Health & Fitness
Astoria, LIC COVID Cases Keep Climbing As Subvariants Spread: Data
More Western Queens residents are testing positive for COVID-19 as omicron subvariants drive the citywide increase in cases, data shows.

ASTORIA QUEENS — Temperatures are rising in Western Queens and across New York City — and so are COVID-19 cases, as the area's virus rates continue to increase due to the presence of new subvariants of omicron, according to city health data.
In Astoria and Long Island City, the rise in coronavirus cases that began in early March has continued in recent weeks. In the seven-day period that ended on Saturday, a total of 521 Western Queens residents tested positive for COVID-19 — an 11.4 percent positivity rate. That's higher than the citywide rate, which was 8.6 percent during the same period.
It is also nearly double the number of positive cases that Astoria and Long Island City recorded during the first few days of April, and more than five times greater than the number of weekly cases being recorded in early March, when the virus had receded following the first omicron wave.
Find out what's happening in Astoria-Long Island Cityfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The current increase began with the contagious BA.2 subvariant of omicron, but has been driven more recently by newer strains, like BA.2.12.1 — an even more transmissible variant that made up 78 percent of new cases in New York, New Jersey and Puerto Rico as of Saturday, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Some signs are more encouraging: no Astoria or Long Island City residents have died from the virus during the past 28 days, while 53 had been hospitalized through May 17, the most recent date where data is available. Both are far lower figures than during previous waves, especially those that occurred before vaccines became available.
Find out what's happening in Astoria-Long Island Cityfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"While we're seeing an increase in hospitalizations, we aren't seeing a dizzying rise as in January, when some emergency rooms were so packed you had to pick your path through gurneys," the New York Times reported earlier this month.
Meanwhile, Mayor Eric Adams has remained steadfast in his opposition to bringing back any COVID-19 restrictions, reiterating this month that he would not reimpose a mask mandate in public schools despite the rising case numbers.
"I'm proud of what we are doing and how we are not allowing COVID to outsmart us," he told reporters at City Hall, noting that hospitalizations and deaths remained "stable."
"We're staying prepared and not panicking," he said.
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