Health & Fitness
Why Stoughton Is No Longer 'High-Risk' For Coronavirus
The state Department of Public Health has revised its reporting system for COVID-19 risk in towns and cities across the state.
STOUGHTON, MA — On Friday afternoon, state officials reported 49 new coronavirus cases in Stoughton over the last two weeks, bringing the total number of cases since the start of the pandemic to 753.
Just a few hours later, the state Department of Public Health released its weekly report on coronavirus risk in towns and cities across the state. Stoughton had been in that report shaded red as a "high-risk" community for virus spread since Oct. 29.
But on Friday, Stoughton was downgraded to the less urgent "yellow" status. Coronavirus cases haven't suddenly dropped. DPH has changed how it rates communities for risk.
Find out what's happening in Stoughtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Now, a town of Stoughton's size — about 29,000 people — would need to have more than 10 cases per day per 100,000 people over a two-week period and a positive test rate above 5 percent to be considered a red high-risk community.
As of Friday, Stoughton was seeing about 12.6 new cases per day per 100,000 people over a two-week period. The positive test rate was at 2.55 percent. Here's a look at DPH's new classification system:
Find out what's happening in Stoughtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
MA DPH Coronavirus by Neal McNamara on Scribd
There are now only 16 towns and cities in Massachusetts in the red category. The closest to Stoughton is Brockton, which was seeing 24.1 new cases per day per 100,000 residents over a two-week period and had a positive test rate of 4.35 percent. The statewide positive test rate is 1.84 percent.
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