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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Marc Freeman

Florida tops 400,000 COVID-19 cases with 12,444 reported Friday

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. _ Florida on Friday topped 400,000 COVID-19 cases, after adding 100,000 reported infections in just nine days.

Only California and New York have had more confirmed cases during the coronavirus pandemic, according to federal officials.

The Florida Department of Health reported 12,444 more cases on Friday, for a grand total of 402,313. The state has reported an average of 10,724 cases per day over the past seven days, which is the biggest surge anywhere in the nation.

This latest jump in reported infections comes a day after Gov. Ron DeSantis announced, "We've clearly stabilized with the cases."

Friday's increase is the highest number in the past six days, and is almost 2,200 more cases than Thursday's 10,249 cases. The state is on a pace to vault over New York's 410,500 cases this weekend. California has 413,500 cases, according to the COVID Data Tracker from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Florida officials also said another 136 people have died from COVID-19 complications, for a total of 5,768 deaths in Florida. Statistics show that 82% of residents who have died were 65 or older.

There have been younger victims _ 17 deaths of people between the ages of 9 and 24. Reports do not say whether there were underlying health issues.

The state's death rate has been steadily rising for the past four weeks; the state has reported over 100 deaths on eight of the past 11 days. A record 173 fatalities were added on Thursday. Due to a reporting lag, many deaths happen weeks before showing up on the daily reports.

South Florida, which accounts for 29% of Florida's population, reported 5,665 new cases in the past day, or 45.5% of the daily total for the state, according to the state Department of Health.

Broward County: 1,566 new coronavirus cases were reported Friday, bringing the total to 46,576. A total of 571 people have died, 10 more since Thursday.

Palm Beach County: 737 new cases were reported, bringing the total to 29,004. A total of 759 people have died, 17 more since Thursday.

Miami-Dade County: 3,362 new cases on Friday, bringing the total to 98,430. It's the second-highest number of cases on any day during the public health emergency, records show. A total of 1,386 people have died. That's 16 more than Thursday.

"We're still working hard to continue to tamp down cases and urge you to protect those loved ones living in your same household who are at high risk of suffering from COVID-19," Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez wrote in a Tweet.

Florida says it has tested 3.28 million people since the pandemic began, and 12.3% have been positive. That's the third-highest number of COVID-19 tests in the country, behind California (6.8 million) and New York (5.4 million).

Florida on Friday reported a 13.3% positivity rate for tests statewide in the previous 24-hour period. The rate was 19.7% for Miami-Dade, 15.7% for Broward and 12.1% for Palm Beach County. Those figures have increased in each of the past two days.

The daily positivity rate is a key figure, since it's one of the numbers that indicates the prevalence of the disease in the population. In May, Florida's positivity rate was about 5%.

A different report, from the state health department, shows 23,225 Florida residents have been hospitalized since the start of the pandemic. That's an increase of 8,400 patients since July 1, when the total was 14,825 hospitalizations.

DEATHS

Statewide: The official COVID-19 death total for Florida reached 5,768 on Friday. That figure includes 115 people who were not residents.

Nationwide: Florida's death rate is in the middle compared with other states. Florida's death rate per 100,000 people was 25.1 as of Thursday, CDC data show. The death rate is much higher in New York City with 279.4 deaths for 100,000. California has had 19.9 deaths per 100,000, and Texas has had 15.1 deaths.

Senior care: At least 2,599 deaths have occurred in nursing homes and long-term care facilities, a figure that represents 46% of the state total for coronavirus deaths of residents.

DeSantis has said the death toll would have been higher without months of lockdowns and other restrictions designed to prevent the spread in nursing homes and assisted-living facilities.

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