Health & Fitness

Malden Remains High Risk As Coronavirus Rate Rises

The city was one of 121 Massachusetts communities marked high risk, with 129 cases over the last two weeks.

Malden continues to be labeled a high-risk community by the state.
Malden continues to be labeled a high-risk community by the state. (Jenna Fisher/Patch)

MALDEN, MA — The state designated Malden a high-risk community for the fourth consecutive week in its Thursday report. The city's positive coronavirus test rate over the last two weeks was 2.43 percent, up from 2 percent last week.

Malden had 129 cases over the last two weeks, according to the state data.

Malden is among 121 communities across the Commonwealth that were designated high risk Thursday, up from 77 last week. The city had an average daily rate of 13.6 cases per 100,000, up from 11.4 last week.

Find out what's happening in Maldenfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

>>MA Town-By-Town Coronavirus Stats: High-Risk List Soars To 121

State officials have said that high-risk communities cannot move on to the next phase of reopening. Towns that spend three consecutive weeks at the high-risk level also must revert to the previous step. The high risk, or red, designation is given to towns that 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 Maldenfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Statewide, the positive test rate rose to 1.8 percent, more than double the September low of 0.8 percent. There were 11.8 average daily cases per 100,000 residents, keeping the state above the high-risk threshold.

There were 1,243 new COVID-19 cases and 27 deaths reported Thursday. There have been 9,727 deaths and 151,741 confirmed cases statewide since the pandemic reached the Bay State in March.

In Malden, 1,777 people have tested positive for the virus since March.

View the state's color-coded map here.

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