Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Number of COVID-19 cases continues upward climb in Virginia

Weekly increase in cases driven by Hampton Roads region

Kate Andrews //July 20, 2020//

Number of COVID-19 cases continues upward climb in Virginia

Weekly increase in cases driven by Hampton Roads region

Kate Andrews // July 20, 2020//

Listen to this article

COVID-19 cases continued to increase statewide last week at a higher rate than the previous week, with 6,733 more people testing positive since July 13.

Over the past month, the weekly rate has climbed from 3,724 the last week of June to 5,540 new cases between July 6 and 13, according to the Virginia Department of Health. As of Monday, July 20, the state has 78,375 coronavirus cases total and 2,031 deaths, an increase of 68 fatalities from last week. That marks a significant slowdown in new virus-related deaths, which were exceeding 100 a week over the past month.

As of July 16, the seven-day positivity rate statewide is 7.7%, an increase from 6.8% last week. As reported last week, the most dramatic surges are in the Hampton Roads area.

Portsmouth has the highest positivity rate in the state, at 15.9%, followed by Norfolk at 15.4%. Chesapeake’s current rate is 13.8%.

Virginia Beach has a 12% positivity rate, Hampton is at 12.2%, and the Peninsula Health District is at 10.8%. The most-affected average age is also younger than earlier in the pandemic, with the majority of cases now falling between the ages of 20 and 39, although hospitalizations and deaths continue to occur more often with older patients, typically over the age of 60.

Last week, Gov. Ralph Northam declared that the health department and Virginia ABC will conduct drop-in visits to businesses to make sure they’re following safety rules, including customers and employees wearing masks and not allowing people to gather at bars. He said much of the state’s enforcement focus will be in Hampton Roads, which saw its number of daily cases rise more than five-fold over the past month, from an average of 60 cases to 346 a day.

These are the Virginia localities that have seen 400 or more total cases, as of July 20:

  • Fairfax County: 14,934
  • Prince William County: 8,190
  • Loudoun County: 4,670
  • Chesterfield County: 3,472
  • Henrico County: 3,058
  • Arlington County: 2,737
  • Virginia Beach: 2,720
  • Richmond: 2,588
  • Alexandria: 2,559
  • Norfolk: 2,214
  • Chesapeake: 1,758
  • Manassas: 1,530
  • Newport News: 1,206
  • Spotsylvania County: 1,154
  • Stafford County: 1,128
  • Accomack County: 1,053
  • Harrisonburg: 1,009
  • Portsmouth: 1,009
  • Culpeper County: 900
  • Rockingham County: 829
  • Suffolk: 757
  • Hampton: 723
  • Roanoke: 659
  • Shenandoah County: 650
  • Albemarle County: 628
  • Frederick County: 597
  • Buckingham County: 584
  • Fauquier County: 530
  • Hanover County: 518
  • Manassas Park: 473
  • James City County: 452

Globally, there are 14.56 million reported COVID-19 cases and 607,187 confirmed deaths as of July 20. The United States, which has the most confirmed cases and deaths worldwide, has seen 3.79 million confirmed cases so far, with 140,716 deaths nationwide attributed to the coronavirus since February.

Below is the latest data from VDH:

 

 

Subscribe to Virginia Business.

Get our daily e-newsletter.

r
YOUR NEWS.
YOUR INBOX.
DAILY.

By subscribing you agree to our Privacy Policy.