Health officials reported 76 on Tuesday, including 55 on Oahu, 10 in Maui County, seven on the Big Island and four residents who were diagnosed out of the state. There were no new fatalities reported.

To date, 21,103 people in Hawaii have been diagnosed with COVID-19, of which 1,452 have required hospitalization.

Maui currently leads the state in the highest number of cases per capita on average over the past week. The county, which includes Maui, Molokai and Lanai, has recently seen an average of 10.8 cases per 100,000 people. That’s higher than Oahu at 7.1, Big Island at 3.5 and Kauai at 1.2 new cases per 100,000 people on average over the seven-day period ending Sunday.

Reporting Lag

There have been in December. Two of the clusters are still being investigated by the state’s contact tracers and have been linked to at least 50 cases.

Roughly 15% of cases diagnosed in December were associated with travel, with the bulk of cases in Hawaii being spread in the community.

The official from the virus is 285. Civil Beat calculates at least 290 people have died from the disease in Hawaii, including five deaths on Hawaii island that are still pending medical verification by the state.

For more information, check or , and . The Hawaii Emergency Management Agency also provides this

Cases, Deaths And COVID-19 Testing In Hawaii

21,103
COVID-19 Cases
290
Deaths
803,715
Tests performed
Source: ,

Honolulu’s 7-Day Averages


Current Tier*
69
Daily Case Count
3%
Test Positivity
Source: * The current case numbers and test positivity rate may not correlate with the metrics set for a specific tier as the county must spend at least four consecutive weeks in a tier and meet the metrics for the next tier before advancing, according to the reopening plan. More information of the City and County of Honolulu’s reopening strategy as well as details of the restrictions of , , and can be found at

Hawaii COVID-19 Cases By County

Daily New COVID-19 Cases

Number Of Confirmed COVID-19 Cases In U.S.

COVID-19 Cases Worldwide

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