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Miami Herald
Miami Herald
National
Michelle Marchante and Howard Cohen

Florida adds 5,838 COVID-19 cases, topping 858,000, as state death toll rises to 17,300

MIAMI — Florida's Department of Health on Wednesday confirmed 5,838 additional cases of COVID-19, bringing the state's known total to 858,012. Also, 52 resident deaths were announced, bringing the resident death toll to 17,300.

This is the most number of cases reported since Sunday when 6,820 were reported.

The state did not report any new nonresident deaths. On Wednesday, the cumulative nonresident toll was at 212.

State-supported COVID-19 testing sites in Miami-Dade and Broward were closed this weekend for Tropical Storm Eta preparations. And while some sites reopened Tuesday, others remain closed because of flooding or other storm-related issues, including the test site at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens.

One of the tools officials rely on to determine whether the coronavirus situation is improving in the state is hospitalization data. Unlike testing, which might be limited or take 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 1:30 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday, there were 3,054 COVID-19 patients admitted into hospitals throughout the state, according to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration dashboard. This is a decrease from early August, when more than 5,000 COVID-19 patients were admitted into hospitals throughout the state.

The state has had a total of 51.115 Florida residents hospitalized for COVID-19-related complications, according to Florida's COVID-19 Data and Surveillance Dashboard.

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

Testing, like hospitalizations, helps officials determine the virus's 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 Wednesday, Florida's Department of Health reported the results of 73,420 people tested Tuesday. The positivity rate of new cases (people who tested positive for the first time) decreased from 8.28% to 7.79%.

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