The Indiana State Department of Health on Thursday reported an all-time high of 2,880 new COVID-19 cases, topping the previous high of 2,521 reported Oct. 17.

The department said the seven-day moving average for cases was an all-time high of 2,019.

The department reported the testing of 13,935 more unique individuals. That’s the highest testing number reported in the daily report so far, with the exception of a few days when the department included a backlog of historical unreported cases.

The state reported 42 new deaths due to COVID-19, the second time in three days that deaths have exceeded 40. Newly reported deaths have been in double digits 15 times over the past 17 days.

Hospitalizations due to COVID-19 were 1,515 as of Wednesday, up from 1,484 on Tuesday. The latest number was the highest since May 4.

The state’s seven-day positivity rate for unique individuals rose from 12.7% to 12.9%.

The department reported the testing of 9,385 more unique individuals. The state’s seven-day positivity rate for unique individuals rose from 12.4% to 12.7%.

Following are the latest COVID-19 numbers from the Indiana State Department of Health. The department updates its data daily based on information received through 11:59 p.m. the previous day.

COVID-19 cases

*New cases: 2,880

Total cumulative cases reported Thursday: 155,246

Total cumulative cases reported Wednesday: 152,396

Increase in cumulative cases: 2,850

Increase in cases reported Sept. 1-Oct. 1: 26,285

Increase in cases reported Aug. 1-Sept. 1: 27,769

Increase in cases reported July 1-Aug. 1: 21,170

Increase in cases reported June 1-July 1: 11,122

Increase in cases reported May 1-June. 1: 16,065

COVID-19 deaths

New deaths: 42

Total deaths: 3,831

Increase in deaths reported Sept. 1-Oct. 1: 325

Increase in deaths reported Aug. 1-Sept. 1: 322

Increase in deaths reported July 1-Aug. 1: 315

Increase in deaths reported June 1-July 1: 480

Increase in deaths reported May 1-June. 1: 914

Increase in deaths reported April 1-May 1: 997

COVID-19 testing

New tested individuals: 13,935

Total cumulative tested individuals reported Thursday: 1,594,365

Total cumulative tested individuals reported Wednesday: 1,581,109

Increase in cumulative tested individuals: 13,256

Cumulative positivity rate unique individuals: 9.7%

Seven-day positivity rate unique individuals: 12.9%**

Cumulative positivity rate all tests: 5.8%

Seven-day positivity rate all tests: 6.9%**

Increase in unique tested individuals reported Sept. 1-Oct. 1: 303,966

Increase in unique tested individuals reported Aug. 1-Sept. 1: 325,159

Increase in unique tested individuals reported July 1-Aug. 1: 268,890

Increase in unique tested individuals reported June 1-July 1: 223,820

Increase in unique tested individuals reported May 1-June 1: 166,257

Increase in unique tested individuals reported April 1-May 1: 85,264

** The health department reports the 7-day positivity rates with a six-day lag to allow time for more comprehensive results.

County numbers

Marion County cumulative cases: 25,151 (increase of 248)

Marion County new deaths: 1

Marion County cumulative deaths: 785

Marion County 7-day positivity rate unique individuals: 11.2%

Hamilton County cumulative cases: 6,117

Hendricks County cumulative cases: 3,268

Johnson County cumulative cases: 3,105

Madison County cumulative cases: 2,350

Boone County cumulative cases: 1,222

Hancock County cumulative cases: 1,182

Morgan County cumulative cases: 937

Shelby County cumulative cases: 817

Indiana intensive care unit usage

Available ICU beds: 31.1%

ICU beds in use by COVID-19 patients: 20.1%

Available ventilators: 78.1%

Ventilators in use for COVID-19: 5.1%

U.S. and worldwide numbers

As of Thursday, from Johns Hopkins University:

U.S. cases: 8,342,228

U.S. deaths: 222,263

Global cases: 41,341,755

Global deaths: 1,133,032

*New cases, deaths and tests are previously unreported cases, deaths and tests submitted to the Indiana State Health Department in the 24 hours through 11:59 p.m. the previous day. The cases and testing categories typically contain numerous duplicates—as many as 20% or more—that are later eliminated from the cumulative totals.

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