Florida counts 7,915 new coronavirus cases, 98 fatalities in ongoing pandemic

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19,627 people have died with COVID-19 in Florida.

State health officials reported 7,915 new COVID-19 diagnoses and confirmed 98 fatalities tied to the coronavirus in an update issued Tuesday.

As of the Department of Health’s latest report, with new data arriving between Monday and Tuesday mornings, 1,073,770 people have tested positive in Florida, including 17,705 nonresidents.

DOH also showed that 19,627 people have died with COVID-19 in Florida. That death toll is composed of 249 nonresidents, including two whose death officials reported Tuesday, and 19,378 Floridians, 96 of whom were announced Tuesday.

As coronavirus outbreaks continue across the country, the Sunshine State is also witnessing a surge in cases. Between Wednesday and Saturday, the department reported four consecutive days with new cases totaling nearly 10,000 each day. Before that streak, Florida became the third state to record more than 1 million cases.

For all-day Monday, the latest complete day available, officials counted 7,842 cases from 112,229 residents tested. Among the new positives, the median age was 39.

An increase in new cases was expected following Thanksgiving with heightened travel and gatherings. In addition to the rise in new cases, a possible spike was unfolding in the state’s positivity rates, but positivity rates fell last week.

The positivity rate for new cases began increasing again the day after Thanksgiving, nearly neutralizing two weeks of improvements since positivity rates topped 10% last month. That day, the positivity rate was down to 6.2% but returned to 9.1% Dec. 1, the highest since mid-November. On Monday, the rate was back down to 7.9%.

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

Central Florida saw peculiar revisions Tuesday, with cases dropping by 1,750 in Orange County while seeing record increases in other counties like Seminole.

A Florida Department of Health spokesperson told Florida Politics he would look into it with officials there. An Orange County spokesperson said county health officials also were asking the state for an explanation but had not yet received one by 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Over the summer, Gov. Ron DeSantis shifted the state’s data focus away from the raw count and percent positivity rates, pointing instead 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 declined. For six consecutive weeks as of two weeks ago, the state has recorded week-over increases in hospitalizations.

Last week showed a downturn in new hospitalizations, from 8,764 two weeks ago to 7,647 last week. Officials may still update last week’s count and instead show an increase, as has happened in recent weeks.

As of Tuesday, 56,906 Floridians have been hospitalized after DOH recorded 299 new hospitalizations, a significant increase for the state. The Agency for Health Care Administration reports that 4,558 people are currently hospitalized with the disease, an increase of 63 in about 24 hours.

Florida, the third most populous state, is only behind California and Texas in the total count of new cases. Officials in California have reported 1.39 million cases while officials in Texas have confirmed 1.26 million cases.

The United States has seen a nationwide surge in coronavirus cases that has disproportionately affected the Upper Midwest. Deaths from COVID-19 in the U.S. have soared to more than 2,200 a day on average, matching the frightening peak reached last April, and cases per day have eclipsed 200,000 on average for the first time on record, with the crisis all but certain to get worse because of the fallout from Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s.

Last week, Florida crossed 1 million coronavirus infections. Nine months prior, after officials confirmed the first COVID-19 cases in Florida on March 1, DeSantis ordered Surgeon General Scott Rivkees to declare a public health emergency in the state. Eight days after the emergency declaration, DeSantis issued a state of emergency, and both orders remain ongoing.

After the initial outbreak of new cases, at a time when access to coronavirus testing was low, officials had identified about 20,000 COVID-19 cases in Florida, recording just over 1,300 cases in a single day. After outbreaks subsided throughout April and May, cases began spiking in June and peaked at more than 15,000 cases in mid-July. In July alone, officials confirmed more than 300,000 new cases and the state’s total reached 470,386 by the end of the month.

Since October, cases have been on the rise again. The latest resurgence in coronavirus outbreaks has been a gradual increase in daily cases as opposed to the spike observed in the summer.

During his first press conference since the beginning of the month, the Governor on Monday announced that schools would remain open during the spring semester and reaffirmed his opposition to lockdowns and mask mandates. He added that preparing for COVID-19 vaccine distributions has been a priority since mid-November.

“Now that there’s a vaccine on the horizon, people say even with a vaccine social distance until 2022. No way. That is just totally overboard,” DeSantis said. “It just shows you how the goal posts have moved, and I think innocent people have been caught up in this.”

On Wednesday, the Governor briefed Floridians on his vaccine distribution plan in a video posted to YouTube and on Twitter. He said the Sunshine State will prioritize its most vulnerable residents and cautioned that no state will have vaccines available for everyone “off the bat.”

DeSantis spent his Tuesday in Washington, D.C., where President Donald Trump held an event on vaccine distribution.

On Monday, the Department of Law Enforcement confirmed that officers raided the home of former DOH Division of Disease Control and Health Protection geographic information systems manager Rebekah Jones, who curated the department’s coronavirus dashboard before she was fired for what the DeSantis administration described as repeated insubordination. The search stemmed from an emergency systems breech that officers say originated from Jones’ home.

Text messages were went using a custom-made DOH program used only to notify state workers in emergency conditions.

“it’s time to speak up before another 17,000 people are dead. You know this is wrong. You don’t have to be part of this. Be a hero. Speak out before it’s too late,” the text blast said, according to an FDLE affidavit.

Jones has been a prominent DeSantis critic, appearing in the national media to slam his coronavirus response.

On CNN during Chris Cuomo‘s Prime Time Monday evening, Jones issued a warning to her former colleagues in DOH who have been leaking her information in privacy. Those records are now in the state’s hands, she said.

“On my phone is every communication I’ve ever had with someone who works at the state who has come to me in confidence and told me things that could get them fired or in trouble like this,” Jones said, “and I just want to say to all those people right now, if he doesn’t know already, DeSantis will know soon enough that you’ve been talking to me, so be careful.”

Renzo Downey

Renzo Downey covers state government for Florida Politics. After graduating from Northwestern University in 2019, Renzo began his reporting career in the Lone Star State, covering state government for the Austin American-Statesman. Shoot Renzo an email at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter @RenzoDowney.



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