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Coronavirus Update: More Vaccines Arrive in N H , But Details Are Lacking

Dan Tuohy / NHPR NHPR is continuing to cover the developing story around coronavirus in New Hampshire. Bookmark this page for the latest updates, including case numbers and other important news of the day. Click here for all of our COVID-19 coverage. The latest numbers in New Hampshire Credit Centers for Disease Control Scroll down to our live blog for more COVID-19 news and the latest updates. The most recent update from the N.H. Department of Health and Human Services on Dec. 29:  20 new deaths reported.  The state s COVID-19 deaths total 735. Active cases total 5,883. 295 patients are currently hospitalized. Other important links:

Coronavirus Update: 7 More Deaths, 891 New COVID-19 Cases in N H

Coronavirus Update: N H Reports 11 Deaths, 1,031 New COVID-19 Cases

Coronavirus Update: N H Reports 13 Deaths, 417 New COVID-19 Infections

LIVE BLOG - CORONAVIRUS IN NEW HAMPSHIRE: 13 additional N.H. COVID-19 deaths Update: Thursday, Dec. 24, 4:06 p.m. An additional 13 people have died from COVID-19 in New Hampshire, state health officials announced Thursday. The deceased were all over the age of 60, and included residents of Belknap, Hillsborough, and Merrimack counties. About 300 people remain hospitalized with COVID-19 in the state. There are currently roughly 6,000 active cases of the illness in New Hampshire. Since the pandemic began, there have been 690 COVID deaths and 38,902 confirmed coronavirus cases in the Granite State. - NHPR Staff Update: Wednesday, Dec. 23, 3:45 p.m. New Hampshire health officials today reported 21 deaths from COVID-19, tying December 16th as the highest number of deaths announced in a single day. Of the new deaths, nine patients were female, and twelve were male.

Coronavirus Update: N H Reports 624 New Cases; New Details On Vaccine Distribution

LIVE BLOG - CORONAVIRUS IN NEW HAMPSHIRE: Students, Teachers To Get Priority In COVID Testing Update: Tuesday, Dec. 22, 10:05 p.m. The state will prioritize COVID testing for students, teachers and school staff when the school year resumes after winter break. Many New Hampshire schools have closed for the holidays and plan to conduct classes remotely for several weeks into 2021. At a press conference Tuesday, Gov. Chris Sununu said, when they do return to class, staff and students with COVID symptoms will be able to get an appointment for a test within 24 hours. “We just want to make sure that students that may require a test to get back into school aren’t being held back, three, four, five, six days or even a week, while awaiting those results,” Sununu said. “We want to make sure those kids can get back into class as quickly as possible.”

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