DAILY UPDATE: APRIL 23, 2020 4 PM

 

STATE: Pennsylvania COVID-19 Statistics per Pennsylvania Department of Health
Data updated as of 12:00pm on 4/23/20

Total Cases1 Negative Tests Deaths2
37,053 142,601 1,394

 

1 Total case counts include confirmed and probable cases.
2 Number of deaths was revised by the Pennsylvania Department of Health

 

 

STATE: Cases by Age Range to Date
per Pennsylvania Department of Health

Data updated as of 12:00pm on 4/23/20

Age Range Cases
0-4 <1%
5-12 <1%
13-18 1%
19-24 6%
25-49 39%
50-64 28%
65+ 25%

 

 

STATE: Hospitalization Rates by Age Range to Date
per Pennsylvania Department of Health

Data updated as of 12:00pm on 4/23/20

Age Range Cases
0-29 2%
30-49 5%
50-64 10%
65-79 20%
80+ 21%

 

 

REGIONAL: COVID-19 cases by county to Date
per Pennsylvania Department of Health
Data updated as of 12:00pm on 4/23/20

County Positive Cases Negative Tests Deaths * New cases
since 4/22
10-County Region 2,290 25,217 154 +83
Allegheny 1,149 12,625 69 +61
Armstrong 43 552 2 +4
Beaver 319 1,667 46 +2
Butler 164 1,944 6
Fayette 71 1,475 3 +1
Greene 25 358 0
Indiana 59 488 4 +3
Lawrence 61 585 5
Washington 92 1,722 2 +5
Westmoreland 307 3,801 17 +7

 

* Number of deaths was revised by the Pennsylvania Department of Health

 

 

State Coronavirus Updates

  • Secretary Dr. Levine
    • As of 12 am Thursday, April 23, there are 1,369 new positive cases; 37,053 positive cases now statewide in all 67 counties. This includes 36,665 confirmed cases and 388 probable cases.
    • 1,421 deaths are adults who tested positive.

 

Federal Coronavirus Updates

  • Federal Reserve

The Federal Reserve announced it will reveal the names of companies that borrow under its emergency lending programs on a monthly basis. It will include the names of participants, how much they borrowed and at what rate, and the overall costs, revenue and fees for each emergency facility. The transparency pledge covers roughly $2.3 trillion in emergency loans that the central bank has said it will offer to large corporations, smaller businesses and municipal governments. Under another program, the Fed is attempting to boost consumers’ access to credit by lending to banks against collateral that includes bundled student loans, auto loans and credit card loans. Because the Fed isn’t set up to take on the risk of borrowers defaulting, the Treasury Department will cover any losses with the money set aside by Congress.