Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Cases hit all-time record: 3,207

- By Marc Freeman Marc Freeman can be reached at mjfreeman@ sunsentine­l.com and on Twitter @marcjfreem­an.

Florida saw a recordbrea­king 3,207 new coronaviru­s cases, shattering the previous high mark of infections this week, state data released Thursday show.

It’s the first time during the pandemic that the state has had more than 3,000 people test positive in one day, and it continues a trend where there has been at least 2,000 cases logged in five out of the past six days.

The previous record was 2,783 cases on Tuesday.

This surge in cases comes nearly two months after Gov. Ron DeSantis declared, “Our work is succeeding. We have flattened the curve.” And it’s happening six weeks after most of the state began emerging from lockdowns.

Public health experts across the country have taken notice and issued warnings. The PolicyLab at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia wrote, “Florida has all the makings of the next large epicenter. … The risk there is the worst it has ever been in our projection­s.”

In South Florida, the hardest-hit area in the state:

Broward County: 299 new cases were reported Thursday, bringing the total to 10,111 to date. Five more people died, putting the known death toll at 387.

Palm Beach County:

382 new cases were reported, bringing the total to 9,854. Six more people died, making 463 total.

Miami-Dade County:

Florida’s hot spot saw 581 new cases, bringing the total to 23,854. The county also had nine more deaths, raising the county’s total to 874. Miami-Dade has 13% of the state’s population but 27.7% of the coronaviru­s cases and 27.8% of the deaths.

Testing and concerns

The state on Thursday reported a total of 1,512,315 people tested for COVID-19 since the pandemic began. About 5.7% of the tests have been positive; 1,003 tests came back inconclusi­ve. The rate is higher in South Florida, where 8.2% of people tested have been diagnosed with the disease, according to the data.

Overall, 85,926 people have been diagnosed with the coronaviru­s illness in Florida. South Florida, home to 29% of Florida’s population, accounts for 51.4% of the cases, with 43,819 total.

DeSantis has tied the rise in cases to higher numbers of tests. But health experts say they’ve noticed an increase in the percentage of positive tests each day.

In the latest batch of statewide results, 12.5% of the people swabbed tested positive. That’s based on 25,556 tests recorded from the previous day.

Compare that to just a month ago on May 18, when 3.5% of the tests showed infections. That was based on the results of 24,629 tests that day — almost the same number as Thursday.

“After Memorial Day, the dynamic changed,” said Dr. David Rubin, who has been studying Florida’s COVID-19 trends in his role as director of the PolicyLab in Philadelph­ia. His researcher­s predict cases to keep soaring in MiamiDade, Tampa, Orlando and other places, without any changes in social distancing practices.

“Time is of the essence now,” Rubin told the South Florida Sun Sentinel. “We’re watching Florida closely.”

Dr. Marissa J. Levine, director of the Center for Leadership in Public Health Practice at University of South Florida, raised concerns that the virus is spreading fast because fewer people are taking precaution­s.

“Because we don’t have a vaccine or treatments, we need to make sure we each do our part with … physical distancing, wearing a face covering when you can’t distance and all the hygienic and sanitizing practices we’ve talked about,” she said. “It’s never been more important than now.”

DeSantis this week said the rise in positive COVID-19 tests is entirely expected and indicative of more testing rather than a dangerous spike. He said there will not be a return to business closures because, “You have to have society function.”

Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried, the only statewide-elected Democrat, this week slammed the Republican governor’s pandemic leadership over the record-high new cases.

“His policies are simply not working, and he’s recklessly reopening Florida despite the data screaming for caution,” Fried said in a statement.

Deaths

Statewide: At least 3,153 people have died from the new coronaviru­s in Florida, 43 more than on Wednesday, the state reported.

Residents: The death total includes 3,061 residents and 92 from outside the state.

Senior care: Fifty-one percent of Florida’s COVID-19 deaths have occurred in nursing homes and long-term care facilities. Some 11,377 cases have occurred among residents and staff.

Hospitaliz­ations

Statewide: A total of 12,577 people have been treated in Florida hospitals for COVID-19 since the beginning of pandemic-related record-keeping, an increase of 188 since Wednesday. The number of available hospital beds has been declining in recent weeks.

South Florida: Broward, Palm Beach and MiamiDade counties have had 6,851 people hospitaliz­ed, 89 more than the previous 24 hours.

 ?? JOHN MCCALL/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? A sign alerts beachgoers to wear a mask near Anglin’s Pier in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea on Wednesday.
JOHN MCCALL/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL A sign alerts beachgoers to wear a mask near Anglin’s Pier in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea on Wednesday.

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