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Georgia coronavirus cases exceed 6,700 as deaths rise to 219

New COVID-19 cases reported in Camden, Chalrton & Glynn counties

(AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) (Gerald Herbert, Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Georgia increased to 6,742, up 359 cases in the last 24 hours, according to data released Sunday evening by the Georgia Department of Public Health.

Eleven new deaths have been reported since Saturday evening, bringing the number of people statewide who have died from the illness related to the coronavirus to 219 as of 7 p.m. Sunday.

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Of the confirmed COVID-19 cases statewide, 74 cases have been reported in Southeast Georgia, with five new cases reported late Sunday morning: 29 in Glynn County (up one case from Saturday evening), nine cases in Camden County (up three cases) and two cases in Chalrton County (up one case).

There were no changes in the number of cases reported in Pierce County (16 cases) and Ware County (18 cases).

There have been three deaths reported in Southeast Georgia -- all in Ware County.

Fulton County still has the highest number of confirmed cases in Georgia with 9970, and 28 deaths have been reported in the county. The small Southwest Georgia county of Dougherty has had 31 reported deaths, the most of any county in the state, and 688 confirmed cases.

Of those who have tested positive in Georgia, 59% were between 18 and 59 years old, 36% were age 60 and up, 1% were age 17 or younger and 4% were of unknown age. Of the COVID-19 patients, 52% were female and 46% were male, with the gender unknown for the other 2%.

At last check, 27,832 tests have been performed in Georgia, according to DPH.

Gov. Brian Kemp’s emergency order to stay at home took effect Friday evening. The order allows residents to get outside for exercise, shop for groceries, seek medical help and to keep going to work at jobs deemed “essential.” Businesses including bars, gyms and theaters remain closed and restaurants can only serve takeout or delivery orders. Gatherings of more than 10 people are prohibited.

The Republican governor’s action also reversed some tougher restrictions that had been imposed by city and county officials. Parks and beaches that had been closed by local emergency orders, for example, were reopened under Kemp’s statewide order.

Angry that Kemp had overridden a local decision to close Georgia’s largest public beach, Tybee Island Mayor Shirley Sessions struck a defiant tone Saturday, saying beach parking lots remained closed and no lifeguards were on duty.

“Tybee City Council and I are devastated by the sudden directives and do not support his decisions,” Sessions said of the governor in a statement posted on the city’s website. “The health of our residents, staff and visitors are being put at risk and we will pursue legal avenues to overturn his reckless mandate.”

Kemp spokeswoman Candice Broce said officers from the state Department of Public Safety and Department of Natural Resources were patrolling Tybee Island roads and beaches to ensure compliance with the governor’s order.

Kemp took to social media Saturday to post photos of largely empty stretches of beach on Tybee Island and St. Simons Island, as well as very light boat traffic on Lake Allatoona.

“Beachgoers are mostly locals and complying with social distancing orders,” Kemp posted on his Twitter account. “We will continue to monitor conditions.”

On Sunday, Kemp also tweeted a video from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, showing few visitors on St. Simons Island’s beaches.

Kemp’s shelter-at-home order will be enforced through April 13, and could be extended. Violations are punishable as misdemeanors.

Bibb County Sheriff David Davis told The Telegraph of Macon that his deputies won’t be randomly stopping people to question why they’re outside their homes. He said his deputies have been told to issue warnings, followed by misdemeanor citations for those who insist on violating the order.

“Just because this order is in effect, it really doesn’t give us the probable cause to stop every single car,” Davis said. “We have to assume that car is going for some essential service unless we see something otherwise.”

For most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause severe illness, including pneumonia, and death.

Kemp announced Saturday that efforts are underway to prepare for a surge of new COVID-19 patients. The state has purchased four temporary medical units, with a total of 88 hospital beds, that will be deployed in mid-April to augment hospital space. Units will be sent to Albany, Rome and Atlanta, with a fourth one available as needed, Kemp’s office said in a news release. Hospitals in Albany and Snellville in metro Atlanta are also setting up space in previously closed medical facilities that will have more than 200 total additional beds by late May.

In hard-hit Dougherty County, one Albany woman who’s recovering from COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, urged others not to give up hope. Quiona Slaughter, 31, told WALB-TV she got sick in late March and was hospitalized for a week. She was sent home Thursday and has another full week of being quarantined there.

“I’m perfectly fine,” Slaughter said. “I can eat, I can eat a full course meal. I can talk. You know sometimes I get a little out of breath but that’s normal because my lungs are still getting stronger.”

She added: “If you don’t have to go out, please don’t go because you never know who has the virus. You have to stay home because it’s not a joke."