CONCORD, NH – Two older men died as a result of COVID-19 or COVID-19 headaches in New Hampshire, state officials said Thursday.
Males were years of age or older and lived in long-term care services in Hillsborough County.
“We are offering our condolences to the circle of family and friends,” the State Joint Information Center said.
Approximately 5. 3% of those who hit COVID-19 in New Hampshire died. Nearly 82% of deaths in the state occurred in long-term care facilities, and 87. 3% of deaths were for citizens over the age of 70.
Only a 40-year-old user, a young Man from Concord with lying fitness problems, died of coronavirus headaches.
Another 52 new positive effects were also reported on Thursday after 8,349 polymer reaction samples were collected on Wednesday. The state has 1589 pending.
Of the new results of the positive controls, two were young and 27 were women. The residence of two of the patients is still under review, however thirteen live in Rockingham County, 11 live in hillsborough County outdoors in Manchester and Nashua, six live in Nashua and 4 live in Merrimack County.
The state has 8,317 COVID-19 demonstrations since March 1 with 7,534 recoveries, or about 91%.
None of the new patients required hospitalization, however, 15 had no known threat factors, meaning they did not recently, had no contact with a proven diagnosis of COVID-19, or were not similar to a long-term care center. hospitalized in New Hampshire.
The state reported that approximately 276,000 other people underwent PCR testing and approximately 451,000 tests were administered.
Approximately 2750 granite statesmen are public fitness supervisors.
The status preview dashboard also has a new feature: a dashboard that contains information with PCR and antibody results, age categories, and seven-, 14-, and 30-day knowledge grids.
The new panel can be here.
School infections in NH
Only one K-12 school in New Hampshire reported a new positive verification result, while many other students recovered within 48 hours.
Heron Pond Elementary School in Milford reported its first case on Tuesday, and the state reported it on its knowledge panel on Wednesday.
Jessica Huizenga, superintendent of the Milford School District, said there is “no evidence” that the infection occurred at school and that the patient had no known contact with academics and limited contact with adults. Like Wednesday, a secluded day, staff and academics were not in the building.
“During this time, a thorough cleaning of the construction will take place,” he said.
The exclusive infection at Allenstown Middle School has recovered, as has the exclusive case at Golden Brook Elementary School in Windham. One of the 3 cases at Henry Wilson Memorial School in Farmington has also recovered, while the school is officially believed to have a group Kearsarge Middle School’s exclusive case in Sutton has also recovered, as has the exclusive case of Memorial Elementary School in Bedford. Salem High School’s exclusive case is also recovered, depending on the state, as the case at Timberlane Regional High School in Plaistow.
Lately there have been 19 assets in public schools.
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Stop COVID-19
The COVID-19 virus is transmitted through 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 follow these recommendations:
Avoid domestic travel and especially by public transport such as buses, trains and planes.
Practice social estinement. Stay at least 1. 80 meters away from others, adding to get away when you’re in waiting spaces or queues.
When you cannot practice 6 feet of social distance, wear a mask.
Anyone who is told to quarantine and remain at home due to the exposure of a user with an alleged or suspected case of COVID-19 will remain in the house and not faint in public places.
If you are 60 years of age or older or have chronic and underlying fitness problems, you will need to stay home and not faint.
Avoid meetings of 10 or people.
Employers paint from home as much as possible.
There is growing evidence that the virus may remain for hours or even days on surfaces. People deserve to regularly leave the affected surfaces blank, adding door handles, supermarket carts and grocery basket handles, etc.
Take the same precautions as if you were sick:
Stay home and public places.
Wear a mask.
Cover your mouth and cough and sneeze.
Wash often.
Disinfect the 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 being discovered here.
Instructions for travelers to return to self-observation of COVID-19 symptoms can be found here.
For more information about COVID-19 on NH, please visit its online page here.
For the latest CDC data, your site here.
To access the state’s COVID-19 knowledge dashboard, click this link here.
To access the state COVID-19 interactive map dashboard, click this link here.
Do you have any new advice? Send him to tony. schinella@patch. com. Watch it on Tony Schinella’s YouTube channel.
This article was originally published in the Concord patch.