Over 3,200 new coronavirus cases in Florida reported Tuesday; 64 new deaths

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Hospitals brace themselves after flood of new cases

Doctors from Tampa General Hospital and the University of South Florida warn that hospitalizations are on the rise.

The Florida Department of Health says the number of known cases of COVID-19 in the state rose by 3,289 since yesterday morning as the virus spreads and as more people are tested across the state. The total number of cases in Florida is now 103,506.

The number of deaths has reached 3,237 an increase of 64 since Monday's update. Locally, Pinellas County reported 13 new deaths, Hillsborough reported three while Sarasota and Manatee each reported one.

Of the 103,506 cases, 101,306 are Florida residents while 2,200 are non-Florida residents currently in the state.

Bay Area COVID-19 cases by the numbers:

Hillsborough: 6,176

Pinellas: 4,033

Sarasota: 1,031

Manatee: 2,013

Sumter: 290

Polk: 2,279

Citrus: 204

Hernando: 206

Pasco: 954

Highlands: 258

DeSoto: 487

Hardee: 318

The state is not reporting a total number of "recovered" coronavirus patients or those currently hospitalized. As of Tuesday, 13,318 people had been hospitalized for treatment at some point.

A total of 1,641,863 people have been tested in the state as of Tuesday -- about 7.6% of the state's population -- according to the Florida Department of Health.

LINK: County-by-county Florida coronavirus cases and ZIP code map

Florida resident cases in orange; Florida resident deaths in gray. Source: Fla. Dept. of Health.

Tuesday's total new cases represented the 21st straight day with new cases near or over 1,000 per day. Experts say the current spike is partly due to more tests being given, but also a result of reopening the state.

The rate of positive tests has increased during that time period. It was 13.19% on Monday, the most recent date available.

Gov. Ron DeSantis says the recent case increases are largely due to testing of "high-risk" individuals like farmworkers in the state's rural counties, prisoners, and residents of long-term care facilities, though he has also noted the "erosion" in social distancing, especially among the younger demographics.

Prior to this spike, the state had averaged just over 700 new cases per day in the last 30 days. That was a level that the health care system could handle, according to Gov. DeSantis. And while the number of new cases has trended up over the last few weeks, the number of deaths has appeared to trend down, though "significant delays" in data reporting, as the state says, make interpreting short-term trends from that statistic less reliable.

Source: Fla. Dept. of Health

Monday, emergency room doctors and hospital executives said they have enough hospital beds for the moment, but they expressed concern that a large increase in new patients appears to be beginning.

As Florida continues taking steps to ease restrictions put in place due to the COVID-19 pandemic, health experts say new cases and more deaths are expected.

Editor's note: The number of new cases and deaths reported each day does not necessarily reflect the day that the case was confirmed. The state says some private testing labs dump large batches of test results which include cases from previous days. Stats for today and previous days will likely change in the future as the state reviews more cases and updates retroactive data.

The state's number of deaths represents permanent Florida residents who have died from COVID-19. The number of non-Florida residents who have died from the coronavirus while in the state is not reported.

If you feel sick:

The Florida Department of Health has a COVID-19 Call Center at 1-866-779-6121. Agents will answer questions around the clock. Questions may also be emailed to covid-19@flhealth.gov. Email responses will be sent during call center hours.

LINK: Florida's COVID-19 website

CORONAVIRUS IN FLORIDA: What you need to know

AROUND THE WORLD: CoronavirusNOW.com

Map of known COVID-19 cases:

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