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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Tim Balk

New York’s COVID case rate has now fallen for 14 straight days

NEW YORK — New York state’s weeklong COVID-19 case rate has tumbled every day for two weeks, dropping to its lowest level in more than a month, Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office said Tuesday.

The state’s daily case rate on Tuesday was down about 63% from May 17, according to government figures, with counts falling in every region of the state.

New York’s hospitalization rate, which lags behind the case count, has also started to sink, according to the data.

The latest dive in New York’s 26-month, five-bump COVID roller coaster ride comes with weather warming and widespread vaccination limiting the worst outcomes.

But the threat has not vanished altogether. On Tuesday, the state announced 26 more COVID deaths.

Daily death tolls had sunk into the single digits some days last month before a spring wave of omicron infections drove fatalities upward.

Hochul urged New Yorkers to remain aggressive in their approach to vaccines and testing.

“With such great momentum as we head into the summer, now is certainly not the time to get complacent,” the governor said in a statement. “Let’s commit to continuing to use the tools that keep New Yorkers safe.”

In the statement, she asked New Yorkers to “remain up to date on vaccine doses and boosters” and to “get tested early — and often.”

Fully vaccinated New Yorkers have at least an 85% lower chance of landing in the hospital with COVID compared with those who are not vaccinated, according to a state Health Department analysis.

About 91% of New Yorkers have received at least one shot of COVID vaccine, according to state figures, but some upstate regions lag far behind the city. A hair under 40% of the statewide population is reported to have received a booster shot.

In the five boroughs, the seven-day virus case rate has dipped about 16% over the last two weeks, according to state data.

New York City continued to have one of the highest case rates of any region in the state, and the city’s virus alert level remained at “high.” But hospitalizations and confirmed deaths were trending down, the city reported.

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