A total of 30 more cases of COVID-19 and 33 new recoveries were announced Wednesday for the Green River District, including 17 cases and 19 recoveries in Daviess County.
As reported by Green River District Health Department:
- New cases by county: Daviess (17), Hancock (1), Henderson (3), McLean (4), Ohio (1), Webster (4)
- New recoveries by county: Daviess (19), Henderson (8), McLean (2), Ohio (2), Webster (2)
- Total number of reported cases in the district: 21,313
- Total number of reported cases now recovered: 19,109 (90%)
- Total number of reported cases currently hospitalized: 10
- Total number of cases that have required hospitalization: 894 (4%)
- Total number of deaths in the district: 385
The county totals to date are:
- Daviess County – 10,189 cases, 9,221 recovered, 2 current hospitalizations, 361 ever hospitalized, 176 deaths
- Hancock County – 832 cases, 742 recovered, 0 current hospitalizations, 22 ever hospitalized, 16 deaths
- Henderson County – 4,503 cases, 3,923 recovered, 3 current hospitalizations, 211 ever hospitalized, 75 deaths
- McLean County – 856 cases, 780 recovered, 0 current hospitalizations, 50 ever hospitalized, 28 deaths
- Ohio County – 2,467 cases, 2,236 recovered, 1 current hospitalization, 124 ever hospitalized, 55 deaths
- Union County – 1,270 cases, 1,162 recovered, 1 current hospitalization, 67 ever hospitalized, 15 deaths
- Webster County – 1,196 cases, 1,045 recovered, 3 current hospitalizations, 59 ever hospitalized, 20 deaths
Demographics (not all demographic information is available because of incomplete reporting from a testing site):
- Age range: 1 month-102 years old
- Average age: 43
- Male: 46.7%
- Female: 53.3%
Cases by age range are :
- <1 — 88 cases
- 1-11 — 785 cases
- 12-19 — 1,973 cases
- 20-29 — 3,530 cases
- 30-39 — 3,380 cases
- 40-49 — 3,333 cases
- 50-59 — 3,062 cases
- 60-69 — 2,540 cases
- 70-79 — 1,551 cases
- 80+ — 1,071 cases
The cases reported by GRDHD have been investigated and confirmed locally. These cases are then reported to the Kentucky Department for Public Health. This process sometimes may result in lags between state and local reporting and some discrepancies from duplicate reports.