Newstral
Article
Denver Post on 2021-08-31 08:00
Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations are back to mid-January levels
Related news
- Colorado’s COVID hospitalizations and deaths back at March levelsDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations reach highest level since mid-MayDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID hospitalizations hit highest level since early January as virus deaths riseDenver Post
- Fewer than 2% of Colorado’s COVID cases since mid-January involve people who’ve been fully vaccinatedDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID cases tick up for first time since January, hospitalizations appear to be falling more slowlyDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations remain high despite falling case countsDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations increase for second day, raising concernsDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to fall, though progress is slowerDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations rise less steeply this weekDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations up slightly, but numbers show mixed pictureDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID hospitalizations stay on high plateau as virus’s trajectory remains uncertainDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID hospitalizations steady, cases show “modest” increaseDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID hospitalizations remain stable despite new variant taking overDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19, flu, RSV hospitalizations are droppingDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID cases and hospitalizations keep falling, but danger to unvaccinated still highDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations stopped falling after Christmas. Holiday blip or reason to worry?Denver Post
- Colorado’s COVID hospitalizations are rising again following summer dipDenver Post
- Colorado’s BA.5 wave of COVID hospitalizations appears to be endingDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 vaccination pace slows while hospitalizations hold steady, outbreaks increaseDenver Post
- Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations increase, but storm confuses picture with case numbersDenver Post