BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Louisiana reached a coronavirus testing benchmark in the latest full month of test administration and has made a sizable dent in its virus tracking goals, as Gov. John Bel Edwards’ administration relaxed restrictions on businesses and churches.

Infectious disease specialists and state leaders will be waiting to see if Louisiana’s efforts are enough to control the highly-contagious coronavirus as people spend more time out of their homes and interacting with others in a state that was once one of the nation’s virus hot spots.

And a chief determinant of Louisiana’s ability to contain the outbreak can’t be controlled by Edwards’ plans, virus testing and tracking because it involves personal decision-making.

As businesses such as bars and spas reopened Friday and regulations eased for restaurants and retailers that already had been operating, Edwards praised Louisiana residents for taking steps to mitigate the spread of the virus.

He also cautioned: “I do hope everyone will follow all the necessary restrictions and precautions to make sure that this step is successful.”

The Democratic governor, in consultation with his health advisers, set a goal of testing 200,000 people in Louisiana each month for the COVID-19 disease caused by the virus. State officials also want 10% or less of those test results to show someone is positive for COVID-19.

Louisiana has reached those targets. It topped 206,000 tests in the month of May, according to health department data, and just under 10% of all tests done statewide since late February have come back positive. Edwards said about 5% of tests in recent days were positive.

The health department contracted with 11 test providers, including commercial labs, Tulane and LSU health facilities, hospitals and clinics. It’s also added specific focus on group settings such as nursing homes and prisons and on minority and rural communities that have seen less access.

Meanwhile, the state initially estimated it would need about 700 contact tracers to pinpoint who has come into close contact with someone infected with COVID-19 so they can be urged to stay away from others. Edwards later walked back that number slightly, but the state still is nearing the benchmark.

The administration has entered into $18 million in federally financed contracts with call centers to spearhead the work, and Dr. Alex Billioux, leader of Louisiana’s public health office, said more than 600 contact tracers have been hired.