Health & Fitness

GA Coronavirus: 1,055 New Cases, 20 Deaths Reported Monday

Even factoring in a post-weekend lull in reporting, the number of new COVID-19 cases and deaths in Georgia continue to decline.

ATLANTA, GA — Even factoring in a post-weekend lull in reporting, the numbers of new COVID-19 cases and deaths in Georgia continue to decline: Only 1,055 newly confirmed cases and 20 deaths were tallied in the state’s Monday-afternoon report.

The Georgia Department of Public Health reported a total of 295,337 confirmed cases of COVID-19 at 2:50 p.m. Monday. According to the health department’s website, that includes 1,055 newly confirmed cases over the last 24 hours.

Georgia also reported 6,353 deaths so far from COVID-19, with 20 more deaths recorded in the last 24 hours. In addition, the state reported 26,394 hospitalizations — 25 more than the day before — and 4,830 admissions so far to intensive-care units.

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No information is available from Georgia about how many patients have recovered.

Counties in or near metro Atlanta continue to have the highest number of positives, with Fulton County still in the lead.

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  • Fulton County: 26,289 cases — 64 new
  • Gwinnett County: 25,863 cases — 57 new
  • Cobb County: 18,550 cases — 55 new
  • DeKalb County: 17,610 cases — 74 new
  • Hall County: 8,379 cases — 17 new

Counties in or near metro Atlanta also continue to have the most deaths from COVID-19. The lone exception is Dougherty County, site of Georgia's first major outbreak.

  • Fulton County: 555 deaths
  • Cobb County: 413 deaths
  • Gwinnett County: 379 deaths —4 new
  • DeKalb County: 339 deaths
  • Dougherty County: 182 deaths — 1 new

As of Monday, Georgia has administered nearly 2.9 million COVID-19 tests, with about 10 percent of those tests the less reliable ones used to detect antibodies.

For the more reliable test for the virus itself, 10.3 percent of tests came back positive. For the less reliable test for antibodies, 8 percent came back positive. The overall positive rate was about 10.1 percent.

As more Georgians were tested over the last month, the percentage of positive tests inched upward from about 8 percent to more than 10 percent. However, over the last few weeks, the percentage of positives has stabilized at just more than 10 percent and is now starting to slowly drop. According to the World Health Organization, positive test results should no more than 5 percent for two weeks before reopening for business as usual. Georgia largely reopened for business in April and May, and since then Gov. Brian Kemp has promoted the use of face masks but has steadfastly refused to mandate them.

All Georgia statistics are available on the state's COVID-19 website.

Globally, more than 29.1 million people have tested positive for COVID-19, and more than 925,000 people have died from it, Johns Hopkins University reported Monday.

In the United States, more than 6.5 million people have been infected and more than 194,000 people have died from COVID-19 as of Monday. The U.S. has only about 4 percent of the world's population but more confirmed cases and deaths than any other country.

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