BISMARCK, N.D. (CCHD) – Here are some of the most recent numbers concerning diagnosed with COVID-19 in North Dakota according to the North Dakota Department of Health and the Centers for Disease Control.
“No children hospitalized but Bismarck Hospitals are full and several children with COVID have been sent to other hospitals.”
New Cases
· 152 new diagnosis of COVID-19 cases in children
· 30 new cases age 0-5 years
· 40 new cases age 6-11 years
· 36 new cases age 12-14 years
· 46 new cases age 15-19 years
· 31 new childhood cases in Cass County, 31 in Burleigh County, 7 in Morton County, 3 in Mountrail County, 9 in Grand Forks County, 5 in Pembina County, 8 in Ramsey County, 6 in Rolette County, 1 in Richland County, 14 in Stark County, 2 in Stutsman County, 2 in Walsh County, 8 in Ward County and 3 in Williams County
· The 152 new childhood cases account for 30.8% of the total 493 new cases in all ages reported today compared to 18.8% of total cases since the pandemic began in North Dakota
Active Cases
· 1139 active cases in children, up from 947 one week ago
· 245 active cases age 0-5 years
· 361 active cases age 6-10 years
· 196 active cases age 12-14 years
· 337 active cases age 15-19 years
· The 1139 active cases account for 32.7% of the 3486 active cases in the state
7-day Childhood COVID-19 Cases in Counties (September 10 through September 16)- 1090 total
206 in Cass County, 260 in Burleigh County, 73 in Stark County, 52 in Ward County, 40 in Rolette County, 62 in Grand Forks County, 34 in Williams County, 13 in Barnes County, 13 in Benson County, 12 in Bottineau County, 7 in McIntosh County, 37 in McKenzie County, 7 In McLean County, 64 in Morton County, 18 in Mountrail County, 21 in Pembina County, 16 in Pierce County, 31 in Ramsey County, 9 in Ransom County, 10 in Richland County, 7 in Sioux County, 20 in Stutsman County, 4 in Traill County, 12 in Walsh County
7-day average Childhood COVID-19 Case Rates per 100,000 population age 0-19 in Counties (September 10 through September 16) –77.6 (Harvard metric considers general population rate of 25 per 100,000 as out-of-control spread.”
More details about COVID-19 cases and strategies to prevent the spread of COVID-19 are attached below.