
Daylina Miller
Health News Florida ReporterDaylina Miller is a multimedia reporter for WUSF and Health News Florida, covering health in the Tampa Bay area and across the state.
She began her journalism career as a teen columnist at The Tampa Tribune in 2005, and has since worked as a reporter for several Tampa Bay news organizations.
Daylina is a graduate of the University of South Florida's School of Mass Communications, where she started the school's Her Campus Magazine branch, served as a correspondent for USA Today College and wrote opinion columns for The Oracle, the Tampa campus newspaper.
She received her master's degree in New Media Journalism at Full Sail University and through the program started Dames & Dice, a tabletop gaming blog.
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County commissioners say their new "Declaration of Racism as a Public Health Crisis" is the first step in acknowledging and addressing racial disparity.
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The decision to begin this phased reopening was made after consultation with health officials, emergency managers, library staff and county officials.
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Dr. Charles Lockwood, dean of USF's college of medicine, suggests people interested in holding holiday gatherings follow CDC recommendations.
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More recently, the team of disease prevention experts worked with the Florida Senate to reduce the spread of the coronavirus as lawmakers return to the Capitol.
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Florida sees its highest number of new coronavirus cases at 5,592 since Sept. 1, which saw 7,569 cases.
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Health experts say when test results are delayed it impacts contact tracing and quarantine efforts that help prevent the disease from spreading.
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On Friday, the Florida Department of Health reported 3,689 positive coronavirus tests, including 667 new positive tests in the greater Tampa Bay region.
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Coronavirus cases have spiked 30% in Florida the past two weeks, according the Florida Department of Health. It could get worse as the country moves into colder months.
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Researchers found that the number of nursing home deaths within 30 and 90 days of Hurricane Irma is more than double the number of deaths reported by the CDC for the entire population of Florida.
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Florida has seen the second largest number of children to lose insurance during the Trump Administration, trailing only Texas. Combined, the two states had 41% of the nation's decline.