22 more COVID-19 reported in New Hampshire: update

CONCORD, NH – The State Joint Information Center reported Monday that 22 other people, in addition to five children, had the new coronavirus in New Hampshire.

Seven of the new instances live in Manchester, while 4 live in Hillsborough County outside Manchester and Nashua, two live in Merrimack County and one live in Nashua.The sex of the instances was divided 50-50, according to the data.

None of the new cases required hospitalization, while existing patients at the hospital remained solid in six.Seven of the new COVID-19 patients had no known threat factors.

“Community-based transmission continues to occur in the state and has been known in all counties,” state officials said.”Among those who have complete threat information, the maximum number of cases has had close contact with a user with a proven diagnosis of COVID-19 or has recently traveled.”

Since January, the state has collected 328,095 samples for polymer chain reaction tests with approximately 211,000 granite estates analyzed.Only more than 2,000 tests were collected on Sunday.

Recoveries remain at 91%, with only 228 cases active in New Hampshire.More than 42,000 other people have been evaluated for antibody laboratory tests.

Approximately 1750 other people are under public physical fitness surveillance through fitness authorities.

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Stop COVID-19

The COVID-19 virus is transmitted through the respiratory droplets, coughing and sneezing, and through exposure to others who are in poor health or at risk of symptoms.

Health officials insist that citizens adhere to these recommendations:

Avoid domestic travel, especially on public transport, such as buses, trains and planes.

Practice social estrangement. Stay at least 1.80 yards from others, as well as get away when you’re in waiting spaces or queues.

When you can’t practice 6 feet of social estrangement, use a face cover.

Anyone who is told to self-quarantine and stay home due to exposure of a user with a suspected or suspected case of COVID-19 will remain home and not pass out in public places.

If you are 60 or older or have chronic and underlying fitness problems, you will need to stay home and not pass out.

Avoid meetings of 10 people or people.

Employers paint from home as much as possible.

There is growing evidence that the virus can remain for hours or, in all likelihood, days on surfaces.People deserve to regularly leave the touched surfaces blank, adding door handles, grocery carts and grocery basket handles, etc.

Take the same precautions as if you were sick:

Stay at home and public places.

Wear a mask.

Cover your mouth and cough and sneeze.

Wash often.

Disinfect affected surfaces.

More information from the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services on coronavirus can be found here on the department’s website.

Tips for discovering here.

Instructions for travelers to return to self-observation of COVID-19 symptoms can be found here.

For more information on COVID-19 in NH, their online page here.

For the latest CDC data, your online page here.

To access the state’s COVID-19 knowledge dashboard, click this link here.

To access the coVID-19 interactive map dashboard of the state, click this link here.

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Do you have any new advice? Send him to [email protected] at it on Tony Schinella’s YouTube channel.

This article was originally published in the Concord patch.

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