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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Mitchell Armentrout

One in five Illinois counties now at COVID-19 ‘warning level,’ 2,208 new cases reported — and some in Will Co. say, ‘So what?’

Nurse practitioner Capri Reese talks to a patient while a doctor administers an IV at Roseland Community Hospital in April. | Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

As public health officials announced nearly a fifth of all Illinois counties are at a coronavirus “warning level,” the state on Friday reported 2,208 new cases of COVID-19 — the fifth time in the last two weeks that Illinois has amassed 2,000 cases or more in a single day.

Illinois hadn’t seen such a cluster of high coronavirus caseloads since its initial peak month of May — and it follows a 33-day stretch from June to July in which Illinois never surpassed more than a thousand new diagnoses in a day.

More than 37,000 people have been diagnosed with the virus over the first three weeks of August, compared to 22,925 in all of June. That’s as the state has averaged more than 1,800 new cases per day over the last two weeks, almost triple the state’s running rate at the end of June.

Still, Illinois’ latest cases were confirmed among 51,736 tests submitted to the state, marking a third straight day of record-high testing numbers for the state and lowering the statewide testing positivity rate over the last week to 4.3%.

But positivity rates have increased in seven of the state’s 11 regions over the last week, including the downstate Metro East region which is now at 9.4% positivity — after Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s health team forced officials there to scale back capacities and operating hours at bars and restaurants.

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Now, many south and southwest suburbs are on the cusp of a state intervention, with the Will-Kankakee region at 7.9%, a hair under the 8% threshold set by Pritzker’s office.

The Illinois Department of Public Health last week added Will County to its “warning level” list — which grew Friday to include 20 of the state’s 102 counties.

Counties are stuck with the warning label from the state if they check two or more boxes on a list of “risk indicators,” including rising case, death and hospitalization numbers.

Besides Will County, they’re scattered across the state map: Bureau, Cass, Clay, Clinton, Franklin, Greene, Grundy, Hancock, Henderson, Jefferson, Logan, Madison, Monroe, Moultrie, Randolph, St. Clair, Union, White and Williamson.

Outbreaks in the targeted counties have been tied to weddings, businesses and other gathering spots, while “cases connected to schools are also beginning to be reported,” according to the state health department.

“Public health officials are observing people not social distancing or using face coverings. Additionally, there are reports of individuals who are ill attributing their symptoms to allergies or other illnesses, or not being forthcoming about their symptoms or close contacts,” officials said.

Will County health officials say they’re fighting a “so what?” attitude among some residents.

“You often hear the attitude of, ‘What’s in it for me?’” contact tracing program manager Susan O’Keefe said in a statement provided by the Will County Health Department.

“In other words, if their family is okay, they feel they don’t have to worry. Or even within their own family, you might have four people test positive after going to an event, and then the one person who tests negative thinks he or she is home free. That’s not true,” O’Keefe said.

The state hasn’t sounded the alarm on Chicago or suburban Cook County, but positivity rates still have inched slowly up this week. The city is at 5.2% and the suburbs at 6.5%.

The Illinois Department of Public Health also announced the virus has killed 24 more residents, including a Cook County man in his 30s. COVID-19 has claimed 7,857 lives across the state since March.

Nursing homes account for about 55% of the death toll. The latest figures released by the state show 4,319 cases have proven fatal among 26,357 infections traced to long-term care facilities.

But most people who contract the virus show mild symptoms, if any. The statewide recovery rate is 95%.

Of the nearly 3.6 million tests administered in Illinois over the last five months, 215,929 people have tested positive — about 1.7% of the state’s population.

Not counted in those statewide totals are 209 deaths and 1,417 nonfatal infections considered to have been “probable” but untested COVID-19 cases.

As of Thursday night, 1,526 Illinois coronavirus patients were hospitalized, with 351 in intensive care units and 121 on ventilators.

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