
A breakdown of the COVID-19 cases in Hunterdon County
HUNTERDON COUNTY, NJ – Here’s the total breakdown of the 13,014 positive cases and 143 deaths of COVID-19 in Hunterdon County as of December 21.
- Alexandria Township –446 and 1 death
- Bethlehem Township –401 and 4 deaths
- Bloomsbury Borough –86 and 0 deaths
- Califon Borough –102 and 2 deaths
- Clinton Town –286 and 1 death
- Clinton Township –1,353 and 13 deaths
- Delaware Township –422 and 3 deaths
- East Amwell Township –387 and 3 deaths
- Flemington Borough –645 and 5 deaths
- Franklin Township –331 and 0 deaths
- Frenchtown Borough –95 and 0 deaths
- Glen Gardner Borough–172 and 0 deaths
- Hampton Borough –142 and 1 death
- High Bridge Borough–366 and 4 deaths
- Holland Township-511 and 4 deaths
- Kingwood Township –399 and 4 deaths
- Lambertville City –288 and 3 deaths
- Lebanon Borough –134 and 2 deaths
- Lebanon Township –619 and 8 deaths
- Milford Borough –100 and 4 deaths
- Raritan Township –2,275 and 31 deaths
- Readington Township –1,578 and 11 deaths
- Stockton Borough –39 and 0 deaths
- Tewksbury Township –559 and 4 deaths
- Union Township –962 and 29 deaths
- West Amwell Township –316 and 6 deaths
Age range is less than 1-years-old to 103-years-old. Case counts for each municipality may show a reduction on certain days, this is due to address corrections or updates from the original case report, health officials said.
There have been 143 COVID-19 related deaths and the ages range from 31-years-old to 102-years-old of age. Case counts for a municipality may show a reduction on certain days, this is due to address
corrections or updates from the original case report, health officials said.
The Hunterdon County Health Department is providing case count numbers by municipality and cannot release any additional personal information to protect case identity and privacy.
The County Health Department performs contact tracing for each positive COVID-19 case. If you have had close contact with an individual who has tested positive, you will be contacted by public health officials.
What is a “close contact?”
A close contact is defined as being within approximately 6 feet (2meters) of a COVID-19 case for a prolonged period of time (approximately 10 minutes or longer); close contact can occur while caring for, living with, visiting, or sharing a health care waiting area or room with a COVID-19 case or having direct contact with infectious secretions of a COVID-19 case (for example, being coughed on).