NYC records zero new COVID-19 deaths, lowest positivity rate yet

NYC
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New York City recorded no new COVID-19 deaths on Monday while posting its lowest rate of positive coronavirus cases yet, officials in the state announced Tuesday.

Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) said during a press conference that the city has a 0.83 percent positivity rate in the five boroughs, which he hailed as an “extraordinary milestone” as more and more people get vaccinated.

“This is a testament to the power of vaccination, this is a testament to the willpower of New Yorkers fighting through this crisis, doing the right things to keep each other safe, going out and getting vaccinated in huge numbers,” the mayor said.

“Let’s keep going … let’s drive COVID out of New York City once and for all,” he added.  

Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) said eight COVID-19 deaths were reported in the state on Monday, but none were in New York City, ABC7 reported. The last time New York City reported no new COVID-19 deaths was in August. 

The latest figures came on Memorial Day, with the city reporting 271 new COVID-19 cases and 72 new coronavirus hospitalizations. 

Cuomo said the statewide positivity rate is 0.77 percent, with 1,032 people hospitalized with the virus. The eight COVID-related deaths on Monday are the lowest the state has seen since October, according to NBC-affiliate WNBC

New York City, which was stricken hard in the early days of the ongoing pandemic, has seen 55 percent of its adult residents vaccinated.

– This story was updated at 4:30 p.m. to reflect that data on COVID-19 deaths came from New York State.

Tags #coronavirus COVID-19 Andrew Cuomo Bill de Blasio COVID-19 New York New York City

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