Another 138 people have died of COVID-19 in Illinois, raising the state’s death toll to 3,928.
Health officials on Thursday reported 3,239 new cases among the 22,678 test results received by the state a day earlier.
In total, there have been 87,937 coronavirus cases confirmed in 99 of Illinois’ 102 counties since the pandemic hit the state.
More than 512,000 people have been tested overall, with the state’s rolling positive rate over the last week at about 17%, officials said.
Even as Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration has warned the state could see between 50 and 150 deaths a day into June — or worse — the Democratic governor is facing criticism from Republican legislators and others fed up about his phased reopening plan. Some are upset that the governor split the state into four regions, instead of the 11 Emergency Medical Services regions the state has set up.
For the first time on Thursday, the state’s Northeast region, including Chicago and the collar counties, met the medical benchmarks set by the Pritzker administration to potentially move from the second phase of the reopening plan to the third phase. That would allow some additional businesses to resume operations on a limited basis when the current stay-at-home order expires May 29.
Those metrics include a 19.9% testing positivity rate for the Northeast region, just barely hitting the 20% standard required by Pritzker’s office over a two-week period.
“Remember, they need to go through a time period, and there needs to be an averaging of those metrics,” Pritzker said.
All other regions previously had been on track to enter the third phase and are still in line to do so.
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Meanwhile, Cook County assumed the ominous moniker of having the most COVID-19 cases of any county in the United States with 58,457. With the latest cases it overtook Queens County, New York, which reported 58,084 as of Thursday, according to data kept by Johns Hopkins University.
Cook County added 2,051 cases over the last 24 hours compared to 336 for Queens, which has fewer than half the number of residents compared to Cook County but a much higher population density.
Illinois Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike called the increase in cases is “a function of increasing our testing.
“No one has captured all cases of COVID-19 — they have captured all cases for which people have been tested,” Ezike said. “This is getting us closer to the actual numbers, but we’re far, far, far from having the actual numbers.”