Health & Fitness

Somerville's Coronavirus Risk Level Rises To High

Mayor Joseph Curtatone said Wednesday it won't be the last time the state labels Somerville a "red" community.

Somerville fell into the high-risk category for the coronavirus this week.
Somerville fell into the high-risk category for the coronavirus this week. (Jenna Fisher/Patch)

SOMERVILLE, MA — Somerville has been labeled a high-risk community for the coronavirus by the state, according to the latest town-by-town data released Wednesday by the Department of Public Health.

Sixty-three communities across the state have been labeled high risk, up 23 from last week. It is the first time since the state started putting out its weekly color-coded map that Somerville has fallen into the high-risk, or "red," category.

Mayor Joseph Curtatone said it won't be the last time the city is designated high risk.

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

"#COVID19 is far from done with us," Curtatone tweeted Wednesday.

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 are marked red if they reported more than eight confirmed COVID-19 cases per 100,000 residents daily over the past two weeks.

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

Somerville's percent positivity rate over two weeks held relatively steady at 0.39 percent. There were 88 cases in the city during that time, bringing the total case count to 1,350.

The state reported 518 new cases and 16 deaths Wednesday. The positive test rate rose to 1.3 percent statewide, up from 0.8 percent in mid-September. 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.

Statewide, there were 8.7 average daily cases per 100,000 residents, putting the state above the high-risk threshold for the first time since the metric was introduced. There have been 9,429 deaths and 138,083 confirmed cases statewide since the pandemic reached the Bay State in March.

View the state's interactive COVID-19 map.

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