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Summer COVID-19 surge continues to recede in Clark County and Nevada

COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue to decline in both Clark County and the state, according to new data released Wednesday, the same day the FDA authorized updated booster shots intended to blunt a potential winter surge.

Cases and hospitalizations dipped for the eighth straight week, with deaths also dropping, according to data from the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services. However, the downward trend shouldn’t keep eligible individuals from getting an updated booster, one local health official said.

“The importance of trying to get it now is to help prevent a surge of cases in fall and winter,” said Dr. Cort Lohff, chief medical officer for the Southern Nevada Health District.

The updated boosters developed by Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech were formulated to fend off omicron subvariants currently in circulation, as well as the original strain of the virus. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the next few days is expected to recommend who should get one of the updated boosters. They could then become available in Clark County as soon as next week, Lohff said.

Meanwhile, confirmed and suspected COVID-19 hospitalizations, considered one of the best indicators of disease trends, fell in the county to 138 from the previous week’s 155, according to state data. Statewide, hospitalizations declined to 183 from 191.

The 14-day average for daily new confirmed cases declined in the county to 187 from the previous week’s 214. Statewide, cases fell to 246 from 277. The 14-day average for daily deaths — a disease indicator that lags behind cases and hospitalizations — numbered one in both the county and the state for the second straight week. Two weeks ago, the average number of daily deaths was two in the county and three in the state, according to state data.

For the third week in a row, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has designated every county in Nevada as having low levels of COVID-19 based on case numbers and hospitalizations. Utah and Massachusetts are the only other states with every one of their counties at low levels. Nationwide, 27.5 percent of counties have low community levels, 43 percent medium, and 29.5 percent high.

Brian Labus, an assistant professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at UNLV’s School of Public Health, has said that Nevada was one of the first states to experience this summer’s surge and, in turn, saw the surge begin to subside before many other states.

In Clark County as of Wednesday, there have been a total of 591,689 confirmed cases over the course of the pandemic, and 8.917 deaths. Statewide, there have been 776,879 cases and 11,400 deaths.

Contact Mary Hynes at mhynes@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0336. Follow @MaryHynes1 on Twitter.

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