Oklahoma reports 16 new deaths from COVID-19, total cases up to 1,472

Counties in red have active cases. Counties with yellow outlines have had deaths.

Monday marked the single deadliest day of the COVID-19 pandemic in Oklahoma so far, with 16 deaths, bringing the state total to 67. There are now 1,472 confirmed cases with 376 cumulative hospitalizations.

The State Public Health Laboratory has currently processed 1,436 negative test results but is also working through 11,000 negative tests received from private labs dating back to February.

Six Tulsa County residents passed away Monday: a male in the 18-35 age group, a female in the 50-64 group, three females in the 65+ group and one man in the 65+ group. A 50-64 female and a 65+ male in Osage County have passed, as have a 65+ female in Adair County, a 65+ female in Cherokee County, a 65+ female in Cleveland County, a 65+ male in Creek County, a 65+ female in Kay County, a 65+ male in Mayes County, a 65+ female in Wagoner County, and a 65+ male in Washington County.

Oklahoma County continues to lead the state in cases with 303 and eleven deaths, followed by Tulsa County with 273 cases and fourteen deaths, and Cleveland County with 203 cases and twelve deaths. Wagoner County has surpassed 50 cases.

The Centers for Disease Control are reporting 374,329 cases nationwide with 12,064 deaths, an increase of over 40,000 cases since Monday’s report. Oklahoma is currently 29th in total cases and 34th per capita. The state is 27th in deaths and 21st per capita.

The World Health Organization’s Tuesday situation report shows 1,279,722 cases worldwide with 72,614 deaths. The United States lead the world, followed by Spain with 135,032 cases, Italy with 132,547, Germany with 99,225, and China with 83,071.