Michigan adds 504 cases, 15 deaths from COVID-19

Michigan added 504 cases and 15 deaths from COVID-19 on Tuesday.
Of the deaths, three were identified during a delayed records review, according to the state.
The additions bring the state's total number of cases to 117,910 and the death toll to 6,680.
Over the weekend, the state had an average of 768 new cases per day and 12 deaths linked to the virus.
The state recorded 15 new outbreaks in K-12 schools as of Sept. 17. Data also show that seven new outbreaks have come from social gatherings and seven from colleges and universities in the state.
There were nine new outbreaks linked to long-term care facilities such as nursing facilities, assisted living, adult daycares, and group homes, that add to the 41 outbreaks previously reported.
Overall across the state, Michigan has 127 outbreaks, which are defined as two or more cases with a link by place and time indicating a shared exposure outside of a household. On Sept. 10, the state recorded 160 outbreaks from previous weeks.
Of those infected, the statewide fatality rate has dropped from 9.5% in June to 5.7% as of Tuesday.
In Detroit, there are a total of 14,259 cases and 1,520 fatalities.
As of Tuesday, 508 Michigan residents were hospital inpatients with the virus, and 57 were on ventilators and 138 in intensive care units.
Of the 52 outbreaks in the last two weeks, nine have been at colleges, five have been at retail outlets and six at agriculture/food processing sites. Additionally, social gatherings including birthday parties, graduations, funerals and weddings have contributed to seven outbreaks, according to the state.
In long-term care facilities, 8,480 residents and 4,673 staff members have confirmed cases. More than 6,385 are recovering. Since March, 2,140 residents and 22 staff members have died from the virus.
More than 90,200 people in the state have recovered from the virus.
srahal@detroitnews.com
Twitter: @SarahRahal_