Key points for today
• Talbot County cases increased by 5 to 262, according to the county health department.
• The county’s 7-day average positivity rate is 6.44%.
• The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Maryland is now at 79,545, an increase of 860 in the last 24 hours.
• Of the state’s 3,272 deaths, 20 were in the last 24 hours.
The Spy obtains information for this chart between 2 and 3 p.m. Statewide data is updated about 10 a.m. each day; counties may update data throughout the day until 5 p.m. Hopkins updates its data throughout the day.
* Maryland and Cecil County report the total released from isolation.
** For Kent County deaths, The Spy reports its own tally based on the number of state-reported deaths within Kent County facilities and the number of non-facility deaths. For Queen Anne’s County deaths, The Spy reports the total deaths listed on the county’s website. There are discrepancies among state and county statistics concerning total deaths and facility deaths.
Key metrics
• The number of COVID-19 patients currently hospitalized in Maryland increased by 21 in the last 24 hours.
• There currently are 484 people hospitalized — 353 in acute care and 131 in intensive care.
• Of the 20,550 test results received on July 20, 4.79% were positive; the 7-day average positivity rate was 4.49%.
For additional COVID-19 graphics and links to resources, click here.
Additional information
• A total of 979,158 COVID-19 tests have been conducted in Maryland. The state reports 684,822 total negative test results.
• Of the state’s 79,545 cases, 11,949 patients have ever been hospitalized for treatment; 5,380 have been released from isolation.
The graph below shows the total cases, total ever hospitalized, and total deaths statewide.
Elizabeth Fisher says
As a resident of Talbot County, what I want to know is this, why aren’t we being informed on how and where these new cases are occurring? While reading the Baltimore Sun this morning, I ran across this “superlative” for Talbot County and COVID: “New cases in Worcester County, where the resort town is located, have risen faster this week than almost any other jurisdiction in the state, although infection rates there remain far below the most heavily infected counties. (Only Talbot County, also on the Eastern Shore, has increased at a higher rate.)”. I am very glad to have Spy report the numbers, but the wheres and hows will help keep us all informed so we can make educated decisions on what we can and can’t (shouldn’t) do here in our home county. I feel very much in the dark.