Florida COVID weekly update: Miami-Dade, Broward now have low risk of virus transmission

Alie Skowronski/askowronski@miamiherald.com

What is the COVID situation like in Florida?

Cases and hospitalizations are going down, while deaths have slightly ticked up.

As of Thursday, Feb. 9, an average of 2,692 cases per day were added in the past seven days, a 14% decrease from the average of two weeks ago, according to Miami Herald calculations of data published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

READ MORE HERE: COVID shots now on CDC list of routine vaccines for kids, adults. What does that mean?

The number of cases is likely an undercount because the data doesn’t include positive results from at-home COVID testing. The state tracks only resident cases and deaths, excluding nonresident information.

Here’s a breakdown of what to know this week:

What’s the COVID risk in South Florida?

Miami-Dade, Broward and Monroe counties fell to a low risk level of virus transmission in the last week, joining Manatee County.

The CDC no longer recommends wearing masks at this level.

Palm Beach County remained at a medium risk level.

At this level, the CDC recommends that those at high risk of severe illness talk with their doctors about whether to wear a mask or take other precautions.

COVID hospitalization levels in Florida?

COVID hospitalizations have decreased in the state.

Of the 44,197 inpatient beds being used in Florida, 1,926, or about 4% of the beds, are being used for COVID-19, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, as of Thursday.

Of the 4,995 ICU beds in use, 264, or about 5%, are being used for COVID-19.

Florida COVID deaths

A total of 85,710 Florida residents have died from COVID since the pandemic began. There were 340 deaths recorded in the state in the CDC’s latest report.

It is unclear when these newly reported deaths occurred. The Community Profile Report updates Florida’s county death tolls about once every seven days.

What’s the dominant COVID variant?

From Feb. 5 to Feb. 11, the XBB.1.5 strain was the most dominant strain in the United States, including in the Southeast region, which includes Florida.

Florida COVID vaccination levels

About 14,896,712 eligible Floridians — 69.4% of the state’s population — have completed the two-dose series of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines or have completed Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine, according to the CDC.

South Florida and Manatee County cases

From Feb. 2 to Feb 9, Florida recorded 18,840 new cases, according to Miami Herald calculations of the CDC’s Community Profile Report published Friday.

Here’s a breakdown of the new COVID cases in South Florida and Manatee County, according to the report.

Miami-Dade reported 3,542 new resident cases in the week ending Feb. 9, reaching a cumulative total of 1,532,574 since March 2020, when the pandemic began. New cases were 12.20% fewer than those added in the previous week.

Broward reported 1,547 new resident cases, reaching a cumulative total of 766,412. New cases were 15.51% fewer than those added in the previous week.

Palm Beach reported 1,265 new resident cases, reaching a cumulative total of 475,322. New cases were 23.15% fewer than those added in the previous week.

Monroe reported 53 new resident cases, reaching a cumulative total of 22,686. New cases were 17.19% fewer than those added in the previous week.

Manatee reported 272 new resident cases, reaching a cumulative total of 122,096. New cases were 13.38% fewer than those added in the previous week.

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