Minnesota is reporting things ranging from ventilator tallies to total unemployment claims on a new online dashboard that state officials say will provide daily updates on the state's response to COVID-19, the global public health crisis that has claimed 22 lives statewide.
Gov. Tim Walz announced the data tool on Friday while saying that his stay-at-home order has been successful in slowing the spread of the COVID-19 virus in Minnesota. But, "the danger is still here," Walz said, as he urged residents to keep up the efforts.
The number of known COVID-19 cases increased by 47 on Friday, from 742 to 789, according to the Minnesota Department of Health, while the number of deaths increased by four. The state is trying to delay an expected surge of COVID-19 patients at hospitals, since the government and hospitals are still scrambling to find the supplies listed on the dashboard.
"A lot of folks are not putting out this information, because they are afraid it will create a sense of panic," Walz said in a 23-minute live video address on Friday afternoon. "You can see on here, we need more of these things. We need to continue to get them, we need them produced, we need the supply chain to work."
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, 156 people have been hospitalized. As of Friday, 86 people were in hospitals including 40 in intensive care units — counts that were up compared with Thursday.
Walz said he understands that for many Minnesotans, worry about the illness may be compounded by not knowing when the measures to slow the spread will end or understanding the plan behind them. To that end, he unveiled the new website, mn.gov/covid19, with a variety of data points ranging from the impact that "social distancing" rules have on freeway traffic to the supply of child care slots for critical workers.
In terms of hospital surge capacity, the dashboard shows Minnesota had 881 patients using ICU beds on Friday, plus another 264 available beds and the capacity to set up within three days another 1,623.
More than 800 of the state's 2,241 ventilators are in use, the dashboard shows, with 888 more machines on order. Ventilators can help patients with the most severe effects from COVID-19.