Health & Fitness
CT Coronavirus Red Zones, Hospitalizations, Infection Rates Climb
The current red zone map "looks a little like the chart we did in the spring," Gov. Ned Lamont said Thursday.

CONNECTICUT — The number of communities falling within the state's red alert level for coronavirus infections rose by 16 towns this week, one week into a new reopening phase that has seen capacity limits for nearly all businesses lifted.
"We're not out of this yet," Gov. Ned Lamont said during a news conference Thursday.
The coronavirus positivity rate in the state has climbed from a 2.2 percent 7-day average three weeks ago to 3.7 percent in the numbers released Thursday. The uptick is not confined to Connecticut, as New York, New Jersey and Rhode Island are all reporting elevated infection rates.
Find out what's happening in Wiltonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"The greater Northeast in general is, I am afraid, leading the country in infections," Lamont said.
Aggravating efforts to contain the virus are new variants which have made their way into the state. About 40 percent of Connecticut's confirmed coronavirus cases are now caused by the U.K. variant of the virus, which spreads more easily.
Find out what's happening in Wiltonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The current red zone map "looks a little like the chart we did in the spring," Lamont said, with the highest levels of infection in the southwestern portion, nearest to New York.
Towns fall into the red zone when average daily cases exceed 15 per 100,000 population over a two-week average. There are now 131 of 169 towns still in the red zone.
The color codes correspond to guidance from the state Department of Public Health about various activities.
Orange (10-14): Avon, Barkhamsted, Bloomfield, Colchester, East Hampton, Ellington, Hebron, Lebanon, Lisbon, Mansfield, Middlefield, Norwich, Portland, Salisbury, South Windsor, Stonington, Thompson, Tolland, Vernon and Voluntown
Yellow (5-9): Essex, Griswold, Pomfret, Somers and Willington
Gray (less than five): Ashford, Canaan, Chaplin, Cornwall, Eastford, Franklin, Hampton, Lyme, Norfolk, North Canaan, Scotland, Sharon and Sprague
The number of residents hospitalized for COVID-19 went up 22 beds overnight, to 434. Lamont reiterated Thursday that this was the metric he considered most crucial.
Another 1,489 cases were confirmed, bringing the state total to 303,511. The death toll from the virus in Connecticut is now 7,862, following 10 more reported Thursday.
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The number of Connecticut students infected with the coronavirus rose 89 cases in the past week, to 756, an 13 percent increase. The number of infections among school district staff fell 33 cases, to 143, a 19 percent drop.
An additional 56 schools have ramped up to full in-person learning last week — a 34 percent improvement.
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