Florida not doing so great with the Covid...of course little testing and Orlando Sentinel having to sue for Health Department stats doesn't help.
Florida reports more than 10,000 COVID-19 variant cases, surge after spring break
243 have been hospitalized with variants and 67 have died.
By
Marlene Lenthang
May 9, 2021, 7:04 AM
• 5 min read
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On Location: May 7, 2021
Catch up on the developing stories making headlines.
Variant COVID-19 infections skyrocketed following spring break in
Florida and there have been more than 10,000 variant cases reported throughout the state,
the South Florida Sun Sentinel reported based on data from the Florida Department of Health.
A total of 753 variant cases from three strains -- the B.1.1.7, the P.1, and the B. 1.3.5.1. -- were reported on March 14, according to variant infection data shared with ABC News. The Florida Department of Health does not disclose variant cases on its public dashboard.
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That number swelled to 5,177 cases from five types of variants on April 15. Just two weeks later, the number of variant infections exploded to 9,248 on April 27, according to local ABC affiliate
, WFTV.
The surge falls in line with mid-March into April spring break celebrations, when college students and vacationers flock to the sunshine state.
Florida is home to the most variant COVID-19 cases in the country. State health officials reported more than 11,800 cases of COVID-19 variants on Wednesday, according to the Sun Sentinel.
Shannon Stapleton/Reuters, FILE
Critical care workers insert an endotracheal tube into a coronavirus disease positive patient in th...
In total, variants have led to the hospitalization of 243 residents and the death of 67 people in Florida, the Sun Sentinel reported.
Only 1% of all COVID-19 cases in Florida undergo testing to study their genetic coding, meaning the number of variant infections is likely much higher than reported.
The data regarding variants was first released Monday hours after
Gov. Ron DeSantis announced the lift of all local COVID-19 restrictions.
MORE: Florida officials denounce Gov. Ron DeSantis' lifting of COVID-19 restrictions
The Florida Department of Health released the data as a part of a legal settlement with the
Orlando Sentinel after the paper sued in March to obtain a county breakdown of variant cases. A judge ended up agreeing with the paper’s claim that the data was vital “to understand how the virus continues to spread and affect Floridians.”
Paul Hennessy/Polaris
People enjoy the beach, March 24, 2021, in Daytona Beach, Fla.
As vaccinations across the country slow, there are concerns over the threat of highly transmissible variants. In Florida, the B.1.1.7. variant, which first emerged in the United Kingdom in December, makes up the highest number of variant cases. There are also several reports of the South African and Brazilian variants.
As of May 1, Miami-Dade County led the state with 2,279 variant cases, followed by Broward County with 1,950 variant cases, the Sun Sentinel reported.
While variants seem to be gaining traction, overall COVID-19 cases in the Sunshine State are slowing. Health officials reported a 4.67% COVID-19 positivity rate on Friday -- the second day in a row that it has dipped below 5%, per
state data.
MORE: Private Florida school won't employ vaccinated teachers
Now doctors are warning the public to stay vigilant and get vaccinated to prevent cases from going back up.
Dr. Bernard Ashby, a Miami-based cardiologist who has worked in the front lines of the pandemic, is warning of the dangers of the variants, especially in populous areas.
"If you look at the county breakdown, Miami-Dade leads the state in the variants followed by Broward County. And we've led in infections rates in general," Ashby told ABC News. "What's interesting is the degree to much the counties dominated ... [those counties] essentially account for almost 40% of the variants in the state that's out there."
"It's hard to ignore that we are essentially open for business," he said noting DeSantis' lift of COVID-19 restrictions this week. "Now we're seeing this little explosion."