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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowFollowing are the latest COVID-19 numbers from the Indiana State Department of Health. The department updates its data daily based on information received through 11:59 p.m. the previous day.
COVID-19 cases
*New cases: 330
Total cumulative cases reported Monday: 48,331
Total cumulative cases reported Sunday: 48,008
Increase in cumulative cases: 323
Increase in cases reported June 30-July 6: 3,103
Increase in cases reported June 23-29: 2,595
COVID-19 deaths
New deaths: 5
Total deaths: 2,505
COVID-19 testing
*New tests: 4,912
Total cumulative tests reported Monday: 526,592
Total cumulative tests reported Sunday: 521,722
Increase in cumulative tests: 4,870
Percentage of total testing positive: 9.2%
County numbers
Marion County cumulative cases: 11,682 (increase of 58)
Marion County new deaths: 1
Marion County cumulative deaths: 684
Hamilton County cumulative cases: 1,563
Hendricks County cumulative cases: 1,410
Johnson County cumulative cases: 1,288
Madison County cumulative cases: 659
Boone County cumulative cases: 445
Hancock County cumulative cases: 450
Morgan County cumulative cases: 329
Shelby County cumulative cases: 426
Indiana intensive care unit usage
Available ICU beds: 42.5%
ICU beds in use by COVID-19 patients: 9.5%
Available ventilators: 83.7%
Ventilators in use for COVID-19: 3.0%
Indiana long-term-care facilities (updated July 6)
New cases: 239
Total cases: 5,581
New deaths: 54
Total deaths: 1,220
Facilities with at least one case: 299
Facilities with at least one death: 180
U.S. and worldwide numbers
As of Monday morning, from John Hopkins University:
U.S. cases: 2,897,613
U.S. deaths: 130,007
Global cases: 11,495,412
Global deaths: 535,185
*New cases and tests are previously unreported cases and tests submitted to the Indiana State Health Department in the 24 hours through 11:59 p.m. the previous day. This category typically contains numerous duplicates—as many as 20% or more—that are later eliminated from the cumulative totals.
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It sure is hard to make common sense out of these statistics and where the problem areas are.
So if Johnson County has 1288 cases, how many deaths per capita and how many of the 1288 is Nursing Homes? Raw numbers tell me nothing I think.