Hays County Reports 17 New COVID-19 Cases

EDITORIAL NOTE
The Coronavirus (COVID-19) is a very fluid situation, and it will continue to be. As new information becomes available from Hays County, the State of Texas and federal government agencies, we will publish those updates.

Hays County releases regular updates on the number of confirmed cases and other local statistics related to COVID-19.

On Tuesday, May 26, Governor Greg Abbott issued a proclamation expanding additional services and activities that can open under Phase II of the state’s plan to safely and strategically open. 

With this proclamation, water parks, recreational sports programs for adults, driver education programs, and food-court dining areas within shopping malls can begin operations with limited occupancy or regulations to protect the health and safety of Texans.

Beginning Friday, May 29th, water parks can open but must limit their occupancy to 25% of normal operating limits. Components of these water parks that have video arcades must remain closed.

Starting Sunday, May 31st, recreational sports programs for adults can resume, but games and similar competitions may not begin until June 15th.

Driver education programs can resume operations immediately. 

  • Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. If soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer.
  • Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth with unwashed hands.
  • Avoid close contact with people who are sick.
  • Stay home when you are sick.
  • Cover your cough or sneeze with a tissue, then wash your hands.
  • Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces.

HAYS COUNTY CASE TOTALS

*UPDATED ON THURSDAY, MAY 28, AT 4:54 PM

* Disclaimer: As this is a fast-moving situation, the information included below is provisional and subject to change.

  MAY 27, 2020 MAY 28, 2020
TOTAL TESTS (includes pending cases) 3,923
4,051
DAILY NEW TESTS
38 128
TOTAL CONFIRMED 297 314
NEW DAILY CONFIRMED
18 17
ACTIVE
117 146
RECOVERED
165 165
DAILY RECOVERED
4 0
FATALITIES
3 3
NEGATIVE 3,621 3,714
HOSPITALIZATIONS TOTAL 28 29
HOSPITALIZATIONS CURRENT 5 4
TRAVEL RELATED 10 10
COMMUNITY SPREAD
297 304

DAILY CHANGE IN NEW CASES FOR HAYS COUNTY

 

  TOTAL CASES ACTIVE CASES RECOVERED
FATALITIES
AUSTIN* 7 3 4 0
BEAR CREEK
1 0 1 0
BUDA 41 19 21 1
DRIFTWOOD 2 0 2 0
DRIPPING SPRINGS 6 1 5 0
HAYS
0 0 0 0
KYLE 160 87 73 0
MANCHACA
0 0 0 0
MOUNTAIN CITY
0 0 0 0
NIEDERWALD
2 0 2 0
SAN MARCOS 83 32 50 1
UHLAND
1 0 1 0
WIMBERLEY 11 4 6 1
WOODCREEK 0 0 0 0
TOTAL 314 146 165 3

*Disclaimer: Parts of Hays County have an Austin address.

 
AGE RANGE FEMALE
MALE
TOTAL
0-9 YEARS 3 3 6
10-19 YEARS 12 5 17
20-29 YEARS 43 35 78
30-39 YEARS 36 26 62
40-49 YEARS 27 18 45
50-59 YEARS 27 33 60
60-69 YEARS 16 10 26
70-79 YEARS 4 7 11
> 80 YEARS 5 4 9
TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES
173 141 314

LATEST TEXAS COVID-19 CASE TOTALS

*UPDATED ON THURSDAY, MAY 28, AT 4:54 PM
Disclaimer: All Texas data below is provisional and subject to change. As this is a fast-moving situation, the information included below is provisional and subject to change.
* These numbers are an estimate based on several assumptions related to hospitalization rates and recovery times, which were informed by data available to date. These assumptions are subject to change as we learn more about COVID-19. The estimated number does not include data from any cases reported prior to 3/24/2020.

*If listed as N/A or TBA, the latest information has not been released by state agencies; the table will be updated when the data is available.

Z

TOTALS MAY 27, 2020 May 28, 2020
TESTED 961,861 989,994
ANTIBODY TESTS
87,565 88,643
CASES REPORTED 57,921 59,776
NEW CASES FROM PRIOR DAY(S) *Estimated 1,361* 1,855*
ACTIVE *Estimated
22,055* 19,270*
RECOVERED *Estimated
37,626* 38,905*
FATALITY 1,562 1,601
COUNTIES REPORTING CASES 230 of 254 230 of 254
COUNTIES WITH FATALITIES
111 of 254 111 of 254

NOTE: Case and fatality information is updated daily at 1 pm and is compiled from information reported publicly by local health departments and through the DSHS public health regions. Counts are current as of that morning.
Because some jurisdictions report cases later in the day, local numbers may be more up to date. County case numbers may occasionally go down if the case investigation determines the person is a resident of another county or state.
Testing numbers show the number of test results for Texas residents reported to DSHS by public health and private labs. They do not include pending tests. Additional testing may be occurring by labs not yet reporting all results to DSHS. Unable to deduplicate total test numbers for private labs.
Demographic data comes from completed case investigations. The majority of cases in Texas are still under investigation.
Hospitalization and hospital capacity numbers are reported daily by hospitals through eight Hospital Preparedness Program providers that coordinate health care system preparedness and response activities in Texas.

U.S. & WORLDWIDE CORONAVIRUS CASE OVERVIEW

*UPDATED ON THURSDAY, MAY 28, AT 4:00 PM
*Disclaimer: This data changes rapidly and might not reflect some cases still being reported.

  CASES REPORTED CASES PER 1M PEOPLE RECOVERED FATALITIES
U.S. CASE OVERVIEW
1,751,759
5,316
376,528
102,659
WORLDWIDE CASE OVERVIEW
5,931,112
763
2,388,172
357,929

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3 Comments

  1. Please, WEAR A MASK, when you go out in public.

    You mention some of the good ideas that will help prevent the spread of Covid-19, but you do not mention one of the best ways, which is WEARING A MASK if you are out in public, sharing breathing space with other people. This one act would keep what comes out of one person’s nose and mouth from ending up on/in another person’s face/nose/mouth.

    I suppose you have some reason for not sharing this sound preventative advice with your readers?

    1. No. A professional mask only blocks 75% of baddies from getting through. So if I were to wear a mask & sneeze, at least 25% is getting through. Then you breath in. Another 75% is getting filtered out. That means 6.25% of germs are still getting through.

      You need to breath to live. You’re always being exposed. Six percent might as well be 100%. Its is as statistical certainty. You’re mask is doing nothing. You need to just get on with your life. Deal with it.

  2. From the CDC website at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/prevention.html

    Cover your mouth and nose with a cloth face cover when around others
    You could spread COVID-19 to others even if you do not feel sick.
    Everyone should wear a cloth face cover when they have to go out in public, for example to the grocery store or to pick up other necessities.
    Cloth face coverings should not be placed on young children under age 2, anyone who has trouble breathing, or is unconscious, incapacitated or otherwise unable to remove the mask without assistance.
    The cloth face cover is meant to protect other people in case you are infected.
    Do NOT use a facemask meant for a healthcare worker.
    Continue to keep about 6 feet between yourself and others. The cloth face cover is not a substitute for social distancing.

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