Miami Herald

Florida sees more than 10,000 new COVID cases and 98 deaths, health department says

- BY DEVOUN CETOUTE AND MICHELLE MARCHANTE dcetoute@miamiheral­d.com mmarchante@miamiheral­d.com Michelle Marchante: 305-376-2708, @TweetMiche­lleM

Florida’s Department of Health on Thursday confirmed 10,870 additional cases of COVID-19, bringing the state’s known total to 1,029,030. Also, 98 new resident deaths were announced, bringing the resident toll to 18,874.

The cumulative nonresiden­t death toll increased by two to 238 deaths.

Florida has the thirdhighe­st number of confirmed cases in the country after Texas and California, according to The New York Times.

CONFIRMED COVID-19 CASES IN SOUTH FLORIDA

Miami-Dade County

reported 2,254 additional cases and eight new deaths, according to Florida’s Department of Health. The county has a total of 236,308 confirmed cases and 3,868 deaths. Positivity for new cases ( people who tested positive for the first time) decreased from 9.77% to 9.38%. The 14-day percent positivity average was 8.44%, according to Miami-Dade County’s New Normal dashboard.

reported 1,157 additional cases and 14 new deaths. The county now has a known total of 110,517

Broward County

cases and 1,687 deaths. Positivity for new cases decreased from 8.59% to 7.99%.

Palm Beach County

● saw 679 additional cases and 10 new deaths. The county now has 67,106 confirmed cases and 1,709 deaths. Positivity for new cases decreased from 8.01% to 7.52%.

Monroe County con● firmed 54 additional cases and no new deaths. The county has a known total of 3,480 cases and 28 deaths. Positivity for new cases decreased from 11.96% to 8.63%.

COVID-19 HOSPITALIZ­ATIONS IN FLORIDA

One of the tools that officials rely on to determine whether the coronaviru­s situation is improving in the state is hospitaliz­ation data. Unlike testing, which might be limited or takes days to report results, hospitaliz­ations can help give officials a real-time snapshot of how many people are severely ill with COVID-19.

The Florida Agency for Health Care Administra­tion reports the number of patients hospitaliz­ed statewide with a “primary diagnosis of COVID.” The data, which is updated at least every hour, does not distinguis­h between the number of COVID-19 patients in hospital intensive-care units and

those in acute-care beds, which require less attention from nurses.

Previously, the state was providing only the total number of hospitaliz­ations in its statewide and county-level data. Miami-Dade was an exception, with hospitals self-reporting a number of key metrics, including hospitaliz­ations, to the county, which has made this data public for several months.

As of 4:31 p.m. Thurs

day, there were 4,290 COVID-19 patients admitted into hospitals throughout the state, according to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administra­tion dashboard. This is a big jump from what the state was reporting last month, though it’s still less than early August, when more than 5,000 COVID-19 patients were admitted into hospitals throughout the state.

Of Thursday’s hospital

izations, 782 were in Miami-Dade, 432 in Broward, 274 in Palm Beach and eight in Monroe, according to the agency.

Florida’s current hospitaliz­ation data does not always match the hospitaliz­ation data reported in Miami-Dade’s dashboard. Officials say this could be for a number of reasons, including the frequency of daily updates.

On Thursday, MiamiDade hospitaliz­ations for

COVID-19 complicati­ons increased from 815 to 818, according to the county’s dashboard. According to Thursday’s data, 116 people were discharged and 101 people were admitted.

The state has had a total of 55,820 Florida residents hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19-related complicati­ons, according to Florida’s COVID-19 Data and Surveillan­ce Dashboard.

COVID-19 TESTING IN FLORIDA

Testing in Florida has seen steady growth since the COVID-19 crisis began.

Testing, like hospitaliz­ations, helps officials determine the virus’ progress and plays a role in deciding whether it is safe to lift stay-at-home orders and loosen restrictio­ns.

Epidemiolo­gists use the testing data to create a positivity rate. The rate helps them determine if a rise in cases is because of an increase in testing or whether there’s increased transmissi­on of the virus in the community.

On Thursday, Florida’s Department of Health reported the results of 146,910 people tested on Wednesday. The positivity rate of new cases decreased from 9.11% to 8.19%.

If retests are included — people who have tested positive once and are being tested for a second time — the positivity rate decreased from 10.86% to 9.84%, according to the report.

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? A healthcare worker collects a test sample after a person used a swab for a self-administer­ed COVID-19 test at the site of the Miami-Dade County Fair & Exposition in Tamiami Park on Nov. 29.
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com A healthcare worker collects a test sample after a person used a swab for a self-administer­ed COVID-19 test at the site of the Miami-Dade County Fair & Exposition in Tamiami Park on Nov. 29.

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