Florida adds nearly another 4K COVID-19 cases Monday

Coronavirus warning sign on the fence against flag of Florida. Quarantine related 3D rendering
State health officials confirmed 58 more deaths in Monday's report.

With coronavirus cases on the rise in Florida and daily diagnoses reaching new heights nationwide, state health officials counted 3,924 new COVID-19 cases in their Monday update.

Now 847,821 people have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus, including 11,451 nonresidents. The Department of Health also confirmed 58 deaths since Sunday, raising the death toll among Florida residents to 17,179. In addition to the death toll, 212 nonresidents have also died in the state.

The latest data includes cases detailed between Sunday morning and Monday morning. For all day Sunday, officials counted 3,876 cases among residents from 52,427 individuals tested. Among the new positives, the median age was 39.

For all but one day in the past two weeks, the percent positivity rate has been above 5%. On Oct. 28, it was 4.9%. On Sunday, the rate was 8.1%, higher than all recent days apart from Friday, when 8.3% of results came back positive.

Some experts say a community should maintain rates below 5% for 14 days before reopening services like schools.

For weeks, the Governor’s Office has acknowledged an uptick in the number of new positives, but Gov. Ron DeSantis has emphasized that Florida will keep its reopening course. Before the uptick in positivity rates, the Governor’s communications director, Fred Piccolo, told Florida Politics that newly available rapid tests could be inspiring interest in testing. But he also acknowledged Phase Three and the full reopening of restaurants as probable factors driving an increase in cases.

Notably, COVID-19 cases and deaths reported by state health officials can sometimes be reported days or weeks later.

New cases have increased across the country, particularly in the Midwest, and the nation has seen record-setting days for new infections.

Meanwhile, the White House and President Donald Trump‘s inner circle faces a second COVID-19 outbreak some speculate is tied to his Election Night celebration from Tuesday. Chief of Staff Mark Meadows was the first prominent official to test positive, and Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson has also tested positive, according to reports Monday.

In Florida, DeSantis has for months shifted the state’s data focus away from the raw count and percent positivity rates, instead, pointing to hospital visits with symptoms related to COVID-19 as his preferred metric.

After peaking at 15,999 coronavirus-related hospitalizations the week of July 5, DOH reported that hospitalizations were in decline. But three of the last five weeks have seen week-over increases in the number of cases, the first since the first half of July.

As of Monday, 50,591 Floridians have been hospitalized after DOH recorded 102 new hospitalizations. The Agency for Health Care Administration reports that 2,902 people are currently hospitalized with the disease, an increase in over recent weeks and an increase of 125 since about 24 hours earlier.

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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



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