Newstral
Article
Merced Sun-Star on 2020-09-18 02:00
Active Merced County COVID-19 cases fall below 600 for first time since June
Related news
- Estimated active Merced County coronavirus cases dip below 300 for first time since JuneMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County reports more than 600 new COVID-19 cases, two deaths since ThanksgivingMerced Sun-Star
- Coronavirus: Merced County passes 10,000 known cases. Active infections highest since SeptemberMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County nearing 1,000 total coronavirus cases. Active cases outpace recoveriesMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County’s estimated active COVID-19 cases reach new high, amid state surgeMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County total COVID-19 deaths hit 160, active infections rise, public health saysMerced Sun-Star
- Active Merced County coronavirus cases continue to fall, but deaths still riseMerced Sun-Star
- Active hospitalizations nearly double for Merced County. Newsom orders schools shutMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County’s estimated active COVID-19 cases double in two weeks, officials sayMerced Sun-Star
- Vaccination clinic begins at Merced College. Active COVID cases fall, but concerns remainMerced Sun-Star
- L.A. County daily COVID-19 case count dips below 1,000 for first time since early JuneLA Times
- Merced County cases rise to 173 since start of pandemic. More businesses look to reopenMerced Sun-Star
- Merced wages are below state, national averagesMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County Sheriff’s Los Banos Office, care home removed from active outbreaks listMerced Sun-Star
- Coronavirus update: Two more Merced County deaths, plus active cases on the upswingMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County COVID-19 deaths this week rise to seven, active cases upMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County COVID-19 cases continue to rise, pass 1,000 estimated active infectionsMerced Sun-Star
- Merced County cities miss their marks as state water use fell in JuneMerced Sun-Star
- Seven new deaths, 700+ COVID-19 cases reported since Friday in Merced CountyMerced Sun-Star
- Coronavirus: Active cases fall in Merced County, but known workplace outbreaks increaseMerced Sun-Star