150 residents reported dead from COVID-19 Tuesday

Coronavirus Illustration 9
The death toll is increasing by 100 Floridians per day again after falling below that mark last week.

State health officials reported Tuesday 150 deaths among Florida residents tied to COVID-19, a tally that pushes the number of dead Floridians to 12,787.

Additionally, 159 non-residents have died in the state, an increase of one over Monday’s report.

Over the last seven days, the death toll has grown an average of 125 residents per day. A week ago, when the average of daily deaths fell below 100 for the first time since July, that was 77.

The most deaths confirmed in a single daily report was 276 on Aug. 11.

Fatalities don’t necessarily occur the day they are reported. Of the 150 deaths confirmed since Monday’s report, only 118 of them occurred in the last 30 days. Two occurred Tuesday morning.

According to the Department of Health, 665,730 people have tested positive for COVID-19 in Florida, including 7,900 non-residents. Of those cases, the department confirmed 3,116 Tuesday morning.

The new cases cover results returned between Monday morning and Tuesday morning. For all-day Monday, DOH received 2,701 positive cases with a median age of 39, up from a recent low of 35 as schools and universities reopen.

The fastest-growing age cohort for the virus is Floridians aged 15 to 24. Of those positive cases from Saturday, 639 — or 24% — of all positives came from that age group. Throughout August, 14% of cases were aged 15 to 24.

Gov. Ron DeSantis began underscoring emergency department visits over testing positivity rates in early August after raising questions about the reliability of complete and timely reporting from private laboratories.

Both hospital visits for illnesses related to influenza and COVID-19 have declined each week since July 5. However, DOH reported 2,101 visits for flu-like illnesses last week, the most since mid-August. Meanwhile, visits for illnesses like COVID-19 dropped a ninth consecutive week to 4,058.

Overall, 41,654 Floridians have been hospitalized, an increase of 280 since Monday’s report. But the Agency for Health Care Administration reports that 2,576 people are currently hospitalized with the disease, a drop of 69 in the last 24 hours.

In total, nearly 5 million Floridians have been tested for COVID-19, as have 20,661 nonresidents in the state. On Monday, DOH received 68,958 test results.

The percent positivity rate ticked up slightly Monday after recording a recent low of 3.9% the day before. Of the results the department received, 4.2% returned positive. But over he last seven days, the positivity rate has been trending down and has fallen below 5% on average.

Some experts say the positivity rate should be below 5% for two weeks before reopening services like schools.

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Editor’s note on methodology: The Florida Department of Health releases new data every morning around 10:45 a.m. The total number reported in those daily reports include the previous day’s totals as well as the most up-to-date data as of about 9:30 a.m.

Florida Politics uses the report-over-report increase to document the number of new cases each day because it represents the most up-to-date data available. Some of the more specific data, including positivity rates and demographics, consider a different data set that includes only cases reported the previous day.

This is important to note because the DOH report lists different daily totals than our methodology to show day-over-day trends. Their numbers do not include nonresidents who tested positive in the state and they only include single-day data; therefore, some data in the DOH report may appear lower than what we report.

Our methodology was established based on careful consideration among our editorial staff to capture both the most recent and accurate trends.

Staff Reports


One comment

  • Dr. John McMahon

    September 20, 2020 at 12:20 am

    More FAKE NEWS! YAWN! Let’s see the ME Reports! Fear tactics wearing thin mister!

Comments are closed.


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