Florida COVID-19 update: 9,148 cases added. Florida nears 3.5 million cases
Florida on Saturday reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 9,148 more COVID-19 cases and seven deaths, according to Miami Herald calculations of CDC data.
In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,418,160 confirmed COVID cases and 48,283 deaths.
In the last seven days, on average, the state has added 339 deaths and 15,633 cases to the daily cumulative total, according to Herald calculations of CDC data.
BEHIND THE STORY
MOREThe Herald publishes the number of new COVID-19 cases and deaths reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention after each update by the agency.
On Aug. 10, the Florida Department of Health changed the way it reported new cases and deaths to the CDC. Cases and deaths used to be logged as total new cases reported on a single day. Now, Florida is reporting cases by the “case date,” according to the CDC, rather than the date the case was logged into the system. The result of this change is a lag in cases by date and a number of cases back-filling over time.
The Herald will continue to report the difference in total cases and deaths from one day to the next in stories about daily new cases and deaths, as this is consistent with the way data have been presented in daily stories since the beginning of the pandemic.
More information
The Herald is calculating new cases using the difference between cumulative total of cases and the total from the previous day, as pulled daily from the CDC trends data. New deaths are calculated the same way.
As a result, the “new cases” and “new deaths” listed on the CDC site for any given day may be different than numbers published by the Herald for the same day.
According to a statement from CDC spokesperson Jasmine Reed on Aug. 18: “Florida’s aggregate case and death data includes case date for cases and date of death for deaths. The method applies data shared by Florida and to data displayed on COVID Data Tracker. Other States also use this reporting method and states can vary in the reporting method. For example, data as of the date that states submit may be the date that a state received its data from its reporting entities, or it might be another dating method that the state prefers.”
DOH spokesperson Weesam Khoury said Florida’s new reporting system “will ensure that continuous epidemiological analyses provide the most updated data to the public.” Neither agency provided further explanation of how a “case date” is assigned to each new case.
Florida COVID-19 vaccine rates
About 11,772,612 eligible Floridians — 54.8% of the state’s population — had completed the two-dose series of Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna, or have completed Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine, according to the CDC.
Vaccinations in South Florida and Manatee County
The CDC reports that every county’s level of community transmission is high. Here’s how many people have been fully vaccinated in South Florida, according to the CDC.
▪ In Miami-Dade County about 1,880,130 people, or 69.2% of the county’s total population, are fully vaccinated.
▪ In Broward County about 1,138,855 people are fully vaccinated, or 58.3% of the county’s population.
▪ In Palm Beach County, about 834,422 people are fully vaccinated, or 55.7% of the county’s population.
▪ In Monroe County about 48,042 people are fully vaccinated, or 64.7% of the county’s population.
▪ In Manatee County about 205,849 people are fully vaccinated, or 51% of the county’s population.
COVID-19 hospitalizations in Florida
There were 12,222 people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services’ Saturday report. This data is reported from 260 Florida hospitals. That is 429 fewer patients than Friday’s report, which also had one more reporting hospital.
COVID-19 patients take up 20.75% of all inpatient beds in the latest report’s hospitals, compared to 21.51% in the previous day’s reporting hospitals.
Of the people hospitalized in Florida, 2,885 people were in intensive care unit beds, a decrease of 57. That represents 43.58% of the state’s ICU hospital beds from 260 hospitals reporting data, compared to 44.48% the previous day.
This story was originally published September 11, 2021 at 1:29 PM with the headline "Florida COVID-19 update: 9,148 cases added. Florida nears 3.5 million cases."