Hospitalizations due to the virus ticked up but still remain low compared with the past month, according to Maryland health officials.
"If these last few difficult months have reminded us of anything, it is that life is so fragile," Gov. Larry Hogan said on Memorial Day.
As more get tested for the coronavirus in Maryland, the state offers a new way to find testing sites and hospitalizations hit record lows.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is studying why the virus is spreading in the D.C. metro area despite stay-at-home orders.
Are more people testing negative for the coronavirus as testing expands in Maryland? Here is what the numbers show.
As Maryland ramps up appointment-free coronavirus testing, the number of patients in the hospital and intensive care unit declined.
The Maryland Department of Health reported Wednesday that 2,004 people have died from COVID-19. Among them is a teenager.
A Baltimore teen died over the weekend at Johns Hopkins Hospital, where she was on a ventilator with coronavirus, her family said.
More than 161,000 negative coronavirus test results and over 39,000 positives have been reported in Maryland, state health officials say.
Coronavirus-related hospitalizations and intensive care unit admissions are both down significantly in Maryland, officials said Sunday.
Hospitals are treating 1,500 people in Maryland for the coronavirus, according to the Maryland Department of Health.
Fifty percent of Maryland's coronavirus cases are in two counties, both of which will remain under stay-at-home orders.
Baltimore Mayor Jack Young said it would be "irresponsible" for the city to reopen. The local stay-at-home order remains in effect.
Coronavirus hospitalizations are down, as more than 35,000 in Maryland have tested positive for the virus, officials said.
Gov. Larry Hogan introduced stage one of his recovery plan for Maryland, where data shows 58 percent of deaths are in group facilities.
The nation's top infectious disease expert laid out what must happen for the NFL season to happen, and how different it might look.
The Maryland Department of Health reported its largest decrease in coronavirus hospitalizations in recent weeks Monday morning.
The Maryland Department of Health reports nearly 6,000 people in the state have been hospitalized with coronavirus since the pandemic began.
The disease caused by the coronavirus has killed 1,510 in Maryland, health officials report; results are pending for more than 100 others.
For the second day in a row, Maryland health officials report some encouraging numbers as the state lifts certain restrictions.
As testing expands in Maryland, health officials say more than 29,000 coronavirus cases have been confirmed statewide.
Over half of MD's coronavirus deaths are in group living facilities, where 793 residents and 11 staff have died from the virus, data shows.
Almost 1,600 people are in the hospital in Maryland because of COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the virus.
More than 110,000 negative test results have been reported in Maryland, while over 26,000 have tested positive, state health officials say.
More than 5,000 people in Maryland have ever been hospitalized with the coronavirus since the pandemic began, state health officials say.
New MinuteClinic E-Clinic visit option enables patients to connect via video conferencing with a local provider
Maryland has reported results from more than 120,000 coronavirus tests as of Friday, less than two months after its first cases.
Nearly 900 people in the past day have tested positive for the new coronavirus, the Maryland Department of Health reported Thursday.
Available by appointment at select Maryland centers
Nursing homes are a hot spot for the new coronavirus in Maryland, according to new data provided by the Maryland Department of Health.
In the past two days, more than 100 deaths in Maryland have been attributed to the new coronavirus, according to state health officials.
More than 8,300 new test results are included in Monday's report on coronavirus in Maryland, according to a spokesman for Gov. Larry Hogan.
"While we have some encouraging numbers," Gov. Larry Hogan said Sunday morning on ABC, "we're still going up."
More than 68,000 Marylanders tested negative for the new coronavirus, and more than 1,000 have recovered from the illness, officials say.
Johns Hopkins University announced Wednesday a series of cuts and restrictions it will be making in response to the coronavirus outbreak.
There are positive signs in Maryland when it comes to the new coronavirus, according to Maryland Department of Health data.
Preliminary data collected by the Maryland Department of the Environment and other government agencies shows good news.
A new coronavirus testing site sponsored by the Baltimore City Health Department is in the works, officials said.
The Maryland Department of Health is providing new information about hospitalizations and ICU beds related to the new coronavirus.
More than 500 people have died from the new coronavirus in Maryland, according to state health officials.