189 new cases of COVID-19 coronavirus, no new deaths, confirmed in Cleveland: Monday update
Updated Dec 14, 2020;
Posted Dec 14, 2020
he city confirmed 189 new cases of COVID-19 coronavirus in Cleveland on Monday, Mayor Frank Jackson’s administration said. No new deaths were reported.John Kuntz, cleveland.com
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CLEVELAND, Ohio – The city confirmed 189 new cases of COVID-19 coronavirus in Cleveland on Monday, Mayor Frank Jackson’s administration said.
No new deaths were reported. The deaths of 175 Clevelanders have been attributed to the coronavirus. The average age of those who died was 73 years old.
The newly confirmed cases involved patients ranging in age from less than one year old into their 80s. They raised the total number of new cases confirmed in the city since March to 15,627, the city reported.
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Municipalities are in line for additional COVID-19 relief funding from Ontario to help bolster social services, the province said Tuesday.
As the province reported a 20 new deaths and a record 2,275 new daily cases of the virus, the province said it would help municipalities and Indigenous communities further protect their communities’ health and safety of vulnerable people.
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Ontario will provide an additional $120 million in funding on top of nearly $400 million already allocated to help bolster social services and housing and shelters in the province.
Understanding the numbers
Since mid-July, daily reported COVID-19 cases in Florida remained under 10,000. And, between Sept. 1 and Oct. 16, daily reported cases stayed below 4,000.
That changed on
The
highest single-day case number Florida has reported so far is
15,300 for July 11. The report released on Nov. 27 of 17,345 newly-reported cases is higher, but that reported combined updates for Nov. 25 and Nov. 26.
The
738 confirmed on Sept. 28.
On Oct. 30, Florida became the third state to cross the 800,000 reported COVID-19 cases mark. Then on Dec. 1,
Florida became the third state to surpass 1 million confirmed cases. As of Dec. 14, Texas and California have reported more than 1.4 and 1.5 million cases, respectively, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.
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By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism. First COVID vaccines arrive in Georgia No timetable yet on when Bulloch will get doses Nurse Vanessa Arroyo, seated, gets a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine shot from nurse Rafael Martinez during a news conference Monday, Dec. 14, at Tampa General Hospital in Tampa, Fla. (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
The first shipments of the COVID-19 vaccine arrived in Georgia Monday, including 5,850 doses in the Coastal Health District, which includes Savannah. The shipments arrived at two public health locations in Southeast Georgia, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health, with ultra-cold freezers required for storage and temperature control of the vaccine. Additional shipments of vaccine are expected later this week at facilities in other parts of the state.
Understanding the numbers
Since mid-July, daily reported COVID-19 cases in Florida remained under 10,000. And, between Sept. 1 and Oct. 16, daily reported cases stayed below 4,000.
That changed on
The
highest single-day case number Florida has reported so far is
15,300 for July 11. The report released on Nov. 27 of 17,345 newly-reported cases is higher, but that reported combined updates for Nov. 25 and Nov. 26.
The
738 confirmed on Sept. 28.
On Oct. 30, Florida became the third state to cross the 800,000 reported COVID-19 cases mark. Then on Dec. 1,
Florida became the third state to surpass 1 million confirmed cases. As of Dec. 14, Texas and California have reported more than 1.4 and 1.5 million cases, respectively, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.