An additional person has been tested for coronavirus in Bergen County, an official said Friday afternoon.

Bergen County Executive James Tedesco, speaking at a press event, described the person as elderly and hospitalized.

"The person has been tested but we do not have the results of that test back,” Tedesco said at a media briefing Friday afternoon.

The county executive further described the patient as a Bergen County resident in one of the six hospitals in Bergen County who has exhibited pneumonia-like symptoms. He declined to provide additional information, including what municipality the person was from and in which hospital the person is being treated.

Tedesco did not know when the test results would be back for this person.

Two of the three people who’ve tested positive in New Jersey for coronavirus, COVID-19, are in Bergen County, the most populous county in the state, with an estimated population of 948,406, according to Census Bureau statistics. Later Friday, officials in Camden County announced a third, positive test.

The state’s first case, a 32-year-old Fort Lee man, was hospitalized at Hackensack University Medical Center suffering from coronavirus symptoms. He later tested positive for presumptive COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus infection.

The Fort Lee man is a health care worker who lives and worked in New York, but maintains an apartment in Fort Lee, Mayor Mark Sokolich said. The man had traveled to Fort Lee alone on Sunday and had no contact with any other people while in town, the mayor said.

On Thursday, state officials announced a woman in her 30s, also a Bergen County resident, had tested positive for the illness while at Englewood Hospital and Medical Center. She’s since been released to her home, where she is self-quarantined and being monitored by the state Department of Health.

Both people visited the same unidentified walk-in urgent clinic in Bergen County, Tedesco said. He declined to identify the facility. He said the two people, now patients, did not cross paths at the facility. Although Tedesco did not say where the facility was, he said it was not in a residential neighborhood.

"It was a coincidence,” said Tedesco.

The facility, which is open and operating, would likely not be identified, he said.

The female patient, in Englewood, is in isolation at her home, which means she cannot have contact with her housemates, Tedesco said.

While the Englewood woman was asymptomatic, showing no symptoms of the virus, the Fort Lee man had been coughing and had a fever, said Tedesco. As of Thursday night, the Fort Lee man was still in the hospital, he said.

Officials at the press event also announced that COVID-19 tool kits would be distributed to municipalities in the count.

In light of recent price gouging for disinfectant and sanitizing products throughout the country, the county’s Director of Consumer Affairs Christina D’Aloia said that any residents who see a 10 percent or higher price increase on such products should report it immediately.

Despite the three cases statewide and a third person being tested in Bergen County, Tedesco assured that the risk to Bergen County was still manageable.

“It’s still very very low risk to the people that live here,” he said.

Rodrigo Torrejon may be reached at rtorrejon@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @rodrigotorrejon.