate is lower when the number of individuals producing positive tests (1,174) is divided by total completed tests (20,559), giving a positivity rate of 5.71%.

Statewide:

  • Total tests: 2,403,811 (up from 2,383,527)
  • People tested: 1,623,276 (up from 1,613,231)
  • Positive cases: 117,106 (up from 115,943)
  • Deaths: 2,199, seven of which are “probable” (up from 2,180)
  • Patients no longer requiring isolation: 104,547 (up from 103,830)

Updated daily at 11 a.m., with data current as of 4 p.m. the previous day.

Last modified: 10/15/2020

Comments are closed.