06-26-2020, 11:45 PM
(This post was last modified: 06-27-2020, 12:58 AM by Eric the Green.)
Most new cases today:
Florida 8942
California 5619
Texas 5614
Arizona 3428
Georgia 1900
North Carolina 1695
Tennessee 1410
South Carolina 1313
Louisiana 1310
Ohio 1002
Where hospitalizations are increasing graph:
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/22/coronavi...texas.html
Texas has 3563 covid 19 patients in the hospital, 53% increase since last week. Hospitalizations are rising in 16 states.
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/25/record-s...tates.html
Florida:
(where data is apparently being covered up, and/or hard to find)
The state’s positivity rate -- the rate of new cases compared to the number of tests given per day-- jumped above 10% Monday, a significant increase compared to the beginning of the month when it was as low as 4%, according to the DOH report.
While Florida hospital executives say they have plenty of hospital and ICU bed capacity to support the growing number of infections, hospitals in Central Florida have reported more hospitalizations in recent weeks.
Florida reported an additional 196 patients with COVID-19 in hospitals around the state Tuesday, bringing the number of people hospitalized in Florida because of the virus since March to 13,316.
https://www.clickorlando.com/news/local/...new-cases/
https://tallahasseereports.com/2020/06/2...us-battle/
From https://www.sun-sentinel.com/coronavirus...story.html
As new COVID-19 cases in the state hit record highs daily, hospitalizations climb and intensive care beds fill, leaders are becoming increasingly anxious about whether the infection will overtax the local hospital system. But Florida’s Agency for Health Care Administration isn’t showing Floridians all they know about how the virus is playing out in its hospitals.
South Florida hospitalizations for COVID-19 are now eclipsing the peaks reached in mid-April. Miami-Dade on Wednesday had 981 people hospitalized with the virus, surpassing an April 17 peak of 787. Broward County had 391 COVID patients in hospitals, nearing its peak of 413 on April 7. Palm Beach County, with 394 people hospitalized with the virus, has far exceeded a peak of 245 cases on April 20.
Florida 8942
California 5619
Texas 5614
Arizona 3428
Georgia 1900
North Carolina 1695
Tennessee 1410
South Carolina 1313
Louisiana 1310
Ohio 1002
Where hospitalizations are increasing graph:
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/22/coronavi...texas.html
Texas has 3563 covid 19 patients in the hospital, 53% increase since last week. Hospitalizations are rising in 16 states.
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/25/record-s...tates.html
Florida:
(where data is apparently being covered up, and/or hard to find)
The state’s positivity rate -- the rate of new cases compared to the number of tests given per day-- jumped above 10% Monday, a significant increase compared to the beginning of the month when it was as low as 4%, according to the DOH report.
While Florida hospital executives say they have plenty of hospital and ICU bed capacity to support the growing number of infections, hospitals in Central Florida have reported more hospitalizations in recent weeks.
Florida reported an additional 196 patients with COVID-19 in hospitals around the state Tuesday, bringing the number of people hospitalized in Florida because of the virus since March to 13,316.
https://www.clickorlando.com/news/local/...new-cases/
https://tallahasseereports.com/2020/06/2...us-battle/
From https://www.sun-sentinel.com/coronavirus...story.html
As new COVID-19 cases in the state hit record highs daily, hospitalizations climb and intensive care beds fill, leaders are becoming increasingly anxious about whether the infection will overtax the local hospital system. But Florida’s Agency for Health Care Administration isn’t showing Floridians all they know about how the virus is playing out in its hospitals.
South Florida hospitalizations for COVID-19 are now eclipsing the peaks reached in mid-April. Miami-Dade on Wednesday had 981 people hospitalized with the virus, surpassing an April 17 peak of 787. Broward County had 391 COVID patients in hospitals, nearing its peak of 413 on April 7. Palm Beach County, with 394 people hospitalized with the virus, has far exceeded a peak of 245 cases on April 20.