Coronavirus

Health officials report 7 new COVID-19 cases in Beaufort County on Sunday, no deaths

State health officials reported seven new confirmed cases of coronavirus in Beaufort County on Sunday.

No other deaths were reported in the county due to COVID-19. Another 569 cases and three deaths were reported statewide.

The Beaufort County case total was the lowest since Sept. 8 and second fewest since June 6.

Cases have been on the decline in the county, and DHEC has again classified the county as having “medium” recent disease activity.

But the number of COVID-19 tests conducted in the area has also dropped. And some experts fear a possible surge of cases this fall as schools prepare to resume face-to-face classes.

The Beaufort County School District plans to resume in-person instruction Oct. 5 for students who chose the option.

Local numbers

  • Number of viral test results reported Saturday: 123
  • Average percent of positive viral tests in the past week: 12.3%
  • Seven-day average of new cases in Beaufort County: 20.43
  • Two-week incidence rate: 183.2 cases per 100,000 people, “Moderate”

An incidence rate measures how quickly a disease is spreading through a given population.

Dr. Scott Curry, an infectious disease specialist at the Medical University of South Carolina, said counties should aim to have a two-week incidence rate of less than 50 new cases per 100,000 people.

The World Health Organization, meanwhile, has suggested that governments reopen only after the percentage of positive tests is below 5% for at least two weeks.

Statewide numbers

  • Percent of positive non-antibody tests Saturday: 14.8%
  • New cases announced Sunday: 569
  • Total cases: 141,909
  • New deaths announced Sunday: 3
  • Total deaths: 3,144

Experts fear a possible surge of new infections this fall as schools resume in-person classes. At the University of South Carolina, hundreds of students have already been diagnosed with COVID-19.

Cases by ZIP code

Bluffton’s ZIP code of 29910 continues to lead the county with 1,360 cases this year. Beaufort’s 29902 ZIP code, meanwhile, has recorded 1,090 cases since March, the second-highest figure in the county.

Hilton Head Island’s 29928 ZIP code, covering the southeastern part of the island, has 339 cases. The 29926 ZIP code covering the north side has 654 cases, according to DHEC data.

Coronavirus infections at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island are being reported in the 29902 ZIP code.

More information on Beaufort County ZIP code data can be found at the following link. Click on it, then click on “Go to Cases,” then click on Beaufort County on the S.C. map: bit.ly/BeaufortCountyZIP

What are DHEC’s recommendations?

State health officials say residents should continue to practice social distancing and should wear a mask in public. Those who are out in the community regularly and around others or unable to wear a mask and social distance should be tested at least monthly, health officials say.

“Recently, our (case) numbers have been slowly trending downward,” said Dr. Linda Bell, DHEC’s top epidemiologist, in late August. “For that to continue, we cannot let up.”

BEHIND THE STORY

MORE

How South Carolina’s coronavirus data is compiled

The S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control’s total COVID-19 case count includes anyone who has tested positive since the pandemic began. The data also include those who have recovered or died.

The state agency does not provide an overall, county-by-county number of cases versus the number of people who have recovered.

DHEC counts deaths based on where a patient lives rather than where they died.

Stephen Fastenau
The Island Packet
Stephen Fastenau covers Beaufort, Port Royal and the Sea Islands for The Beaufort Gazette and The Island Packet. He has worked for the newspapers since 2010 in various roles as a reporter and assistant editor. His work has been recognized with awards from the S.C. Press Association, including first place for public service as part of a large team reporting on environmental contamination in a Beaufort military community. Fastenau previously wrote for the Columbia County News-Times and Augusta Chronicle. He studied journalism and political science at the University of South Carolina in Columbia and lives in Beaufort. Support my work with a digital subscription
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