Miami Herald

Florida sees huge weekly spike in COVID-19 cases with 7 times the amount in June

Florida’s Department of Health announced 73,166 new resident cases of COVID-19 and 282 new deaths since July 16.

- BY DEVOUN CETOUTE dcetoute@miamiheral­d.com

Florida’s surge of COVID-19 cases escalated significan­tly Friday when the Florida Department of Health announced 73,166 new resident cases of COVID-19 since last Friday, 61% higher than the high rate from last week’s report and more than seven times higher from where the cases were in mid-June.

On Thursday, U.S. Surgeon General

Vivek Murthy told McClatchy that Florida “cases are rising at an alarming rate, hospitaliz­ations are going up, and deaths are going up.”

Last July was the worst month of the Florida pandemic, with daily case counts routinely topping 10,000. As of Thursday, Florida recorded 13,256 new daily COVID cases, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported, the highest single-day count since January.

The seven-day case average for Florida increased from 6,492 to 10,452 over the past week.

Miami-Dade, which represents about 10% of the state’s population, is accounting for about 15% of the state’s new cases, based on Friday’s report.

The surge of cases is being driven by the virulent delta variant, fewer people wearing masks and practicing social distancing, and millions of people who have not been vaccinated. As of Friday, 67.1% of Floridians 18 and over have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, and 57.9% of those 18 and over in the state have been fully vaccinated, according to The New York Times.

8 MILLION PEOPLE IN FLORIDA ARE NOT VACCINATED DESPITE BEING ELIGIBLE

About 8 million people in Florida who are eligible for a vaccine have not been vaccinated, according to estimates by Jason Salemi, who is an epidemiolo­gist and professor with the University of South Florida in Tampa and has been tracking the pandemic since 2020.

The state also reported 282 new deaths, up from 231 new deaths on the previous week. On July 16, the previous Friday, the state reported 45,449 new resident COVID-19 cases.

New weekly case totals have been rapidly rising since last month when state health officials reported 10,095 cases from June 11-17.

VACCINE RATES IN FLORIDA ARE ‘QUITE LOW’ IN SOME POCKETS

Murthy, in the McClatchy interview on Thursday, said pockets of the state with low vaccinatio­n rates were contributi­ng to rising cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths.

“The challenge we have in Florida, and in far too many states, is we still don’t have vaccinatio­n rates high enough, and in some pockets, we have actually vaccinatio­n rates that are quite low,” he said. “And the consequenc­e of that is that COVID is now spreading very quickly in those population­s. So that’s what concerns me.”

He is a graduate of Palmetto High School in Pinecrest.

The totals given by the state do not represent non-Florida resident cases and deaths — people who either contracted the disease or died from it while in Florida — because the state stopped reporting those metrics in late May when it pulled its daily reports.

At that time, there were 744 non-resident deaths and 43,535 non-resident cases, cumulative­ly.

The state’s seven-day positivity rate increased from 11.5% to 15.1%; the state sits at a 17.3% positivity rate since the pandemic began.

The health department is no longer reporting daily case numbers, just weekly cumulative counts.

More than 9.9 million Floridians have completed either the two-dose series of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines or have completed Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine. Another 1.5 million have completed their first dosage, bringing the total number of Floridians who have been fully or partially vaccinated to around 11.4 million, or 59% of Floridians who are 12 and older.

COVID-19 IN FLORIDA

Here’s a breakdown of

how many new COVID-19 cases were reported this past week in South Florida. The Miami Herald can no longer include new deaths because the state stopped classifyin­g deaths by county in its report.

Miami-Dade County reported 11,104 new resident cases in the week ending July 22, according to the health department. The Miami Herald calculates there were 11,087 new resident cases based on released weekly reports.

The county has recorded at least 533,821 confirmed cases and 6,472 deaths.

In Miami-Dade, 1,926,953 people, or about 76% of eligible residents, have received at least one dose a vaccine, the state reported.

Broward County

reported 6,105 new reported resident cases for the week ending July 22, according to the health department. The Miami Herald calculates there were 6,055 new resident cases based on released weekly reports.

The county has now recorded at least 262,319 confirmed cases and

3,079 deaths.

In Broward, 1,155,963 people, or about 68% of residents 12 years old and older, have received at least one vaccine dose, the state reported.

Palm Beach County reported 3,972 new reported resident cases as of the week ending July 22, according to the health department. The Miami Herald calculates there were 3,981 new resident cases based on released weekly reports.

The county has now recorded at least 159,598 confirmed cases and 2,883 deaths.

In Palm Beach County, 831,451 people, or about 64% of residents 12 years old and older, have received at least one dose of a vaccine, the state reported.

Monroe County reported 123 new reported resident cases as of the week ending July 22, according to the health department. The Miami Herald calculates there

were 115 new resident cases based on released weekly reports.

The county has now recorded at least 7,535 confirmed cases and 52 deaths.

In the Florida Keys, 47,392 people, or about 69% of residents 12 years old and older, have received at least one dose of a vaccine, the state reported.

FLORIDA COVID-19 VARIANT CASES

Several variants of COVID-19 have proliferat­ed since the beginning of the pandemic. There are eight variants being tracked across the globe.

Four of the variants have been classified as variants of concern by the CDC and World Health Organizati­on: alpha, beta, gamma and delta.

All the variants of concern have been recorded in Florida, with MiamiDade having the state’s most variant cases at 4,545 this year.

Variant data recorded by the state serve as benchmarks to see their proliferat­ion. A normal COVID test does not identify a variant.

A more thorough, deeper analysis must be done and since it is costly, only a fraction of tests are analyzed for variants.

Since the beginning of this year to July 15, the Florida Department of Health has released the following variant data:

Alpha: There have been 19,438 COVID-19 cases linked to the alpha variant this year in Florida. The state also reported 538 hospitaliz­ations from the variant.

Over the last 15 days, 3,361 more Alpha variant cases were reported and 190 more hospitaliz­ations.

Beta: There have been 103 COVID-19 cases linked to the beta variant. The state also reported six hospitaliz­ations from the variant.

Over the last 15 days, 19 more beta variant cases were reported and two more hospitaliz­ations.

Gamma: There have been 2,502 COVID-19 cases linked to the gamma variant. The state also reported 111 hospitaliz­ations from the variant.

Over the last 15 days, 957 more gamma variant cases were reported and 60 more hospitaliz­ations.

Delta: There have been 877 COVID-19 cases linked to the delta variant. The state also reported 29 hospitaliz­ations from the variant.

The Florida Department of Health did not report delta variant cases in Friday’s report. The state also did not include variant breakdowns per county.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? The surge is being driven by the delta variant, fewer people wearing masks, and millions of people who have not been vaccinated.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com The surge is being driven by the delta variant, fewer people wearing masks, and millions of people who have not been vaccinated.
 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Nurse Niurka Pérez vaccinates Uberne Vargas in downtown Miami on May 21.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Nurse Niurka Pérez vaccinates Uberne Vargas in downtown Miami on May 21.

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