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Coronavirus in the DMV: October 7

The coronavirus impact on the DMV continues. Here are the updates for October 7.

WASHINGTON — The novel coronavirus (COVID-19) remains present around the country, as well as here in the DMV. Things like masks and social distancing are the most important to help combat the spread of the virus.

This blog details the latest updates on the coronavirus in D.C., Maryland, and Virginia. Check-in each day for what’s new, where each part of the DMV is at in its phased reopening plan and what direction the coronavirus trend is headed.

THIS STORY IS NO LONGER BEING UPDATED. CLICK HERE FOR THE LATEST.

Have a question? Text it to us at 202-895-5599.

Updates on coronavirus cases come from health departments between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. every day.

Tracking the Coronavirus

  • D.C health officials reported 45 cases of coronavirus Wednesday, closer to the District's average number following Tuesday's report of more than 100 cases.
  • D.C. is now averaging 53 cases of the virus per day, up from 43 cases two weeks ago.
  • Maryland's average number of coronavirus cases per day is now 562. Up slightly from two weeks ago, when the state reported an average of 487 cases per day.
  • Maryland reported 6 deaths from the coronavirus Wednesday. The state has maintained an average of three deaths a day for the last four days.
  • Virginia reported 509 coronavirus cases on Wednesday. That's the commonwealth's lowest daily case count in a week.
  • Virginia's average number of cases is now 774 cases. Two weeks ago it was 890 cases. That's a 14% drop.

Reopening the DMV

The latest in reopening news:

  • Mayor Bowser extends D.C.'s public health emergency order until Dec. 31, 2020. Read the full order here.
  • D.C. Public Schools announces that a limited number of DCPS students can return to in-person learning starting in November. Read the detailed plan here.
  • DC health released its latest list of high-risk states. Find it here.
  • D.C. announced a pilot that will allow a limited number of venues to host live entertainment. Here are the details.
  • Maryland has entered the third and final stage of its reopening plan, with all businesses able to reopen. Details on what Phase 3 looks like here.
  • Montgomery County has adjusted some of its Phase 2 guidelines. More here. 
  • Prince George's County, Maryland, remains in Phase 2, but released additional reopenings. Here's a look.
  • Metro returns to a normal schedule with masks and social distancing still required. Here's the latest.

Previous Updates

October 6:

  • D.C. sees a large spike and reports 105 new positive COVID-19 cases, bringing the city's overall positive case total to 15,652.
  •  No new deaths reported in D.C. for three days straight
  • Virginia is now averaging over 800 positive cases of the coronavirus a day.

October 5:

  • D.C. health officials reported zero new deaths from the coronavirus Monday.
  • D.C. is now averaging 40 cases of coronavirus a day, down slightly from two weeks ago.
  • Maryland is now averaging 3 deaths per day from coronavirus. That's the lowest average number of deaths since March.
  • Maryland is now averaging 558 cases of coronavirus a day, about the same as the average number two weeks ago.
  • Virginia health officials reported 3 deaths on Monday. A low number following the commonwealth's backlog issues.
  • Virginia reported 687 new cases of coronavirus Monday, following a weekend where more than 1,000 cases were reported both Saturday and Sunday.
  • The DMV region as a whole is nearing 300,000 coronavirus cases total. As of Monday 295,895 cases have been reported.

Read previous updates here.

What precautions should you take?

  • Avoid close contact with people who are sick.
  • Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth with unwashed hands.
  • Wash your hands often with soap and warm water for at least 20 seconds.
  • Use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer that contains at least 60 percent alcohol if soap and water are unavailable.
  • Cover your cough or sneeze with a tissue, then throw the tissue in the trash.

Check the status of the virus in your state with your state health department's websites by tapping below:

D.C. Coronavirus Surveillance Data

Virginia Department of Health

Maryland Department of Health

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