There have been 28,058 positive cases of COVID-19 in Wisconsin as of Monday, according to the state Department of Health Services. That’s an increase of 315 cases from the day before.
Health officials reported no additional coronavirus deaths Monday. In total, 777 people in the state have died from COVID-19.
DHS reported 527,359 total negative tests for the coronavirus, an increase of 5,612 from Sunday to Monday.
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Seventy-nine percent of people who have tested positive for the virus in Wisconsin have recovered as of Monday, according to DHS. Three percent have died.
Wisconsin’s daily testing capacity — based on the availability of test supplies and adequate staffing — has grown from 120 available lab tests in early March to 18,425 as of Monday. The number of actual tests reported on Monday was 5,927.
The percentage of positive tests has been steadily increasing in recent days, but went down on Monday to 5.3 percent. It was 7.1 percent the day before.
Based on the state’s gating criteria, Wisconsin is no longer seeing a 14-day downward trajectory in reports of COVID-like cases, and DHS is no longer reporting a downward trajectory of positive tests as a percent of total tests within a 14-day period.
According to DHS, 3,407 people have been hospitalized because of the virus as of Monday. That means at least 12 percent of people who have tested positive for the coronavirus in the state have been hospitalized. DHS officials said they don’t know the hospitalization history of 8,320 people, or 30 percent.
On June 24, DHS launched a new data dashboard that looks at COVID-19 activity on a county and regional level. That dashboard shows that 22 counties in the state had a “high” COVID-19 activity level as of last Wednesday — a designation based on a county’s number of cases per 100,000 residents over the past 14 days, and the extent to which that case rate is increasing.
The dashboard also listed the overall state’s COVID-19 activity level as “high.”
La Crosse, Trempealeau, Milwaukee and Lafayette counties had the highest case rates in the state, all with over 100 cases per 100,000 residents reported over the past two weeks.
There have been confirmed cases in all 72 of Wisconsin’s counties.
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