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Colorado coronavirus latest numbers, Nov. 3

The number of people currently hospitalized is 814, and the state's seven-day, moving average positivity rate is 8.92%.

COLORADO, USA — There are 814 patients currently hospitalized in Colorado as of Nov. 3, and the seven-day, moving average positivity rate increased to 8.92%, according to the latest data from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE).

Positivity is an important indicator of the status of COVID-19 in the state. The World Health Organization (WHO) in May 2020 recommended that the positivity rate be at or below 5% to contain the virus.

> Video above: Colorado hospitals concerned about rising COVID hospitalizations. 

Current hospitalization data are also a key metric because they can be an indicator of whether Colorado’s hospital system is being overwhelmed by the virus. In April, hospitalizations peaked at 888 in one day.

Data are released each day at 4 p.m. Numbers will be updated each day at that time.

A breakdown of the data and links to related stories can be found below.

What to know right now:

  • 114,709 cumulative cases, up from 112,147 the day prior.   
  • 9,180 cumulative hospitalizations, up from 9,114 the day prior.    
  • 2,311 deaths among those who tested positive for COVID-19, up from 2,292the day prior. 
  • 2,134 deaths due to COVID-19, up from 2,126 the day prior. 
  • Get the latest from CDPHE here.
  • Gov. Jared Polis issued an executive order mandating face masks or coverings for anyone in indoor places in public.

Updates from Nov. 2 can be found here

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Coronavirus data breakdown

CDPHE reports 114,709 people have tested positive for the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, COVID-19. That's up from 112,147 the day prior.   

The graphic below shows case growth, which comes from subtracting the total number of cases from the previous day. A moving average helps capture a trend over a period of time. This removes some noise from the day-to-day numbers. The line on the graph is the seven-day moving average of case growth.

Positivity 

Positivity is the number of tests that come back with a COVID-19 result. Above 10% could be an indicator that not enough testing is being done and that only people likely to have COVID are getting tested. The World Health Organization recommended in May 2020 that the positivity rate should be even lower, 5%, to contain the virus.

Fatalities

CDPHE reports:

  • 2,311 deaths among people with COVID-19
  • 2,134 deaths due to COVID-19

The majority of deaths — 53% — are among people over age 80; 23% of deaths occurred in people between ages 70-79, and 13% were in people ages 60-69.

The graph below shows the number of people who have died from COVID-19 based on the date of their death.

On May 15, CDPHE shifted to a death documentation difference that divided into "deaths among cases" and "deaths due to COVID-19." Dr. Rachel Herlihy, state epidemiologist at CDPHE, said on May 18 that deaths in the "among" category are from those that tested positive for COVID-19 either before or after death. This is done by medical workers on the front line. Deaths in the "due to" category lag and stem from death certificates that the Centers for Disease Control codes and then sends to CDPHE. On the CDPHE website, it explains the two categories should not be on the same timeline because of reporting differences.

Hospitalizations

Of those who tested positive for the disease, a total of 9,114 cumulative hospitalizations have been reported.

As of Nov. 2, 814 patients were hospitalized with the disease, according to the most recent data from the Colorado Hospital Association. Within the last 24 hours, 68 patients had been transferred or discharged.

(Note: 90% of facilities reported data as of Nov. 3.)

The graph below shows the number of people currently hospitalized with a COVID-19 diagnosis and the number of people who have been discharged within 24 hours. This is a key metric because it can be an indicator of whether or not Colorado’s hospital system is being overwhelmed by the virus.

Testing

According to CDPHE, 1,259,853 people have been tested, up from 1,249,128  the day prior, and all 64 counties are reporting cases.   

This graph shows the total number of tests processed each day.

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