The “car parade” has become a new party fad in the wake of the Communist Party Viral Epidemic (COVID-19). Pictured are graduates of a high school in Aventura, Florida, celebrating their graduation with a caravan parade on May 14, 2020.
On Sunday (April 11), Florida health officials confirmed that the state’s daily death toll related to COVID-19 (the Chinese Communist virus) has dropped to single digits for the first time in months.
According to the Palm Beach Post, the Florida Department of Health revealed that seven Floridians, as well as two non-residents, died from the CCP virus on Sunday.
The outbreak was caused by a Chinese Communist virus, also commonly known as novel coronavirus, which emerged in China in late 2019.
The last time the number of deaths from COVID-19 (CCP virus) in the Sunshine State dropped to single digits was last September 28, when only five people died after contracting the CCP virus.
While the number of deaths from the virus remains low, the state has seen an increase of 5,520 positive tests for the virus, for a 7.65 percent positive rate, according to the Florida Department of Health.
The Palm Beach Post reports that in the more than two weeks that have passed, fewer than 100 people have died each day from the CCP virus in Florida, with the number of deaths ranging from 22 to 98.
According to the latest data from the state Department of Health, the state has confirmed more than 2.1 million positive cases of COVID-19 (Chinese Communist virus) and 34,021 deaths since the outbreak began. Another 664 non-residents of the state have died from the CCP virus.
Compared to Florida, California is the most populous state in the U.S. and the only state in the nation to report a triple-digit increase in deaths following COVID-19 (Chinese Communist virus) infection on Sunday.
According to the California Department of Public Health, the state saw an increase of 105 deaths and an increase of 4,954 people testing positive for the virus.
Florida has not implemented statewide restrictions on the outbreak, and Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis has banned municipalities from imposing fines on people who refuse to wear masks.
In contrast, California Governor Gavin Newsom was the first governor in the nation to order a statewide shutdown due to the CCP virus outbreak; and has implemented measures such as mask mandates, bans on eating indoors, and significant restrictions on many other activities.
Although the two states responded to the outbreak differently, they experienced nearly identical results in terms of the rate of infection from the CCA virus.
According to a March report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), both California and Florida have had about 8,900 COVID-19 infections per 100,000 residents since the outbreak began.
Although studies have shown that mask wearing mandates and restrictions on group activities, such as indoor dining, can help slow the spread of the CCP virus, states with more government-imposed restrictions have not always fared better than states without these restrictions.
While Florida has apparently made progress in fighting the epidemic, the state has reported the first U.S.-wide case of a variant of the CCP virus infection, with more than 3,500 cases confirmed to date.
In an April 9 update, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said B.1.1.7, also known as the British variant of the virus, is now the most common virus infecting the epidemic in the United States, with 20,915 cases.
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