UPDATED: Here’s The Latest COVID-19 Case Totals In Hays County, Texas & US

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 Monday, May 18, Governor Greg Abbott announced most Texas counties would begin phase 2 of his plan to reopen the Texas economy. 

Via Executive Order, the following services and activities may open under Phase II.

  • Child Care Centers (May 18)
  • Massage and Personal-Care Centers (May 18)
  • Youth Clubs (May 18)
  • Rodeo and Equestrian Events (May 22)
  • Bowling Alleys, Bingo Halls, Simulcast Racing, and Skating Rinks (May 22)
  • Bars (May 22)
  • Aquariums and Natural Caverns (May 22)
  • Zoos (May 29)
  • Day Youth Camps (May 31)
  • Overnight Youth Camps (May 31)
  • Youth Sports (May 31)
  • Certain professional sports without in-person spectators (May 31)

All sporting and camp activities are required to adhere by special safety standards, and minimum standard health protocols have been established for all newly-announced opened services and activities.

Businesses located in office buildings may also open but must limit their occupancy to the greater of 10 employees or 25% of their workforce.

Additionally, restaurants may expand their occupancy to 50% beginning May 22.

Bars—including wine tasting rooms, craft breweries, and similar businesses—may open at 25% occupancy but like restaurants, these occupancy limits do not apply to outdoor areas that maintain safe distancing among parties.

Opened services and activities under Phase II are subject to certain occupancy limits and health and safety protocols.

For details and a full list of guidelines, openings, and relevant dates, visit www.gov.texas.gov/opentexas.

Certain counties experiencing surges in COVID-19 cases will have their beginning date of Phase II delayed until May 29. These counties include El Paso, Randall, Potter, Moore, and Deaf Smith.

  • 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 WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, AT 4:10 PM

* Disclaimer: Some information included below is provisional and subject to change.

  MAY 19, 2020 MAY 20, 2020
TOTAL TESTS (includes pending cases) 2,708 3,133
DAILY NEW TESTS
47 425
TOTAL CONFIRMED 238 250
NEW DAILY CONFIRMED
3 12
ACTIVE
81 92
RECOVERED
154 155
DAILY RECOVERED
2 1
FATALITIES
3 3
NEGATIVE 2,265 2,629
HOSPITALIZATIONS TOTAL 26 27
HOSPITALIZATIONS CURRENT 5 6
FEMALE 138 143
MALE 99 107
TRAVEL RELATED 10 10
COMMUNITY SPREAD
228 240

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 30 9 20 1
DRIFTWOOD 2 0 2
0
DRIPPING SPRINGS 6 3 3
0
HAYS
0
0
0
0
KYLE 121 50 71 0
MANCHACA
0
0
0
0
MOUNTAIN CITY
0
0
0
0
NIEDERWALD
2 0 2 0
SAN MARCOS 70 24 45 1
UHLAND
1
0
1 0
WIMBERLEY 10 3 6 1
WOODCREEK 0 0 0
0
TOTAL 250 92 155
3

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

 
AGE RANGE TOTAL
0-9 YEARS 3
10-19 YEARS 11
20-29 YEARS 49
30-39 YEARS 53
40-49 YEARS 38
50-59 YEARS 51
60-69 YEARS 25
70-79 YEARS 11
> 80 YEARS 9
TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES
250

LATEST TEXAS COVID-19 CASE TOTALS

*UPDATED ON WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, AT 3:30 PM
Disclaimer: All Texas data 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 19, 2020 MAY 20, 2020
TESTED 744,937 770,241
CASES REPORTED 49,912 51,323
NEW CASES FROM PRIOR DAY *Estimated 1,219* 1,411*
ACTIVE *Estimated
19,280* 19,664*
RECOVERED *Estimated
29,359* 30,341*
FATALITY 1,369 1,419
IN TEXAS HOSPITALS
1,732 1,791
COUNTIES REPORTING CASES 224 of 254 225 of 254
COUNTIES WITH FATALITIES
101 of 254 106 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 WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, AT 3:50 PM
*Disclaimer: This data changes rapidly and might not reflect some cases still being reported.

  CASES REPORTED RECOVERED FATALITIES
U.S. CASE OVERVIEW 1.57M 300K 93,111
WORLDWIDE CASE OVERVIEW 4.95M 1.72M 326K

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One Comment

  1. Most recent data? BS. Most recent data shows we are climbing in cases drastically again and that was before this article. What happened to journalistic integrity? Report the facts. Really disappointed to see y’all sucking Abbott off with this article.

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