COVID-19 Overall Case Count
Confirmed cases as of noon November 14, 2022
(U.S. cases: Johns Hopkins University & Medicine; Kansas and counties cases: Kansas Department of Health & Environment; Sedgwick County Cases: Sedgwick County Health Department)
Location |
Monday, Nov. 7 |
Monday, Nov. 14 |
Percent Change |
United States |
97,760,875 |
98,014,622 |
+0.26 |
Kansas |
889,458 |
**892,194 |
+0.31 |
Sedgwick County* |
124,188 |
124,379 |
+0.15 |
*Sedgwick County’s data reflects people who test positive with nasopharyngeal (NP) swab, oropharyngeal (throat) swab, or saliva molecular testing (confirmed COVID-19 cases). The KDHE dashboard differs because it also includes people who are antigen test positive.
**Beginning May 18, KDHE will only update their COVID-19 dashboard once a week on Wednesdays.
No-Cost, COVID-19 Testing
- Sedgwick County Health Department provides COVID-19 tests for uninsured adults, uninsured children, and children with CHIP or Medicaid/KanCare.
- Testing is by appointment only at SCHD’s Main Clinic (2716 W. Central) by calling
316-660-7361. - Test results are available the next business day.
- To self-report at-home COVID-19 test results, visit
https://www.sedgwickcounty.org/covid-19/sampling-and-testing-information/covid-19-at-home-test-self-reporting-website/. SCHD provides up-to-date exposure and isolation guidance to people who submit test results. - For additional testing sites, visit www.covid.gov.
Vaccination Doses Given by Sedgwick County
This table shows how many doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been provided by the Health Department. More information can be found at the COVID-19 Vaccination StoryMap.
Dose Description |
Cumulative Doses Given |
First Dose |
126,408 |
Second Dose (considered fully vaccinated) |
116,510 |
Third Dose (Recommended for those immunocompromised) |
958 |
Single-Dose Vaccine (considered fully vaccinated)* |
7,339 |
Booster Dose |
42,799 |
Total Doses Given by Sedgwick County Health Department |
294,014 |
*This table only contains vaccination doses given by the Sedgwick County Health Department. Other vaccination providers are required to report vaccination doses given to KDHE, not Sedgwick County. .
Sedgwick County Health Department COVID-19 Vaccine Information
SCHD offers no-cost COVID-19 vaccine to uninsured adults and uninsured or state-insured children at its Main Clinic, 2716 W. Central. Eligible individuals can call 316-660-7361 to make an appointment. The Main Clinic offers Pfizer for children 6 months and older and Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson and Novavax vaccines for adults over 18.
Sedgwick County also provides Pfizer vaccine (for people 5 and older) or one-dose Johnson & Johnson (for people 18 and older) at walk-in clinics across the County. Find a location near you at https://www.sedgwickcounty.org/covid-19/vaccine/clinic-locations/.
Vaccinations for children under 5 are not offered at SCHD mobile vaccine clinics unless specified.
- People are fully vaccinated two weeks after receiving a primary vaccination series:
- One shot for Johnson & Johnson vaccine
- Second shot for Pfizer vaccines
The updated, bivalent COVID-19 booster dose is available to people over age 5 who have completed a primary series at least 2 months ago.
Mobile and Partner Vaccine Clinics
Day, Date |
Time |
Location |
Scheduling Information |
Clinic Highlights |
Tuesday, |
2 to 5 p.m. |
Clearwater Senior Center |
Mobile Clinic |
|
Friday, |
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. |
Child Start – Parklane |
Mobile Clinic |
|
Monday, |
3 to 7 p.m. |
Walters Library |
Mobile Clinic |
|
Tuesday, |
9 a.m. to 12 p.m. |
Salvation Army |
Mobile Clinic |
|
To find a different vaccine clinic near you, visit https://www.vaccines.gov/search/ and enter your ZIP Code.
Sedgwick County Updates
- Sedgwick County Health Department follows CDC’s newly established COVID-19 Community Level framework.
- The COVID-19 Community Level reflects case counts, hospital admissions and hospital capacity in a color-coded system indicating low, medium and high community levels.
- Sedgwick County’s current COVID-19 Community Level is LOW.
- On August 11, 2022, the CDC updated its exposure and isolation guidance for the public:
If you are exposed to COVID-19 |
If you test positive for COVID-19 |
· Wear a high-quality, well-fitting mask when indoors and around people, including at home. · With Day 0 as the date of exposure, test on Day 5. · If the test is negative, continue to wear a mask around others through Day 10. · If the test is positive, immediately begin isolation.
|
· With a positive test and no symptoms or mild symptoms, isolate through Day 5. · With moderate or severe symptoms or if immunocompromised, isolate through Day 10. · Regardless of symptoms, wear a mask around others through Day 10. o You can stop wearing a mask after Day 5 with two sequential negative antigen tests taken 48 hours apart. · If at any time COVID-19 symptoms recur or worsen, restart isolation at Day 0. |
- On September 23, 2022, the CDC updated its exposure and isolation guidance for healthcare workers. For more information on the updated guidance, visit the CDC website here.
- The CDC is still developing updated guidance for people who live or work in high-risk group settings (corrections facilities, nursing homes).