Health & Fitness

Anne Arundel Slows Coronavirus Infections, Starts To Limit Spread

Anne Arundel's coronavirus situation is slowly improving. The county has cut its new infections in half since mid-January.

The Anne Arundel County Department of Health reported that coronavirus-related hospitalizations fell last week.
The Anne Arundel County Department of Health reported that coronavirus-related hospitalizations fell last week. (Jacob Baumgart/Patch)

ANNE ARUNDEL, COUNTY, MD — Every coronavirus metric is pointing in the right direction in Anne Arundel County. Hospitalizations plunged last week, giving medical facilities some breathing room.

The positivity rate is at its lowest clip since November. Sunday saw the fewest new cases in a single day since Black Friday. The only downside is that the county has one of the slowest vaccine rollouts in the state.

Still, Anne Arundel County tallied more than 1,000 coronavirus infections for the 12th straight week. The county is reporting about twice times as many cases-per-day as its summertime high.

Find out what's happening in Annapolisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Last week's 1,280 infections are down 310 from the week prior. The virus also killed 25 county residents for the second straight week, the Maryland Department of Health said. Here's a look at where all the numbers stand in Anne Arundel County.

Vaccine Update

  • Currently: 6.76 percent
  • Trend: Up by 1.87 percentage points

The state tallies the number of Marylanders who have gotten the immunization on this website. So far, 39,125 Anne Arundel County residents have gotten their first shot. That's up 10,801 from last week, and it's 6.76 percent of the population.

Find out what's happening in Annapolisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Anne Arundel County continues to have the fourth lowest immunization rate in the state. Talbot County leads the way with 12.63 percent vaccination.

The second dose has reached 8,063 locals. That's 4,983 more than a week ago, and it's 1.39 percent of all county residents.

The vaccine rollout has five phases: 1A, 1B, 1C, 2 and 3. The following residents were part of stage 1A. Though Maryland has already opened the door to more locals, these people can still get the inoculation:

  • Health care workers
  • Public health employees
  • Residents and staff of nursing homes
  • First responders
  • Judiciary employees
  • Corrections staffers

The state entered phase 1B of vaccination on Jan. 18. That enabled these Marylanders to get the inoculation:

  • Anybody age 75 and older
  • Residents of congregate living facilities
  • School staff
  • Those needed for continuity of government
  • Child-care providers

Maryland began stage 1C on Jan. 25. Residents age 65 to 74 will be eligible in this period, as will essential workers in lab services, agriculture, manufacturing and the postal service. Anne Arundel County, however, will remain in phase 1B.

"Due to limited vaccine supplies, we are first scheduling appointments for Phase 1A & those age 75+," the Anne Arundel County Department of Health said in an email.

For more information on Anne Arundel County's plan, click here. To see when you'll be eligible for the inoculation, read Patch's explainer. Check out our how-to guide to learn how to sign up for the shot.

Coronavirus Case Rate:

  • Currently: 31.57
  • Trend: Down by 7.64

Health officials focus on several metrics to evaluate the coronavirus pandemic. The most frequently-used are the case rate, hospitalizations and percent positivity.

The case rate is a per-capita measure that makes it easy to compare places with different populations. A jurisdiction's case rate is the average number of new coronavirus infections-per-day that it registers over a rolling week per 100,000 people.

As a barometer, Maryland health officials said it is probably safe to return to fully in-person classes when the local case rate dips below 5. Anne Arundel County's case rate is still above this mark, but it has fallen to 31.57.

That's down by 7.64 from this time last week, and it's the lowest since Dec. 3, 2020. The case rate has plummeted since Jan. 12, when the county set a record high of 64.99.

Anne Arundel's case rate hit previous peaks of 13.4 on June 3, 2020 and 14.26 on Aug. 2, 2020. It reached an all-time low of 3.53 on June 26, 2020.

Hospitalizations

  • Currently: 104
  • Trend: Down by 37

Coronavirus-related hospitalizations are starting to fall, but they are still above their summertime lows. The disease left 104 Anne Arundel County residents hospitalized on Sunday. That's down 37 from the week prior, and it's the lowest since Nov. 25, 2020.

Anne Arundel is easing down from its Jan. 8 peak of 168 hospitalizations, which were the second-most ever. The record high of 172 came on April 21, 2020. Hospitalizations hit an overall low of 21 on Sept. 21, 2020.

ICU Hospitalizations

  • Currently: 25
  • Trend: Down by 9

Covid ActNow, a coronavirus statistics website, estimates that Anne Arundel County has 50 beds in the intensive care unit. Hospitals need to save some of these beds for emergencies that aren't related to coronavirus.

On Sunday, Anne Arundel had 25 patients in the ICU with the virus. That's down by nine from this time last week, and it's the lowest since Nov. 25, 2020. That's a significant drop from the 43 ICU hospitalizations registered on Jan. 14, which were the most since May 13, 2020.

ICU usage maxed out at 49 on May 13, 2020. It receded to 4 by Aug. 24, 2020.

Positivity Rate

  • Currently: 6.08 percent
  • Trend: Down by 1.63 percentage points

The county's positivity rate is also continuing its downward trend. This is the percentage of coronavirus tests that come back positive over a moving seven days.

The statistic also measures whether an area has enough tests to identify most of its infections. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said a positivity rate of less than 5 percent demonstrates that a region has enough testing to control its outbreak.

Anne Arundel County's positivity rate dropped to 6.08 percent on Sunday, which is down by 1.63 percentage points from this time last week. The positivity rate hasn't been this low since Nov. 30, 2020.

The rate has been on a steady decline since Jan. 3. That's when the positivity rate peaked at 10.4 percent, which was the highest since May 30, 2020. The positivity rate is down from its April 16, 2020 high of 28.16 percent, but it's still up from its Aug. 16, 2020 low of 2.29 percent.

Total Cases And Deaths

Anne Arundel County's 33,044 coronavirus infections are the fifth most in the state. The virus is blamed for the death of 458 county residents.


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