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Sunday, December 15, 2024 at 7:26 PM
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Hays County reports 18 new cases, 11 additional recoveries Friday

The Hays County Local Health Department recorded 18 new lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases and 11 additional recoveries on Friday. 

There are currently 368 active coronavirus cases — a seven-case increase since Thursday — and there have been 6,331 total cases since the first diagnosis of the virus within Hays County on March 14. The local health department also reported that there have been 476 active cases over the last 21 days — a six-case decrease since Thursday. The county reported that there have been 774 probable cases spanning from April through October.

There are currently five county residents hospitalized by COVID-19 and there have been 391 total hospitalizations as of Friday. Some patients hospitalized by COVID-19 are in hospitals outside of Hays County but are included in the county’s numbers if they reside within the county, the local health department said.

Hays County has now had 5,872 residents recover from the disease as of Friday. 

There have been 91 coronavirus-related fatalities reported since the first diagnosis of the virus within the county’s boundaries.

The local health department has received 38,088 negative tests and there have been 44,419tests administered in Hays County.

San Marcos, which has tallied the most coronavirus cases in the county, saw an eight-case increase in active cases reported Friday. There are currently 66 active COVID-19 cases and there have been 3,009.

Kyle has tallied 1,912 total cases, including 131 active cases. Buda has recorded 909 total cases and currently has 97 active cases. Dripping Springs has amassed 147 total cases and has 34 active cases. Wimberley has tallied 122 total cases, including 12 active cases. Austin, within Hays County, currently has 18 active cases and has had 94 total cases. Driftwood has recorded 51 total cases and has six active cases. Niederwald has had 30 total cases. Uhland has had 23 total cases and two active cases. Mountain City has had 11 total cases and has one active case. Maxwell has had 10 total cases.

Manchaca has had eight total cases. Bear Creek has one active case and has had three total cases. Woodcreek has had one total case.

The 20-29-age-range has recorded the most COVID-19 cases with 2,281 total cases tallied as of Friday.

According to the local health department, 1,009 county residents diagnosed with the disease are between 30-39 years old. Seven-hundred-ninety-nine people diagnosed with the coronavirus are 40-49 years old. Seven-hundred-fifty-five residents fall in the 10-19-year-old age range. Five-hundred-eighty-six county residents diagnosed with COVID-19 are between 50-59 years old, 378 are 60-69 years old, 215 are 70-79 years old, 220 are 9 years old or younger and 123 are 80 and older.

According to the local health department, 3,294 females and 3,037 males in Hays County have been diagnosed with COVID-19.

The county’s ethnic breakdown states 44.9% of county residents diagnosed with the coronavirus are Hispanic, while 32% of county residents diagnosed with the disease don’t have a specified ethnicity and 23.1% are non-Hispanic.

By race, 63.6% of county residents who’ve had COVID-19 are white, 33.4% are unknown or not specified, 2.4% are Black and 0.6% are Asian.

The Texas Department of State Health Services reported that there have now been 934,994 Texans diagnosed with COVID-19, 18,453 fatalities and an estimated 802,611 recoveries from the disease as of Thursday. There are currently 5,954 Texans hospitalized by the coronavirus, according to the DSHS.

At Texas State University there have been 810 total coronavirus cases since March 1 — 759 among students and 51 among faculty and staff — as of press time on Thursday. There are currently 35 active cases, according to the university’s dashboard.

As San Marcos Consolidated ISD brought back students at roughly 50% capacity on Oct. 5, the district is reporting four total onsite cases among students.
COVID-19 causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks for most people. The disease, however, can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, and death, especially for older adults and people with existing health problems.


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