Denton County Public Health (DCPH) announced four Denton County community members died as a result of COVID-19, bringing the total to 826 deaths due to COVID-19 in Denton County. Today’s reported COVID-19 deaths include:
- A female in her 50s who was a resident of Carrollton
- A female in her 50s who was a resident of Little Elm
- A female in her 60s who was a resident of Corinth
- A male in his 60s who was a resident of unincorporated southeast Denton County
“As we announce the death of four community members due to COVID-19, please keep their families in your thoughts and prayers,” stated Denton County Judge Andy Eads. “We hope community members will get vaccinated, as vaccination remains the best way to reduce the risk of COVID-19 hospitalization and death.”
Actual dates of death can be released several days to several months after the date of death, due to various reporting agencies and medical records review. Please visit dentoncounty.gov/COVIDstats for an in-depth chart displaying dates of death and date of DCPH report.
DCPH also announced 161 new cases of COVID-19 in Denton County, of which 18 are active cases. This increases the cumulative, countywide total to 179,146 COVID-19 cases. DCPH also reported 228 newly recovered cases of COVID-19, increasing the countywide recovery total to 175,573.
To minimize spread of COVID-19, DCPH urges community members to:
- Get vaccinated and boosted when eligible
- Test five days after exposure or if you have symptoms of COVID-19
- Isolate, quarantine, and wear a mask when recommended
For local COVID-19 vaccine information, including booster and third doses, visit DCPH's COVID-19 vaccine page. For additional COVID-19 data including CDC community level, active cases by municipality, and hospital capacity, visit the DCPH stats page. For information regarding DCPH’s upcoming testing centers, please visit dentoncounty.gov/COVID19testing. For guidance on isolation and quarantine, read CDC's updated guidance. To view CDC prevention steps based on COVID-19 community levels, visit CDC's community levels page.