coronavirus

Dallas County Adds 624 COVID-19 Cases Wednesday, Three More Deaths

Dallas County Judge warns against events like trick-or-treating due to continuing rise in cases of adults and children

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The Dallas County Health Department is reporting 624 new COVID-19 cases Wednesday along with three more deaths.

The latest victims include two women in their 60s from Dallas and a man in his 80s from Irving. All three had been hospitalized in the ICU but only the women had underlying high-risk health conditions.

"As our numbers continue to climb, I'll remind you that we know what we need to do, we just need to do it," Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said in a prepared statement Wednesday. "Please make sure to have a safe Halloween and forgo trick-or-treating and Halloween parties this year for family activities.

The provisional 7-day average for new confirmed and probable cases for CDC week 42 was 588 per day, the highest daily average since July. Jenkins said the number of known school-aged children with COVID-19 doubled over the last three weeks from 251 cases to 493 cases and he cautioned that if people don't take steps to curb the spread of the virus medical models indicate the county will once again see new cases numbers over 1,000 per day by Thanksgiving.

According to data from the state health department, hospitalizations in Texas are up again Wednesday to more than 5,600.

"We don't want to get into the holiday season with it gets colder, more people are inside, and there are more gatherings with people outside our home, during an extremely high COVID spike or we will be in for a bad holiday season and spring. Let's all band together now and move from selfishness to sacrifice to put our families and community and our economy in a safer, better place," Jenkins said.

Of the 624 cases reported, 479 were confirmed and 145 were probable, according to Dallas County Health and Human Services. DCHHS said 346 of the cases came from the DSHS backlog and all were from this month.

The county has now accumulated 94,837 confirmed cases of the virus since testing began in March. The county said there have been 1,104 confirmed deaths attributed in the county to the virus, which, according to Dallas County Health and Human Services Director Dr. Philip Huang, is now the third leading cause of death in the county behind diseases of the heart and cancers.

Are Trick-or-Treating and Voting Dangerous?

Judge Jenkins advised North Texans to avoid trick-or-treating this year, and other similar events, and called them a possible super-spreader activity.

"As we approach the Halloween holiday with cases increasing, it’s important that families make responsible decisions to do things within the family unit and not come into contact with many people outside their home. Doctors strongly encourage all residents to forgo trick or treating, trunk or treating, and Halloween parties and instead focus on candy hunts, Halloween themed family parties or movie nights, pumpkin carving and other things that can be done with the people that you live with. We must get this under control now or we are in for a rough holiday season and winter when the weather forces more people indoors which increases the chance of COVID-19 spread. We can do this North Texas but it’s up to each and every one of us. You’ve brought the numbers down twice before and you can do it again,” Jenkins said.

Jenkins said that voting in person in Dallas County is safe and that the county has spent millions of dollars on disinfectants, plexiglass screens and other precautions to ensure that voters are safe. Voters can also see a live, color-coded map showing the approximate wait times at polling locations in Dallas County so that they can see which polls are least crowded and where voting can be done quickly. See the map here.

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