Health & Fitness

Bed-Stuy COVID Rates Start Dipping, But Cases Still High: Data

The neighborhood's positivity rates have dropped in the last week as the omicron surge "plateaus" across New York City. Here's the latest.

Bed-Stuy's positivity rates have dropped in the last week as the omicron surge "plateaus" across New York City.
Bed-Stuy's positivity rates have dropped in the last week as the omicron surge "plateaus" across New York City. (Scott Heins/Getty Images)

BED-STUY, BROOKLYN — Weeks after the omicron variant began its alarming surge in New York City, data shows that COVID-19 rates are beginning to dip in Bed-Stuy and around the five boroughs — though cases remain worryingly high.

During the seven-day period that ended on Saturday, more than 6,100 people in Bed-Stuy's five ZIP codes tested positive for the coronavirus — a positivity rate of 24.2 percent.

While those figures would have been stunningly high just a few months ago, they represent a slight drop from previous days. During the week ending Jan. 1, the neighborhood's average positivity rate stood at 28 percent, data shows.

Find out what's happening in Bed-Stuyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Rates throughout the omicron surge have meant record-highs for most neighborhoods, including Bed-Stuy.

By ZIP code, Bed-Stuy's lowest positivity is found in 11205, which also includes Fort Greene and Clinton Hill. In that ZIP code, just over 17 percent of people had positive tests as of Saturday, according to the data.

Find out what's happening in Bed-Stuyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The highest rate in the neighborhood, in 11233, had 29 percent positivity as of Jan. 8, according to the data.

Local health experts have expressed cautious optimism that New York's omicron wave has reached or has surpassed its peak — specifically in the five boroughs.

"As far as NYC, that has been a plateauing in a sense that we hope will continue," Gov. Kathy Hochul said Tuesday.

Cases in New York City hovered near 50,000 new infections detected a day at the height of the omicron surge.

Data shows those daily cases started to fall this weekend. They stood at 47,591 on Jan. 7, but fell to 32,236 by Sunday, data shows.

Hochul said New York City still leads state regions for hospitalizations — they stand near 75 people per 100,000, according to data.

Through Dec. 28, 484 people in Bed-Stuy's ZIP codes had been hospitalized with COVID-19 in the previous 28 days — a number likely to rise as more recent data becomes available.

Citywide hospitalizations as of Thursday had reached a 7-day average of 518 per day — a drop from Jan. 2, when the city was averaging 847, but still far above any levels that the city has seen in months.

Patch reporters Nick Garber and Matt Troutman contributed to this report.

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