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niman

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  1. Abstract The evolution of SARS-CoV-2 could impair recognition of the virus by human antibody-mediated immunity. To facilitate prospective surveillance for such evolution, we map how convalescent serum antibodies are impacted by all mutations to the spike’s receptor-binding domain (RBD), the main target of serum neutralizing activity. Binding by polyclonal serum antibodies is affected by mutations in three main epitopes in the RBD, but there is substantial variation in the impact of mutations both among individuals and within the same individual over time. Despite this inter- and intra-person heterogeneity, the mutations that most reduce antibody binding usually occur at just a few sites in the RBD’s receptor binding motif. The most important site is E484, where neutralization by some sera is reduced >10-fold by several mutations, including one in emerging viral lineages in South Africa and Brazil. Going forward, these serum escape maps can inform surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 evolution.
  2. Comprehensive mapping of mutations to the SARS-CoV-2 receptor-binding domain that affect recognition by polyclonal human serum antibodies Allison J Greaney, Andrea N Loes, Katharine HD Crawford, Tyler N Starr, Keara D Malone, Helen Y Chu, Jesse D Bloom doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.12.31.425021 This article is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review
  3. The most important site is E484, where neutralization by some sera is reduced >10-fold by several mutations, including one in emerging viral lineages in South Africa and Brazil. Going forward, these serum escape maps can inform surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 evolution. https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.12.31.425021v1.full.pdf+html
  4. Jan 6 SARS-CoV2 Variant Escape Mutations B.1.1.7 & 501.v2 Spike Dels in NTD Bloom Lab Preprint On RBD Escape E484K in 501.v2 https://recombinomics.co/thedrnimanshow/2021/010621_Variant_Escape.mp3
  5. By Los Angeles Times Staff Updated Jan. 5 9:44 p.m. Pacific 2,496,990 confirmed cases +43,875 on Tuesday 27,519 deaths +503 on Tuesday 459,564 vaccinated 1.5% of adults To better understand the COVID-19 pandemic, The Times is conducting an independent, continual survey of dozens of local health agencies across the state. What we know Stay-at-home orders remain. Most of the state, including Los Angeles County, is currently under stricter rules. New cases have been surging. Over the last seven days, the state has averaged 38,038 cases per day, a significant jump from before the holidays. Roughly 13.5% of tests this past week have come back positive. Deaths are on the rise. The state has averaged 361.7 daily deaths over the last week, an increase of 39.7% from two weeks ago. Hospitalizations have never been higher. Statewide, there are 21,597 people hospitalized with a confirmed case, 21% more than two weeks ago. Among those patients, 4,634 are in intensive care. Disparities in age and race persist. Roughly 74% of the dead were 65 or older. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 2.6 times more likely than whites to test positive. California counties +Other trackers +More coverage + Jump to a section Totals Hotspots Maps Hospitals Vaccine Tests Demographics Nursing homes Prisons State rankings The latest totals Coronavirus can infect people so rapidly that it has continued to spread despite shutdown orders aimed at slowing the growth of new cases and flattening the line below. The number of cases in California is now on pace to double every 43 days, a number used to measure how quickly the virus is spreading. CasesDeaths Cumulative cases Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.0500,0001,000,0001,500,0002,000,0002,500,000Stay-at-home orderStay-at-home orderGovernoreases limitsGovernoreases limits2,496,990Jan. 5 Times survey of county and local health departments Local governments announce new cases and deaths each day, though bottlenecks in bureaucracy can introduce delays. For instance, some agencies do not report new totals on holidays and weekends, leading to lower numbers on those days. Over the past week, the state has averaged 38,038 new cases and 361.7 new deaths per day. Experts say the true number of people infected is unknown and likely much higher than official tallies. New cases by day Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.020,00040,00060,00080,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage Deaths by day Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.02004006007-dayaverage7-dayaverage Seven-day averages offer a more stable view of the trend than daily totals. On the cases chart, gray bars mark when errors in a state computer system delayed the tabulation of new cases. Where new cases are concentrated State officials study the latest data and then rate regions and counties to determine when and how businesses reopen. The government doesn‘t release enough data to replicate its analysis, but the rate of new cases per 100,000 residents over the last seven days provides insight into where the virus is spreading. Metric CasesDeaths Method Per 100kTotals Regions ranked by new cases per 100,000 residents 1. Southern California 855.1 cases per 100k in last 7 days855.1 cases per 100k in last 7 days7-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 2. San Joaquin Valley 592.2592.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 3. Bay Area 378.8378.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 4. Greater Sacramento 377.2377.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 5. Northern California 352.1352.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 After adjusting for population, the virus is now categorized as widespread in 54 the state's 58 counties, which results in stricter rules being put into place. Together they are home to 99% of California residents. Metric CasesDeaths Method Per 100kTotals Counties ranked by new cases per 100,000 residents 1. San Bernardino 1,042.9 cases per 100k in last 7 days1,042.9 cases per 100k in last 7 days7-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 2. Riverside 980.5980.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 3. Los Angeles 938.1938.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 4. San Luis Obispo 814.7814.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 5. Ventura 809.7809.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 6. San Benito 779.3779.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 7. Monterey 775.1775.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 8. Lassen 737.5737.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 9. Amador 7277277-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 10. Sierra 716.7716.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 11. Madera 714.8714.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 12. Kings 6976977-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 13. San Diego 689.8689.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 14. Merced 634.8634.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 15. San Joaquin 634.5634.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 16. Kern 632.6632.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 17. Orange 628.8628.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 18. Glenn 616.6616.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 19. Tulare 588.1588.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 20. Fresno 572.2572.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 21. Solano 569.4569.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 22. Santa Cruz 547.2547.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 23. Imperial 527.1527.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 24. Yuba 523.2523.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 25. Santa Barbara 515.4515.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 26. Inyo 503.2503.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 27. Colusa 493.9493.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 28. Tehama 484.4484.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 29. Sutter 475.6475.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 30. Stanislaus 4714717-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 31. Santa Clara 458.4458.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 32. Alpine 435.5435.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 33. Shasta 422.1422.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 34. Napa 414.9414.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 35. Tuolumne 411.6411.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 36. Modoc 402.8402.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 37. Placer 4024027-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 38. Sacramento 374.4374.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 39. Butte 347.9347.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 40. Contra Costa 338.1338.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 41. Yolo 337.7337.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 42. Lake 324.3324.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 43. El Dorado 3233237-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 44. Alameda 319.1319.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 45. Mendocino 312.3312.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 46. Mariposa 290.8290.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 47. San Mateo 268.6268.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 48. Sonoma 254.3254.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 49. Mono 246.9246.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 50. Plumas 2462467-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 51. Siskiyou 245.8245.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 52. Marin 239.3239.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 53. Nevada 228.1228.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 54. San Francisco 226.7226.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 55. Humboldt 184.1184.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 56. Del Norte 182.3182.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 57. Calaveras 99.599.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 58. Trinity 85.585.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 6 Show less The Times' calculation of per capita rates can vary from what's published elsewhere. To learn more about how and why this count sometimes differs from official figures, consult our FAQ. What's open where? See how the governor has rated all 58 counties, and what that means for reopening, in our county reopening tracker. Mapping the toll The coronavirus has been found in all 58 counties, from urban Southern California to the state's rural north. Cumulative totals Metric CasesDeaths Method Per 100kTotals Confirmed cases1.4k3.1k4.6k6.2k7.7k10k15.5k Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingReddingFresnoFresno Cumulative totals County Cases Per 100k Tuesday Deaths Per 100k Tuesday Lassen » 4,845 15,536.3 – 11 35.3 – Imperial » 22,907 12,710.9 +87 434 240.8 +14 Kings » 16,855 11,231.1 – 110 73.3 – San Bernardino » 213,357 9,991.4 +10,048 1,450 67.9 +1 Riverside » 200,056 8,394.1 +1,820 2,098 88 +2 Los Angeles » 841,392 8,332.2 +11,843 11,089 109.8 +237 Kern » 72,878 8,253 +608 518 58.7 – Merced » 20,774 7,720.5 +372 266 98.9 +2 Tulare » 35,286 7,662.9 +884 421 91.4 +2 Madera » 11,280 7,276.8 +152 126 81.3 +9 Amador » 2,717 7,182.3 +16 26 68.7 +2 Fresno » 69,871 7,143.3 +553 711 72.7 – Sutter » 6,797 7,089.7 +63 62 64.7 +8 Monterey » 30,110 6,950.4 +1,759 216 49.9 +20 Stanislaus » 36,439 6,756.7 +184 638 118.3 +7 San Joaquin » 49,306 6,733.8 +2,744 672 91.8 +5 Colusa » 1,438 6,699.6 +42 9 41.9 – San Benito » 3,952 6,651.4 – 34 57.2 – Mono » 928 6,547.2 +1 4 28.2 – Alpine » 71 6,184.7 – 0 0 – Tuolumne » 3,063 5,679.4 +18 22 40.8 – Glenn » 1,564 5,606.3 +25 16 57.4 – Yuba » 4,221 5,591.2 +153 23 30.5 +2 Tehama » 3,529 5,568.6 +185 38 60 +1 Orange » 171,955 5,434.4 +1,376 1,926 60.9 – Ventura » 44,439 5,239.8 +894 297 35 +8 San Diego » 172,847 5,233.3 +1,814 1,654 50.1 +56 Solano » 21,223 4,839.6 +270 102 23.3 +2 Shasta » 8,463 4,725.7 +195 79 44.1 +1 Sacramento » 69,552 4,606 +441 917 60.7 +19 Napa » 6,198 4,410.4 +350 30 21.3 +2 Santa Barbara » 19,019 4,286.1 +339 173 39 +7 San Luis Obispo » 11,895 4,226.3 +611 90 32 +2 Yolo » 8,681 4,038.1 +279 123 57.2 +6 Sonoma » 20,147 4,018.8 +132 204 40.7 +8 Santa Clara » 76,235 3,966 +1,876 771 40.1 +24 Marin » 10,284 3,950.9 +102 143 54.9 +3 Modoc » 351 3,927.1 +7 1 11.2 – Inyo » 709 3,920.4 +34 25 138.2 +3 Placer » 14,800 3,893.9 +113 132 34.7 – Contra Costa » 43,223 3,814.1 +591 348 30.7 +1 Santa Cruz » 9,700 3,543.2 +121 93 34 +10 Butte » 7,963 3,506.8 +113 100 44 – San Mateo » 25,973 3,391 +249 234 30.6 +7 Alameda » 55,441 3,372.9 +1,813 681 41.4 +22 El Dorado » 6,216 3,330.1 +121 27 14.5 +3 Lake » 2,005 3,125.6 +7 25 39 +1 Mendocino » 2,714 3,104.5 +51 31 35.5 – Del Norte » 783 2,855.2 +6 2 7.3 – Siskiyou » 1,239 2,845.7 +21 11 25.3 – San Francisco » 24,564 2,823.3 +156 198 22.8 +4 Nevada » 2,774 2,799.4 +83 50 50.5 – Plumas » 514 2,748.8 +17 5 26.7 +1 Trinity » 282 2,192.5 – 4 31.1 – Sierra » 62 2,116 +3 0 0 – Calaveras » 898 1,985.2 +45 22 48.6 – Mariposa » 277 1,579.2 – 4 22.8 – Humboldt » 1,928 1,420.1 +18 23 16.9 +1 Show less Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 1,374 places as released by county health departments. Confirmed cases 100 1,000 10,000 Counties that do not report cases by locality © Mapbox © OpenStreetMap Improve this map The following counties currently do not report cases by locality: Alpine, Colusa, Glenn, Mariposa, Modoc, San Benito, Tehama and Tuolumne Filter by countyAlameda Amador Butte Calaveras Contra Costa Del Norte El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Imperial Inyo Kern Kings Lake Lassen Los Angeles Madera Marin Mendocino Merced Mono Monterey Napa Nevada Orange Placer Plumas Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Luis Obispo San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Santa Cruz Shasta Sierra Siskiyou Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Trinity Tulare Ventura Yolo Yuba Search by name Area Confirmed cases East Los Angeles 18,330 Pomona 17,720 Palmdale 16,610 Lancaster 14,738 North Hollywood 13,731 South Gate 13,120 Santa Clarita 12,899 Downey 12,664 Boyle Heights 12,645 El Monte 12,230 Glendale 12,142 Pacoima 11,975 Compton 11,700 Norwalk 10,904 Sylmar 10,888 Van Nuys 10,107 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone 9,736 Lynwood 9,468 Panorama City 9,272 Baldwin Park 9,241 West Covina 8,925 Inglewood 8,874 90805: Long Beach 8,842 Huntington Park 8,054 Vernon Central 7,967 Pico Rivera 7,951 Whittier 7,850 Reseda 7,698 Pasadena 7,449 Bellflower 7,415 Montebello 7,338 Paramount 7,142 West Vernon 7,035 Florence-Firestone 6,748 Hawthorne 6,594 North Hills 6,311 Sun Valley 6,241 Canoga Park 6,173 Bell Gardens 5,992 South Whittier 5,914 Carson 5,913 Burbank 5,652 Central 5,497 Wilmington 5,461 Westlake 5,427 90813: Long Beach 5,397 Melrose 5,374 South Park 5,366 Watts 5,242 Vermont Vista 5,234 Harvard Park 4,985 Northridge 4,927 Pico-Union 4,847 La Puente 4,839 Arleta 4,821 Wholesale District 4,786 Lakewood 4,671 Bell 4,664 San Pedro 4,638 Alhambra 4,516 Winnetka 4,509 Covina 4,488 Azusa 4,427 El Sereno 4,365 Century Palms/Cove 4,346 Torrance 4,324 Athens-Westmont 4,294 Granada Hills 4,267 Willowbrook 4,256 Exposition Park 4,222 Gardena 4,141 90806: Long Beach 4,062 Highland Park 4,030 Sherman Oaks 3,767 Maywood 3,729 Lake Balboa 3,619 Lincoln Heights 3,585 Hacienda Heights 3,548 Hollywood 3,544 San Fernando 3,487 Temple-Beaudry 3,478 Koreatown 3,456 Wilshire Center 3,446 Cudahy 3,362 Glendora 3,251 Monterey Park 3,207 Harbor Gateway 3,152 Rosemead 3,131 West Whittier/Los Nietos 3,114 90810: Long Beach 3,086 Woodland Hills 3,081 Castaic 3,037 90804: Long Beach 3,007 Mission Hills 2,999 Santa Monica 2,948 La Mirada 2,897 West Adams 2,720 Green Meadows 2,698 90802: Long Beach 2,648 Valinda 2,604 Valley Glen 2,576 Downtown 2,552 Eagle Rock 2,527 San Jose Hills 2,524 Rowland Heights 2,430 Hyde Park 2,427 South El Monte 2,417 Chatsworth 2,389 University Park 2,378 Lennox 2,316 Glassell Park 2,252 Encino 2,240 Lawndale 2,224 Altadena 2,206 Silver Lake 2,158 Tarzana 2,154 East Hollywood 2,150 Walnut Park 2,120 Diamond Bar 2,108 Monrovia 2,101 San Gabriel 2,080 San Dimas 2,053 Vermont Knolls 2,000 Mt. Washington 1,984 West Hills 1,971 East Rancho Dominguez 1,951 Cerritos 1,916 Santa Fe Springs 1,899 90815: Long Beach 1,888 La Verne 1,879 Bassett 1,854 90807: Long Beach 1,846 Baldwin Hills 1,836 Commerce 1,819 Arcadia 1,774 Tujunga 1,757 Beverly Hills 1,733 90808: Long Beach 1,719 Harvard Heights 1,703 Little Bangladesh 1,691 Redondo Beach 1,672 Unincorporated - Azusa 1,632 Temple City 1,622 Unincorporated - Covina 1,615 Lakeview Terrace 1,613 Porter Ranch 1,601 Palms 1,552 Duarte 1,550 Claremont 1,527 Hawaiian Gardens 1,525 Harbor City 1,507 West Los Angeles 1,507 West Hollywood 1,502 Sunland 1,471 Historic Filipinotown 1,463 Westwood 1,442 Westchester 1,432 Culver City 1,403 Artesia 1,375 Del Rey 1,372 Valley Village 1,365 West Carson 1,337 90803: Long Beach 1,255 Mar Vista 1,237 West Puente Valley 1,236 Walnut 1,135 Northeast San Gabriel 1,115 Cloverdale/Cochran 1,087 Alsace 1,080 Covina (Charter Oak) 1,057 Lake Los Angeles 1,054 Leimert Park 1,042 Venice 1,032 Country Club Park 1,021 Crenshaw District 992 Vermont Square 991 Hollywood Hills 968 Figueroa Park Square 964 Brentwood 957 Echo Park 905 South Pasadena 893 Elysian Valley 889 Atwater Village 882 Studio City 881 90814: Long Beach 874 Gramercy Place 857 Rancho Palos Verdes 849 Manhattan Beach 841 Lomita 833 Jefferson Park 811 Adams-Normandie 804 Little Armenia 803 Athens Village 795 Mid-city 787 Avocado Heights 784 North Whittier 780 Signal Hill 771 Quartz Hill 768 Calabasas 750 Victoria Park 736 Los Feliz 700 Hancock Park 674 Stevenson Ranch 668 Crestview 663 La Crescenta-Montrose 657 Carthay 650 Agoura Hills 630 Hermosa Beach 627 Unincorporated - Duarte 625 South San Gabriel 621 Manchester Square 609 Sun Village 602 Miracle Mile 587 Beverlywood 565 Thai Town 546 Canyon Country 528 La Canada Flintridge 508 El Camino Village 507 Pacific Palisades 506 Chinatown 503 Cadillac-Corning 474 View Park/Windsor Hills 469 South Carthay 467 Reseda Ranch 426 Beverly Crest 419 St Elmo Village 418 El Segundo 412 Longwood 402 Park La Brea 386 Century City 381 Wellington Square 378 Playa Vista 371 Unincorporated - Arcadia 369 Lafayette Square 359 Elysian Park 349 Littlerock 344 Wiseburn 339 Littlerock/Pearblossom 336 East La Mirada 332 Toluca Lake 330 Santa Monica Mountains 329 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez 328 Sierra Madre 315 East Whittier 311 Acton 293 Cheviot Hills 287 Little Tokyo 285 Rancho Dominguez 260 Bel Air 257 Ladera Heights 256 San Marino 254 Shadow Hills 252 Unincorporated - South El Monte 252 Unincorporated - Monrovia 249 Exposition 242 Palos Verdes Estates 239 Desert View Highlands 238 Rancho Park 231 Malibu 229 Marina del Rey 227 Unincorporated - Hawthorne 222 Unincorporated - Whittier 217 Del Aire 211 Val Verde 202 Irwindale 186 Angelino Heights 185 University Hills 183 White Fence Farms 172 Reynier Village 165 East Pasadena 154 Rolling Hills Estates 152 Regent Square 150 View Heights 150 La Rambla 149 Agua Dulce 148 Sunrise Village 146 Faircrest Heights 140 Kagel/Lopez Canyons 140 Unincorporated - West LA 140 Industry 114 Harbor Pines 112 Del Sur 110 Pellissier Village 110 Valencia 110 Unincorporated - La Verne 109 Rosewood/East Gardena 108 West Rancho Dominguez 106 Anaverde 102 Rosewood 98 Marina Peninsula 95 Saugus 94 Santa Catalina Island 93 Palisades Highlands 92 North Lancaster 90 La Habra Heights 88 Mandeville Canyon 85 Toluca Terrace 85 Lake Manor 82 Leona Valley 79 Westlake Village 76 Littlerock/Juniper Hills 74 Toluca Woods 73 Playa Del Rey 72 Vernon 70 Pearblossom/Llano 69 Unincorporated - Palmdale 67 Newhall 57 Southeast Antelope Valley 57 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain 56 Roosevelt 53 Unincorporated - Glendora 50 Unincorporated - Cerritos 48 Elizabeth Lake 45 Hidden Hills 44 Unincorporated - Pomona 43 Unincorporated - Claremont 36 Bradbury 32 Westhills 30 Bouquet Canyon 28 Hi Vista 28 Rolling Hills 28 Saugus/Canyon Country 28 East Covina 26 Lake Hughes 25 San Pasqual 25 Llano 24 Sycamore Square 23 Westfield/Academy Hills 21 Brookside 20 West Antelope Valley 20 Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest 19 Palos Verdes Peninsula 18 Unincorporated - Del Rey 17 Unincorporated - El Monte 17 South Antelope Valley 16 Unincorporated - Bradbury 15 Unincorporated - La Habra Heights 11 East Lancaster 10 Sand Canyon 10 San Francisquito Canyon/Bouquet Canyon 8 Whittier Narrows 8 Avalon 6 Padua Hills 6 Angeles National Forest 3 Franklin Canyon 1 West Chatsworth 1 Show less Hospitals and patients Stay-at-home orders aim to slow the virus in hope of preventing hospitals from being overrun. To keep tabs on available beds, officials watch out for rapid increases in the number of patients. There are now 21,597 hospital patients statewide with a confirmed case, a change of 21% from two weeks ago. ConfirmedSuspectedBoth Intensive care and other hospitalized patients AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.05,00010,00015,00020,000 California Department of Public Health Confirmed patients County ICU Other Total Los Angeles » 1,642 6,381 8,023 Orange » 504 1,732 2,236 San Bernardino » 346 1,417 1,763 Riverside » 342 1,273 1,615 San Diego » 382 1,155 1,537 Santa Clara » 146 573 719 Fresno » 126 514 640 Sacramento » 102 363 465 Alameda » 109 315 424 Kern » 90 311 401 Ventura » 87 307 394 Stanislaus » 61 294 355 San Joaquin » 87 237 324 Contra Costa » 69 200 269 Tulare » 27 204 231 San Francisco » 54 157 211 Monterey » 32 166 198 Imperial » 67 114 181 Placer » 29 149 178 San Mateo » 41 137 178 Santa Barbara » 55 117 172 Solano » 36 134 170 Sonoma » 20 82 102 Kings » 14 82 96 Santa Cruz » 18 68 86 Butte » 9 75 84 Yuba » 17 51 68 Merced » 17 43 60 San Luis Obispo » 14 44 58 Madera » 11 42 53 Shasta » 10 35 45 El Dorado » 12 26 38 Marin » 6 28 34 Yolo » 12 16 28 Napa » 14 13 27 Tehama » 2 16 18 Mendocino » 4 9 13 Amador » 3 9 12 Tuolumne » 1 11 12 San Benito » 3 8 11 Glenn » 0 10 10 Lake » 4 5 9 Nevada » 3 6 9 Inyo » 2 6 8 Humboldt » 2 5 7 Lassen » 0 6 6 Colusa » 0 4 4 Del Norte » 1 3 4 Siskiyou » 1 3 4 Calaveras » 0 3 3 Modoc » 0 2 2 Plumas » 0 1 1 Mariposa » 0 1 1 Sutter » 0 0 0 Mono » 0 0 0 Trinity » 0 0 0 Show less Officials also closely monitor the number of beds open in intensive-care units. The latest data show that there are 1,319 available statewide. Available ICU beds Aug.Sept.Oct.Nov.Dec.Jan.05001,0001,5002,0002,5003,0003,5001,319Jan. 4 California Department of Public Health Officials have organized the state’s counties into five regions. If a region’s available percentage of intensive-care beds falls below 15%, a stay-at-home order is issued. The number is adjusted to ensure that some beds remain open for patients who don’t have COVID-19. Four regions currently fail. Available ICU beds by region 01530Dec.3Jan.5Bay AreaBay Area5.9%5.9% Greater SacramentoGreater Sacramento11.7%11.7% Northern CaliforniaNorthern California29.8%29.8% San Joaquin ValleySan Joaquin Valley0.0%0.0% Southern CaliforniaSouthern California0.0%0.0% Vaccines California has received about 2.02 million doses of coronavirus vaccine. The first inoculations are being administered to healthcare workers who face the greatest exposure to the virus and residents of long-term care facilities, such as nursing homes. As of Jan. 4, 459,564 people have received the shot. Officials are still drafting a plan on how to roll out the vaccine beyond the initial group. It is unclear when essential workers and other Californians will have access. Phase 1 Healthcare workers and long-term care residents Doctors and nurses on the front lines are now receiving shots. Other healthcare workers and nursing homes come next in this step. Phase 2 Essential workers Emergency personnel, teachers and farmworkers are expected to be next in line. There is no start date. Who else will qualify is undecided. Phase 3 Everyone else It’s unclear how long the rest of California’s nearly 40 million residents may wait. Experts say shots may be readily available by late spring or summer. Testing After a fitful start, California has increased coronavirus testing in the state. Over the last week, an average of 283,727 tests have been conducted each day. New tests by day MayJulySept.Nov.Jan.0100,000200,000300,000400,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage California Department of Public Health In the last seven days, about 13.5% of the 1,986,090 tests conducted have returned a positive result. Positive test rate, seven-day average MayJulySept.Nov.Jan.0%5%10%15%13.5%Jan. 3 California Department of Public Health Wide disparities in age and race While younger adults make up the majority of positive tests, deaths due to the virus have skewed heavily toward the elderly. Percentage of cases vs. population 0%10%20%30%40%50%80+75-7970-7465-6960-6450-5935-4918-345-170-4 Percentage of deaths vs. population 0%10%20%30%40%50%80+75-7970-7465-6960-6450-5935-4918-345-170-4 There are 1518 cases with an unreported age. California Department of Public Health The state has logged the race of the patient in nearly two-thirds of cases. Latinos and Black people have contracted the virus at a higher rate than white and Asian people. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 2.6 times more likely to test positive than white people. Cumulative cases by race per 100,000 people JuneAug.Oct.Dec.01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,000AsianAsianBlackBlackLatino5,681 casesper 100,000Latino5,681 casesper 100,000OtherOtherWhiteWhite The other category includes Native Americans and people of two or more races. California Department of Public Health One outcome is that among most age groups, and especially younger people, Black people and Latinos are dying more often than other races relative to their share of the population. Percentage of deaths vs. population Age: All 18+ 0-17 18-34 35-49 50-64 65-79 80+ CasesDeaths 0%20%40%60%80%BlackAsianWhiteLatino Race Deaths Deaths Pct. Population Pct. Latino 11,572 47.4% 36.3% White 7,676 31.4% 38.8% Asian 2,946 12.0% 16.5% Black 1,696 6.9% 6.1% Note: There are 295 deaths with an unknown race in this age bracket, 1% of the total. Lives lost to COVID-19 Learn more about those we've lost by reading Times obituaries of Californians who have died from coronavirus. Nursing homes Nursing homes are a tragic focal point of the outbreak. Residents and staff have accounted for 5% the state's coronavirus cases, but 35% of its deaths. CasesDeaths Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere JuneAug.Oct.Dec.05,00010,00015,00020,00025,000 California Department of Public Health Track outbreaks in California nursing homes Follow the data and look up the latest tallies at the hundreds of skilled-nursing and assisted-living facilities across the state. State prisons The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has faced criticism around its handling of recent surge in cases across its 35 facilities in the state. Cumulative casesActive casesDeaths Cumulative cases AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.010,00020,00030,00040,00041,518Jan. 5 The data do not include tallies from federal prisons, immigration detention facilities or local jails. California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Track outbreaks in California state prisons Follow the data and look up latest outbreaks among inmates and state employees by facility. California in context To date, the United States has recorded 20,802,482 coronavirus cases and 353,468 deaths. In the last week, the country has averaged 214,221 new cases and 2,665 deaths per day. While California — America’s most populous state — has the nation’s top case counts. Home to 12% of the country's population, thus far it has accounted for roughly 12% of cases. New cases in California vs. the rest of the country MarchMayJulySept.Nov.Jan.050,000100,000150,000200,000250,000 Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey State Cases Per 100k Last 14 days Per 100k New cases FewerMore California 2,453,115 6,266.1 524,063 1,338.6 Mar 1Jan 4 Texas 1,829,199 6,559.7 224,208 804 New York 1,035,139 5,276.4 168,251 857.6 Florida 1,376,692 6,683.6 164,111 796.7 Georgia 696,063 6,759.5 104,625 1,016 Pennsylvania 670,039 5,238.3 100,940 789.1 Arizona 561,542 8,083.6 100,197 1,442.4 Ohio 727,423 6,248.3 98,069 842.4 North Carolina 570,111 5,613.7 86,464 851.4 Tennessee 612,250 9,205.3 82,672 1,243 Illinois 984,880 7,681.5 79,811 622.5 Massachusetts 392,568 5,747.5 65,194 954.5 Indiana 529,688 7,980.3 61,469 926.1 New Jersey 493,102 5,551.8 57,339 645.6 Virginia 367,536 4,368.3 56,646 673.3 South Carolina 325,472 6,567.3 49,739 1,003.6 Alabama 374,095 7,690 49,263 1,012.7 Oklahoma 306,771 7,829.5 43,337 1,106.1 Michigan 543,611 5,459.3 42,496 426.8 Missouri 414,213 6,801.5 36,265 595.5 Louisiana 322,181 6,908.4 34,920 748.8 Kentucky 279,142 6,286.7 34,846 784.8 Maryland 287,802 4,794 34,729 578.5 Wisconsin 527,871 9,135.3 33,518 580.1 Utah 285,633 9,379.3 32,850 1,078.7 Colorado 343,435 6,209.1 32,399 585.8 Arkansas 234,781 7,850.4 31,674 1,059.1 Washington 256,435 3,515.5 29,800 408.5 Mississippi 223,677 7,483.9 28,177 942.8 Connecticut 194,636 5,434.5 27,259 761.1 Nevada 233,032 7,972.8 27,148 928.8 Kansas 234,297 8,054.8 26,513 911.5 Minnesota 423,688 7,665.3 24,377 441 West Virginia 91,886 5,023.7 18,549 1,014.1 Iowa 286,356 9,141.5 17,620 562.5 New Mexico 147,315 7,040.4 16,507 788.9 Oregon 118,453 2,901.9 14,698 360.1 Nebraska 169,585 8,903.2 12,482 655.3 Rhode Island 92,708 8,774.1 12,477 1,180.9 Idaho 143,305 8,490.6 12,428 736.3 Puerto Rico 78,805 2,326.7 9,956 294 New Hampshire 47,328 3,522.4 9,940 739.8 Delaware 60,333 6,354.2 9,277 977 Maine 25,967 1,948.3 6,682 501.3 South Dakota 100,643 11,644.6 5,569 644.3 Montana 82,664 7,935.2 5,340 512.6 Alaska 48,363 6,548.7 4,340 587.7 District of Columbia 29,904 4,368.7 3,164 462.2 Wyoming 45,257 7,778.3 3,139 539.5 North Dakota 93,240 12,395.6 3,124 415.3 Hawaii 22,378 1,573.7 1,669 117.4 Vermont 7,873 1,259.7 1,339 214.2 Show less So far, California has accounted for 8% of deaths nationwide. It still trails behind New York, where deaths surged in the early days of the pandemic. New deaths in California vs. the rest of the country MarchMayJulySept.Nov.Jan.01,0002,0003,0004,000 Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey State Deaths Per 100k Last 14 days Per 100k New deaths FewerMore California 27,016 69 4,088 10.4 Mar 1Jan 4 Texas 28,551 102.4 2,615 9.4 Pennsylvania 16,335 127.7 2,445 19.1 New York 38,599 196.7 2,031 10.4 Illinois 18,412 143.6 1,885 14.7 Florida 22,090 107.2 1,410 6.8 Michigan 13,391 134.5 1,238 12.4 Arizona 9,064 130.5 1,092 15.7 Indiana 8,514 128.3 1,076 16.2 Tennessee 7,168 107.8 1,032 15.5 Ohio 9,143 78.5 1,021 8.8 New Jersey 19,225 216.5 1,002 11.3 Massachusetts 12,671 185.5 912 13.4 North Carolina 6,941 68.3 701 6.9 Missouri 5,736 94.2 648 10.6 Georgia 10,971 106.5 572 5.6 Minnesota 5,502 99.5 571 10.3 Colorado 4,944 89.4 566 10.2 Maryland 6,027 100.4 556 9.3 South Carolina 5,484 110.7 522 10.5 Wisconsin 5,269 91.2 518 9 Arkansas 3,800 127.1 505 16.9 Connecticut 6,168 172.2 492 13.7 Alabama 4,878 100.3 489 10.1 Virginia 5,132 61 478 5.7 Louisiana 7,585 162.6 478 10.2 Mississippi 4,884 163.4 473 15.8 Kansas 2,890 99.4 442 15.2 Nevada 3,206 109.7 421 14.4 Iowa 3,992 127.4 404 12.9 New Mexico 2,574 123 394 18.8 Washington 3,482 47.7 376 5.2 Kentucky 2,749 61.9 337 7.6 Oklahoma 2,552 65.1 334 8.5 West Virginia 1,396 76.3 267 14.6 Rhode Island 1,855 175.6 185 17.5 Puerto Rico 1,555 45.9 173 5.1 Nebraska 1,682 88.3 171 9 Oregon 1,506 36.9 159 3.9 Idaho 1,459 86.4 158 9.4 Utah 1,305 42.9 144 4.7 South Dakota 1,513 175.1 132 15.3 New Hampshire 781 58.1 125 9.3 Montana 975 93.6 94 9 Wyoming 438 75.3 87 15 North Dakota 1,312 174.4 79 10.5 Maine 361 27.1 68 5.1 Delaware 937 98.7 66 7 District of Columbia 797 116.4 55 8 Alaska 218 29.5 34 4.6 Vermont 144 23 33 5.3 Hawaii 289 20.3 7 0.5 Show less Tracking the coronavirus California counties Alameda Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Contra Costa Del Norte El Dorado Fresno Glenn Humboldt Imperial Inyo Kern Kings Lake Lassen Los Angeles Madera Marin Mariposa Mendocino Merced Modoc Mono Monterey Napa Nevada Orange Placer Plumas Riverside Sacramento San Benito San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Luis Obispo San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Santa Cruz Shasta Sierra Siskiyou Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Tehama Trinity Tulare Tuolumne Ventura Yolo Yuba Other trackers Housing homeless people Nursing homes State prisons Following the curve Unemployment and economic fallout Which counties are open Which beaches are closed Lives lost Frequently asked questions More coverage Coronavirus symptoms How coronavirus spreads Get our newsletter About the numbers This page was created by Swetha Kannan, Casey Miller, Sean Greene, Lorena Iñiguez Elebee, Rong-Gong Lin II, Ryan Murphy, Melody Gutierrez, Priya Krishnakumar, Sandhya Kambhampati, Maloy Moore, Jennifer Lu, Aida Ylanan, Vanessa Martínez, Ryan Menezes, Thomas Suh Lauder, Andrea Roberson, Ben Poston, Nicole Santa Cruz, Iris Lee, Rahul Mukherjee, Jaclyn Cosgrove, Anthony Pesce, Paul Duginski and Phi Do. State and county totals come from an ongoing Times survey of California’s 58 county health agencies as well as the three run by cities. Those figures are ahead of the totals periodically released by the state’s Department of Public Health. State officials acknowledge that their tallies lag behind the updates posted by local agencies throughout the day and do not dispute The Times’ method. Data on hospitalizations, tests, demographics and reopening plans come from the state health department. Nursing home totals include skilled-nursing facilities tracked by the state public health department, as well as assisted-living facilities monitored by the California Department of Social Services. Data from other states, Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico are collected by researchers at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering. Counties are organized into regions using the groupings developed by the state health department. The Times database is available to the public on Github, a popular website for hosting data and computer code. The files will be updated daily at github.com/datadesk/california-coronavirus-data. The data collection effort is done in partnership with journalists at the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Diego Union-Tribune, KQED, KPCC, CapRadio, Calmatters and Stanford’s Big Local News. Learn more about The Times count by reading this list of frequently asked questions or by reading this interview with members of our team. If you see information here that you believe is incorrect or out of date, please contact Data and Graphics Editor Ben Welsh at [email protected]. Change log Dec. 23 State prison data added to county pages and overview page. ICU totals at local hospitals added to county pages. Dec. 14 New charts were added ranking the rate of new cases in the state’s five regions over the last seven days. Dec. 12 New charts were added plotting the ICU capacity in the state’s five region over time. Dec. 3 The state’s new ICU availability metric were added to county reopening profiles. Nov. 13 A chart tracking changes in tier assignments was added to the reopenings tracker. Nov. 9 Per-capita totals for city-level data added to some county pages. Oct. 19 Maps were added for case counts in Del Norte, Lake, Siskiyou, Trinity counties. Oct. 17 The hotspots section now offers a ranking of counties by the total number of cases and deaths in the past week. Oct. 9 Charts plotting the daily trend in cities and regions added to most county pages. Oct. 4 Charts plotting how each area stacks up against the state’s reopening benchmarks added to county pages. Oct. 1 City-level totals added for Shasta County. Sept. 27 Totals for skilled-nursing facilities are now drawn from the state's open data portal, which is promoted as the most comprehensive and up-to-date source. Sept. 26 The hotspots section now offers a ranking of counties by deaths per 100,000 residents over the last seven days. Sept. 22 Nursing home lists moved to a new page focused on skilled-nursing and assisted-living facilities. Sept. 13 The logarithmic curves plotting the rate of growth in each state were replaced. Instead, stacked-bar charts compare California's case and death counts against the rest of the nation. Sept. 12 The county map is now exclusively focused on cumulative totals and starts off by displaying grand totals per 100,000 residents. Sept. 11 The logarithmic curves plotting the rate of growth in each county were replaced. Instead, after adjusting for population, counties are now ranked by the number new cases announced in the past week. The reopening map has been removed and can be found by visiting our more complete county reopening tracker. https://www.latimes.com/projects/california-coronavirus-cases-tracking-outbreak/
  6. Switzerland/GE-ETHZ-420394/2020 12/22 matched UK variant with 3 AAs deleted in Spike protein, 3 AAs deleted in NSP6 and Q27 stop codon in NS8. map update https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/1/edit?mid=1aQDSL2LwQFbuoCAg_nIOPK8D-LIJ5MYd&ll=46.33303783366165%2C5.499066718750019&z=8
  7. ETH Zürich has released (at GISAID) a UK Variant B.1.1.7 SARS CoV2 sequence, Switzerland/GE-ETHZ-420394/2020, collected Dec 22
  8. Switzerland/BE-ETHZ-5/2020 12/21 matched UK variant with 3 AAs deleted in Spike protein, 3 AAs deleted in NSP6 and Q27 stop codon in NS8. map update https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/1/edit?mid=1aQDSL2LwQFbuoCAg_nIOPK8D-LIJ5MYd&ll=46.92359159571356%2C7.185443953906265&z=10
  9. ETH Zürich has released (at GISAID) a UK Variant B.1.1.7 SARS CoV2 sequence, Switzerland/BE-ETHZ-5/2020 from Bern Switzerland collected Dec 21.
  10. 4,592 Douglas 2,111 Lancaster 1,498 Sarpy 310 Dodge 296 Hall 257 Cass 214 Buffalo 203 Saunders 193 Lincoln 168 Madison 163 Dawson 162 Adams 135 Gage 122 Washington 113 Cuming 103 Red Willow 96 Dakota 91 Platte 90 Seward 83 Otoe 75 Scotts Bluff 74 Phelps 65 Cheyenne 63 Richardson 62 Saline 62 Keith 59 Johnson 57 Chase 57 York 54 Colfax 52 Knox 52 Merrick 50 Holt 49 Nemaha 48 Hamilton 48 Clay 43 Box Butte 40 Thurston 40 Thayer 37 Custer 32 Boone 30 Wayne 28 Dawes 28 Howard 27 Kearney 27 Kimball 27 Butler 27 Pierce 25 Stanton 25 Furnas 24 Jefferson 24 Perkins 23 Sheridan 23 Dixon 20 Frontier 20 Antelope 19 Dundy 17 Franklin 16 Burt 16 Cedar 16 Morrill 16 Polk 15 Valley 15 Pawnee 15 Fillmore 14 Hitchcock 14 Gosper 11 Nance 10 Harlan 9 Logan 8 Garden 7 Nuckolls 7 Deuel 6 Cherry 5 Hayes 4 Brown 4 Webster 2 Sioux 2 Thomas 2 Garfield 2 Greeley 2 Loup 1 Hooker 1 Arthur 1 Blaine 1 Boyd 1 Sherman 1 Rock 1 Wheeler 0 Banner 0 Grant 0 McPherson https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/ece0db09da4d4ca68252c3967aa1e9dd 0 Keya Paha
  11. Total Cases 47,006 New Cases Yesterday 203 Updated Daily by Noon Hospitalizations 1,036 https://coronavirus-response-alaska-dhss.hub.arcgis.com/ Total count (does not reflect current stays) Deaths 217
  12. https://health.wyo.gov/publichealth/infectious-disease-epidemiology-unit/disease/novel-coronavirus/covid-19-map-and-statistics/
  13. https://montana.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=7c34f3412536439491adcc2103421d4b
  14. https://health.hawaii.gov/coronavirusdisease2019/
  15. https://www.health.nd.gov/diseases-conditions/coronavirus/north-dakota-coronavirus-cases
  16. New Cases 165 8,038 Total Currently Hospitalized 38 Hospitalized In ICU 8 Hospitalized Under Investigation 6 Percent Positive 7-day Avg. 2.8% People Tested 269,010 Total Tests 719,758 Recovered 5,463 68% of Cases Deaths 149 https://www.healthvermont.gov/covid-19/current-activity/vermont-dashboard 1.9% of Cases
  17. Cumulative COVID-19 Cases by County https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/infectious-disease/epi/airborne/coronavirus/data.shtml Download the most recent Cases by County Table Maine COVID-19 Reopening Gating Metrics Cumulative COVID-19 Cases by ZIP Code Download an Excel file with the most recent cumulative case data by zip code, county, sex, age, race, and historical case data by county. Tables of COVID-19 Testing and Contact Tracing Data, Hospital Use, and Case Demographics View a Table of Contact Tracing (Sara Alert) Data Contact Tracing (Sara Alert) Data Number of Individuals Currently in Monitoring Total Number of Individuals Enrolled 1,051 36,217 Maine CDC updates contact tracing data weekly. Updated December 31, 2020 at 3:46 PM.
  18. There are 437,144 confirmed COVID-19 patients in Missouri, including 6,278 deaths. https://www.kshb.com/news/coronavirus/covid-19-case-tracker-where-we-stand-in-mo-ks-nationwide Adair County 1,833 13 Andrew County 1,731 16 Atchison County 261 5 Audrain County 1,835 41 Barry County 2,396 44 Barton County 794 8 Bates County 876 13 Benton County 1,244 16 Bollinger County 1,098 15 Boone County 14,295 59 Buchanan County 6,371 133 Butler County 3,651 32 Caldwell County 564 6 Callaway County 3,886 30 Camden County 3,227 64 Cape Girardeau County 6,676 119 Carroll County 679 18 Carter County 383 6 Cass County 5,811 58 Cedar County 551 9 Chariton County 346 3 Christian County 5,870 53 Clark County 378 5 Clay County 7,340 103 Clinton County 1,297 60 Cole County 7,771 93 Cooper County 1,508 20 Crawford County 1,776 20 Dade County 372 10 Dallas County 714 19 Daviess County 485 9 DeKalb County 792 20 Dent County 722 9 Douglas County 648 19 Dunklin County 2,742 18 Franklin County 7,237 115 Gasconade County 705 30 Gentry County 623 16 Greene County 22,375 297 Grundy County 693 24 Harrison County 653 10 Henry County 1,466 24 Hickory County 437 9 Holt County 447 15 Howard County 634 4 Howell County 2,403 38 Iron County 413 1 Jackson County 24,252 258 Jasper County 11,953 196 Jefferson County 17,506 150 Johnson County 3,781 34 Knox County 155 2 Laclede County 2,575 46 Lafayette County 2,140 42 Lawrence County 2,407 57 Lewis County 559 3 Lincoln County 3,639 38 Linn County 416 10 Livingston County 1,055 24 McDonald County 2,065 27 Macon County 946 10 Madison County 1,238 11 Maries County 476 7 Marion County 2,403 30 Mercer County 135 1 Miller County 2,083 41 Mississippi County 1,442 27 Moniteau County 1,727 20 Monroe County 536 6 Montgomery County 519 9 Morgan County 1,480 24 New Madrid County 1,826 32 Newton County 4,243 66 Nodaway County 2,372 22 Oregon County 561 3 Osage County 1,217 8 Ozark County 396 4 Pemiscot County 1,497 31 Perry County 1,964 26 Pettis County 4,326 66 Phelps County 2,589 89 Pike County 1,300 16 Platte County 2,557 26 Polk County 1,867 24 Pulaski County 5,562 39 Putnam County 201 2 Ralls County 682 7 Randolph County 1,634 18 Ray County 1,176 10 Reynolds County 232 2 Ripley County 691 9 St. Charles County 30,353 334 St. Clair County 477 5 Ste. Genevieve County 1,520 8 St. Francois County 6,719 75 St. Louis County 71,901 1,406 Saline County 2,306 46 Schuyler County 213 1 Scotland County 233 3 Scott County 3,525 66 Shannon County 416 9 Shelby County 307 4 Stoddard County 2,719 60 Stone County 1,694 25 Sullivan County 671 10 Taney County 3,894 56 Texas County 1,383 19 Vernon County 1,144 24 Warren County 2,103 19 Washington County 1,836 41 Wayne County 687 7 Webster County 2,532 43 Worth County 122 1 Wright County 1,138 24 St. Louis city 16,670 309 Kansas City 31,191 361 Note: Positive cases and deaths reported by the Joplin Health Department are included with the Jasper County Health Department figures.
  19. https://dhhr.wv.gov/COVID-19/Pages/default.aspx
  20. New Hampshire 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Summary Report (data updated as of January 5, 2021- 9:00 AM) https://www.nh.gov/covid19/ Number of Persons with COVID-19 1 47,992 Recovered 40,720 (85%) Deaths Attributed to COVID-19 792 (2%) Total Current COVID-19 Cases 6,480 Persons Who Have Been Hospitalized for COVID-19 918 (2%) Current Hospitalizations 305 Total Persons Tested at Selected Laboratories, Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)2 525,826 Total Persons Tested at Selected Laboratories, Antibody Laboratory Tests2 34,909 Persons with Specimens Submitted to NH PHL 63,920 Persons with Test Pending at NH PHL3 251 1 Includes specimens positive at any laboratory and those confirmed by CDC confirmatory testing.2 Includes specimens tested at the NH Public Health Laboratories (PHL), LabCorp, Quest, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Mako, certain hospital laboratories, the University of New Hampshire and their contracted laboratory, and those sent to CDC prior to NH PHL testing capacity.3 Includes specimens received and awaiting testing at NH PHL. Does not include tests pending at commercial laboratories. Active Cases Data Active Cases Map January 5, 2021 Cumulative Cases Data Cumulative Cases Map January 5, 2021
  21. https://doh.sd.gov/COVID/Dashboard.aspx
  22. https://coronavirus.idaho.gov/
  23. Arkansas (1,369 Total Positive Cases) Ashley (1,326 Total Positive Cases) Baxter (2,233 Total Positive Cases) Benton (19,290 Total Positive Cases) Boone (2,693 Total Positive Cases) Bradley (986 Total Positive Cases) Calhoun (246 Total Positive Cases) Carroll (2,169 Total Positive Cases) Chicot (1,434 Total Positive Cases) Clark (1,438 Total Positive Cases) Clay (1,369 Total Positive Cases) Cleburne (1,359 Total Positive Cases) Cleveland (596 Total Positive Cases) Columbia (1,624 Total Positive Cases) Conway (1,470 Total Positive Cases) Craighead (10,475 Total Positive Cases) Crawford (4,799 Total Positive Cases) Crittenden (4,483 Total Positive Cases) Cross (1,512 Total Positive Cases) Dallas (508 Total Positive Cases) Desha (991 Total Positive Cases) Drew (1,520 Total Positive Cases) Faulkner (8,261 Total Positive Cases) Franklin (1,165 Total Positive Cases) Fulton (931 Total Positive Cases) Garland (6,233 Total Positive Cases) Grant (1,139 Total Positive Cases) Greene (4,626 Total Positive Cases) Hempstead (1,293 Total Positive Cases) Hot Spring (3,749 Total Positive Cases) Howard (1,151 Total Positive Cases) Independence (2,933 Total Positive Cases) Izard (1,388 Total Positive Cases) Jackson (2,859 Total Positive Cases) Jefferson (6,923 Total Positive Cases) Johnson (1,978 Total Positive Cases) Lafayette (353 Total Positive Cases) Lawrence (1,651 Total Positive Cases) Lee (1,482 Total Positive Cases) Lincoln (2,852 Total Positive Cases) Little River (855 Total Positive Cases) Logan (1,535 Total Positive Cases) Lonoke (4,513 Total Positive Cases) Madison (1,081 Total Positive Cases) Marion (678 Total Positive Cases) Miller (2,839 Total Positive Cases) Missing County Info (2,779 Total Positive Cases) Mississippi (4,543 Total Positive Cases) Monroe (517 Total Positive Cases) Montgomery (529 Total Positive Cases) Nevada (612 Total Positive Cases) Newton (579 Total Positive Cases) Ouachita (1,453 Total Positive Cases) Perry (501 Total Positive Cases) Phillips (1,299 Total Positive Cases) Pike (727 Total Positive Cases) Poinsett (2,496 Total Positive Cases) Polk (1,330 Total Positive Cases) Pope (5,830 Total Positive Cases) Prairie (573 Total Positive Cases) Pulaski (26,350 Total Positive Cases) Randolph (1,530 Total Positive Cases) Saline (8,127 Total Positive Cases) Scott (644 Total Positive Cases) Searcy (525 Total Positive Cases) Sebastian (10,312 Total Positive Cases) Sevier (2,130 Total Positive Cases) Sharp (1,219 Total Positive Cases) St. Francis (2,844 Total Positive Cases) Stone (795 Total Positive Cases) Union (2,584 Total Positive Cases) Van Buren (806 Total Positive Cases) Washington (22,733 Total Positive Cases) White (5,209 Total Positive Cases) Woodruff (408 Total Positive Cases) Yell (2,546 Total Positive Cases)
  24. https://oklahoma.gov/covid19.html
  25. https://cvprovider.nmhealth.org/public-dashboard.html
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