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June 26 update: 82 new positive tests, no new hospitalizations, 1 new death

BY JENNIFER CABRERA

According to the stateĀ dashboard, Alachua County has a cumulative total of 945 people with COVID-19-positive test results, an increase of 82 from yesterday on 630 test results for a test positivity rate of 13%. The median age of positive tests (overall) in Alachua County is down again from 31 to 30; it was 47 a few weeks ago.

One new death was reported at Parklands Care Center, bringing the total there to 10.

This graph is for Alachua County:

These charts show the age distribution of cases in Alachua County and a comparison of the ages of cases before and after June 10. The migrant worker tests first started coming in on June 10, and protests with large numbers of participants occurred on the weekend of June 13.


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Paul Myers from the Department of Health said the important thing is that the new cases have not led to a significant increase in hospitalizations. He said Tuesday at the Alachua County Commission meeting that some of those who are testing positive may have been sick weeks ago: ā€œWe cannot differentiate between current infection with this test and, basically, a person who is continuing to excrete viral debris, which is not infectious. This test is very sensitive but not very specific, in that regard.ā€

A total of twelve deaths have been reported in the county. Ten of the deaths were reportedly from one long-term care facility, Parklands Care Center. The 12 deaths were first reported as positive cases on April 9 (4), April 18 (2), April 20, April 21, April 23, May 10, May 12, and May 24.

92 people (total) have been hospitalized, no increase since yesterday. Note that hospitalizations are not necessarily people who seek care for COVID; everyone who is admitted to the hospital for any reason is now tested.

TheĀ websiteĀ with current numbers of long-term care cases in Alachua County shows 75 cases, no change from the last report. 58 of the cases are from Parklands Care Center. The chart says, ā€œThe data is not cumulative but reflects the information available for current residents and staff with cases as of yesterdayā€™s date.ā€ (The top line shows totals for the state.)

TheĀ county reportĀ shows a cumulative total of 74 cases in long-term care (no change in the past 2 days) and 2 cases in a correctional facility (Iā€™ve been told that both of these are related to correctional facilities in other counties).

Available bed capacityĀ in Alachua County is 15.36%. You may have seen stories about hospital capacity around the state, tying the increased number of patients to COVID. The truth is that the increased number of patients is from elective procedures that were delayed during the pandemic.

The state has 122,960 cases (an increase of 8,946 from yesterday on 48,269 new test results for a positive rate of 18.5%) and 3,366 deaths (an increase of 39 from yesterday, 24 of which were from long-term care facilities).

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 yesterdayā€™s positive rate was 13.05%. (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.)

Dade County has 25% of the stateā€™s cases. Broward has 11%; Palm Beach 10%; Hillsborough has 7%; Orange has 6%, and Lee has 4%. Alachua County represents about 1.2% of the stateā€™s population and 0.77% of the stateā€™s cases.

37,974 test results have come back so far in Alachua County (up 630 from yesterday), and 37,020 tests have come back negative. Only 2.5% of the local tests have come back positive so far, and 82 tests came back positive since yesterdayā€™s report, for a positive test rate of 13%.

The University of Florida is reporting 20 positive tests out of 15,853 employees tested since May 6. This is a positive rate of 0.13%; it is unclear whether these negative test results are included in the overall numbers for Alachua County (positive test results are required to be reported). If theyā€™re not included, the overall positivity rate for Alachua County (assuming these employees are Alachua County residents) drops to 1.8%. We are trying to get more information about this but have not received a response from UF.

Here is the official graph for Alachua County:

Also, here is the graph for the percentage of emergency department visits for cough, fever, and shortness of breath (normal baseline is around 2%):

According to theĀ daily report,Ā there are 780 cases in Gainesville, 40 in Alachua, 36 in Newberry, 19 in High Springs, 12 in Archer, 9 in Hawthorne, 7 in Waldo, 5 in Micanopy, 4 in Tioga, 4 in Santa Fe, and 1 in LaCrosse. 4 cases are listed in the city of ā€œMissingā€ in Alachua County. Location data is not available for all cases.

The 7-day moving average of new cases is at 46.9 through yesterdayā€™s cases. Here is the 7-day average of new cases for the past 14 days.

Cases by zip code

Iā€™m not going to type out the cases by zip code any more. If youā€™re interested, you can find them on the ā€œCases by Zip Codeā€ tab of the dashboard.

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.

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