Coronavirus in Reg Reagan: Brown 66 new cases, 22 new deaths due to slight reduction in Brown’s business controls



Oregon was hit with a new 6 cases of coronavirus and 22 deaths on Tuesday, the governor said. Kate Brown said some businesses in the severely affected counties may now allow a limited number of customers following an earlier closure order.

In small changes, indoor buildings such as museums, gyms and movie theaters with more than 500 square feet of space will be allowed to accommodate up to six people at a time, above zero. The new restrictions do not apply to restaurants.

While Tuesday’s new case numbers surpassed Monday’s figure by hundreds of cases, but Jan. 15 has not broken the low trend seen in Oregon. The average rate of new cases per day is currently 698, compared to 1,309 daily cases in the week of January. .

Here is today’s coronavirus number:

Where new cases are by county: Baker (1), Benton (21), Klakmasmas (100), Klatop (11), Columbia (8), Koos (2), Crook (8), Curry (2), Deschauts (70), Douglas (20), Harney (9), Hood River (8), Jackson (49), Jefferson (1), Josephine (14), Klamath (19), Lake (3), Lane (50), Lincoln (6), Lynn (12) , Malhaur (16), Marion (61), Moro (1), Multonomeh (195), Poke (11), Sherman (1), Tilmuk (2), Umatila (18), Sangh (6), Vallova (1) , Vasco (2), Washington (37) and Yamhill (31).

Mortality: CO Reagan’s 1,883rd death linked to Covid-19 is that of a 74-year-old Clackmas County man who tested positive on Jan. 22 and died on January 25 in Portland VA. He died at the medical center.

The 1,884th death is from an 84-year-old Crook County man who tested positive on Jan. 16 and died at his residence on Jan. 22.

The 1,885th death is a 79-year-old Coos County man who tested positive on Dec. 19 and died Jan. 24 at Bay Area Hospital.

The 1,886th death is an 84-year-old Deschutes County woman who tested positive on Jan. 20 and died Jan. 23 at St Charles Band Hospital.

The 1,887th death is a 96-year-old Douglas County woman who tested positive Jan. Tested 15 and died January 25 at his residence.

The 1,888th death is from an 82-year-old Douglas County man who tested positive in January. 14 and Jan. 23 at Mercy Medical Center.

The 1,889th death is an 82-year-old Hood River County woman who developed everyday symptoms on Jan. 12. After contact with the confirmation case and Jan. He died at his residence on the 22nd.

The 1,890th death is a 64-year-old Jackson County man who tested positive on Jan. 10 and died Jan. 24 at Providence Madford Medical Center.

The 1,891-year-old man, a 72-year-old man from Klamath County, tested positive in January. 15 and Portland V.A. Jan. 23 at the Medical Center.

The 1,892nd death is a 68-year-old Klamath County man who tested positive on Dec. 31, and died Jan. 23 at Sky Lakes Medical Center.

The 1,893-year-old man, a 58-year-old Marion County man, tested positive on Dec. 31 and died at Salem Hospital on Jan. 21.

The 1,894th deceased is a 76-year-old Marion County woman who tested positive on Dec. 8, 8 and died Jan. 21 at Salem Hospital.

The 1,895th deceased is a 70-year-old Multnomah County woman who tested positive on Jan. 4 and died Jan. 7 at her residence.

The 1,896th deceased is an 86-year-old Multnomah County woman who tested positive on Jan. 19 and was found dead at her residence. 25 died.

The 1,897th death is that of a 70-year-old Umatila County man who died December 23. 23 tested positive and died in January at Providence Portland Medical Center. State officials listed the date of death, which included a typo, obscuring the date.

The 1,898th death is the 88-year-old Washington County woman who tested positive on December 9, 9 and died at her residence on January 22.

The 1,899th death is a 40-year-old Washington Washington County woman who tested positive on November 19 and died at her residence on December 29.

The 1,900th death is a 35-year-old Washington County woman who tested positive on Jan. 8 and died Jan. 19 at Legacy Meridian Park Medical Center.

The 1,901st death is a 73-year-old Washington County woman who tested positive on Dec. 28 and died at her residence on Jan. 20.

The 1,902nd death is from an 86-year-old Yamihill County woman who tested positive on Jan. 11.

The 1,903rd death is a 77-year-old Yamihill County woman who tested positive on Jan. 1 and died in January. 18. State officials are determining where she died.

The 1,904th death is a 27-year-old Hood River County woman who died December 22. 22 tested positive and Jan. 23 He died at Oregon University Hospital of Health and Science. There were no conditions under her.

Except as indicated above, each person who died had underlying health conditions or state officials were employed to determine whether that person had underlying medical conditions.

In addition, the Reagan Reform Department announced two deaths Tuesday that are not yet reflected in state numbers:

Ma, a man aged 65 to 75, who was placed in a two-river correctional facility in Umatila County, tested positive for Covid-19 and died Jan. 26 at a local hospital.

A man aged 55 to A, who was placed in a two-river correctional facility in Umatila County, tested positive for Covid-119 and died at a local hospital.

Prevalence of infection: On Tuesday, 1,165 new positive tests were reported out of 23,706 tests conducted in the state, equivalent to a 4.9% positivity rate.

Who is infected: Newly confirmed or assumed infections increased in the following age groups: 0-9 (35); 10-19 (115); 20-29 (137); 30-39 (122); 40-49 (104); 50-59 (93); 60-69 (80); 70-79 (44); 80 and older (37).

Who is in the hospital: The state reported that there were 308 Oregonians with coronavirus infections confirmed in the hospital on Tuesday, 12 less than on Monday. Of those, 70 coronavirus patients were in intensive care units, five fewer than on Monday.

Vaccines: As of Monday, 40,775 Oregonians have been fully vaccinated, and another 222,385 have been partially vaccinated.

Since it started: Oregon has the lowest number of confirmed or suspected infections in the country at 139,355 and reported 1,904 deaths. To date, 3,105,100 lab reports have been received from tests by the state.

– Fedor Zarkhin; [email protected]; 503-294-7674