Health & Fitness
Arlington At Brink Of Moderate-Risk Coronavirus Community Spread
The town's rate of cases per 100,000 is 3.9 in the most recent state report, just shy of the 4-8 threshold used to determine "high risk."

ARLINGTON, MA — Arlington is still considered a low-risk community, according to weekly state data released Thursday. But the town's case count and positive test rates continue to rise, with 25 confirmed cases over the last two weeks.
Seventy-seven communities across the Commonwealth were labeled high risk, or "red," Thursday, up from 63 from last week. Arlington stayed in the "green" range with an average daily rate of 3.9 cases per 100,000, up from 1.4 last week, according to state data. That's trending in the wrong direction toward 4-8 cases per 100,000, which is the state's metric for designating a community as moderate risk, or "yellow."
State officials have said that high-risk communities, along with those considered high risk in the past two updates, cannot move on to the next phase of reopening. Towns were marked high risk, or "red," if they reported more than eight confirmed COVID-19 cases per day per 100,000 residents over the past two weeks.
Find out what's happening in Arlingtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Statewide, the positive test rate rose to 1.4 percent, the highest level since mid-August and up from 0.8 percent in mid-September. In Arlington, the positive rate rose to 1 percent from 0.28 percent last week.
Health officials say positive test results need to stay below 5 percent for two weeks or longer and, preferably, be closer to 2 percent, for states to safely ease restrictions.
Find out what's happening in Arlingtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The state reported 986 confirmed cases and 30 deaths associated with the virus Thursday. There have been 9,589 deaths and 143,927 confirmed cases statewide since the pandemic reached the Bay State in March.
In Arlington, 399 people have tested positive for the virus during that time.
Statewide, there were 9 average daily cases per 100,000 residents, keeping the state above the high-risk threshold for the second week in a row.
View the state's interactive COVID-19 map.
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