NewsCoronavirus

Actions

Michigan shatters yet another one-day record with 6,225 new COVID-19 cases, adds 43 deaths

Posted
and last updated

There are 207,794 total confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 7,578 deaths in Michigan, the state reported Saturday.

That's up 6,225 cases and 65 deaths from the previous day, shattering yet another single-day record for coronavirus cases in the state. On Thursday, the state health officials confirmed 5,710 cases of COVID-19, the last highest record.

Related: US records more than 125,000 new COVID-19 cases Friday, shattering record set on Wednesday and Thursday

Related: Thanksgiving dinner plans are somewhat different for families in 2020 due to the pandemic

Dr. Joneigh Khaldun, the state's chief medical executive, said Michigan could see up to 100 deaths per day from COVID-19 by the end of December if we don't change our behaviors.

The last time the state reported 100 or more deaths from COVID-19 in a single day was on April 30 with 101 deaths. The highest one-day death total was on April 16 with 164 deaths.

The overall case rate is 261 cases per million people per day. The state's percentage of positive tests is now at 7.5%.

As of Nov. 6, 128,981 people have recovered from the virus.

Additional Coronavirus information and resources:

Click here for a page with resources including a COVID-19 overview from the CDC, details on cases in Michigan, a timeline of Governor Gretchen Whitmer's orders since the outbreak, coronavirus' impact on Southeast Michigan, and links to more information from the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, the CDC and the WHO.

View a global coronavirus tracker with data from Johns Hopkins University.

See complete coverage on our Coronavirus Continuing Coverage page.

Visit our The Rebound Detroit, a place where we are working to help people impacted financially from the coronavirus. We have all the information on everything available to help you through this crisis and how to access it.