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Georgia surpasses 14,000 confirmed deaths related to COVID-19

State on Tuesday reports 1,872 additional coronavirus cases, 180 more deaths

FILE (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) (Rick Bowmer, Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

The Georgia Department of Public Health on Tuesday reported 1,872 additional confirmed cases of COVID-19. Of those cases, 21 were reported in the Southeast Georgia counties tracked by News4Jax.

As of Tuesday, a total of 794,349 confirmed cases had been reported by the state Department of Public Health.

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The agency on Tuesday reported 180 additional confirmed deaths related to COVID-19 -- including one in Charlton County, one in Glynn County and two in Ware County -- bringing the state’s total to 14,176 confirmed deaths since the start of the pandemic.

According to the state Department of Public Health, 6,895,381 tests have been performed in the state, which had an 11.1% positivity rate, as of Tuesday.

Georgia was reporting a total of 175,353 antigen positive cases and 1,998 “probable” deaths on Tuesday. For more on those categories, click here.

(Note: There are variations in the day-to-day data reported by the Georgia Department of Public Health. Data are based on available information at the time of the report and may not reflect all cases or tests performed in Georgia on that particular day. At times, cases and deaths are removed from the overall running total reported by the Department of Public Health.)

RELATED: What new Georgia vaccine dashboard shows about rollout

On Tuesday, 255 additional hospitalizations were reported, bringing the state’s total to 53,658 since the outbreak began.

(The chart below is updated daily and the numbers might not reflect the date this article was posted.)

County-by-county breakdown for Southeast Georgia

Common symptoms of COVID-19 include fever, cough, breathing trouble, sore throat, muscle pain, and loss of taste or smell. Most people develop only mild symptoms. But some people, usually those with other medical complications, develop more severe symptoms, including pneumonia.


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