Thirty-five new COVID-19 deaths were reported Wednesday, a grim reminder of the fatal consequences as the coronavirus pandemic continues.
State health officials linked the high number of fatalities — the most since May 28 — to accelerating infections.
"We've known that a surge in deaths was to be expected several weeks after a surge in cases," Minnesota Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm said.
Malcolm noted that the pandemic has entered a different phase, moving beyond urban areas into rural parts of the state.
"We will see more and more deaths in greater Minnesota because of the high caseload in that area," said state Infectious Disease Director Kris Ehresmann.
Wednesday's tally, which includes deaths that happened over several days, ties a one-day record set five months ago.
At that time, Minnesota was averaging 600 to 800 new COVID-19 cases each day. The rolling average has risen from 1,200 new cases 10 days ago to nearly 1,600 most recently.
Altogether, 2,281 Minnesotans have died from COVID-19 complications.