Wisconsin reported 17 newly hospitalized due to COVID-19, according to the latest numbers from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

MADISON (WKOW) — Wisconsin reported 17 newly hospitalized due to COVID-19, according to the latest numbers from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.
Deaths for each day are reported by DHS HERE.
As of Saturday afternoon, 226 COVID-19 patients were being treated in Wisconsin hospitals, down seven from the day prior.
Of those, 64 are in the ICU, up nine from the day before, according to the Wisconsin Hospital Association.
There have been 274 positive COVID-19 tests since yesterday in Wisconsin and 3,548 negative results.
(CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL DHS DASHBOARD)
The Department of Health Services dashboard shows the seven-day average of positive tests. (CHART)
(App users, see the daily reports and charts HERE.)
Of all positive cases reported since the pandemic began, 556,803, or 97.8 percent, are considered recovered.
Deaths, hospitalizations due to COVID-19

Date Newdeaths Newhospitalizations Totaldeaths Totalhosp.
March 14 -2 17 6,536 26,791
March 13 13 60 6,538 26,774
March 12 1 44 6,525 26,714
March 11 0 40 6,524 26,670
March 10 14 76 6,524 26,630
March 9 29 70 6,510 26,554
March 8 0 27 6,481 26,484

DHS reported negative two deaths on their summary page and zero deaths on their death page Sunday. 27 News was unable reach anyone at the department to ask what this discrepancy is about.
As of Tuesday, a total of 1,962,159 vaccines have been administered throughout Wisconsin.
So far, 21.1 percent of Wisconsinites have gotten at least one dose of the vaccine, and 11.9 percent of the state has complete the vaccine series.
Vaccination numbers can change on a rolling basis as the state gets more data each day.
DHS has a county-level dashboard to assess the COVID-19 activity level in counties and Healthcare Emergency Readiness Coalition regions that measure what DHS calls the burden in each county. View the dashboard HERE.
The Wisconsin Department of Health Services updates the statistics each day on its website around 2 p.m.
(Our entire coronavirus coverage is available here.)
The new strain of the coronavirus causes the disease COVID-19. Symptoms include cough, fever and shortness of breath. A full list of symptoms is available on the Centers for Disease Control website.
In severe cases, pneumonia can develop. Those most at risk include the elderly, people with heart or lung disease as well as anyone at greater risk of infection.
For most, the virus is mild, presenting similarly to a common cold or the flu.
Anyone who thinks they may have the disease should call ahead to a hospital or clinic before going in for a diagnosis. Doing so gives the staff time to take the proper precautions so the virus does not spread.
Those needing emergency medical services should continue to use 911.
(County by county results are available here).