Coronavirus

Dallas County reports record COVID-19 cases including spike at child care facilities

Dallas County reported a single-day high 413 new coronavirus cases and nine deaths on Wednesday.

The county has passed 15,000 COVID-19 cases and 300 deaths as the pandemic continues to surge during June.

The previous high for cases was 345 on Saturday. The county has reported 300 or more cases the past eight days and at least 200 for the past three weeks.

The nine latest pandemic deaths include four patients with no underlying conditions, including a Dallas man in his 40s who was a resident of a long-term care facility. The deceased included four in Dallas, two in Mesquite and one each in Duncanville, Grand Prairie and Lancaster. Three men and a woman were in their 60s, two men and a woman were in their 70s, and one woman was in her 90s and a resident of a Dallas long-term care facility.

Health officials are reporting more than 17 COVID-19 cases in children and staff from nine different child care facilities during the past week, including additional illness in associated family members with affected children. Officials said that before this week only one child care facility had reported COVID-19 cases the previous two months.

“Increasing outbreaks of cases are being reported from multiple large social gatherings since the beginning of June,” the county reported in a release. “The recent death of a 12-year-old is under investigation by the Medical Examiner’s office as a COVID-19 associated death.”

Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said there has been a 40% increase in COVID-19 hospitalizations in the county over the past two weeks.

“If these percentage increases continue, many more people will get sick and die in the coming weeks,” Jenkins said in a release.

COVID-19 Hospitalizations over Time

Coronavirus daily hospitalization counts in Texas and the larger Trauma Service Areas, beginning April 8, 2020. Data provided by Texas Health and Human Services.

Flourish Studio

DFW area Coronavirus cases

Tap the map to see cases in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Pan the map to see cases elsewhere in the US. The data for the map is maintained by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at the Johns Hopkins University and automated by the Esri Living Atlas team. Data sources are WHO, US CDC, China NHC, ECDC, and DXY. The data also includes local reports.


This story was originally published June 17, 2020 at 3:46 PM.

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Stefan Stevenson
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Stefan Stevenson was a sports writer for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram from 1997 to 2022. He covered TCU athletics, the Texas Rangers and the Dallas Cowboys.
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