Coronavirus

3 new cases of COVID-19 gives Thurston County 123

Thurston County finished the week of May 4 with 11 new confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus, including two on Saturday and three more on Sunday, public health officials announced.

The 11 cases were one less than the 12 reported last week, but were higher than the eight cases reported the week of April 20, according to Thurston County Public Health and Social Services.

County health officials likely are watching that weekly number closely now that better weather is here, which has enticed people to get outdoors. Gov. Jay Inslee also recently announced a reopening of the economy in phases.

The county is still reporting only one death.

The five new cases were a man in his 50s, two women in their 40s, a woman in her 20s and a girl, who falls into the age range of 0-9. The county has not been releasing specific ages.

Of the 123 cases, 113 are considered to be recovered or are recovering. Combined with the one death, the county has nine active cases.

Also in the region

▪ Pierce County now has 1,688 cases and 60 deaths as of Sunday. Two Tacoma women in their 80s were the latest deaths. Both had underlying health problems, according to public health officials.

▪ Lewis County has 30 cases and three deaths.

▪ Mason County has 28 cases and one death.

▪ Grays Harbor County has 13 cases.

Around the state, nation and world

Washington state is home to 16,000 cases and 921 deaths, according to the state Department of Health.

The. U.S. is home to 1.3 million cases and nearly 80,000 deaths, according to data being tracked by Johns Hopkins University. More than 26,000 have died in New York state.

Globally, the respiratory virus has afflicted 4 million and killed 282,000.

This story was originally published May 10, 2020 at 3:50 PM.

Follow More of Our Reporting on Full coverage of coronavirus in Washington

Rolf Boone
The Olympian
Rolf has worked at The Olympian since August 2005. He covers breaking news, the city of Lacey and business for the paper. Rolf graduated from The Evergreen State College in 1990. Support my work with a digital subscription
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