A total of 39 more cases of COVID-19 and 27 new recoveries were announced Saturday for the Green River District, including 13 new cases and 8 recoveries in Daviess County.
As reported by Green River District Health Department:
- New cases by county: Daviess (13), Hancock (2), Henderson (15), McLean (1), Ohio (1), Union (1), Webster (6)
- New recoveries by county: Daviess (8), Hancock (1), Henderson (7), Ohio (3), Union (5), Webster (3)
- Total number of reported cases in the district: 22, 031
- Total number of reported cases now recovered: 19,717 (90%)
- Total number of reported cases currently hospitalized: 11
- Total number of cases that have required hospitalization: 878 (4%)
- Total number of deaths in the district: 395
The county totals to date are:
- Daviess County – 10,526 cases, 9,531 recovered, 1 current hospitalization, 347 ever hospitalized, 182 deaths
- Hancock County – 853 cases, 772 recovered, 0 current hospitalizations, 22 ever hospitalized, 16 deaths
- Henderson County – 4,697 cases, 4,085 recovered, 5 current hospitalizations, 210 ever hospitalized, 78 deaths
- McLean County – 869 cases, 794 recovered, 1 current hospitalization, 52 ever hospitalized, 28 deaths
- Ohio County – 2,520 cases, 2,266 recovered, 1 current hospitalization, 114 ever hospitalized, 56 deaths
- Union County – 1,309 cases, 1,186 recovered, 2 current hospitalizations, 72 ever hospitalized, 15 deaths
- Webster County – 1,257 cases, 1,083 recovered, 1 current hospitalizations, 60 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: 46.8%
- Female: 53.2%
Cases by age range are :
- <1 — 91 cases
- 1-11 — 820 cases
- 12-19 — 2,087 cases
- 20-29 — 3,652 cases
- 30-39 — 3,522 cases
- 40-49 — 3,451 cases
- 50-59 — 3,153 cases
- 60-69 — 2,594 cases
- 70-79 — 1,572 cases
- 80+ — 1,089 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.