Covid-19Florida

Florida’s COVID-19 cases climb sharply

Miami, Florida – The number of new COVID-19 infections continues to climb sharply. For the second week in a row, Florida alone accounts for 20% of all new cases nationally.
According to the Florida Department of Health, 73,199 new cases are reported throughout the state, up more than 25,000 cases from the previous week.
There were also another 78 reported deaths, and the state’s new case positivity rate stands at 15.1%, which is up from 11.5% from the previous week.
Despite Miami-Dade County’s 76% vaccination rate, there were 11,104 newly reported cases last week and the county has a 10.1% new case positivity rate, up from 7.4%.
In Broward, the vaccination rate is 68%, but added 6,105 new cases last week and has a new case positivity rate of 10.9%, up from 8.1%.
Monroe County, with a 69% vaccination rate, added 123 new cases last week and has increased its positivity rate from 8.1% to 11.6%.
Florida’s COVID-19 hospitalizations also jumped significantly this week.
About 5,300 Floridians are now hospitalized with COVID, a 65% jump since last week and nearly a tripling since June 14 when 1,845 were hospitalized, the Florida Hospital Association said. Officials have said more than 95% of those hospitalized were not vaccinated.
Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has been vaccinated, this week encouraged the remaining unvaccinated Floridians to get their shots.
Despite the recent surge, DeSantis said the state will not return to government mandates and it is up to individuals on how they deal with the pandemic.
“We have a situation where we have three vaccines that have been widely available for months and months now and people need to make decisions that are best for them,” he said. “To have the government come in and to lock anyone down or restrict anyone is totally unacceptable.”
According to Jackson, there have been 143 COVID-19 patients this week compared with 66 in early July, a 117% increase.
Dr. Lilian Abbo, head of Jackson’s infectious disease prevention program, believes most of those becoming ill are infected with the delta variant as they are becoming sicker faster than with earlier strains of the coronavirus. They are also not seniors and other groups that were previously prevalent.
“We are seeing younger people in their 20s and 30s with not much risk factors — not obese, not diabetic, coming in very sick,” Abbo said. “Some of them requiring potential lung transplants.”

Lowell Bowen

From the time he was 8 years old Lowell knew he wanted to be on TV. Well, as people say one thing leads to another, that's how Lowell started his career in the news industry. Lowell has been part of The South Florida Daily since the very beginning.

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