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Pennsylvania nursing homes continue to be hit hard by coronavirus deaths

Nearly 70% of Pennsylvania's COVID-19 deaths have been residents of long-term care homes

  • The Associated Press
Orange barriers enclose chairs and tables that will be used for dining along Sixth Street between Liberty and Penn avenues on Tuesday, June 23, 2020 in downtown Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership announced plans Monday to reimagine Downtown streets, allowing restaurants and bars to expand their outdoor dining opportunities in various locations. The outdoor spaces are expected to be fully activated by early July and run until mid-to-late October.

 Gene J. Puskar / AP Photo

Orange barriers enclose chairs and tables that will be used for dining along Sixth Street between Liberty and Penn avenues on Tuesday, June 23, 2020 in downtown Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership announced plans Monday to reimagine Downtown streets, allowing restaurants and bars to expand their outdoor dining opportunities in various locations. The outdoor spaces are expected to be fully activated by early July and run until mid-to-late October.

(Harrisburg) — Confirmed coronavirus cases in Pennsylvania now exceed 83,000, while there are 54 new reports of coronavirus-related deaths, many if not all of them who were residents of nursing homes or personal care homes, the state Department of Health said Wednesday.

The department reported 495 new infections. The 54 new deaths brings the statewide total to 6,515.

The department’s death toll for nursing homes or personal care homes rose by 57 on Wednesday as the agency reconciles information it has gathered from various sources in recent days, it said. The total death toll in those facilities is now 4,467, or nearly 70% of Pennsylvania’s total deaths attributed to the coronavirus outbreak.

The number of new infections reported over the last week, 3,373, is virtually the same as the number for the previous seven-day period, 3,382. Both of those figures are slightly higher than the seven-day period before that, through June 9, when the state reported 3,031 new infections.

However, the percentage of positive tests has steadily dropped, from 6% for the seven days ending June 9 to 4.5% over the last seven days.

Of those Pennsylvania residents infected since early March, 77% have recovered, the department said. The number of infections is thought to be far higher than the state’s confirmed case count because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected without feeling sick.

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