Seventeen more people have died of COVID-19 in Minnesota, health officials reported Saturday, as the count for confirmed cases grew by more than 700 statewide.
The pandemic has caused a total of 700 deaths across the state thus far, according to data posted Saturday morning by the Minnesota Department of Health.
Saturday's numbers show a significant one-day jump in patients needing ICU care, growing from 200 patients on Friday to 225 intensive care patients reported Saturday morning.
More than 10,200 Minnesotans who were infected with the novel coronavirus no longer need to be in isolation, up from 9,503 people at Friday's data release. The daily tallies include those who have died, meaning 9,500 people in Minnesota with known COVID cases have lived through isolation periods.
COVID-19 is a viral respiratory illness caused by a new coronavirus that surfaced late last year. Since the first case was reported in Minnesota on March 6, a total of 2,039 people have been hospitalized, up from 1,985 on Friday.
People at greatest risk from COVID-19 include: those age 65 years and older; residents of long-term care facilities; and those with underlying medical conditions. The medical conditions range from lung disease, serious heart conditions and cancer to severe obesity, diabetes and kidney patients who need dialysis.
Numbers released Saturday show the confirmed case count of 14,969 grew from Friday's tally of 14,240 cases. As of Saturday, health care workers account for 1,765 cases statewide.
The state completed more than 8,600 tests during the most recent 24-hour period for data collection, one of the biggest one-day totals thus far. Just over a week ago, state officials said there was capacity for more than 10,000 tests per day, but just a fraction of the total was being used due to a lack of patients with symptoms seeking tests.