Jan 15, 2021
ESCANABA As of Thursday, the U.P. had 15,210 confirmed cases of COVID-19, 3,642 probable cases, 343 deaths and 80 probable deaths linked to the disease, according to state officials.
The figure does not include prisoners in the Michigan Department of Corrections.
According to the state’s county-by-county count issued Thursday, Delta County had a total of 2,568 confirmed COVID-19 cases (up six from Wednesday), 442 probable cases, 60 deaths and 18 probable deaths. Delta County’s death rate has remained stable for the past several days. Menominee County had 1,546 confirmed cases (up three from Wednesday), 245 probable cases, 34 deaths and two probable deaths. Schoolcraft County had 223 confirmed cases (no change from Wednesday, 22 probable cases, three deaths and one probable death.
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ESCANABA As of Tuesday, the U.P. had 13,948 confirmed cases of COVID-19, 3,064 probable cases, 312 deaths and 69 probable deaths linked to the disease, according to state officials.
According to the state’s county-by-county count issued Tuesday, Delta County had a total of 2,438 confirmed COVID-19 cases, 403 probable cases, 57 deaths and 17 probable deaths; Menominee County had 1,395 confirmed cases, 212 probable cases, and 25 deaths; Schoolcraft County had 195 confirmed cases, 16 probable cases, three deaths and one probable death.
Elsewhere in the peninsula, Alger County had 185 confirmed cases, 101 probable cases, one death and one probable death; Baraga County had 405 confirmed cases, 94 probable cases, and 28 deaths; Chippewa County had 570 confirmed cases, 738 probable cases, 10 deaths and two probable deaths; Dickinson County had 1,936 confirmed cases, 169 probable cases, 53 deaths and 13 probable deaths; Gogebic County had 700 confirmed cases, 289 pro
Yesterday during a Press Conference in which no Press people were shown Whitmer said the following: If you are planning to travel or gather with other households for the holidays we urge you to reconsider”
Thus cancel any Christmas celebration unless it is in your own home and I hear she will possibly urge people to stay 6 feet apart and wear a mask while in your own home. Ten months ago no one would have dreamed of ordering people to wear masks in their own homes. The State of Pennsylvania’s Democrat Governor Wolf did exactly that when he announced on November 17
We remember Midland s 37 deaths from COVID
Dec. 12, 2020
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Individuals who have died in Midland County from COVID-19. Top row, left to right: Rose MacDonald, Paul Martin Pankratz, Nancy A. Raymond, Oscar Rosalez, Margaret Ann Szczepanski, Lowell Paige Hilton, Leroy R. Knoertzer, Kay Vvonne Reeves. Second row: Keith Gunnar Syerson, Reginald F. Huebner, Tim C. Lamparski, Joan Stark, Rolland R. Thornton, Jeanne Lou Nagel, John Forrest Billingsley, Gregory Keith Kern Sr. Third row: Jean M. Fronius, John Allen Maul, Helen Mae Wayward, Joseph Reddo, Frances G. Vella-Williams, Vincent Denvers Hatch, Elsie O. Havens, James E. Johnson. Fourth row: Donald Owen Huber, Deanne Balch, David Lee Spitnale, Barbara Reiss, David Lawrence Phillips, Alice V. Olsen, Anthony Hasenfrantz Sr., Joseph Edgar Travis.
CHICAGO, Dec. 10 (Xinhua) Large variations in exposure at home, in the community and at work rather than case-fatality rates may explain the well-documented racial disparities in COVID-19 mortality during the first wave of the pandemic last spring, according to a University of Michigan (UM) study.