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The total number of New Hampshire residents who have died due to COVID-19 has moved past 1,000.
The Granite State reached the grim milestone about 10 months after the first death was recorded in mid-March. As of Monday night, state health officials had reported 990 deaths associated with the coronavirus with about 75% of those lives lost in long-term care facilities.
(Story updated: New Hamsphire surpassed 1,000 deaths on Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2021.)
These 1,000 deaths will represent 1,000 parents, siblings, dear friends, community pillars and others, including some who worked on the frontlines of the coronavirus pandemic or contracted the virus while caring for another.
They each represent a life cut short. A person who left a lasting impact on those around them. A person whose absence is felt with immeasurable grief.
UpdatedThu, Dec 10, 2020 at 7:07 pm ET
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Dr. Benjamin Chan at a news conference on Dec. 10. (Tony Schinella/Patch)
CONCORD, NH The state of New Hampshire announced Thursday that 14 residents have died due to or related to COVID-19.
Thirteen of the 14 deaths were connected to long-term care settings in the state. Of the 14 deaths, nine were 80 years of age or older, two were between 70 and 79, two were between 60 and 69, and one was between 30 and 39, according to the state s data dashboard. Of the deaths, a man and a woman lived in Coos County, four men and a woman lived in Belknap County, four men and a woman lived in Hillsborough County, and a man and a woman lived in Merrimack County.