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Florida sees second day of less than 1,000 new coronavirus cases. Death toll passes 600

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Florida saw its second day of relatively low novel coronavirus confirmations since late March. The state has not seen two consecutive days of new reported cases under 1,000 since March 29.

Wednesday evening, the Florida Department of Health confirmed 891 additional cases of COVID-19 and 43 new deaths statewide since Tuesday night. The state’s total confirmed cases is 22,519 as the death toll grew to 614.

The drop in the number of coronavirus cases being reported may be due to Florida significantly underreporting the state’s COVID-19 testing backlog, it could hide the pandemic’s size.

The state only reports the number of Floridians waiting to hear test results from state labs, not private ones — and private labs are completing more than 90% of state tests. The state website doesn’t say that its figures exclude the vast majority of pending tests for the novel coronavirus.

Since Wednesday morning, 438 more cases and 23 new deaths were reported, health officials said.

Of the 43 new deaths, 29 were in South Florida.

Miami-Dade County saw 12 new deaths since Tuesday night. Health officials reported 13 new deaths in Broward County and four new deaths in Palm Beach County.

Information on these deaths has not yet been released by the state’s Department of Health.

Miami-Dade County continues to have the highest number of confirmed cases and deaths in Florida and is the 16th county in the country with the most coronavirus cases, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine. On Tuesday night, it ranked 12th.

In total, 21,865 of the confirmed cases are Florida residents and 653 are non-residents. The state has had a total of 3,249 hospitalizations for COVID-19 complications.

The statewide and county-level data for COVID-19 hospitalizations includes anyone who was hospitalized during their illness and “does not reflect the number of people currently hospitalized,” according to Florida’s Department of Health.

The department says it does not “have a figure” to reflect current hospitalization data.

CONFIRMED COVID-19 CASES IN SOUTH FLORIDA

As of Wednesday evening, here’s what Florida’s Department of Health COVID-19 Data and Surveillance Dashboard showed:

Miami-Dade County saw 200 additional confirmed cases of COVID-19, raising the county total to 8,063. Those who have fallen ill range from 0 to 103. (Those in the zero age range are less than 1.) Health officials say 7,990 are residents, 72 are non-residents and one is a resident who is not in Florida. The county has had 702 hospitalizations and 155 deaths, the state’s highest death toll.

Broward County reported 29 additional confirmed cases of the disease, raising the county total of confirmed cases to 3,363. Those who have fallen ill range from 0 to 99. Health officials say 3,249 are residents and 114 are non-residents. The county has had 94 deaths and 562 hospitalizations.

Palm Beach County had 34 additional confirmed cases of COVID-19, raising the county total to 1,816. Those who have fallen ill range from 0 to 104. Health officials say 1,763 are residents, 51 are non-residents and two are residents who are not in Florida. The county has had 326 hospitalizations and 107 deaths.

Monroe County had two additional confirmed cases of the disease. The county has a total of 66 known cases of COVID-19. Only six of them are non-residents. Those who have fallen ill range from 14 to 80. The Florida Keys have had three deaths and nine hospitalizations.

From Miami Herald.

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