Wisconsin Health News

More than half of newly sequenced COVID-19 specimens are UK variant

COVID - for web

More than half of Wisconsin COVID-19 specimens sequenced in the past week have been a more contagious variant that emerged in the United Kingdom last year.

Laboratories have sequenced 10,959 COVID-19 specimens as of Thursday, up 363 from last week.

Of those newly reported, about 63 percent, or 229, were variants of concern. That includes:

The number of cases of the B.1.351 variant, which was discovered in South Africa in October, remained the same at 28.

Wisconsin vaccinators administered 4,363,653 doses of COVID-19 vaccine through Wednesday.

They gave 42,399 doses on Wednesday, with a seven-day average of 37,984 daily shots.

Per state data, 42.8 percent of the state’s population, or 2,492,262 Wisconsinites, have received at least one dose of a vaccine, and 33.1. percent, or 1,929,913 Wisconsinites, have completed their vaccination series.

The Department of Health Services reported 806 new cases of COVID-19 on Thursday, for a total of 597,358.

The state’s death toll is at 6,815, after DHS reported eight new deaths.

An additional 5,545 Wisconsinites have been tested for COVID-19, for a total of 3,440,201.

DHS considers 9,079 cases active.

The seven-day average for daily new cases is 623, up 11 from Wednesday and down 18 from a week ago.

The seven-day average for daily new deaths is 13, up one from Wednesday and nine from a week ago.

As of Wednesday, the seven-day positivity rate by test was 3.2 percent, the same as Tuesday and a week earlier, per preliminary data from DHS.

The Wisconsin Hospital Association reported 329 COVID-19 patients hospitalized on Thursday, down 13 from Wednesday and 17 from a week ago. Ninety-three were in intensive care units, down 14 from Wednesday and 23 from a week ago.

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