April 28, 2022

Indiana passes 1.7M confirmed COVID-19 cases, sees slight uptick since April 1

Article origination IPB News
There has been a slight statewide uptick in new confirmed cases in April so far. The month’s average has grown to 280 cases per day and the previous week’s average was 453 new cases per day. - Lauren Chapman/IPB News

There has been a slight statewide uptick in new confirmed cases in April so far. The month’s average has grown to 280 cases per day and the previous week’s average was 453 new cases per day.

Lauren Chapman/IPB News

Indiana surpassed 1.7 million confirmed cases following its dashboard update Wednesday, adding its most recent 100,000 new cases over the last four months.

Since April 1, Indiana has seen a small uptick in new cases.

In January, the state averaged 11,474.5 new cases per day. In February, that fell to 1,456.1 and March dropped to 241 new cases per day.

READ MORE: Tippecanoe County, Purdue University post relatively high COVID-19 numbers

 

Join the conversation and sign up for the Indiana Two-Way. Text "Indiana" to 73224. Your comments and questions in response to our weekly text help us find the answers you need on COVID-19 and other statewide issues.

But, there has been a slight statewide uptick in new confirmed cases in April so far, with the month’s average growing to 280 and the previous week’s average at 453 new cases per day.

There is a big caveat to these numbers: At-home tests are not reported to the Indiana Department of Health. The state eliminated metrics like positivity rates, aligning with a national push from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

But hospitalizations remain at nearly pandemic-lows, with COVID-19 accounting for less than 3 percent of the state’s total hospital census.

And in April so far, Indiana has added just 66 deaths to its total, averaging fewer than three deaths per day – which is a pandemic record.

Contact Lauren at lchapman@wfyi.org or follow her on Twitter at @laurenechapman_.

Copyright 2022 IPB News. To see more, visit IPB News.
Support independent journalism today. You rely on WFYI to stay informed, and we depend on you to make our work possible. Donate to power our nonprofit reporting today. Give now.

 

Related News

Some Indiana health experts want to ask patients about their spirituality. Here’s why
Report: Indiana HIV criminalization laws target actions with no risk of transmission
Report: Indiana's total health costs near national average, but differ in other key areas