WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Florida's coronavirus deaths' increased by 36, one day after 26, the lowest since 21 on Nov. 8, as cases increased 4,943 after 5,883, the Florida Health Department announced Sunday afternoon.
Of the increased deaths, 10 were people 85 and older and a rise of 5 in long-term facilities.
Palm Beach County's deaths didn't change for the second day in a row and is in second place. The Treasure Coast had a net increase of 8 --2 by St. Lucie 1 by Indian River. Okeechobee was unchanged.
California was the only state with a triple-digit deaths increase Sunday. Increased U.S. deaths: 507 though 13 states didn't report data. Increased cases: 43,694.
Tests reported from labs Saturday were 85,298, one day after 107,963 and 33,466 on Feb. 28, the fewest since 24,575 on Oct. 9 and a record 262,798 Jan. 29.
The state's daily first-time positivity rate was 6.8 percent one day after 6.26, a two-week high 6.73 six days ago, a two-week low 5.05 March 18 and record 23.38 Dec. 28. Palm Beach County's rate was 6.24 percent, one day after 6.57, a two-week high of 6.77 March 14 and a two-week low of 4.89 March 18.
The state's total daily positivity rate was 8.71 percent, one day after 7.8, six days after a two-week high of 9.15, a two-week low of 6.17 March 17, the lowest since 5.95 on Oct. 24 and a record 26.34 Dec. 28. Only 20,987 tests were reported Sept. 27.
The state's target positivity rate is the 5 percent threshold.
Florida's cases reached 2,044,005, including 130,727 in Palm Beach County, with only No. 1 California, No. 2 Texas, No. 4 New York, No. 5 Illinois, No. 6 Georgia, No. 7 Ohio and No. 8 Pennsylvania also reporting more than 1 million. California leads with more than 3 million.
Cases passed 2 million one Saturday ago, taking 21 days from 1.9 million 16 days to climb 100,000 from 1.8 million on Feb. 11,11 days to rise past 1.7 million. The first 100,000 was on June 22, 3 1/2 months after the first time.
After the first two deaths in Florida were announced on March 6, which is 388 days, the death toll has reached 33,178, an average of 86 per day. Florida's total including nonresidents is 33,819, which remained at 641.
Residents' deaths passed 33,000 on Friday, which was 15 days after reaching 32,000, nine days to surpass 31,000. It was 49 days for Florida's death toll of residents to reach the first 1,000 yet it was only 40 days to more than double. On July 20, there were 5,075 deaths.
On Thursday, deaths hit triple digits with the last time nine days ago: 101 on March 16. On Feb. 22 there also were 159, which was the most since 218 on Feb. 19.
Last Sunday's increase of 29 had tied for the lowest on Nov. 15 at the time since 26 Saturday. The last lowest was 21 on Nov. 8.
Two Sundays ago, the increase was 30.
The increase of 233 of Tuesday Feb. 9 was the third-highest and most since Friday, Jan. 22 of 272, which was 4 from the record on Aug. 11. With five additional nonresident deaths, the total for the day was 277, which ties the mark on Aug. 1. At the time there were 8,685 deaths. So that Friday's residents increase was 4 from the record of 276.
Palm Beach County remained at 2,635 for the second day in a row and a record 32 Feb. 2. First-place Miami-Dade rose by 17 to 5,814and Broward is third at 2,24with an increase of 1.
St. Lucie went from 577 to 584, Martin stayed at 302, Indian River from 279 to 280 and Okeechobee stayed at 84 with its first two fatalities on July 25.
No. 4 Hillsborough County was 1,602 (1 increase), No. 5 Pinellas 1,543 (no change), No. 6 Duval 1,295 (2 increase), No. 7 Polk 1,237 (no change), No. 8 Orange 1,175 (1 increase), No. 9 Marion 916 (no change) and No. 10 Lee 910 (no change).
With a net increase of 26 deaths in South Florida of the 36 state total, which is 72.2 percent after 65.4, there are 12,323, which is 37.1 percent of the state figure though the population only comprises 30 percent.
The number of increased deaths over seven days is 436, an average of 63 and 1.3 percent, compared with 487 the previous week and more than 1,200 several weeks ago. Palm Beach County increased by 39 over seven days for 1.5 percent. The U.S. figure is 1.3 percent with the world at 2.5 percent.
The number of new cases were 4,865, which is different than the 4,943 increase because of an update from previous days.
Data traditionally are low on Monday.
On Monday they rose by 2,862.
The previous Monday's 2,826 increased cases were the second fewest since 2,331 on Oct. 31. On Monday, March 1, the 1,700 cases were the lowest since 1,533 on Oct. 12. Two Mondays ago: 3,312 and Monday, Feb. 15: 3,615. On Sept. 29, the 738 cases were fewest since Tuesday June 2 when there were 617 additional infections.
The increase of 11,543 on Feb. 5 was the last time they were more than 10,000.
Cases increased by a record 19,816 on Thursday, Jan. 6 then were slightly lower at 19,530 one day later.
The most reported cases in one day were 20,015 from labs on Dec. 31. With no data released on New Year's Day, those results were part of a two-day total of 29,767 and an increase of 31,518.
A total of 21.5 percent of the additional cases were in Miami-Dade: 1,062 compared with 1,305 rise the day before. Much fewer were Palm Beach County with 369 one day after 454 and a record 1,213 Jan. 16 with Broward 706, St. Lucie 53, Martin 24, Indian River 18 and Okeechobee 11. Miami-Dade has the most cases in Florida with 442,337 and Broward is second at 212,641, ahead of Palm Beach County.
Over seven days, cases have risen by 35,656 for an average of 5,094 at 1.8 percent. The previous week the increase was 31,541 for an average of 4,506. The average since the first case was reported March 1, 2020, is 5,201 per day in 393 days.
Florida's cases are 6.8 percent of the total infections in the U.S. and 6.0 percent of the deaths. The state comprises 6.5 percent of the U.S. population.
Since the first two cases were announced nine months ago on March 1, Florida's total has surged to 9.5 percent of the state's 21.48 million population, 28th in cases per million. In cases per 100,000 for seven days, Florida is 13th at 158.1 with New York City No. 1 at 424.9 (separate from rest of state, which is 233.1), according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
State and county increases represent fatalities received by the state and not the number of deaths that occurred then. The day someone dies and when it is received by the state can lag for several days. The most deaths the past month: 86 on March 3.
Florida's new hospitalizations rose by 83 compared with 155 one day ago. The state reported Sunday there are currently 2,863 hospitalized with a primary diagnosis of COVID-19, which is an increase of 32. It reached as high as 7,762 Jan. 14 since hitting 6,000 in December. The high of 9,520 was on July 21 though the state didn't begin posting data until July. In all, there are around 57,000 hospital beds in the state.
TESTING
Florida is fourth in total tests at 20,648,211 behind No. 1 California, No. 2 New York, No. 3 Texas and and behind No. 5 Illinois, according to Johns Hopkins. Some people have taken more than one test.
First-time positivity rates:
Palm Beach County's rate was 1.92 on Oct. 11, which was the smallest since 1.5 percent on May 19.
Miami-Dade: 60.5 percent (day ago 5.82, two-week low 5.27 two days ago, two-week high 9.3 March 17). The rate hit 26.4 on July 8. Broward: 7.35 percent (day ago 7.13, two-week high 7.26 March 14, two-week low 5.51 March 18).
St. Lucie: 7.74 percent (day ago two-week high 8.63, two-week low 5.23 March 19). Martin: 5.37 percent (day ago two-week high 6.95, two-week low 3.0 March 19). Indian River: 5.01 percent (day ago 3.09, two-week high 7.58 six days ago, two-week low 3.0 March 19). Okeechobee: two-week high 18.97 on 47 negative tests (day ago 10.98 on 73 negative tests,two-week low 1.37 on 288 tests March 17).
MORTALITY
The mortality rate compares positive cases against deaths. The state's rate was 1.7 percent for all deaths and cases, including nonresidents, compared with 1.8 percent in the United States and 2.2 percent worldwide.
County rates: Palm Beach County 2.1 percent, Broward 1.2 (-0.1), Miami-Dade 1.3, St. Lucie 2.5 (+0.1), Martin 2.7, Indian River 2.4 and Okeechobee 2.3.
Deaths per million: Florida 1,546 (27th in nation), U.S. 1,699, world 358.3. New York, which represents 9.1 percent of the deaths in the nation, has 2,587 per million, second behind New Jersey at 2,746. Six months ago New York was 16.5 percent of the U.S. deaths.
AGE BREAKDOWN
The death of a 4-year-old girl from Hardee, the youngest in the state, was reported recently. Five deaths are among youths 14 and under, including a 6-year-old from Hillsborough. The 5-14 class hasn't changed since Sept. 26. Four other juveniles are among the 42 deaths in the 15-24 class, which rose by 1. The class was 33 on Sept. 25.
Ages 25-34: 178 (no change).
55 and older: Fatalities 94 percent, cases 28 percent. 75 and older: Fatalities 62 percent, cases 7 percent.
85 and older: 10,46 (10 increase)
Infant to 4: 40,666 cases (115 increase), 559 hospitalized at one time (no change). Ages 5-14: 127,01 cases (428 increase), 547 hospitalized at one time (no change).
Infant to 54 age group: 1,442,825 of the 2,006,118 residents' cases. Fatalities: 2,002 (3 increase, 0.14 percent. From infant to 64: 1,707,343cases. Fatalities 5,576 (13 increase, .33 percent).
CITIES
No. 1 West Palm Beach 31306 (64 increase). No. 2 Boca Raton 21,904 (88 increase). No. 3 Lake Worth, which includes the city and county portion 18,626 (56 increase). No. 4 Boynton Beach 12,503 (38 increase). No. 5 Delray Beach 9,672 (23 increase).
Port St. Lucie leads St. Lucie with 15,745 (43 increase) followed by Fort Pierce 7,718 (8 increase). Vero Beach is first in Indian River 8,903 (16 increase) with Fellsmere, which has a population of 5,754, at 924 (no change with only 3 on May 31. Stuart leads Martin with 5,240 (18 increase).
HOSPITALIZATIONS
A total of 84,644 people in the state have been hospitalized. Seven days ago: 83,446. That means it is a running total and includes people who have been released or died.
Palm Beach County: 6,453 (11 increase). Martin 740 (1 increase), St. Lucie 1,639 (6 increase), Indian River 820 (2 increase), Okeechobee 402 (2 increase).
LONG-TERM CARE
Thirty-three percent of the deaths, 11,014 are residents and staff of long-term care (5 increase). Palm Beach County is in first place with 1,054 (no change) ahead of Miami-Dade at 999 (no change).
NATION
Deaths
Since the first death was reported on Feb. 29, 2020, the national toll has risen to 549,335 Sunday (507 increase, seven days ago 447. Three states reported at least 50 more deaths. One week increase: 6,787 (1.3 percent).
Top-ranked states: No. 1 California 57,746 (U.S.-high 195 increase, U.S.-record 1,114 increase, including 806 from Los Angeles County dating from Dec. 3, past record record 764). No. 2 New York 50,017 (89 increase, record 799). No. 3 Texas 47,156 (63 increase, record 471). No. 5 Pennsylvania 25,000 (14 increase, record 405).
Others in top 10: No. 6 New Jersey 16 increase, No. 7 Illinois 23, No. 8 Georgia 0, No. 9 Ohio no data, No. 10 Massachusetts 39.
Also with at least 50: None. Also: No. 12 Arizona 6, No. 11 Michigan no data. No. 29 Washington, the original epicenter in the U.S., no data,
Palm Beach County's death count is higher than 16 states, including West Virginia at 2,634.
Cases
Total 30,262,377 Sunday (43,694 increase, seven days ago 33,766, record 299,786 Jan. 2). Six states had at least 2,000 cases.
Top-ranked states: No. 1 California 3,562,191 (2,998 increase, U.S.-record 53,711). No. 2 Texas 2,772,080 (2,415 increase, record 29,310 confirmed cases). No. 4 New York 1,835,940 (U.S.-high 9,395 increase, record 19,942). No. 5 Illinois 1,237,828 (2,259 increase, record 15,415).
Also at least 3,000: No. 7 Pennsylvania 4,927, No. 10 New Jersey 3,927.
Worldwide
Deaths: 2,796,099 Sunday (6,921 increase, seven days ago 6,286). The U.S. represented 7.4 percent of increase and overall 20.1 though its population is only 4.3 of the global total. One-week increase: 67,429 (2.5 percent).
Cases: 127,765,837 (487,487 increase, record 844,743 Jan. 8, seven days ago 438,657).
No. 2 Brazil: Deaths 312,299 (1,605 increase, record 3,600 Friday). Cases `12,534,688 (44,326 increase, record 97,586 Thursday).
No. 3 Mexico: Deaths 201,623 (194 increase, record 1,803). Cases 2,226,550 (1,783 increase, record 22,339).
No. 4 India: Deaths 161,240 (322 increase, first time topped 300 this year, record 1,283). Cases 11,971,624 (62,500, most since Oct. 16, record 97,859).
Europe: 2,013 new deaths, 174,888 new cases. Six nations in top 10.
No. 5 United Kingdom: Deaths 126,592 (19 increase, record 1,823). Cases 4,333,042 (3,862 increase, record 68,053).
No. 6 Italy: Deaths 107,933 (297 increase, record 993). Cases 19,611 increase, record 40,896.
No. 7 Russia: Deaths 97,740 (336 increase, record 635). Cases 4,519,832 (9,088 increase, record 29,935).
No. 8 France: Deaths 94,596 (131 increase, record 1,437). Cases 37,014 increase, record 88,790 Nov. 7).
No. 9 Germany: Deaths 76,468 (64 increase, record 1,244. Cases 13,651 increase, record 31,553.
No. 10 Spain: Deaths 75,010 (no data Sunday 590 increase Friday, record 996). Cases 7,586 increase Friday, record 44,357.
Also, No. 15 Poland: Deaths 51,884 (131 increase, record 674). Cases 29,253 increase, record 37,596.
Others
No. 14 South Africa: 52,663 deaths (15 increase, record 839. Cases 965 increase, record 21,980.
No. 22 Canada: Deaths 22,880 (28 increase, record 257). Cases 4,321 increase, record 11,383.
No. 39 Japan: Deaths 9,065 (29 increase, record 120). Cases:1,785 increase, record 7,882.
No. 55: China: Deaths 4,636 (reported one death Jan. 26 and another one week earlier after announcing only one since April 27, a new verification on May 17). Cases: 15 increase Monday.
No. 82 South Korea: Deaths 1,726 (4 increase Monday, record 40). Cases: 384 increase, record 1,241.