COVID restrictions ease at 5 pm; more than 784,000 North Carolinians have received both doses

Last Updated: February 26, 2021By Tags: , ,

Feb. 26. With COVID-19 restrictions easing at 5 pm today, the NC Dept. of Health & Human Services is reporting more than 784,000 North Carolinians have received both doses of the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines.

That’s almost twice as many as two weeks ago.

The median number of new cases over the past week (3,227) is down 15.8 percent from the median volume over the past month (3,833). (See chart: Data from Johns Hopkins University.)

There were 2,924 new cases in today’s report from the NCDHHS.

Hospitalizations

Statewide, hospitalizations fell to 1,465, a three-month low.

Deaths

There were 49 new deaths statewide attributable to the coronavirus, for a total of 11,186 since the outbreak began in North Carolina a year ago. There was one new death in Mecklenburg County, for a total of 855 COVID-related deaths county-wide.

Testing

The statewide positive test rate is at 4.7 percent, finally below the 5 percent goal two days in a row. The Mecklenburg positive test rate is 6.5 percent.

Mecklenburg

In Mecklenburg County, the NCDHHS reported 300 new cases.

North Mecklenburg

Cornelius: 8 new cases, 2,498 cumulative; 21 deaths total.

Davidson: 6 new cases, 1,420 cumulative; 15 deaths total.

Huntersville: 24 new cases, 5,093 cumulative; 47 deaths total.

No Comments

  1. Tracy February 27, 2021 at 2:16 pm - Reply

    When someone gets the vaccine what are the chances of catching the virus from them

    • Newsroom February 28, 2021 at 10:34 am - Reply

      This is from the NCDHHS FAQs on vaccines. Note the last sentence:
      Q: What should you do after you have been vaccinated?
      A: Continue practicing the 3 Ws – wearing a mask, waiting 6 feet apart, washing your hands – as well as limiting gatherings. The vaccine does not provide full protection until two weeks after the second dose. The vaccine is very effective to prevent becoming ill from COVID-19, though scientists are still studying how often vaccinated individuals can become infected with the COVID-19 virus or pass the virus to others. Vaccinated people need to still think of themselves as potential virus spreaders.

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