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COVID-19 Update: Positivity rate stays at 4.1 percent as state reports 20 more deaths Southern Illinois, Metro East regions still have highest positivity rates

SPRINGFIELD - The state on Tuesday announced another 20 COVID-19-related deaths and 1,549 new confirmed cases of the virus.

Three of those deaths are from the southern Illinois counties of Perry, Jackson and Franklin.

That brings the total number of COVID-19 related deaths in Illinois to 7,657 out of 196,948 confirmed cases since the pandemic began. More than 3.14 million tests have been conducted during the same time period.

A total of 4,162 of the virus-related deaths have occurred in long-term care facilities, where 25,452 confirmed cases of the virus have been reported, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Those who have not passed away within 42 days of their initial diagnosis are considered recovered, according to IDPH. The recovery rate per those guidelines is 95 percent.

The new cases reported Tuesday were among 41,362 test results reported over the previous 24 hours, making for a one-day positivity rate of 3.7 percent. That kept the seven-day rolling average positivity rate at 4.1 percent - the sixth straight day of a rate at 4 percent or greater.

As of Aug. 8, the positivity rates in the Metro East region on the Missouri border as well as in southern Illinois increased to 7.4 percent and 7.3 percent, respectively. Those were the two highest rates for the state's 11 regions in the Restore Illinois virus mitigation plan. Behind them was Region 7, which includes Kankakee and Will County, at 6.6 percent.

The other rates ranged from 2.8 percent in eastern Illinois' Region 6 to 5.8 percent in suburban Cook County.

At the end of Monday, there were 1,459 COVID-19-positive patients reported hospitalized, including 336 in intensive care unit beds. There were 127 COVID-19-positive patients on ventilators. The hospitalization numbers were all slightly down from the day prior but still up from their pandemic lows of early and mid-July.