Get our newsletters
Daily Coronavirus Briefing

Daily Coronavirus Briefing for Feb. 1

Posted

Department of Health: 18.26 million vaccinations to date in Pennsylvania

Harrisburg, PA - The Pennsylvania Department of Health today confirmed that on Feb.1, there were 5,337 additional positive cases of COVID-19, bringing the statewide cumulative total cases to 2,667,166.
There were 10 new deaths identified by the Pennsylvania death registry on Jan. 31 and reported for a cumulative total of 40,836 deaths attributed to COVID-19.
There are 455,382 who have a positive viral antigen test and are considered probable cases. There are 6,004,441 individuals who have tested negative to date.
The department continues to urge Pennsylvanians to follow CDC guidance for wearing a mask where required by law, rules and regulations, including health care, local business and workplace guidance. For the protection of themselves and others, individuals who have not yet been vaccinated or are partially vaccinated, are still encouraged to wear a mask when in public. Bucks County is in an area of substantial transmission. CDC also recommends all individuals wear a mask indoors in public if you are in an area of substantial or high transmission.
The CDC lists Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Lehigh, Montgomery, Northampton and Philadelphia counties as areas of high transmission.

Numbers by county as of February 1

  • Bucks County: 118,690 cases and 1,742 deaths
  • Chester County: 87,658 cases and 1070 deaths
  • Delaware County: 106,289 cases and 1,723 deaths
  • Lehigh County: 87,011 cases and 1,166 deaths
  • Montgomery County: 145,247 cases and 2,164 deaths
  • Northampton County: 77,061 cases and 1,009 deaths
  • Philadelphia: 296,373 cases and 4,691 deaths

The Department of Health continues to provide the public with extensive and frequently updated data on both the COVID-19 dashboard and the vaccine dashboard. Both dashboards provide an interactive experience for the user to review statewide and local-level data updated daily.


Join our readers whose generous donations are making it possible for you to read our news coverage. Help keep local journalism alive and our community strong. Donate today.

Coronavirus

X