July 30 update: 95 new positive tests, 4 new hospitalizations, no new deaths

BY JENNIFER CABRERA
According to the stateĀ dashboard, Alachua County has a cumulative total of 3,448 people with COVID-19-positive test results, an increase of 95 from yesterday on 661 test results with an official test positivity rate of 6.9%. The median age of positive tests (overall) in Alachua County is 31. 4 new hospitalizations were reported, and no new deaths were reported.
The new hospitalizations are a 60-year-old male who first tested positive on July 28; a 38-year-old female who first tested positive on July 26 and first noticed symptoms on July 18; a 22-year-old female who first tested positive on July 23 and first reported symptoms on July 15; and a 76-year-old male who first tested positive on April 9.
Perhaps the best news is that visits to county emergency rooms with COVID-like illness continue to decrease from the July 5 peak:

Of the 2,292 people who tested positive between June 11 (the beginning of the āspikeā in cases) and July 20 (cutting it off at July 20 allows a conservative 10 days from the positive test to hospitalization), only 49 (2.1%) have been hospitalized, and 9 have died (0.4%).
Around June 11, the number of new daily cases jumped about 10-fold, but then it stayed there. So we went from a 7-day average of 4-8 per day to 70-80 per day.
Of the 95 people whose tests came back yesterday, 17 were 65 or older (the chart shows 91 new cases because the state data doesnāt always match up):

A total of 20 deaths have been reported in the county. Nine of the deaths were reportedly from one long-term care facility, Parklands Care Center, and two were from other long-term care facilities. The 20 deaths were first reported as positive cases on April 9 (4), April 18 (2), April 20, April 21, April 23, May 10, May 12, May 24, June 23, June 29, July 1, July 6, July 7, July 8, July 9, and July 13.
141 people (total) have been hospitalized, an increase of 4 from yesterday. 21 people have been added to the hospitalization total in the past week.
TheĀ websiteĀ with current numbers of institutional care cases in Alachua County shows 122 cases, a decrease of 1 from the previous report. The chart says, āThe data is not cumulative but reflects the information available for current residents and staff with cases as of yesterdayās date.ā (The top line shows totals for the state.)

TheĀ county reportĀ shows a cumulative total of 113 cases in long-term care (an increase of 9 from yesterday) and 25 cases in a correctional facility (no increase from yesterday).
Available hospital bed capacityĀ in Alachua County is 11.64%, and ICU capacity is 7.79%.
North Florida Regional has 7 ICU beds available (14.5% of capacity), and Shands has 17 available (6.5% of capacity). ICU beds are used for all intensive-care patients, not just COVID patients.
The state has 461,379 cases (an increase of 9,956 from yesterday on 52,472 new test results) and 6,586 deaths (an increase of 253 from yesterday, 85 of which were from long-term care facilities).
Here are the dates of the new deaths:
7/29 ā 17
7/28 ā 37
7/27 ā 18
7/26 ā 10
7/25 ā 14
7/24 ā 21
7/23 ā 27
7/22 ā 13
7/21 ā 6
7/20 ā 8
7/19 ā 14
7/18 ā 9
7/17 ā 13
7/16 ā 3
7/15 ā 2
7/14 ā 2
7/13 ā 2
7/12 ā 1
7/11 ā 8
7/10 ā 9
7/9 ā 6
7/8 ā 2
7/7 ā 4
7/6 ā 2
7/5 ā 1
7/4 – 1
7/2 ā 1
7/1 – 1
6/25 ā 1

The state also publishes a chart of the percentage of new tests that are positive by day (this chart is for the whole state), and yesterdayās positive rate was 12%. (The state charts only count people who test positive for the first time, and they may assign results to a different date than the day the test result came back. Our calculations are just positives/total tests for new results.)

65,287 test results have come back so far in Alachua County (up 661 from yesterday). The official positivity rate yesterday was 6.9%.

The University of Florida is reporting 54 positive tests out of 20,323 employees tested since May 6. This is a positive rate of 0.27%. 4 of the last 446 tests were positive, for a positive rate of 0.9%.
UF is also now reporting its testing of students, and it shows 163 positives out of 686 tests for a positive rate of 24%. 1 out of the last 30 results have come back positive, for a positive rate of 3.3%. UF has added information to this page, stating that these tests are the ones run at the UF Student Health Care Center on students who seek care for COVID-like symptoms.
According to theĀ daily report,Ā there are 2,775 cases in Gainesville, 208 in Alachua, 145 in Newberry, 75 in High Springs, 65 in Archer, 56 in Hawthorne, 25 in Micanopy, 11 in Waldo, 10 in Santa Fe, 7 in Tioga, 7 in LaCrosse, 2 in Earleton, 2 in Jonesville, and 1 in Evinston. 6 cases are listed in the city of āMissingā in Alachua County, 1 case is erroneously listed in āWesley Chapelā in Alachua County, 1 case is in āUnkā in Alachua County, and 1 case is in “Ocala” in Alachua County. Location data is not available for all cases.
The 7-day moving average of new cases is at 80 through yesterdayās cases. Here is the 7-day average of new cases for the past 14 days.
Testing information
Drive-Thru COVID-19 Testing
The Florida Department of Health in Alachua County (DOH-Alachua) is offering drive-thru COVID-19 testing on Wednesdays from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. and Fridays from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. DOH-Alachua is offering COVID-19 testing to Alachua County residents, regardless of symptoms. Residents who want a COVID-19 test are asked to call 352-334-8810 for an appointment. A referral from a doctor is not required. If your insurance covers this, it will be billed (no copay is required). If not, it is free.
COVID-19 Testing Results Phone Line
The Department of Health in Alachua County has set up a dedicated line for residents to call for COVID-19 test results. The phone number is 352-334-8828, and it is staffed Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m.