Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that his state would expand testing for the coronavirus to better gauge how widespread infections have become, as the disease continued to spread.

During a press conference in Jacksonville, the governor said the state will begin allowing anyone with coronavirus symptoms to get tested at three government-run sites in Jacksonville, Orlando, and Miami. The governor also opened testing to anyone who may be asymptomatic but have had close contact with confirmed cases of COVID-19.

“What we’re trying to do is to get a sense of people who are asymptomatic who may be carrying the virus and may be spreading the virus,” DeSantis said.

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As of Friday evening, Florida had about 18,000 total cases, with the number of deaths exceeding 400, according to the state’s COVID-19 dashboard. There were about 2,500 people currently hospitalized with the disease. With a single case reported Friday in Liberty County, the virus has now officially touched each of the state’s 67 counties.

As the governor moved to close restaurants and bars and advocate social distancing in recent weeks, he has long abandoned his earlier insistence that the virus had not spread throughout the state’s communities.

The governor said his state was aggressively trying to acquire tests that allow for quicker results, as well as a new test to see if a person possesses antibodies that could make them immune to further infection.

“It’ll give us a sense of how much this virus has actually penetrated into the community,” he said.

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Previously, tests were reserved for first responders, health care workers, and the state’s older population.

To help contain the spread of the virus, the state has had travel-related screenings in place at airports and major roadways. To date, the governor said, 17,000 people from New York City or New Orleans have been screened since the start of the month.

Passengers on flights arriving from Connecticut, New Jersey and New York — the country’s current COVID-19 epicenter — are required to self-quarantine for 14 days.

The state also has set up checkpoints at heavily trafficked roadways connecting the state with Alabama and Georgia.

The governor said the state has the hospital capacity to treat new patients, with 44% of the state’s 67,000 beds free. In addition, 40% of beds in ICU wards are also available, he said.

“We track the hospitalizations very closely to see what trends are developing,” he said, noting that the number of hospitalizations has dipped by 50 since Thursday.

But the state’s statistics have occasionally moved up and down — although the trend has continued to go upward despite day-to-day variances.

Also ticking upward has been the state’s unemployment claims, as the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity continues to grapple with a system that has been overwhelmed by the newly jobless.

So far this week, the agency has received 225,755 initial claims, the governor said. That’s on top of the 471,000 that had come in since March 15.

Because of continued problems with the state’s online unemployment portal, those seeking benefits have been allowed to file applications by mail. To date, nearly 12,000 paper applications have come in.

But as a sign of continued challenges for the agency, its spokespeople still could not say when checks would begin to be sent out.

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Florida expands coronavirus testing to better measure spread