With record number of new cases, and high positive test rates and hospitalizations, this could be Kentucky’s worst COVID-19 day yet

“We’ve got to be careful. We’ve got to make sure that we are wearing our facial coverings, because today’s cases are a reflection of 14 days ago, before we mandated those. This is what it’s going to take if we want to save our economy and save lives and get our kids back in school; it’s really that simple.” — Gov. Andy Beshear

With coronavirus cases at a new high, and hospitalizations and positive test rates up significantly, Saturday could have been Kentucky’s worst day yet in the coronavirus pandemic.

(Kentucky Health News graphic)

Gov. Andy Beshear reported 583 new cases, the highest number found in a single day. (The state reported 625 cases on May 5, but almost half were found over several days at a prison.) That pushed the state’s seven-day rolling average to 447, a new high for the fifth day in a row.

“That means this is a dangerous time and it can’t be explained away by our increase in tests,” Beshear said in his daily news release. “We’ve got to be careful. We’ve got to make sure that we are wearing our facial coverings, because today’s cases are a reflection of 14 days ago, before we mandated those. This is what it’s going to take if we want to save our economy and save lives and get our kids back in school; it’s really that simple.”

The seven-day average for positive tests is also up, to 4.66%, from 4.19% on Friday. Beshear has warned, “Once you go over 5, they say you ought to consider rolling back.”(

Hospitalizations are also up. The daily report shows 514 people are currently hospitalized with the virus and 109 are in intensive care. On Monday, Kentucky Health News reported that last week’s averages were 439 and 106 respectively. The number of hospitalizations equaled the number reported on June 11, but the figures may not be comparable because the hospital reporting system has changed.

On Friday, the Supreme Court of Kentucky issued a unanimous order blocking several legal challenges to Beshear’s emergency orders, most notably his mask mandate, which took effect Friday, July 10. Beshear said local elected officials like Harlan County Judge-Executive Dan Mosley support the mandate. 

“I’ve been encouraged to see near 100% compliance since Gov. Beshear implemented what was needed to protect our people,” Mosley said in Beshear’s release. “With 85 new cases in one week in our county, compared to 40 over the last four months, we owe it to our loved ones to try even harder. Just like many of us own a weapon to protect our families from intruders into our homes, a mask is our weapon to keep the coronavirus from intruding into our lives as well. I appreciate the governor giving us this tool to protect the people we love.”

The state reported nine more deaths Saturday from COVID-19, raising the toll to 667. Five were from Logan County: three women, 78, 80 and 81; and two men, 83 and 96; an 88-year-old woman from Shelby County; a 64-year-old man from Simpson County; a 76-year-old woman from Warren County; and a 93-year-old woman from Jefferson County.

Oldham County stood out in the report for the first time as the county with the most new cases, 106. That could have been a result of reporting from the Kentucky State Reformatory, which is having an outbreak. Jefferson had 101 cases. Other counties with the most new cases were Warren, with 32; Kenton and Laurel, 20 each; Fayette and Scott, 17 each; Graves, 16; Bell, Hardin, and Ohio, 13 each; Pike, 12; Boone, 11; and Barren, 10.

Melissa Patrick is a reporter for Kentucky Health News, an independent news service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, based in the School of Journalism and Media at the University of Kentucky, with support from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky. She has received several competitive fellowships, including the 2016-17 Nursing and Health Care Workforce Media Fellow of the Center for Health, Media & Policy, which allowed her to focus on and write about nursing workforce issues in Kentucky; and the year-long Association of Health Care Journalists 2017-18 Regional Health Journalism Program fellowship. She is a former registered nurse and holds degrees in journalism and community leadership and development from UK.