Statewide Response Updates
Newest numbers.?The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) reported a total of 1,796,023 confirmed cases as of 11:59 p.m. on Sept. 11. There have been 14,060 COVID-19 deaths in Washington.
For the most recent number of cases by county, demographics, and more, visit the Department of Health's dashboard.
Dashboard data note (Sept. 14): The DOH dashboard Current Status and Disease Activity pages were not updated yesterday due to an issue in our data systems. We expect to resume our regular reporting on Friday, Sept. 16.?
DOH partners bring COVID-19 vaccine clinics to state college campuses.?DOH?s?Care-A-Van program, in partnership with the?Power of Providers (POP) Initiative?will host a series of COVID-19 vaccine and booster clinics at several college and university campuses across Washington state.?Read the full Sept. 14 news release.
DOH announces updated at-home COVID-19 testing guidance.?DOH has announced updated guidance around COVID-19 at-home testing, including changes to how self-testing results should be reported and additional information about COVID-19 treatment.?Read the full Sept. 9 news release.
Inslee announces end to remaining COVID-19 emergency orders and state of emergency by Oct. 31.?Nearly three-quarters of the governor?s 85 COVID-19 emergency orders have been lifted, and an additional?13 health care-related orders will end Oct. 27. The remaining 10 orders will be lifted on Oct. 31, including the underlying state of emergency.?Read the full Sept. 8 news release.
Reported COVID-19 reinfections in Washington state. This weekly report includes information on hospitalizations and deaths, demographics, trends over time, and vaccination status of people with a reinfection where DOH has information about both infection events. Read the full Sept. 14 report.
COVID-19 cases among children and youth in Washington. This weekly report provides information on COVID-19 in all children and youth, ages 0 to 19 years. Cases are broken down by educational service district (ESD) regions and age. Read the full Sept. 14 report in English and in Spanish.
COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths by vaccination status. This weekly report provides a brief overview of confirmed or probable COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths among those who are not fully vaccinated in Washington state. Read the full Sept. 14 report.
Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children Associated with COVID-19 in Washington State report. Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) is a condition that causes inflammation in different body parts, including the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, skin, eyes, or gastrointestinal organs. Read the full Sept. 14 report.
DOH SARS-CoV-2 sequencing and variants report. This weekly report summarizes genome sequencing coverage of Washington SARS-CoV-2 specimens from multiple laboratories from across the United States and our state. It provides a statewide view of sequencing capacity and data, including breakouts by county and demographics. Read the full Sept. 14 report.
SARS-CoV-2 vaccine breakthrough surveillance and case information resource. This weekly report provides data and criteria on fully vaccinated people who test positive with SARS-CoV-2 and may or may not develop COVID-19 symptoms. Read the full Sept. 14 report.
Resources
Get a vaccine, exposure notifications, COVID-19 testing, and proof of vaccination.?Use the DOH vaccine locator to help end the pandemic. Next, get WA Notify so you?ll know if you?ve been near another WA Notify user who later tests positive for COVID-19. To get quickly and easily tested anywhere in Washington, visit the DOH COVID-19 testing locations page.?For K-12 students, staff, and parents/guardians, learn more about our partnership that helps schools provide easy COVID-19 testing on site. Once vaccinated, you can provide your vaccination status using WA Verify.
Care Connect Washington assistance. Care Connect provides food and other support to people who test positive for COVID-19 so they can isolate at home. People who have been exposed to the virus and are actively quarantining are also eligible. Making it easier for people to stay home helps slow the spread of the illness. Call the COVID-19 Information Hotline at 1-800-525-0127, then press #. Language assistance is available. The hotline hours are 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday, and 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday and observed state holidays.
Latest COVID-19 reopening guidance for businesses and workers.?See a full list of current reopening guidance from the Governor's Office.
Guidance and resources for employers and business owners.?Sign up for the Economic and Business Resilience Newsletter.
The state COVID-19 Assistance Hotline?is a general information line related to COVID-19. If you need information or have a general question, call 1-800-525-0127, then press # or text?211-211?for help. Hours of operation are 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday, and 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday and on?observed state holidays. You can also text the word??Coronavirus??to?211-211?to receive information and updates on your phone wherever you are. You will receive links to the latest information on COVID-19, including county-level updates, and resources for families, businesses, students, and more.
DOH publishes this bulletin on Thursdays only, and only if there is significant new information to share.?
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