COVID-19 pandemic in Connecticut

The first case relating to the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. state of Connecticut was confirmed on March 8, although there had been multiple suspected cases before that point which tested negative. As of June 20, 2020, there were 45,715 cases and 4,251 deaths in the state.[1]

COVID-19 pandemic in Connecticut
Map of the outbreak in Connecticut by confirmed new infections per 100,000 people (14 days preceding June 26)
  100+ confirmed new cases
  50–100 confirmed new cases
  20–50 confirmed new cases
  10–20 confirmed new cases
  0–10 confirmed new cases
  No confirmed new cases
Map of the outbreak in Connecticut by confirmed infections per 100,000 people (as of June 26)
  1,000+ confirmed infected
  500–1,000 confirmed infected
  100–500 confirmed infected
  20–100 confirmed infected
  0–20 confirmed infected
DiseaseCOVID-19
Virus strainSARS-CoV-2
LocationConnecticut, U.S.
Index caseWilton
Arrival dateMarch 8, 2020
Confirmed cases43,763
Suspected cases1,952
Hospitalized cases150 (current)
Deaths
4,251
Government website
portal.ct.gov/coronavirus
Suspected cases have not been confirmed as being due to this strain by laboratory tests, although some other strains may have been ruled out.

Timeline

COVID-19 cases in Connecticut, United States  ()
     Deaths        Active cases and recoveries

Mar Mar Apr Apr May May Jun Jun Last 15 days Last 15 days

Date
# of cases
# of deaths
2020-03-08
1(n.a.)
2020-03-09
2(+100%)
2020-03-11
3(+50%)
2020-03-12
6(+100%)
2020-03-13
11(+83%)
2020-03-14
20(+82%)
2020-03-15
26(+30%)
2020-03-16
41(+58%)
2020-03-17
68(+66%)
2020-03-18
96(+41%)
2020-03-19
159(+66%)
2020-03-20
194(+22%)
2020-03-21
223(+15%) 5(n.a.)
2020-03-22
327(+47%) 8(+60%)
2020-03-23
415(+27%) 10(+25%)
2020-03-24
618(+49%) 12(+20%)
2020-03-25
875(+42%) 19(+58%)
2020-03-26
1,012(+16%) 21(+11%)
2020-03-27
1,291(+28%) 27(+29%)
2020-03-28
1,524(+18%) 33(+22%)
2020-03-29
1,993(+31%) 34(+3%)
2020-03-30
2,571(+29%) 36(+5.9%)
2020-03-31
3,128(+22%) 69(+92%)
2020-04-01
3,557(+14%) 85(+23%)
2020-04-02
3,824(+7.5%) 112(+32%)
2020-04-03
4,915(+29%) 132(+18%)
2020-04-04
5,276(+7.3%) 165(+25%)
2020-04-05
5,675(+7.6%) 189(+15%)
2020-04-06
6,906(+22%) 206(+9%)
2020-04-07
7,781(+13%) 277(+34%)
2020-04-08
8,781(+13%) 335(+21%)
2020-04-09
9,784(+11%) 380(+13%)
2020-04-10
10,538(+7.7%) 448(+18%)
2020-04-11
11,510(+9.2%) 494(+10%)
2020-04-12
12,035(+4.6%) 554(+12%)
2020-04-13
13,381(+11%) 602(+8.7%)
2020-04-14
13,989(+4.5%) 671(+11%)
2020-04-15
14,755(+5.5%) 868(+29%)
2020-04-16
15,884(+7.7%) 971(+12%)
2020-04-17
16,809(+5.8%) 1,036(+6.7%)
2020-04-18
17,550(+4.4%) 1,086(+4.8%)
2020-04-19
17,962(+2.3%) 1,127(+3.8%)
2020-04-20
19,815(+10%) 1,331(+18%)
2020-04-21
20,360(+2.8%) 1,423(+6.9%)
2020-04-22
22,469(+10%) 1,544(+8.5%)
2020-04-23
23,100(+2.8%) 1,639(+6.2%)
2020-04-24
23,921(+3.6%) 1,764(+7.6%)
2020-04-25
24,582(+2.8%) 1,862(+5.6%)
2020-04-26
25,269(+2.8%) 1,924(+3.3%)
2020-04-27
25,997(+2.9%) 2,012(+4.6%)
2020-04-28
26,312(+1.2%) 2,089(+3.8%)
2020-04-29
26,767(+1.7%) 2,168(+3.8%)
2020-04-30
27,700(+3.5%) 2,257(+4.1%)
2020-05-01
28,764(+3.8%) 2,339(+3.6%)
2020-05-02
29,287(+1.8%) 2,436(+4.1%)
2020-05-03
29,973(+2.3%) 2,556(+4.9%)
2020-05-04
30,621(+2.2%) 2,633(+3%)
2020-05-05
31,212(+1.9%) 2,708(+2.8%)
2020-05-06
31,803(+1.9%) 2,783(+2.8%)
2020-05-07
32,394(+1.9%) 2,858(+2.7%)
2020-05-08
32,984(+1.8%) 2,932(+2.6%)
2020-05-09
33,554(+1.7%) 2,967(+1.2%)
2020-05-10
33,765(+0.63%) 3,008(+1.4%)
2020-05-11
34,333(+1.7%) 3,041(+1.1%)
2020-05-12
34,855(+1.5%) 3,125(+2.8%)
2020-05-13
35,464(+1.7%) 3,219(+3%)
2020-05-14
36,085(+1.8%) 3,285(+2.1%)
2020-05-15
36,703(+1.7%) 3,339(+1.6%)
2020-05-16
37,419(+2%) 3,408(+2.1%)
2020-05-17
38,116(+1.9%) 3,449(+1.2%)
2020-05-18
38,430(+0.82%) 3,472(+0.67%)
2020-05-19
39,017(+1.5%) 3,529(+1.6%)
2020-05-20
39,208(+0.49%) 3,582(+1.5%)
2020-05-21
39,640(+1.1%) 3,637(+1.5%)
2020-05-22
40,022(+0.96%) 3,675(+1%)
2020-05-23
40,468(+1.1%) 3,693(+0.49%)
2020-05-24
40,873(+1%) 3,742(+1.3%)
2020-05-25
41,303(+1.1%) 3,769(+0.72%)
2020-05-26
41,288(-0.04%) 3,803(+0.9%)
2020-05-27
41,559(+0.66%) 3,826(+0.6%)
2020-05-28
41,762(+0.49%) 3,868(+1.1%)
2020-05-29
42,022(+0.62%) 3,912(+1.1%)
2020-05-30
42,201(+0.43%) 3,944(+0.82%)
2020-06-01
42,740(+1.3%) 3,970(+0.66%)
2020-06-02
42,979(+0.56%) 3,972(+0.05%)
2020-06-03
43,091(+0.26%) 3,989(+0.43%)
2020-06-04
43,239(+0.34%) 4,007(+0.45%)
2020-06-05
43,460(+0.51%) 4,038(+0.77%)
2020-06-06
43,818(+0.82%) 4,055(+0.42%)
2020-06-07
43,968(+0.34%) 4,071(+0.39%)
2020-06-08
44,092(+0.28%) 4,084(+0.32%)
2020-06-09
44,179(+0.2%) 4,097(+0.32%)
2020-06-10
44,347(+0.38%) 4,120(+0.56%)
2020-06-11
44,461(+0.26%) 4,146(+0.63%)
2020-06-12
44,689(+0.51%) 4,159(+0.31%)
2020-06-13
44,994(+0.68%) 4,186(+0.65%)
2020-06-14
45,088(+0.21%) 4,201(+0.36%)
2020-06-15
45,235(+0.33%) 4,204(+0.07%)
2020-06-16
45,349(+0.25%) 4,210(+0.14%)
2020-06-17
45,429(+0.18%) 4,219(+0.21%)
2020-06-18
45,440(+0.02%) 4,226(+0.17%)
2020-06-19
45,557(+0.26%) 4,238(+0.28%)
2020-06-20
45,715(+0.35%) 4,251(+0.31%)
2020-06-21
45,755(+0.09%) 4,260(+0.21%)
2020-06-22
45,782(+0.06%) 4,263(+0.07%)
2020-06-23
45,899(+0.26%) 4,277(+0.33%)
2020-06-24
45,913(+0.03%) 4,287(+0.23%)
2020-06-25
45,994(+0.18%) 4,298(+0.26%)
2020-06-26
46,059(+0.14%) 4,307(+0.21%)
2020-06-27
46,206(+0.32%) 4,311(+0.09%)
Cases: The number of cases confirmed in Connecticut.
Sources: CT.gov.
County [lower-alpha 1] Cases [lower-alpha 2] Deaths Hosp. Pop (2020) Cases/100k CFR
8 / 8 45,715 4,251 150 3,574,097 1,092.61 9.30%
Fairfield 16,469 1,360 53 916,829 1,796.3 8.26%
Hartford 11,392 1,344 35 894,014 1,274.3 11.80%
Litchfield 1,467 135 3 189,927 772.4 9.20%
Middlesex 1,258 172 9 165,676 759.3 13.67%
New Haven 12,174 1,060 46 862,477 1,411.5 8.71%
New London 1,209 101 3 274,055 441.2 8.35%
Tolland 895 64 0 152,691 586.2 7.15%
Windham 575 14 1 118,428 485.5 2.43%
Unknown [lower-alpha 3] 276 0 [lower-alpha 4] [lower-alpha 4] [lower-alpha 4] [lower-alpha 4]
Updated June 20, 2020
Data is publicly reported by Connecticut Department of Public Health[2][3]
  1. County where individuals with a positive case reside, not where they were diagnosed. Location of original infection may vary.
  2. Reported confirmed cases. Actual case numbers are probably higher.
  3. Pending address validation
  4. "–" denotes that no data is currently available, not that the value is zero.

January–February

In late-January, 2020, two students living in Connecticut were monitored for displaying coronavirus-like symptoms. The first student attended Wesleyan University in Middletown and was confirmed to not have the virus, and instead had a case of the flu on January 27.[4] The second student monitored for the virus was attending the 2020 Yale Model United Nations Conference at Yale University in New Haven, and was also diagnosed with the flu, not coronavirus, on January 31.[5] On January 28, a student from Uncasville who had traveled to China was suspected to carry the virus was confirmed not to, and was cleared to return to school on January 29.[6]

On February 6, the Connecticut Department of Public Health released a document with information intended for schools to prevent the spread of the virus. The document advocated for those who had been to China recently to self-monitor for 14 days, and that those exhibiting no symptoms after the 14-day period were able to return to their normal lives.[7][8]

In late February, greater precautions were undertaken by different organizations to be prepared for the eventual spread of the virus into Connecticut.[9] On February 25, the University of New Haven suggested that all students in Italy should return to the United States.[10] A laboratory in Rocky Hill was approved by the United States Centers for Disease Control to test for the coronavirus.[11]

March

March 1–2

On March 1, two of Connecticut's neighbors, Rhode Island and New York, were confirmed to have cases of the virus within, the states.[12] On the same day, both the Connecticut state governor Ned Lamont and the United States surgeon general spoke at a Connecticut Department of Public Health laboratory in Rocky Hill, which had been previously approved to test for the virus.[13] On March 2, two suspected cases of coronavirus in Connecticut were confirmed to be negative.[14]

Connecticut governor Ned Lamont with senator Richard Blumenthal and US surgeon general Jerome Adams discussing the state and federal response to the coronavirus outbreak on March 2

March 3–4

Southern Connecticut State University suspended all institutionally-supported travel to nations including Italy, China, South Korea, and Japan on March 3 to try to prevent the spread of the virus.[15] On March 4, it was revealed that a Meriden-based company had begun research on a vaccine for SARS-Cov-2.[16]

March 5–6

On March 5, over 200 people in Connecticut were advised to self-monitor for symptoms.[17] An employee at Danbury hospital and Norwalk hospital was confirmed to have the coronavirus on March 6, which marked the first confirmed coronavirus case that could be linked to Connecticut. The person infected lived in New York however, and was quarantined in Westchester county, where she lived.[18]

March 7–8

On March 8, the first confirmed case in the state was reported in the town of Wilton. The patient was between the ages of 40 and 50 and was believed to have contracted the virus during a trip to California.[19]

March 9

A second positive case of coronavirus was confirmed on March 9. The patient was a female in her 60s who was a healthcare worker at Bridgeport Hospital.[20]

Nearly empty freezers at a Big Y grocery store in Cheshire, Connecticut on 14 March 2020 after hoarding reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic

March 10

On March 10, governor Ned Lamont declared a civil preparedness and public health emergency in response to the coronavirus.[21]

March 13

On March 13, governor Lamont ordered all schools to close after March 16 until at least March 31.[22]

March 24

Soldiers from the Connecticut Army National Guard's 102nd Infantry Regiment began distributing personal protective equipment to medical facility personnel at the New Britain Armory. Members of the 1st and 2nd Governor's Foot Guard and 2nd Governor's Horse Guard assembled a mobile field hospital at Saint Francis Hospital in Hartford, Connecticut.[23]

March 27

Dr. Cory Edgar, 48, of the University of Connecticut Health Center was arrested and charged with a breach of peace misdemeanor for coughing on and hugging coworkers. Edgar is in good health and is not believed to have COVID-19.[24] Sen Chris Murphy (D-CT) said that administration officials turned down an offer of congressional funding made on February 5.[25]

March 28

President Trump decided against imposing a broad two-week lockdown on New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut; however, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC) advised residents of the region not to travel except for essential purposes.[26]

April

April 11

Connecticut National Guard works putting up a Field Hospital with 646 beds at the Connecticut Convention Center.[27]

May

May 20

Connecticut began Phase 1 of a three phase plan to reopen Connecticut. Phase 1 allowed museums and zoos (outdoors only), offices, restaurant (outdoors only), retail and malls, outdoor recreation, and university research.[28]

June

June 1

Two of Connecticut's largest employers, Mohegan Sun Casino and Foxwoods Resort Casino, reopen. While Lamont publicly urges casinos to stay closed, due to the sovereign nature of the tribal nations that own the casinos, they are able to open before similar businesses are allowed in Connecticut.[29] The state erects electric signs on roads leading to the casinos discouraging people from going.[30]

Hair salons and barbershops are allowed to open.[28]

June 17

Connecticut began phase 2 of reopening. Indoor dining, hotels, and gyms were allowed to open.[31]

Impact

Sports

In college sports, the National Collegiate Athletic Association canceled all winter and spring tournaments, most notably the Division I men's and women's basketball tournaments, affecting colleges and universities statewide.[32] On March 16, the National Junior College Athletic Association also canceled the remainder of the winter seasons as well as the spring seasons.[33] In addition, CIAC, which regulates high school athletics in the state canceled winter championship tournaments and is reported to currently be discussing the future of spring sports.

Unemployment

Over 30,000 unemployment claims have been filed between Friday, March 13, and Tuesday, March 17 in Connecticut.[34] Many of these unemployment claims have been associated with the laying-off of employees of businesses unable to afford to maintain their entire staff during the outbreak, as well as due to the closure of businesses reliant on public and social interactions such as bars and gyms.[35][36]

Xenophobia and racism

In response to racism surrounding the coronavirus outbreak, Connecticut governor Ned Lamont stated during a speech at the Connecticut Department of Public Health's laboratory in Rocky Hill, "there is no link between race or ethnicity and the spread of coronavirus. Viruses do not discriminate."[14]

Education

Governor Ned Lamont signed an executive order requiring the closure of all Connecticut public schools on March 17 until May 20; it was eventually extended for the rest of the school year.[37] Lamont also encouraged private schools and other non-public schools to follow the same schedule.[38] Many colleges in Connecticut switched to virtual learning.

See also

References

  1. "Coronavirus". CT.gov – Connecticut's Official State Website. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  2. "Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)". Connecticut's Official Website. 27 April 2020. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  3. "COVID-19 Update April 26, 2020" (PDF). Connecticut's Official Website. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  4. "2 students in CT monitored for coronavirus, school releases results for 1". WFSB. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  5. "Governor Lamont Announces Second Connecticut Patient Tests Negative for Coronavirus". CT.gov – Connecticut's Official State Website. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  6. "Montville Student Who Experienced Symptoms Similar to Coronavirus Cleared to Return to School". NBC Connecticut. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  7. Coleman-Mitchell, Renée (2020). Information on the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) for K-12 Schools (PDF). Connecticut Department of Public Health.
  8. "CT DPH Issues New Guidance on Coronavirus". NBC Connecticut. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  9. Lambert, Ben (2020-02-26). "Connecticut officials preparing for coronavirus to spread". New Haven Register. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  10. Lambert, Ben (2020-02-25). "University of New Haven recommends students in Italy return as coronavirus spreads". New Haven Register. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  11. "CT lab approved to test for Coronavirus rapidly speeding up response". fox61.com. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  12. Brindley, Emily. "Rhode Island, New York announce first coronavirus cases". Hartford Courant. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  13. "US Surgeon General, Gov. Lamont speak at DPH lab in Rocky Hill". Fox 61. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  14. "Two Test Negative For Coronavirus In CT". Fairfield Daily Voice. 2020-03-02. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  15. "Coronavirus Update from President Joe | Southern Connecticut State University". Inside Southern. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  16. Graziano, Frankie. "Effort To Develop Coronavirus Vaccine Underway In Connecticut". New England Public Radio. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  17. "At Least 200 People in CT Have Been Told to Self-Monitor for Coronavirus Symptoms". NBC Connecticut. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  18. "Conn. Hospital Employee Marks First Case of Coronavirus Connected to the State". NBC Connecticut. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  19. Times, The New York (8 March 2020). "Coronavirus in Connecticut: Governor Announces First Case of Resident". The New York Times. Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  20. "THE LATEST: 68 test positive for COVID-19 in the state". WFSB. Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  21. "Gov. Lamont declares civil preparedness, public health emergencies in response to coronavirus. What does that mean for you?". WTNH.com. 10 March 2020. Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  22. "Gov. Lamont Issues Executive Order to Close All Schools After Monday".
  23. "Connecticut Military Department assists with COVID19 relief efforts". Defense Visual Information Distribution Service. 24 March 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  24. A Connecticut doctor has been charged after authorities said he deliberately coughed on his coworkers by Sarah Al-Arshani, Business Insider, 27 Mar 2020
  25. Senator says White House turned down emergency coronavirus funding in early February by Suzanne Smalley, Yahoo News, 27 March 2020
  26. Coronavirus: Trump decides against quarantine of New York region by Paul HANDLEY, AFP, 28 Mar 2020
  27. Moody, Dominique. "Conn. National Guards Helps Assemble State's Largest Field Hospital". CT. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  28. "Sector Rules for Reopen". portal.ct.gov. 2020-06-06. Archived from the original on 2020-06-06. Retrieved 2020-06-06.
  29. Teitz, Liz (2020-05-18). "Lamont, tribes in standoff over casinos' reopening". Connecticut Post. Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  30. "As Foxwoods, Mohegan Sun reopen, state puts up coronavoirus warnings". Boston Herald. 2020-06-01. Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  31. "Here's What's Open as CT Begins Phase 2". NBC Connecticut. Retrieved June 19, 2020.
  32. NCAA cancels remaining winter and spring championships NCAA, March 12, 2020
  33. NJCAA cancels spring sports, basketball nationals amid coronavirus outbreak MLive.com, March 16, 2020
  34. Singer, Stephen. "Connecticut unemployment claims reach 30,000 since Friday as coronavirus takes toll on state's economy". courant.com. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  35. "Coronavirus closures: Nearly 8,000 people have applied for unemployment since Friday, CT Department of Labor says". WTNH.com. 2020-03-16. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  36. Keating, Alex Putterman, Chris. "Daily updates: Connecticut likely has thousands of cases of COVID-19, top health official says, as coronavirus continues to affect all aspects of state". courant.com. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  37. "Governor Lamont Announces Classes at K-12 Public Schools Will Remain Canceled for the Rest of the Academic Year". CT.gov. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  38. "Coronavirus Closures: What's Open and What's Closed". NBC Connecticut. Retrieved 2020-03-19.
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