Home Contra Costa County Contra Costa County Reports 175 Coronavirus Cases, 3 Deaths

Contra Costa County Reports 175 Coronavirus Cases, 3 Deaths

by ECT

On Sunday Contra Costa County is reporting it has 175 confirmed cases of coronavirus (COVID-19). The county also said it has 3 deaths.

As of Sunday, Contra Costa Health has not stated how many tests have been taken, number of pending results nor number of people who have recovered. While Contra Costa Health has released information regarding the first death, no additional details on the second and third deaths have been released.

The health department continues to maintain its stance that it is not going to be releasing the cities of those infected or hospitalized. Supervisor Diane Burgis explained the reasoning behind this in a Podcast (45-min mark) we had on Friday.

The health department does not release any further details, including the cities of those infected, or the number of people currently hospitalized

  • March 29 – 175 cases / 3 deaths
  • March 28 – 168 cases / 2 deaths
  • March 27 – 151 cases / 2 deaths
  • March 26 – 147 cases /1 death
  • March 25 – 108 cases / 1 death
  • March 24 – 86 cases / 1 death
  • March 23 – 71 cases / 1 death
  • March 19 – 42 cases
  • March 18 – 41 cases
  • March 8 – 9 cases
  • March 3 – First confirmed case in the county

Contra Costa Cases are as of 3/29/2020 at 1:00 p.m.

CALIFORNIA DEPT. OF HEALTH: COVID-19 By the Numbers

As of March 27, 2020, 2 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, there are a total of 4,643 positive cases and 101 deaths in California (including one non-California resident).

  • 923: Community-acquired cases
  • 3,720: Cases acquired through person-to-person transmission, travel (including cruise ship passengers), repatriation, or under investigation.
    • This includes 73 health care workers

Ages of all confirmed positive cases:

  • Age 0-17: 54 cases
  • Age 18-49: 2,368 cases
  • Age 50-64: 1,184 cases
  • Age 65 and older: 1,016 cases
  • Unknown: 21 cases

Gender of all confirmed positive cases:

  • Female: 2,057 cases
  • Male: 2,536 cases
  • Unknown: 50 cases

In order to better focus public health resources on the changing needs of California communities, beginning on March 18, the state is no longer collecting information about California travelers returning from countries that have confirmed COVID-19 outbreaks. Community transmission of COVID-19 has been identified in California since late February, and since early March, most of the confirmed cases in the state were not related to travel outside of the United States.

Twenty-two public health labs in California are testing samples for COVID-19. These labs include the California Department of Public Health’s Laboratory in Richmond, Alameda, Contra Costa, Humboldt, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Monterey, Napa-Solano-Yolo-Marin (located in Solano), Orange, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Luis Obispo, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Shasta, Sonoma, Tulare and Ventura County public health laboratories The Richmond Laboratory will provide diagnostic testing within a 48-hour turnaround time. This means California public health officials will get test results sooner, so that patients will get the best care.

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