coronavirus illinois

WATCH: Chicago Health Officials to Give COVID Update Ahead of Holiday Weekend

The address comes two days after CDPH Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady revealed the city, along with Cook County, would likely reach a high community alert level, per guidelines set by the CDC, this week

NOTE: Watch the update live at 11 a.m. in the player above.

With Chicago expected to reach a "high" alert level by the end of the week, the city's top health officials are set to hold a COVID-19 update Thursday to discuss the transition and what it means ahead of Memorial Day weekend.

Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady, along with other leaders, is slated to discuss "COVID-19 case and vaccination data in Chicago, the expected move from medium to high COVID community level, and the impact of this move ahead of Memorial Day weekend and summer time."

The address is slated to take place at 11 a.m. at City Hall. (Watch live in the player above)

The address comes two days after Arwady revealed the city, along with Cook County, would likely reach a high community alert level, per guidelines set by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, this week.

"I do anticipate that Cook County, which includes Chicago, will move to high with the update [from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] later this week," Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said in a Facebook Live Tuesday. "And so I would expect by Friday will probably be there."

According to the CDC, a county will be considered at a “high community level” of COVID-19 if it is seeing more than 200 new weekly COVID cases per 100,000 residents, and if it is seeing either 10 or more new COVID admissions per 100,000 residents per week, or if it is seeing 10% or greater hospital bed use by COVID patients.

As of Friday, every Illinois county within the Chicago area was at a “medium community level” of COVID-19, according to CDC guidelines, though several were expected to reach the "high" level in this week's upcoming update. Eight Illinois counties, however, are already at high community level risk for COVID: Boone, Lee, Stephenson, Winnebago, Champaign, Ford, Peoria and Tazewell.

Evanston, a northern suburb just outside of Chicago, has also said it is currently at a "high" community level.

In Cook County, 367.34 new weekly cases per 100,000 residents were being reported as of Friday, along with 9.8 new COVID admissions per 100,000 residents per week.

Also included in that hospitalization cluster (a group of counties that the CDC categorizes together because of health care service patterns and proximity) are DuPage, Lake and McHenry counties.

CDC officials say that DeKalb, Kane and Kendall counties are seeing 8.1 new admissions per 100,000 residents, meaning that those three counties could also find themselves in the “high community level” range by this week.

In the event that a county reaches a “high community level” of COVID, residents are advised to wear masks indoors regardless of COVID vaccination status.

Those residents who are immunocompromised, or who live in a household with those residents, are urged to consider avoiding “non-essential indoor activities,” and to consult with their physicians on additional steps that may need to be taken.

While city and county health officials have not definitively said that a move to the “high community level” could trigger a new mask mandate, some have indicated that such a strategy could be implemented in the event of strain put on medical facilities.

Arwady said that is not the case for Chicago - yet.

"Just to be clear, if the county does move to that higher risk with the update later this week, the city of Chicago would be considered at a high risk for COVID because our cases are high and we're starting to see some impact on hospitalizations, but we would not be reinstating mask mandates, for example, until we started - unless and until - we started to see serious impact on our hospitals here in Chicago."

The change in alert status would come just ahead of the Memorial Day holiday weekend.

"Gather outside if you can. It's the easiest, safest thing that significantly cuts the risk of COVID if you're getting together with folks," Arwady said. "But you are good to gather, just make sure folks have vaccines and boosters, outdoors where you can, test if you've got COVID symptoms and be careful."

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