Coronavirus

Georgia reports more than 1,800 new COVID-19 cases Sunday. Here are the 24-hour trends

The Georgia Department of Public Health reported 237,030 cumulative COVID-19 cases Sunday, up by more than 1,800 new cases in 24 hours.

Here are some key takeaways from the latest data:

Cases: 237,030 (+1,873 reported today). The number of new cases reported in a day may not match the difference in total cases over a 24-hour period. This occurs because previously reported cases may be removed as duplicate reports are corrected. An older confirmed case may also be reclassified as additional information is collected during an investigation.

Deaths: 4,702 (+33 deaths in 24 hours). It’s important to note that these numbers indicate when deaths are reported to the Georgia Department of Public Health. It does not reflect when these deaths occurred. Georgia reported back-to-back days with more than 100 coronavirus-related deaths earlier this week.

Tests: Georgia reported 253,837 total antibody tests and 2,005,273 total viral tests (+17,207 viral tests in 24 hours). These totals don’t account for tests that are not reported through the state’s electronic lab reporting system.

Current COVID hospitalizations: 2,603. That’s an increase of 17 patients in 24 hours. The count includes any patient in a Georgia hospital who has tested positive for COVID-19 at the time of the report. This count does not include patients who are being investigated for possible infection by health officials.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reports Georgia had 3,565 current hospital patients in an inpatient bed with confirmed or suspected coronavirus infections as of Aug. 15. Representatives of the Georgia Department of Public Health previously said that federal data includes some long-term acute care and rehabilitation facilities, while state data is only from acute care hospitals.

Total COVID hospitalizations: 22,087, an increase of 59 in 24 hours.

Hospital capacity: As of Sunday, 83% of the state’s critical care beds are full. Not all critical care beds in the state are filled with COVID-19 patients. Some regions have less than 10 critical care beds available.

Region I, which includes Muscogee and other Columbus-area counties, has eight critical care beds left, and Region H, which includes some Middle Georgia counties such as Baldwin, Laurens and Twiggs, has seven critical care beds left. Not every patient in a critical care bed has COVID-19.

Cases per 100,000: Chattahoochee (7,535.6), Echols (5,694.1), Stewart (4,486.9), Appling (4,191.6) and Randolph (4,249.3) counties have the highest coronavirus rates per 100,000 people in the state.

For a complete county-by-county list, visit the Georgia Department of Public Health’s website. The health department is not reporting how many Georgians have recovered.

Regional update

Muscogee County reported 5,066 COVID-19 cases, an increase of 37 cases in 24 hours. The county reported 109 coronavirus-related deaths, no increase in 24 hours.

In Middle Georgia, Bibb County reported 4,061 cases, up 64 cases in 24 hours. The county reported 83 coronavirus-related deaths, no increase in 24 hours.

Fulton County reports the highest number of cumulative cases in the state at 21,993.

This story was originally published August 16, 2020 at 3:56 PM with the headline "Georgia reports more than 1,800 new COVID-19 cases Sunday. Here are the 24-hour trends."

JB
Justin Baxley
The Telegraph
Justin Baxley is the fan life reporter at The Telegraph and writes stories centered around entertainment, food and sports in the Macon community. Justin joined the Telegraph staff after graduating from Mercer University in May 2017 with a degree in criminal justice and journalism. During his time at Mercer he served as the sports editor for The Cluster.
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