Maryland will acquire 250,000 rapid-response coronavirus tests, Gov. Larry Hogan said.

SPARKS GELNCOE, MD — Maryland will acquire 250,000 rapid-response coronavirus tests, Gov. Larry Hogan said Thursday. These tests deliver results in 15 to 20 minutes. The deal is part of a 10-state compact, backed financially by the Rockefeller Foundation.

The states announced the initial agreement to amass 3.5 million rapid results tests on Aug. 4. Hogan executed the deal with the governors from Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio and Virginia during the final days of his tenure as chairman of the National Governors Association.

Utah, Arkansas and Rhode Island have since joined the partnership, bringing the total testing goal to 5 million. Each state will get 500,000 of these tests. Hogan's Thursday announcement is the first step toward reaching this benchmark.

The Rockefeller Foundation said it will pay for the purchase, if need be. The deal's value is not yet known.

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New Jersey medical manufacturer Becton, Dickinson and Company will supply the Food and Drug Administration-authorized tests. The business has an office in Sparks Glencoe, Baltimore County, where Hogan announced the deal.

"At one of the most important moments in our history, governors are doing what we do best," Hogan said. "We are working together in a bipartisan way, showing real leadership, making real progress, and finding real solutions to the serious problems facing us. Never has that type of leadership been more important than it is right now in America."

Maryland added 503 coronavirus cases on Thursday, bringing the state's total to 114,078 infections. The state also reported seven more coronavirus-related deaths Thursday. The virus has killed 3,679 Marylanders.

The state's positivity rate has seen an uptick since it bottomed out at 3.08 percent on Aug. 21. Now, the seven-day rolling average sits at 3.71 percent. The weekly positivity rate topped out at 26.88 percent on April 17.

Hospitalizations have trended downward since they hit a recent peak of 592 on Aug. 1. Thursday's 358 hospitalizations are down from their overall peak of 1,711 on April 30. The 92 patients in the intensive care unit are the fewest since March 28.

New cases have seen a spike as of late, prompting states to add Maryland to their quarantine orders. Most notably, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York placed Maryland on their joint travel advisory on Tuesday. Maryland was previously on the restricted list from July 21 to Aug. 25. Read more at Patch