334 New Coronavirus Cases in Wyoming on Wednesday; 4,974 Active

The number of active coronavirus cases in Wyoming increased slightly on Wednesday, according to Wyoming Department of Health figures.

December 09, 20202 min read

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(Cowboy State Daily Staff)

The number of active coronavirus cases in Wyoming increased slightly on Wednesday, according to Wyoming Department of Health figures.

The department, in its daily coronavirus update, said 334 new confirmed cases were reported around the state Wednesday, along with 76 new probable cases.

At the same time, the state received new reports of 378 recoveries among patients with either confirmed or probable coronavirus cases, leaving it with 4,974 active cases, an increase of 13 from Tuesday.

Laramie County had 1,114 active cases; Natrona County had 957; Campbell County had 478; Sweetwater had 300; Fremont had 290; Albany had 222; Park had 204; Goshen had 201; Washakie had 185; Sheridan had 140; Uinta had 137; Teton had 109; Lincoln had 102; Johnson had 79; Converse had 77; Carbon had 71; Big Horn had 69; Sublette had 67; Platte had 55; Crook had 37; Weston had 35; Hot Springs had 28, and Niobrara had 17.

Active cases are determined by adding the total confirmed and probable coronavirus cases diagnosed since the illness first surfaced in Wyoming on March 12, subtracting the number of recoveries during the same period among patients with both confirmed and probable cases and taking into account the number of deaths attributed to the illness.

All of Wyoming’s counties reported increases in confirmed cases Wednesday. Laramie County had the highest number of new cases at 72. Natrona County had 47.

The increase in confirmed case numbers brought the number of cases confirmed since the first case was detected in Wyoming in mid-March to 32,889.The number of probable cases increased by 76 to total 4,996 since the pandemic began.

The growth in recoveries means that 32,612 of the 37,885 people diagnosed with confirmed or probable coronavirus since mid-March have recovered.

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