Massachusetts reported 3,750 new coronavirus cases Sunday, down from the 4,330 new infections reported Saturday. The death toll rose by 67.
The state has seen an uptick in cases over the past few days following Tuesday’s 2,567 cases, the lowest number reported since Dec. 27. Last week, Massachusetts saw a decline from the record-breaking highs set the week prior, with cases consistently below 6,000.
Governor Charlie Baker announced Thursday the 9:30 p.m. curfew on restaurants first put in place in November would be lifted Monday. The decision was made, Baker said, due to improving metrics following the Christmas holiday. The 25 percent capacity limit will remain in place until Feb. 8.
Coronavirus cases in Massachusetts hit record highs following the Christmas holiday—topping 7,000 twice and rising above 3,000 for three weeks straight. This week, cases have consistently fallen below 5,000.
Baker also announced the state’s stay-at-home advisory will be lifted at 5 a.m. on Monday.
The state reports two COVID-19 positivity rates—one with higher education testing and one without. The seven-day test positivity rate with higher education removed sits at 6.4 percent Sunday, down from the 7.2 percent reported this time last week. The rate that includes higher education sits at 4.8 percent, the first time it has been under 5 percent since Nov. 29.
The state reported 1,946 total hospitalizations Sunday, down from the 2,165 reported this time last week. Hospitalizations in the state have begun to decline in recent weeks, falling by a total of 265 since Jan. 10, after rising by nearly 300 week over week during much of November and early December.
Emerson reported no new COVID-19 testing data on Sunday. The college’s testing center at a Tufts Medical Center facility is open for testing this weekend as a result of residential students moving in, but no testing data has been reported yet for tests administered on Jan. 21 and Jan. 22. The dashboard is typically not updated on weekends due to no new tests being administered on those days.
Friday’s dashboard update revealed no new positives on 239 new tests.
The college reported six new positives on Thursday, which pushed the college’s positivity rate to 0.59 percent before the majority of the student population returns to campus or in-person learning commences on Feb. 1.
Thursday’s total marked the second-highest number of positive tests reported on a single day by the college, behind only the 10 reported on Nov. 18.
Emerson has reported 11 new positive tests within the first two weeks of the spring testing cycle. The last month of Emerson’s fall semester testing brought 28 new positives, compared to 32 over the course of the first three months of testing. The fall testing cycle’s overall positivity rate stood at 0.12 percent.
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health announced Jan. 20 that a second case of the more contagious coronavirus variant first discovered in the United Kingdom had been confirmed in the state. The second confirmation came two days after its initial discovery in Massachusetts. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report on Jan. 15 warned that the variant could become the dominant strain in the U.S. as early March. The U.K. variant is believed to be 50 percent more transmissive than current variants of COVID-19.
Emerson shifted from a manual data reporting process to an automatic one on Oct. 13. The decision followed a Beacon investigation that revealed a string of inaccuracies in the data reported by the college.
The college’s dashboard is updated daily Monday through Friday. When it was first launched in August, the college opted for weekly updates before eventually shifting to twice weekly and then daily updates. Tabs for hospitalizations and the number of “invalid” results received by community members have since been removed from the dashboard after testing began in August. Invalid results are typically a result of user error and require re-testing.
Administrators said in August the decision to remove hospitalizations was part of an effort to increase transparency, as the college was concerned it could not accurately track the metric. Invalid results were deemed “not valuable” data by “COVID Lead” Erik Muurisepp.
The dashboard is not updated on weekends because Emerson’s testing site at Tufts Medical Center is closed on Saturdays and Sundays.