Beaufort Co. reports record 134 new COVID cases ahead of New Year, 1 new death Thursday
Beaufort County on Thursday logged a record 134 new COVID-19 cases and one new death in the last daily case report of 2020.
The previous single-day high for cases was 126 on Dec. 18; prior to that, the county recorded 113 on July 30.
South Carolina’s Department of Health and Environmental Control also reported one new death of an elderly COVID-19 patient, who died Dec. 9.
Bluffton’s zip code of 29910, which has the highest number of cases in the county, surpassed 2,500 reported cases Thursday.
Across the state, 3,234 new cases and 39 new deaths were reported, along with eight probable deaths.
The Lowcountry has recorded a surge of infections throughout December, mirroring other places around South Carolina and the rest of the country.
Daily case counts in Beaufort County are regularly back to early-August levels, although Thursday’s report shattered records from July.
Coronavirus cases are rising across the entire Palmetto State, DHEC data show. And experts have warned S.C. residents to follow public health guidelines during the holiday season, fearing rapid transmission of the novel virus in poorly ventilated buildings.
As of Wednesday, Beaufort County School District had reported 279 COVID-19 cases among students and staff since Sept. 28, up 38 from the 241 cases reported on Dec. 22 before winter break began.
The previous number included at least six student-athletes at five schools who tested positive in December, leading 167 students and coaching staff at six schools to quarantine over winter break.
The case increase comes less than a week before the end of break. When students return to classes on Jan. 4, the district will begin offering five days a week of in-person classes for the first time since schools shut down in March. About 69% of the district’s 21,000-plus students will attend these classes, while the rest will remain online-only.
Local numbers
Viral test results reported Tuesday (the most recent date for which data is available): 375
Average percentage of positive viral tests in the past week, as of Tuesday: 28.3%
Total cases: 9,586 confirmed, according to DHEC
Total deaths: 105 confirmed, according to DHEC
Two-week cumulative incidence rate as of Tuesday: 579.8 cases per 100,000 people, a “high” rate under DHEC’s definition. 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, has previously said counties should aim to have a two-week incidence rate of less than 50 new cases per 100,000 people.
Statewide numbers
Percentage of positive non-antibody tests reported Tuesday: 31.2%
New cases announced Thursday: 3,234
Total cases: 283,424 confirmed
New deaths announced Wednesday: 39
Total deaths: 4,885 confirmed
Cases by ZIP code
Bluffton’s ZIP code of 29910 continues to lead the county with 2,508 cases this year. Beaufort’s 29902 ZIP code, meanwhile, has recorded 1,535 cases since March, the second-highest figure in the county.
Hilton Head’s 29928 ZIP code, covering the southeastern part of the island, has 679 cases. The 29926 ZIP code on the north side has 1,085 cases, according to DHEC data.
Okatie’s 29909 ZIP code, which includes Sun City Hilton Head, has reported 639 cases.
Coronavirus infections at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island are included 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.
People who are active in the community or those who can’t effectively social distance or wear a mask should be tested for COVID-19 monthly, according to DHEC.
BEHIND THE STORY
MOREHow 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.