NICEVILLE, Fla — The Florida Department of Health on Wednesday reported 169 newly confirmed COVID-19 cases in Okaloosa County. There are 41 new cases in Niceville and Valparaiso.
The cumulative number of cases in Okaloosa is 15,451.
The FDOH reports the total number of people killed by COVID-19 in Okaloosa is 264, one more since yesterday.
Statewide, 11,914 new cases were reported by the FDOH. The current cumulative total is 1,601,011. The total number of Florida residents who have died from COVID-19 in the state is 24,578.
The cumulative number of hospitalizations in Okaloosa is 586, 10 since yesterday. Currently, there are 56 COVID-19 patients in Okaloosa County hospitals.
Okaloosa County testing
Okaloosa County vaccinations
According to the FDOH, there were 559 test results returned in Okaloosa yesterday with 163 positives. The daily positivity rate is 29.16 percent.
As a rule of thumb, the threshold for the percent positive being “too high” is five percent according to the Centers for Disease Control.
According to the FDOH, Okaloosa’s weekly positivity rate is 21.79 percent for the week ending January 16, down from 22.05 percent the previous week.
Florida’s current weekly positivity rate is 10.6 percent (7-day moving average) according to Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center data.
Here’s the current breakdown by city in Okaloosa (note that the city is not always reported as part of the initial notification and may be missing while the case is being investigated):
- Fort Walton Beach, 4,367, +45
- Destin, 1,569, +14
- Niceville, 2,518, +40
- Crestview, 3,977, +43
- Shalimar, 680, +7
- Mary Esther, 747, +11
- Eglin AFB, 184, no change
- Laurel Hill, 213, +3
- Baker, 461, +2
- Holt, 139, +1
- Valparaiso, 231, +1
- Hurlburt Field, 85, +2
- Milligan, 3, no change
- Cinco Bayou, 42, no change
- Duke Field, 1, no change
- Missing, 33, no change
Want more info and data? Get it here:
The state of Florida’s daily COVID-19 data reports
The Florida Department of Health’s COVID-19 dashboard
Johns Hopkins University’s COVID-19 resource center for Florida