Massachusetts reports 980 new coronavirus cases

Massachusetts+Gov.+Charlie+Baker.

State House News Service

Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker.

By Frankie Rowley, Content Managing Editor

Massachusetts reported 980 new coronavirus cases Tuesday, down from the 1,248 new infections reported Monday. The death toll rose by 37. 

COVID-19 cases have fallen below 2,000 in the state each day for the past three weeks, after topping that mark each day from Nov. 30 to Feb. 2. Tuesday marks the first time cases have dipped below 1,000 since Feb. 16

The state reports two COVID-19 positivity rates—one with higher education testing and one without. On Tuesday, the seven-day test positivity rate with higher education removed sat at 3.0 percent, down from the 3.1 percent reported this time last week. The rate that includes higher education sits at 1.8 percent. 

The state reported 775 total hospitalizations on Tuesday, down from the 879 reported this time last week. Hospitalizations have declined swiftly over the course of the past month after they spiked amid the state’s winter time surge.

Massachusetts reported 44,340 vaccinations administered on Tuesday, bringing the state’s total to 1,813,992. 

Emerson reported one new positive COVID-19 test out of 1,196 new tests administered on Monday, bringing the college’s cumulative positive tests to 146. Emerson’s cumulative testing total sits at 82,539.

The college is seeing a decline in the number of positive test results being reported each week. Last week marked just the second during the spring semester the number of positives fell below double digits. 

Since testing resumed on Jan. 11, the college has reported 86 positive tests—topping the 60 reported over the entire fall semester—and a positivity rate of .27 percent. 

The latest dashboard update on Tuesday reported zero community members in isolation on campus and three in quarantine on campus. 

Those in quarantine may have been exposed to COVID-19 but aren’t experiencing symptoms. Those in isolation are symptomatic, have produced a positive test, or are “reasonably known to be infected,” according to the college. Off-campus students are not counted in the quarantine and isolation numbers. 

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.