
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.
-
The CDC's HIV surveillance report uses the most recent data, collected from 2015 to 2019. Hillsborough and Pinellas counties were identified as particular areas of concern nationally.
-
Doctor's Hospital in Sarasota has a new line of defense against the coronavirus. Meet Buffy, a 2-year-old Labrador retriever trained to sniff out the scent emitted by a human with the disease.
-
Cruise companies are starting to announce that more ships will resume sailing this summer, but that’s not the case yet at Port Tampa Bay.
-
The state on Tuesday reported 1,824 new coronavirus cases and 81 deaths related to COVID-19, but did not update how many tests came in or the daily positivity rate.
-
The state reported Thursday 3.92% of swabs that came in tested positive for the virus, making it the 11th day in a row the number has been under 5%.
-
A report shows more than 14% of nursing homes had new resident cases in the past four weeks. The national average is 10%. Part of the problem is only about 38% of facility workers have been vaccinated.
-
Parents or guardians need to accompany kids to the vaccination.
-
New cases of coronavirus in Florida continue to decline as the state reports the lowest number of new cases on a Tuesday since early February.
-
Now that vaccines are widely available at pharmacies and other community locations, the larger sites will begin consolidating operations this month.
-
Meantime, the average of new daily infections continues to fall, down 18% compared to the week before and 4% compared to two weeks ago, according to data from Johns Hopkins.