Nearly 30 percent of the state has received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.
Wisconsin vaccinators administered 2,753,146 doses of COVID-19 vaccine through Monday.
They gave 22,653 doses on Monday, with a seven-day average of 48,474 daily shots.
Per state data, 29.7 percent of the state’s population, or 1,726,519 Wisconsinites, have received at least one dose of a vaccine, and 17.4 percent, or 1,013,613 Wisconsinites, have completed their vaccination series.
The federal government has allocated 3,002,745 COVID-19 vaccine doses.
Vaccinators gave 1,453,436 Pfizer-BioNTech doses; 1,244,508 Moderna doses; and 55,080 Johnson & Johnson doses.
Healthcare providers gave 49 percent of shots, pharmacies gave 23.8 percent, local and tribal health departments gave 16.5 percent, community-based vaccination clinics gave 5 percent and other facilities gave 5.7 percent.
The Department of Health Services reported 588 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, for a total of 576,632.
The state’s death toll is at 6,612 people, after DHS reported 11 more deaths.
An additional 3,751 Wisconsinites have been tested for COVID-19, for a total of 3,292,030.
DHS considers 6,673 cases active.
The seven-day average for daily new cases is 501, up 34 from Monday and 114 from a week ago.
The seven-day average for daily new deaths is four, the same as Monday and down three from a week ago.
As of Monday, the seven-day positivity rate by test was 2.7 percent, the same as Sunday and up 0.4 percentage points from a week earlier, per preliminary data from DHS.
According to the Wisconsin Hospital Association, there were 250 total COVID-19 patients hospitalized in the state, up 23 from Monday and 33 from a week ago.
There were 66 in intensive care units, up eight from Monday and seven from a week ago.