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Abbeville Rate (per 100k): 2,319.89 Cases--Confirmed positives: 569, Probable: 64 Deaths--Confirmed: 11, Probable: 2 Aiken Rate (per 100k): 2,381.31 Cases--Confirmed positives: 4,069, Probable: 308 Deaths--Confirmed: 75, Probable: 9 Allendale Rate (per 100k): 4,569.52 Cases--Confirmed positives: 397, Probable: 4 Deaths--Confirmed: 6, Probable: 0 Anderson Rate (per 100k): 2,234.42 Cases--Confirmed positives: 4,526, Probable: 179 Deaths--Confirmed: 166, Probable: 16 Bamberg Rate (per 100k): 4,585.53 Cases--Confirmed positives: 645, Probable: 5 Deaths--Confirmed: 35, Probable: 0 Barnwell Rate (per 100k): 3,460.17 Cases--Confirmed positives: 722, Probable: 32 Deaths--Confirmed: 15, Probable: 1 Beaufort Rate (per 100k): 2,959.58 Cases--Confirmed positives: 5,686, Probable: 60 Deaths--Confirmed: 80, Probable: 3 Berkeley Rate (per 100k): 2,384.31 Cases--Confirmed positives: 5,434, Probable: 110 Deaths--Confirmed: 85, Probable: 4 Calhoun Rate (per 100k): 3,167.73 Cases--Confirmed positives: 461, Probable: 2 Deaths--Confirmed: 16, Probable: 1 Charleston Rate (per 100k): 3,816.91 Cases--Confirmed positives: 15,703, Probable: 300 Deaths--Confirmed: 246, Probable: 20 Cherokee Rate (per 100k): 2,113.44 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,211, Probable: 16 Deaths--Confirmed: 39, Probable: 2 Chester Rate (per 100k): 3,250.22 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,048, Probable: 18 Deaths--Confirmed: 20, Probable: 1 Chesterfield Rate (per 100k): 2,499.45 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,141, Probable: 125 Deaths--Confirmed: 36, Probable: 1 Clarendon Rate (per 100k): 3,253.82 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,098, Probable: 14 Deaths--Confirmed: 65, Probable: 2 Colleton Rate (per 100k): 2,765.61 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,042, Probable: 26 Deaths--Confirmed: 41, Probable: 1 Darlington Rate (per 100k): 2,916.63 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,943, Probable: 169 Deaths--Confirmed: 57, Probable: 2 Dillon Rate (per 100k): 3,510.61 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,070, Probable: 38 Deaths--Confirmed: 37, Probable: 3 Dorchester Rate (per 100k): 2,518.9 Cases--Confirmed positives: 4,101, Probable: 144 Deaths--Confirmed: 88, Probable: 2 Edgefield Rate (per 100k): 2,949.38 Cases--Confirmed positives: 804, Probable: 23 Deaths--Confirmed: 15, Probable: 4 Fairfield Rate (per 100k): 3,374.05 Cases--Confirmed positives: 754, Probable: 28 Deaths--Confirmed: 36, Probable: 1 Florence Rate (per 100k): 3,523.68 Cases--Confirmed positives: 4,873, Probable: 145 Deaths--Confirmed: 191, Probable: 2 Georgetown Rate (per 100k): 2,726.55 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,709, Probable: 207 Deaths--Confirmed: 35, Probable: 10 Greenville Rate (per 100k): 2,821.17 Cases--Confirmed positives: 14,770, Probable: 101 Deaths--Confirmed: 291, Probable: 19 Greenwood Rate (per 100k): 3,136.52 Cases--Confirmed positives: 2,221, Probable: 73 Deaths--Confirmed: 65, Probable: 8 Hampton Rate (per 100k): 3,527.21 Cases--Confirmed positives: 678, Probable: 13 Deaths--Confirmed: 26, Probable: 1 Horry Rate (per 100k): 2,814.05 Cases--Confirmed positives: 9,964, Probable: 610 Deaths--Confirmed: 185, Probable: 18 Jasper Rate (per 100k): 2,736.67 Cases--Confirmed positives: 823, Probable: 2 Deaths--Confirmed: 21, Probable: 1 Kershaw Rate (per 100k): 3,008.22 Cases--Confirmed positives: 2,002, Probable: 84 Deaths--Confirmed: 37, Probable: 1 Lancaster Rate (per 100k): 2,177.28 Cases--Confirmed positives: 2,134, Probable: 98 Deaths--Confirmed: 49, Probable: 4 Laurens Rate (per 100k): 2,535.08 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,711, Probable: 14 Deaths--Confirmed: 55, Probable: 2 Lee Rate (per 100k): 4,201.33 Cases--Confirmed positives: 707, Probable: 12 Deaths--Confirmed: 35, Probable: 0 Lexington Rate (per 100k): 2,457.57 Cases--Confirmed positives: 7,342, Probable: 346 Deaths--Confirmed: 167, Probable: 4 McCormick Rate (per 100k): 2,493.92 Cases--Confirmed positives: 236, Probable: 10 Deaths--Confirmed: 6, Probable: 1 Marion Rate (per 100k): 2,925.92 Cases--Confirmed positives: 897, Probable: 28 Deaths--Confirmed: 28, Probable: 0 Marlboro Rate (per 100k): 3,526.3 Cases--Confirmed positives: 921, Probable: 38 Deaths--Confirmed: 9, Probable: 2 Newberry Rate (per 100k): 3,428.72 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,318, Probable: 58 Deaths--Confirmed: 27, Probable: 1 Oconee Rate (per 100k): 2,342.04 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,863, Probable: 14 Deaths--Confirmed: 26, Probable: 2 Orangeburg Rate (per 100k): 3,620.54 Cases--Confirmed positives: 3,120, Probable: 30 Deaths--Confirmed: 125, Probable: 2 Pickens Rate (per 100k): 2,578.73 Cases--Confirmed positives: 3,272, Probable: 23 Deaths--Confirmed: 43, Probable: 4 Richland Rate (per 100k): 3,576.35 Cases--Confirmed positives: 14,869, Probable: 783 Deaths--Confirmed: 235, Probable: 14 Saluda Rate (per 100k): 3,272.6 Cases--Confirmed positives: 670, Probable: 21 Deaths--Confirmed: 19, Probable: 3 Spartanburg Rate (per 100k): 2,160.83 Cases--Confirmed positives: 6,910, Probable: 246 Deaths--Confirmed: 192, Probable: 13 Sumter Rate (per 100k): 3,043.45 Cases--Confirmed positives: 3,248, Probable: 21 Deaths--Confirmed: 76, Probable: 2 Union Rate (per 100k): 2,207.5 Cases--Confirmed positives: 603, Probable: 9 Deaths--Confirmed: 13, Probable: 0 Williamsburg Rate (per 100k): 3,977.87 Cases--Confirmed positives: 1,208, Probable: 134 Deaths--Confirmed: 36, Probable: 9 York Rate (per 100k): 1,943.21 Cases--Confirmed positives: 5,460, Probable: 153 Deaths--Confirmed: 82, Probable: 1 https://scdhec.gov/infectious-diseases/viruses/coronavirus-disease-2019-covid-19/sc-testing-data-projections-covid-19
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Cumulative Cases and Deaths by County https://msdh.ms.gov/msdhsite/_static/14,0,420.html#caseTable Totals of all reported COVID-19 cases for 2020, including those in long-term care (LTC) facilities. Detailed reporting of long-term care information will resume on Monday. The numbers in this table are provisional. County case numbers and deaths may change as investigation finds new or additional information. The data provided below is the most current available. County Total Cases Total Deaths Adams 967 39 Alcorn 860 11 Amite 355 10 Attala 691 25 Benton 248 3 Bolivar 1902 71 Calhoun 545 12 Carroll 332 12 Chickasaw 718 24 Choctaw 189 6 Claiborne 477 16 Clarke 625 48 Clay 611 20 Coahoma 1189 31 Copiah 1242 33 Covington 845 25 De Soto 5811 70 Forrest 2650 75 Franklin 204 3 George 820 14 Greene 405 17 Grenada 1123 36 Hancock 622 22 Harrison 4077 76 Hinds 7289 163 Holmes 1111 60 Humphreys 382 15 Issaquena 106 3 Itawamba 917 24 Jackson 3739 70 Jasper 601 15 Jefferson 246 10 Jefferson Davis 350 11 Jones 2583 81 Kemper 294 15 Lafayette 2266 41 Lamar 1869 37 Lauderdale 2123 127 Lawrence 443 14 Leake 980 38 Lee 3040 73 Leflore 1463 82 Lincoln 1150 53 Lowndes 1644 58 Madison 3389 90 Marion 887 40 Marshall 1128 22 Monroe 1287 70 Montgomery 490 21 Neshoba 1646 106 Newton 800 25 Noxubee 571 16 Oktibbeha 1850 53 Panola 1546 31 Pearl River 952 54 Perry 441 21 Pike 1260 54 Pontotoc 1328 17 Prentiss 896 19 Quitman 398 5 Rankin 3446 80 Scott 1184 27 Sharkey 268 14 Simpson 1085 47 Smith 553 15 Stone 389 13 Sunflower 1514 47 Tallahatchie 788 24 Tate 1041 38 Tippah 736 18 Tishomingo 724 39 Tunica 505 15 Union 1046 24 Walthall 606 26 Warren 1429 51 Washington 2317 84 Wayne 929 21 Webster 347 13 Wilkinson 309 18 Winston 763 19 Yalobusha 453 14 Yazoo 1083 33 Total 100,488 3,013 Case Classifications Mississippi investigates and reports both probable and confirmed cases and deaths according to the CSTE case definition. Confirmed Probable Total Cases 92,154 8,334 100,488 Deaths 2,765 248 3,013 Confirmed cases and deaths are generally determined by positive PCR tests, which detect the presence of ongoing coronavirus infection. Probable cases are those who test positive by other testing methods such as antibody or antigen, and have recent symptoms consistent with COVID-19, indicating a recent infection. Probable deaths are those individuals with a designation of COVID-19 as a cause of death on the death certificate, but where no confirmatory testing was performed. Deaths from COVID-19 and Other Causes This table of death counts compares COVID-19 deaths in Mississippi by week with deaths from other major causes, including contributing and underlying causes. Mississippi Provisional Death Counts by Week Updated weekly K-12 School Report Mississippi K-12 schools make weekly reports of cases among students, teachers and staff, number of outbreaks, and teachers and students under quarantine as a result of COVID-19 exposure. An outbreak in a school setting is defined as 3 or more individuals diagnosed with COVID-19 in the same group within a 14-day period. Note: These cases have been directly reported to MSDH by each school, and may not yet have appeared in our state and county totals of cases reported by laboratories. K-12 reports of COVID-19 school cases, outbreaks and exposure Updated weekly Long-Term Care Facility Cases and Outbreaks Long-term care (LTC) facilities like nursing homes are considered high risk locations because their residents are older or in poor health. A single confirmed COVID-19 infection in an LTC facility resident, or more than one infection in employees or staff in a 14-day period constitutes an outbreak. Residential care facilities also represent group living facilities where COVID-19 can be easily spread. We investigate residents, staff and close contacts of infected individuals for possible exposure. These outbreak figures are reported directly to MSDH by the facility. Many of the cases and deaths reported by facilities may not yet be included in our totals of lab-reported cases. Mississippi COVID-19 cases and deaths in long-term care facilities PDF Long-term care facilities include nursing homes, personal care homes, assisted living homes, and intermediate care facilities for individuals with intellectual disability (ICF-IID) Mississippi COVID-19 cases and deaths in residential care facilities PDF Residential care facilities include psychiatric or chemical dependency residential treatment centers and long-term acute care facilities. Ongoing Outbreaks in Nursing Homes Because nursing homes report COVID-19 data directly to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS), we have replaced our usual long-term care facility report with the most recent CMS nursing home data, avoiding duplicate reporting requirements for these facilities. Data such as illness in residents and staff, deaths in residents, as well as a number of other data elements are now publicly available on the CMS website. MSDH is providing the following links to view this data, which is reported directly by the Nursing Homes and is updated daily. Note: Cases and deaths listed on the CMS website may not have appeared yet in our county totals, which are based on reports from testing laboratories. Search for nursing home COVID-19 data About the CMS COVID-19 dataset CMS state and national COVID-19 nursing home data Mississippi COVID-19 Data Charts and Map Detailed charts of COVID-19 cases, deaths and hospitalizations will resume on Monday. All data reports below are updated as they become available. Hospitalizations and Bed Availability Interactive chart of hospitalizations by date Interactive chart of local and state hospital bed availability Daily Statewide Data Charts Our state case map and other data charts are also available in interactive form. View interactive map View interactive epidemiological trend and syndromic surveillance The charts below are based on available data at the time of publication. Charts do not include cases where insufficient details of the case are known. Note: Values up to two weeks in the past on the chart of Cases by Date above can change as we update it with new information from disease investigation. Weekly Statewide Data Summaries Weekly Pediatric MIS-C Cases and Deaths Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) is a rare but serious condition associated with COVID-19 that causes inflammation in many body parts, including the heart and other vital organs. Weekly High Case and High Incidence Counties Tracking counties with recent high numbers of COVID-19 cases, adjusted for population, provides insight on where local outbreaks are most serious, and where protective measures should be increased. For more accurate reporting, these weekly charts include sample collection dates only up to seven days in the past to allow for case investigation and delays in lab test reports. Cases counts in these charts is based on the date of illness onset. If the date of illness is not known, the date the test sample was taken, or the date of test result reporting is used instead. Counts are adjusted as cases are investigated. Counties are ranked by highest weekly case counts, and by weekly incidence (cases proportional to population). A separate table ranking all counties is also available. All tables updated weekly. Full tables of counties ranked by weekly incidence and cases PDF Syndromic Surveillance Emergency department visits by those with symptoms characteristic of COVID-19, influenza and pneumonia, updated weekly. Estimated Recoveries Presumed COVID-19 cases recovered, estimated weekly (does not include cases still under investigation). U.S. and World Cases COVID-19 cases in the United States (CDC) U.S. COVID-19 Tracker (CDC) COVID-19 Global Case Map (Johns Hopkins University) COVID-19 Testing Statewide Combined Testing as of September 27 COVID-19 testing providers around the state include commercial laboratories as well as hospital labs. Combined with testing done by the MSDH Public Health Laboratory, the figures provide a complete picture of all Mississippi testing. Updated weekly. PCR testing detects current, active COVID-19 infection in an individual. Antibody (serology) testing identifies individuals with past COVID-19 infection based on antibodies they develop one to three weeks after infection. Antigen testing is another way to identify current COVID-19 infection. Total tests PCR Antibody Antigen MSDH Public Health Laboratory 110,105 108,865 1,240 0 Other testing providers 713,080 619,654 37,480 55,946 Total tests for COVID-19 statewide 823,185 728,519 38,720 55,946 MSDH Individuals Tested as of October 3 MSDH Public Health Laboratory (MPHL) testing totals as of 3 p.m. These totals are for tests performed at the MPHL only. Total individuals tested by the MPHL: 81,563 Total positive individuals from MPHL tests: 8,863
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https://www.azdhs.gov/preparedness/epidemiology-disease-control/infectious-disease-epidemiology/covid-19/dashboards/index.php
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There are 136,462 confirmed COVID-19 patients in Missouri, including 2,303 deaths. https://www.kshb.com/news/coronavirus/covid-19-case-tracker-where-we-stand-in-mo-ks-nationwide Adair County 373 0 Andrew County 428 3 Atchison County 61 0 Audrain County 740 5 Barry County 579 6 Barton County 237 0 Bates County 152 3 Benton County 374 5 Bollinger County 429 1 Boone County 4,845 12 Buchanan County 2,189 35 Butler County 821 8 Caldwell County 112 1 Callaway County 718 3 Camden County 1,096 16 Cape Girardeau County 2,005 32 Carroll County 135 2 Carter County 107 3 Cass County 1,677 26 Cedar County 143 0 Chariton County 52 0 Christian County 1,692 6 Clark County 73 0 Clay County 1,862 41 Clinton County 262 0 Cole County 1,721 14 Cooper County 471 2 Crawford County 421 5 Dade County 80 0 Dallas County 207 1 Daviess County 144 1 DeKalb County 159 2 Dent County 144 2 Douglas County 229 3 Dunklin County 915 10 Franklin County 1,905 32 Gasconade County 165 22 Gentry County 132 9 Greene County 7,287 87 Grundy County 207 4 Harrison County 129 1 Henry County 241 5 Hickory County 117 3 Holt County 92 1 Howard County 185 2 Howell County 751 3 Iron County 59 0 Jackson County 7,688 103 Jasper County 4,198 60 Jefferson County 4,737 66 Johnson County 1,336 6 Knox County 55 1 Laclede County 760 9 Lafayette County 594 17 Lawrence County 716 4 Lewis County 120 2 Lincoln County 858 3 Linn County 121 1 Livingston County 430 3 McDonald County 1,170 12 Macon County 165 0 Madison County 305 1 Maries County 89 0 Marion County 708 14 Mercer County 31 0 Miller County 554 2 Mississippi County 394 6 Moniteau County 385 5 Monroe County 91 1 Montgomery County 87 1 Morgan County 413 2 New Madrid County 590 16 Newton County 1,707 23 Nodaway County 801 10 Oregon County 141 0 Osage County 184 1 Ozark County 136 1 Pemiscot County 593 12 Perry County 685 7 Pettis County 1,210 20 Phelps County 507 12 Pike County 251 5 Platte County 792 12 Polk County 719 3 Pulaski County 1,111 8 Putnam County 32 1 Ralls County 154 0 Randolph County 298 2 Ray County 183 2 Reynolds County 41 0 Ripley County 141 1 St. Charles County 8,250 129 St. Clair County 74 0 Ste. Genevieve County 241 1 St. Francois County 2,407 14 St. Louis County 24,994 819 Saline County 845 12 Schuyler County 27 0 Scotland County 38 1 Scott County 983 17 Shannon County 136 1 Shelby County 72 1 Stoddard County 638 18 Stone County 509 6 Sullivan County 221 0 Taney County 1,376 36 Texas County 376 2 Vernon County 219 1 Warren County 543 1 Washington County 472 11 Wayne County 231 0 Webster County 754 5 Worth County 21 0 Wright County 417 0 St. Louis city 7,159 213 Kansas City 12,255 143 TBD TOTALS 136462 2303
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Colorado COVID Cases Increase To 72,555 Deaths To 2,060
niman posted a topic in Colorado (2019-nCoV)
https://covid19.colorado.gov/data -
New Tests Administered 26,111 06/28/2020 ... 10/02/2020 10,193 New Individuals Tested New Positive Cases 1,429 09/10/2020 ... 10/02/2020 Positivity - All Tests 4.4 %7-Day Rate 09/20/2020 ... 09/26/2020 5.8 % cumulative rate New Deaths 13 08/01/2020 ... 10/02/2020 Total Confirmed COVID-19 Counts Total Tests Administered 2,140,897 02/26/2020 ... 10/01/2020 1,408,475 Individuals Tested Total Positive Cases 124,059 03/06/2020 ... 10/02/2020 Positivity - Unique Individuals 7.7 %7-Day Rate 09/20/2020 ... 09/26/2020 8.8 % cumulative rate Total Deaths 3,442 03/15/2020 ... 10/01/2020 https://www.coronavirus.in.gov/
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https://coronavirus.ohio.gov/wps/portal/gov/covid-19/home
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Number of confirmed cases : 126,819 Number of persons tested negative : 1,522,906 Total testing volume : 2,688,866 Number of confirmed deaths : 3,813 Number of probable deaths : 144 Currently hospitalized : 323 Acute care : 245 Intensive care : 78 Ever hospitalized : 15,670 Released from isolation : 7,652 https://coronavirus.maryland.gov/ Cases and Deaths Data Breakdown: Parenthesis = Confirmed death, laboratory-confirmed positive COVID-19 test result Asterisk = Probable death, death certificate lists COVID-19 as the cause of death but not yet confirmed by a laboratory test NH = Non-Hispanic By County County Cases Deaths Allegany 492 (23) Anne Arundel 10,323 (240) 12* Baltimore City 15,898 (469) 17* Baltimore County 18,285 (609) 23* Calvert 1,001 (27) 1* Caroline 662 (7) Carroll 2,000 (123) 3* Cecil 1,118 (34) 1* Charles 2,841 (99) 2* Dorchester 613 (10) Frederick 4,175 (125) 8* Garrett 76 (1) Harford 3,124 (72) 4* Howard 5,217 (117) 6* Kent 308 (22) 2* Montgomery 22,893 (809) 40* Prince George's 29,905 (805) 23* Queen Anne's 677 (25) 1* St. Mary's 1,337 (57) Somerset 295 (4) Talbot 577 (6) Washington 1,857 (39) Wicomico 2,056 (49) Worcester 1,089 (29) 1* Data not available (12) By Age Range and Gender Age/Gender Cases Deaths 0-9 4,751 10-19 10,858 (2) 20-29 24,012 (23) 1* 30-39 22,859 (48) 6* 40-49 20,196 (123) 3* 50-59 18,490 (312) 15* 60-69 12,368 (628) 13* 70-79 7,374 (947) 28* 80+ 5,911 (1,728) 78* Data not available (2) Female 66,904 (1,864) 75* Male 59,915 (1,949) 69* By Race and Ethnicity Race/Ethnicity Cases Deaths African-American (NH) 39,985 (1,559) 54* Asian (NH) 2,395 (145) 6* White (NH) 32,140 (1,614) 72* Hispanic 27,257 (441) 12* Other (NH) 5,828 (41) Data not available 19,214 (13)
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https://dph.georgia.gov/covid-19-daily-status-report
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Harris County 146,234 Dallas County 82,918 Bexar County 47,566 Tarrant County 47,411 Hidalgo County 32,406 Travis County 29,647 El Paso County 25,206 Cameron County 22,946 Fort Bend County 16,572 Nueces County 15,992 Collin County 15,548 Webb County 14,090 Lubbock County 12,398 Denton County 12,383 Galveston County 11,757 Brazoria County 11,539 Montgomery County 11,032 Williamson County 8,706 McLennan County 8,334 Jefferson County 7,585 Brazos County 6,567 Potter County 6,127 Hays County 5,951 Bell County 5,623 Ellis County 4,482 Victoria County 4,100 Midland County 3,943 Smith County 3,876 Walker County 3,749 Maverick County 3,712 Guadalupe County 3,643 Starr County 3,451 Kaufman County 3,202 Randall County 3,193 Ector County 3,192 Johnson County 3,169 Anderson County 2,821 Comal County 2,754 Tom Green County 2,303 Gregg County 2,291 Val Verde County 2,232 Liberty County 2,231 Angelina County 2,189 Parker County 2,040 Orange County 2,005 Grayson County 1,964 Hale County 1,940 Wichita County 1,930 Bastrop County 1,864 Coryell County 1,839 Bee County 1,838 Hunt County 1,689 Rockwall County 1,680 Nacogdoches County 1,643 Caldwell County 1,628 Cherokee County 1,571 Taylor County 1,537 Jim Wells County 1,523 San Patricio County 1,501 Titus County 1,480 Bowie County 1,439 Wharton County 1,380 Chambers County 1,377 Hardin County 1,358 Navarro County 1,317 Lamar County 1,251 Medina County 1,226 Willacy County 1,206 Moore County 1,185 Atascosa County 1,166 Grimes County 1,091 Gonzales County 1,063 Matagorda County 1,052 Kleberg County 1,018 Lavaca County 1,010 Henderson County 1,006 Hood County 1,002 DeWitt County 996 Frio County 984 Rusk County 965 Karnes County 944 Harrison County 922 Howard County 917 Wilson County 913 Deaf Smith County 906 Erath County 892 Polk County 873 Waller County 873 Calhoun County 831 Uvalde County 797 Wise County 784 Burnet County 771 Scurry County 759 Madison County 728 Hill County 710 Fannin County 701 Washington County 646 Jackson County 614 Kerr County 606 Van Zandt County 595 Palo Pinto County 594 Brown County 592 Limestone County 588 Jones County 568 Wood County 540 Milam County 511 Austin County 498 Fayette County 495 Colorado County 489 Dawson County 487 Shelby County 485 Jasper County 483 Cooke County 461 Andrews County 457 Duval County 453 Parmer County 443 Freestone County 420 Upshur County 402 Panola County 396 Pecos County 392 Cass County 387 Hopkins County 385 Houston County 384 Zavala County 377 Live Oak County 374 Hockley County 373 Gaines County 371 Camp County 363 Burleson County 354 Bosque County 351 La Salle County 349 Lamb County 346 Young County 346 Kendall County 343 Aransas County 335 Zapata County 335 Gray County 332 Robertson County 326 Brooks County 325 Gillespie County 321 Comanche County 310 Refugio County 310 Falls County 306 Runnels County 279 Nolan County 273 Terry County 269 Castro County 263 Dallam County 261 Lampasas County 261 Dimmit County 258 Leon County 257 Yoakum County 250 Hutchinson County 233 Lee County 230 Tyler County 230 Bailey County 228 San Jacinto County 227 Brewster County 220 Reeves County 212 Wilbarger County 212 San Augustine County 207 Trinity County 198 Eastland County 191 Morris County 191 Montague County 190 Newton County 182 McCulloch County 168 Red River County 167 Crockett County 164 Bandera County 160 Goliad County 156 Hamilton County 154 Marion County 152 Somervell County 148 Blanco County 145 Hansford County 145 Ochiltree County 144 Hartley County 141 Jack County 140 Llano County 138 Stephens County 138 Ward County 137 Concho County 136 Franklin County 136 Winkler County 120 Real County 118 Floyd County 112 Jim Hogg County 111 Lynn County 109 Swisher County 107 Garza County 105 Knox County 103 Callahan County 98 Mitchell County 98 Presidio County 97 Crosby County 89 Reagan County 89 Archer County 88 Sutton County 84 Hemphill County 83 Sabine County 82 Clay County 81 Coleman County 80 Mason County 79 Martin County 78 Childress County 75 Crane County 72 Rains County 72 Haskell County 71 Fisher County 68 San Saba County 68 Edwards County 67 Donley County 66 Sherman County 66 Hudspeth County 62 Mills County 61 Cochran County 59 Culberson County 55 Coke County 53 Schleicher County 53 Dickens County 50 Wheeler County 50 Kinney County 47 Lipscomb County 36 Hall County 35 Carson County 31 Cottle County 30 Delta County 29 Menard County 29 Shackelford County 28 Hardeman County 25 Upton County 25 McMullen County 24 Baylor County 20 Collingsworth County 19 Oldham County 19 Foard County 18 Kimble County 17 Stonewall County 16 Briscoe County 15 Jeff Davis County 14 Armstrong County 13 Irion County 12 Roberts County 12 Motley County 10 Glasscock County 9 Kent County 9 Throckmorton County 8 Kenedy County 7 Sterling County 5 Terrell County 3 Borden County 1 https://txdshs.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/ed483ecd702b4298ab01e8b9cafc8b83
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Confirmed Cases 300,088 Confirmed Deaths 8,774 Total Tests Performed* 5,834,762 Recovery Rate** 96% *Total nucleic acid-based tests performed and reported electronically for testing of COVID-19 at IDPH, commercial or hospital laboratories. All numbers displayed are provisional and will change. http://www.dph.illinois.gov/covid19 ** Recovered cases are defined as persons with initial positive specimen collection date > 42 days who have not expired. Recovery rate is calculated as the recovered cases divided by the sum of recovered cases and deceased cases. Information regarding the number of persons under investigation updated on 10/3/2020. Information to be updated daily. Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Probable Cases and Deaths Probable Cases 2,739 Probable Deaths 249 Information regarding the number of probable cases and deaths updated on 10/2/2020 Information updated weekly each friday.
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Ocean County 203 New Positives 985 Confirmed Deaths 14,100 Positive Test Results 65 Probable Deaths Middlesex County 100 New Positives 1,228 Confirmed Deaths 19,858 Positive Test Results 202 Probable Deaths Monmouth County 93 New Positives 776 Confirmed Deaths 12,171 Positive Test Results 92 Probable Deaths Hudson County 64 New Positives 1,359 Confirmed Deaths 20,869 Positive Test Results 160 Probable Deaths Essex County 62 New Positives 1,900 Confirmed Deaths 21,260 Positive Test Results 229 Probable Deaths Bergen County 60 New Positives 1,804 Confirmed Deaths 22,692 Positive Test Results 241 Probable Deaths Camden County 55 New Positives 559 Confirmed Deaths 10,085 Positive Test Results 53 Probable Deaths Passaic County 50 New Positives 1,115 Confirmed Deaths 19,210 Positive Test Results 141 Probable Deaths Union County 47 New Positives 1,190 Confirmed Deaths 17,832 Positive Test Results 167 Probable Deaths Atlantic County 37 New Positives 245 Confirmed Deaths 4,203 Positive Test Results 11 Probable Deaths Burlington County 33 New Positives 461 Confirmed Deaths 7,281 Positive Test Results 41 Probable Deaths Morris County 27 New Positives 686 Confirmed Deaths 7,967 Positive Test Results 144 Probable Deaths Gloucester County 25 New Positives 223 Confirmed Deaths 4,772 Positive Test Results 7 Probable Deaths Mercer County 24 New Positives 601 Confirmed Deaths 8,711 Positive Test Results 35 Probable Deaths Somerset County 21 New Positives 503 Confirmed Deaths 5,892 Positive Test Results 74 Probable Deaths Hunterdon County 13 New Positives 71 Confirmed Deaths 1,382 Positive Test Results 54 Probable Deaths Sussex County 12 New Positives 161 Confirmed Deaths 1,538 Positive Test Results 36 Probable Deaths Cape May County 7 New Positives 88 Confirmed Deaths 1,043 Positive Test Results 9 Probable Deaths Cumberland County 3 New Positives 152 Confirmed Deaths 3,812 Positive Test Results 8 Probable Deaths Warren County 3 New Positives 158 Confirmed Deaths 1,456 Positive Test Results 13 Probable Deaths Salem County 2 New Positives 83 Confirmed Deaths 1,088 Positive Test Results 5 Probable Deaths https://www.nj.gov/health/cd/topics/covid2019_dashboard.shtml
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By Los Angeles Times Staff Updated Oct. 3, 10:49 p.m. Pacific 829,563 confirmed cases +2,988 on Saturday 16,121 deaths +48 on Saturday The COVID-19 pandemic has spread rapidly across California. Experts say the true number of people infected is unknown and likely much higher than official tallies. To better understand the spread of the virus, The Times is conducting an independent, continual survey of dozens of local health agencies across the state. What we know Officials point to positive signs. State and local officials see signs of hope in the recent drops in new cases and hospitalizations. The death toll keeps climbing. The state has averaged 76.3 deaths per day over the last seven days. Fewer tests are coming back positive. The statewide positivity rate has decreased to 2.6%. Most of the state is still on lockdown. The governor’s new system rates 18 counties as too risky to reopen. Together they're home to 43% of the population. Disparities in age and race persist. Roughly 74% of the dead were 65 or older. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 3.4 times more likely than whites to test positive. California counties +Other trackers +More coverage + Jump to a section Totals Hotspots Maps Hospitals Tests Demographics Nursing homes 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 169.8 days, a number used to measure how quickly the virus is spreading. CasesDeaths Cumulative cases Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.0200,000400,000600,000800,000Stay athome orderStay athome orderGovernoreases limitsGovernoreases limits829,563Oct. 3 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 3,159 new cases and 76.3 new deaths per day. New cases by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.02,0004,0006,0008,00010,00012,00014,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverageData collectionerrors reportedData collectionerrors reported Deaths by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.0501001502007-dayaverage7-dayaverage The lines above are seven-day averages. They offer a more stable view of the trend than daily totals. The gray range marks 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 counties to determine when and how businesses reopen. After adjusting for population, the virus is now categorized as widespread in 18 counties, keeping those areas largely locked down. Together they are home to 43% of California residents. The government doesn't release enough data to replicate its analysis, but the rate of new cases over the last seven days provides some insight into where the virus is spreading. Metric CasesDeaths Counties ranked by new cases per 100,000 residents 1. Imperial 117.6 cases per 100k in last 7 days117.6 cases per 100k in last 7 days7-day average │March 1Oct. 4 2. Tehama 116.8116.87-day average │March 1Oct. 4 3. Madera 103.9103.97-day average │March 1Oct. 4 4. Monterey 98.898.87-day average │March 1Oct. 4 5. Shasta 98.398.37-day average │March 1Oct. 4 6. Tulare 93.293.27-day average │March 1Oct. 4 7. Glenn 89.689.67-day average │March 1Oct. 4 8. Sonoma 85.885.87-day average │March 1Oct. 4 9. Kings 80.680.67-day average │March 1Oct. 4 10. San Bernardino 76.176.17-day average │March 1Oct. 4 11. Riverside 73.773.77-day average │March 1Oct. 4 12. Trinity 70707-day average │March 1Oct. 4 13. Fresno 67.167.17-day average │March 1Oct. 4 14. Los Angeles 66.166.17-day average │March 1Oct. 4 15. Lake 65.565.57-day average │March 1Oct. 4 16. Mendocino 65.265.27-day average │March 1Oct. 4 17. Merced 59.859.87-day average │March 1Oct. 4 18. San Diego 56.656.67-day average │March 1Oct. 4 19. Kern 56.256.27-day average │March 1Oct. 4 20. Ventura 53.653.67-day average │March 1Oct. 4 21. Contra Costa 51.851.87-day average │March 1Oct. 4 22. San Luis Obispo 50.150.17-day average │March 1Oct. 4 23. Santa Cruz 49.749.77-day average │March 1Oct. 4 24. Stanislaus 48.448.47-day average │March 1Oct. 4 25. Solano 48.148.17-day average │March 1Oct. 4 26. Santa Barbara 47.847.87-day average │March 1Oct. 4 27. San Mateo 47.547.57-day average │March 1Oct. 4 28. Napa 47477-day average │March 1Oct. 4 29. Yuba 46.446.47-day average │March 1Oct. 4 30. Sutter 44.944.97-day average │March 1Oct. 4 31. Sacramento 44.544.57-day average │March 1Oct. 4 32. Colusa 41.941.97-day average │March 1Oct. 4 33. Orange 40.740.77-day average │March 1Oct. 4 34. San Joaquin 39.739.77-day average │March 1Oct. 4 35. San Francisco 38.838.87-day average │March 1Oct. 4 36. El Dorado 38387-day average │March 1Oct. 4 37. San Benito 37377-day average │March 1Oct. 4 38. Santa Clara 36.636.67-day average │March 1Oct. 4 39. Yolo 33.533.57-day average │March 1Oct. 4 40. Alameda 29.729.77-day average │March 1Oct. 4 41. Butte 29.129.17-day average │March 1Oct. 4 42. Mono 28.228.27-day average │March 1Oct. 4 43. Del Norte 25.525.57-day average │March 1Oct. 4 44. Inyo 22.122.17-day average │March 1Oct. 4 45. Marin 21.921.97-day average │March 1Oct. 4 46. Placer 16167-day average │March 1Oct. 4 47. Calaveras 15.515.57-day average │March 1Oct. 4 48. Amador 13.213.27-day average │March 1Oct. 4 49. Humboldt 12.512.57-day average │March 1Oct. 4 50. Nevada 10.110.17-day average │March 1Oct. 4 51. Lassen 6.46.47-day average │March 1Oct. 4 52. Mariposa 5.75.77-day average │March 1Oct. 4 53. Tuolumne 5.65.67-day average │March 1Oct. 4 54. Plumas 5.35.37-day average │March 1Oct. 4 55. Siskiyou 4.64.67-day average │March 1Oct. 4 56. Alpine 007-day average │March 1Oct. 4 57. Modoc 007-day average │March 1Oct. 4 58. Sierra 007-day average │March 1Oct. 4 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 you live? See how the governor has rated your area, 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 cases1709001.4k2.1k3k5.1k6.7k Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingReddingFresnoFresno Cumulative totals County Cases Per 100k Saturday Deaths Per 100k Saturday Imperial » 12,047 6,684.8 +45 326 180.9 +3 Kings » 7,682 5,118.8 – 80 53.3 – Kern » 32,443 3,674 +100 386 43.7 +5 Tulare » 16,399 3,561.3 – 265 57.5 – Merced » 9,033 3,357.1 – 145 53.9 – Stanislaus » 16,703 3,097.2 +75 370 68.6 +2 Madera » 4,642 2,994.6 – 70 45.2 – Fresno » 28,855 2,950 +59 399 40.8 – San Joaquin » 20,485 2,797.7 – 470 64.2 – Los Angeles » 273,699 2,710.4 +1,040 6,642 65.8 +16 San Bernardino » 56,011 2,623 +340 962 45 – Marin » 6,773 2,602 +11 119 45.7 – Riverside » 59,934 2,514.8 – 1,231 51.7 – Colusa » 538 2,506.5 – 6 28 – Monterey » 10,312 2,380.4 +93 75 17.3 +1 Lassen » 742 2,379.3 – 0 0 – San Benito » 1,362 2,292.3 +4 11 18.5 – Glenn » 603 2,161.5 – 3 10.8 – Santa Barbara » 9,249 2,084.3 – 115 25.9 – Sutter » 1,748 1,823.3 – 11 11.5 – Orange » 54,357 1,717.9 +239 1,286 40.6 +5 Yuba » 1,188 1,573.7 – 9 11.9 – Sonoma » 7,799 1,555.7 – 122 24.3 – Ventura » 12,943 1,526.1 – 153 18 – Contra Costa » 17,159 1,514.1 +90 211 18.6 – Sacramento » 22,855 1,513.6 – 430 28.5 – Solano » 6,520 1,486.8 – 71 16.2 – San Diego » 48,200 1,459.4 +409 798 24.2 +4 Yolo » 2,867 1,333.6 +20 56 26 +1 San Mateo » 10,207 1,332.6 +81 152 19.8 – Alameda » 21,625 1,315.6 +117 426 25.9 +6 San Francisco » 11,414 1,311.9 +54 107 12.3 – San Luis Obispo » 3,685 1,309.3 – 31 11 – Butte » 2,840 1,250.7 – 45 19.8 – Napa » 1,734 1,233.9 – 12 8.5 – Mono » 169 1,192.3 – 2 14.1 – Santa Clara » 21,734 1,130.7 +129 333 17.3 +3 Mendocino » 988 1,130.2 – 19 21.7 – Inyo » 191 1,056.1 – 15 82.9 – Tehama » 618 975.2 +13 7 11 +1 Placer » 3,628 954.5 – 49 12.9 – Santa Cruz » 2,494 911 +13 12 4.4 – Lake » 581 905.7 – 11 17.1 – Calaveras » 324 716.3 – 14 30.9 – Amador » 259 684.7 – 15 39.7 – El Dorado » 1,180 632.2 – 4 2.1 – Nevada » 543 548 – 7 7.1 – Del Norte » 146 532.4 – 1 3.6 – Shasta » 953 532.1 – 22 12.3 – Mariposa » 76 433.3 – 2 11.4 – Tuolumne 230 426.5 – 4 7.4 – Siskiyou » 167 383.6 – 1 2.3 – Humboldt » 518 381.5 – 8 5.9 – Modoc » 27 302.1 – 0 0 – Plumas » 51 272.7 – 0 0 – Sierra » 6 204.8 – 0 0 – Trinity » 25 194.4 +9 0 0 – Alpine » 2 174.5 – 0 0 – Show less Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 1,075 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, Del Norte, Glenn, Inyo, Lake, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoc, San Benito, Sierra, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity and Tuolumne Filter by countyAlameda Amador Butte Calaveras Contra Costa El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Imperial Kern Kings 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 Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Tulare Ventura Yolo Yuba Search by name Area Confirmed cases East Los Angeles 6,434 Pomona 5,623 South Gate 4,535 El Monte 4,437 Boyle Heights 4,338 Palmdale 4,250 Downey 4,224 Compton 4,110 North Hollywood 4,035 Glendale 3,885 Santa Clarita 3,594 Pacoima 3,567 Lancaster 3,560 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone 3,494 Lynwood 3,392 Sylmar 3,353 Norwalk 3,346 Van Nuys 3,097 Baldwin Park 3,078 Vernon Central 3,047 Panorama City 3,023 Huntington Park 3,000 West Covina 2,963 Inglewood 2,923 90805: Long Beach 2,882 Pasadena 2,616 Pico Rivera 2,471 Paramount 2,449 Westlake 2,428 Wholesale District 2,428 Bellflower 2,426 West Vernon 2,396 Montebello 2,362 Florence-Firestone 2,361 Whittier 2,308 Reseda 2,232 Central 2,197 Castaic 2,095 90813: Long Beach 2,083 South Park 2,065 Bell Gardens 2,018 Watts 1,976 Hawthorne 1,975 Melrose 1,970 San Pedro 1,970 Canoga Park 1,949 Vermont Vista 1,934 North Hills 1,882 Carson 1,871 South Whittier 1,847 Pico-Union 1,830 Wilmington 1,811 Sun Valley 1,703 Harvard Park 1,658 Bell 1,641 Burbank 1,621 Azusa 1,577 Athens-Westmont 1,560 La Puente 1,553 Century Palms/Cove 1,510 Arleta 1,487 Willowbrook 1,483 Maywood 1,463 Northridge 1,463 Torrance 1,460 Covina 1,447 90806: Long Beach 1,397 Exposition Park 1,360 Lakewood 1,322 Alhambra 1,298 Winnetka 1,285 Gardena 1,275 Glendora 1,272 El Sereno 1,268 Temple-Beaudry 1,258 Hollywood 1,241 Granada Hills 1,240 Koreatown 1,197 University Park 1,166 Highland Park 1,135 Wilshire Center 1,122 Cudahy 1,120 Sherman Oaks 1,116 Lincoln Heights 1,092 90810: Long Beach 1,084 Lake Balboa 1,081 Hacienda Heights 1,064 90804: Long Beach 1,033 Harbor Gateway 1,008 West Whittier/Los Nietos 998 90802: Long Beach 996 Monterey Park 985 San Fernando 969 Green Meadows 956 Woodland Hills 947 West Adams 904 Santa Monica 896 La Mirada 868 Rosemead 843 Downtown 836 Mission Hills 813 Hyde Park 812 South El Monte 809 Monrovia 771 Valinda 762 San Jose Hills 753 Altadena 738 Vermont Knolls 725 Walnut Park 724 Glassell Park 718 Lennox 711 Beverly Hills 702 Rowland Heights 696 Chatsworth 691 East Rancho Dominguez 690 Tarzana 689 Eagle Rock 685 Valley Glen 682 90815: Long Beach 681 Bassett 672 San Gabriel 661 East Hollywood 644 Lawndale 643 Silver Lake 632 Encino 628 Baldwin Hills 623 90807: Long Beach 615 Commerce 596 Duarte 587 West Hollywood 584 Cerritos 579 Santa Fe Springs 576 Harvard Heights 571 Lakeview Terrace 570 Redondo Beach 570 Mt. Washington 563 Diamond Bar 559 Palms 559 West Hills 552 San Dimas 542 Hawaiian Gardens 539 Valley Village 539 Temple City 538 Tujunga 533 Unincorporated - Azusa 523 Arcadia 518 West Los Angeles 513 Harbor City 511 Little Bangladesh 501 La Verne 495 90808: Long Beach 482 Sunland 474 Unincorporated - Covina 461 Historic Filipinotown 449 West Carson 449 90803: Long Beach 428 Westchester 428 Westwood 405 West Puente Valley 400 Little Armenia 399 Claremont 397 Culver City 396 Porter Ranch 394 Artesia 384 Alsace 381 Country Club Park 381 Manhattan Beach 369 Del Rey 365 Northeast San Gabriel 349 Vermont Square 349 Mar Vista 330 Covina (Charter Oak) 320 Leimert Park 320 Figueroa Park Square 317 Rancho Palos Verdes 315 Crenshaw District 306 Hollywood Hills 305 Cloverdale/Cochran 303 Avocado Heights 300 Brentwood 300 Venice 300 South Pasadena 292 Mid-city 284 Signal Hill 283 Walnut 281 Calabasas 279 Adams-Normandie 272 Elysian Valley 267 Echo Park 261 90814: Long Beach 260 Gramercy Place 255 Jefferson Park 255 Studio City 255 Athens Village 245 Lomita 243 Atwater Village 242 Hancock Park 241 Lake Los Angeles 241 Carthay 224 Hermosa Beach 222 Victoria Park 219 North Whittier 217 Los Feliz 216 La Crescenta-Montrose 209 Crestview 196 Manchester Square 195 Agoura Hills 188 La Canada Flintridge 185 Miracle Mile 184 Quartz Hill 183 South San Gabriel 175 Stevenson Ranch 172 Beverlywood 168 Sun Village 167 Thai Town 167 St Elmo Village 155 Unincorporated - Duarte 154 El Camino Village 148 View Park/Windsor Hills 147 Canyon Country 145 Playa Vista 143 Pacific Palisades 134 Cadillac-Corning 133 El Segundo 132 Beverly Crest 131 Wiseburn 129 South Carthay 126 Wellington Square 126 Chinatown 120 Santa Monica Mountains 120 Century City 119 Reseda Ranch 119 Longwood 117 Park La Brea 111 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez 110 Toluca Lake 108 Malibu 104 East La Mirada 102 Palos Verdes Estates 102 Ladera Heights 99 Elysian Park 98 Bel Air 95 Unincorporated - Arcadia 95 East Whittier 94 Littlerock/Pearblossom 94 Little Tokyo 93 San Marino 92 Unincorporated - South El Monte 92 Rancho Park 90 Littlerock 85 Lafayette Square 84 East Pasadena 83 Cheviot Hills 82 Unincorporated - Monrovia 82 Exposition 81 La Rambla 80 Val Verde 80 Sierra Madre 78 Angelino Heights 76 Del Aire 76 Rancho Dominguez 74 Acton 73 Marina del Rey 72 Unincorporated - Whittier 70 Irwindale 68 Shadow Hills 67 Unincorporated - Hawthorne 60 University Hills 54 Sunrise Village 53 Desert View Highlands 49 Valencia 47 View Heights 46 La Habra Heights 45 Unincorporated - West LA 45 White Fence Farms 45 Rolling Hills Estates 44 Kagel/Lopez Canyons 39 Reynier Village 39 Marina Peninsula 38 Faircrest Heights 37 Industry 36 Unincorporated - La Verne 34 Westlake Village 34 Pellissier Village 32 Rosewood 32 Palisades Highlands 30 Regent Square 30 Rosewood/East Gardena 30 Playa Del Rey 29 Agua Dulce 28 Saugus 28 Mandeville Canyon 27 Santa Catalina Island 25 Harbor Pines 24 Lake Manor 24 Pearblossom/Llano 24 Toluca Terrace 23 Unincorporated - Claremont 23 Toluca Woods 22 West Rancho Dominguez 22 Unincorporated - Palmdale 21 Leona Valley 20 Del Sur 19 North Lancaster 19 Unincorporated - Cerritos 18 Anaverde 17 Unincorporated - Pomona 16 Bradbury 14 Newhall 14 Southeast Antelope Valley 14 Unincorporated - Glendora 13 Rolling Hills 12 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain 12 Vernon 12 Littlerock/Juniper Hills 11 Roosevelt 11 San Pasqual 10 Bouquet Canyon 9 Hidden Hills 9 Westhills 9 Hi Vista 8 Westfield/Academy Hills 8 Elizabeth Lake 7 Sand Canyon 7 Sycamore Square 7 Avalon 6 South Antelope Valley 6 Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest 6 Unincorporated - El Monte 6 Saugus/Canyon Country 5 Unincorporated - La Habra Heights 5 West Antelope Valley 5 East Covina 4 Lake Hughes 4 Unincorporated - Bradbury 4 Brookside 3 Llano 3 Padua Hills 3 Palos Verdes Peninsula 3 Unincorporated - Del Rey 3 Whittier Narrows 3 Angeles National Forest 2 Show less Hospitals and patients Lockdown measures aim to slow the virus in hope of preventing hospitals from being overrun. To keep tabs on capacity, officials watch out for rapid increases in the number of patients. There are now 2,287 hospital patients statewide with a confirmed case, a change of -14% from two weeks ago. ConfirmedSuspectedBoth Intensive care and other hospitalized patients AprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.02,0004,0006,0008,000 California Department of Public Health Confirmed patients County ICU Other Total Los Angeles » 188 485 673 San Diego » 77 126 203 San Bernardino » 41 123 164 Orange » 47 113 160 Riverside » 39 96 135 Fresno » 22 75 97 Sacramento » 32 64 96 Santa Clara » 34 48 82 Alameda » 27 49 76 Kern » 16 47 63 Stanislaus » 19 36 55 San Francisco » 16 39 55 San Joaquin » 13 26 39 Ventura » 15 24 39 Tulare » 6 29 35 Contra Costa » 10 21 31 Monterey » 7 23 30 San Mateo » 10 19 29 Imperial » 7 19 26 Solano » 3 19 22 Santa Cruz » 6 16 22 Sonoma » 5 16 21 Santa Barbara » 5 14 19 Placer » 5 13 18 Kings » 1 12 13 Merced » 3 6 9 Napa » 3 5 8 Mendocino » 3 5 8 Madera » 1 6 7 Marin » 2 5 7 Yuba » 2 5 7 Butte » 3 4 7 Shasta » 0 7 7 Tehama » 1 4 5 Colusa » 0 4 4 Yolo » 1 3 4 Nevada » 1 2 3 San Luis Obispo » 0 2 2 Humboldt » 1 1 2 San Benito » 1 0 1 Lake » 0 1 1 Amador » 0 1 1 El Dorado » 0 1 1 Lassen » 0 0 0 Glenn » 0 0 0 Sutter » 0 0 0 Mono » 0 0 0 Inyo » 0 0 0 Calaveras » 0 0 0 Del Norte » 0 0 0 Mariposa » 0 0 0 Tuolumne 0 0 0 Siskiyou » 0 0 0 Modoc » 0 0 0 Plumas » 0 0 0 Trinity » 0 0 0 Show less Officials also closely monitor the number of beds open in intensive-care units. In late July, the state changed its tracking method to exclude beds that are only for infants from the count. Available ICU beds AprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.01,0002,0003,0004,0005,000State changestracking methodState changestracking method2,772Oct. 2 California Department of Public Health Testing After a fitful start, California has increased coronavirus testing in the state. Over the last week, an average of 116,594 tests have been conducted each day. New tests by day MayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.050,000100,000150,000200,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage California Department of Public Health In the last seven days, about 2.6% of the 816,158 tests conducted have returned a positive result. Positive test rate, seven-day average MayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.0%2%4%6%8%10%2.6%Oct. 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 883 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 3.4 times more likely to test positive than white people. Cumulative cases by race per 100,000 people JuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.05001,0001,5002,000AsianAsianBlackBlackLatino2,270 casesper 100,000Latino2,270 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 7,659 48.5% 36.3% White 4,727 30.0% 38.8% Asian 1,928 12.2% 16.5% Black 1,201 7.6% 6.1% Note: There are 151 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 coronavirus outbreak. Residents and staff have accounted for 7% the state's COVID-19 cases, but 36% of its deaths. CasesDeaths Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere JuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.02,0004,0006,0008,00010,00012,00014,00016,00018,000 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. California in context To date, the United States has recorded 7,378,065 coronavirus cases and 209,314 deaths. In the last week, the country has averaged 43,155 new cases and 698 deaths per day. While California — America’s most populous state — leads the nation in cases, it ranks much lower after adjusting for population. Home to 12% of the country's population, thus far it has accounted for roughly 11% of cases. New cases in California vs. the rest of the country MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.020,00040,00060,00080,000 Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey State Cases Per 100k New cases FewerMore California 829,561 2,119 Mar 1Oct 3 Texas 787,425 2,823.8 Florida 714,591 3,469.2 New York 463,360 2,361.9 Georgia 322,169 3,128.6 Illinois 302,782 2,361.5 Arizona 220,399 3,172.7 North Carolina 216,886 2,135.6 New Jersey 207,576 2,337.1 Tennessee 199,595 3,000.9 Louisiana 167,401 3,589.5 Pennsylvania 166,238 1,299.6 Alabama 158,380 3,255.7 Ohio 157,966 1,356.9 South Carolina 150,891 3,044.7 Virginia 150,583 1,789.7 Michigan 141,271 1,418.7 Massachusetts 134,303 1,966.3 Missouri 132,630 2,177.8 Wisconsin 130,798 2,263.6 Maryland 126,819 2,112.4 Indiana 124,059 1,869.1 Minnesota 102,787 1,859.6 Mississippi 100,167 3,351.5 Iowa 92,301 2,946.6 Oklahoma 90,748 2,316.1 Washington 89,419 1,225.9 Arkansas 86,525 2,893.2 Nevada 81,708 2,795.5 Utah 76,225 2,503 Colorado 72,533 1,311.4 Kentucky 72,001 1,621.6 Kansas 60,725 2,087.6 Connecticut 58,297 1,627.7 Puerto Rico 50,375 1,487.3 Nebraska 47,403 2,488.7 Idaho 43,702 2,589.3 Oregon 34,511 845.5 New Mexico 30,296 1,447.9 Rhode Island 25,076 2,373.2 South Dakota 23,986 2,775.2 North Dakota 23,134 3,075.5 Delaware 21,125 2,224.9 West Virginia 16,481 901.1 District of Columbia 15,326 2,239 Montana 14,356 1,378.1 Hawaii 12,734 895.5 New Hampshire 8,597 639.8 Alaska 8,217 1,112.6 Wyoming 6,365 1,094 Maine 5,484 411.5 Vermont 1,778 284.5 Show less The same is true for deaths. So far, California has accounted for 8% of deaths nationwide. It still trails far behind New York, where deaths surged in the early days of the pandemic. New deaths in California vs. the rest of the country MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.05001,0001,5002,0002,500 Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey State Deaths Per 100k New deaths FewerMore New York 33,197 169.2 Mar 1Oct 3 Texas 16,295 58.4 New Jersey 16,135 181.7 California 16,121 41.2 Florida 14,628 71 Massachusetts 9,507 139.2 Illinois 9,023 70.4 Pennsylvania 8,180 64 Georgia 7,133 69.3 Michigan 7,124 71.5 Arizona 5,705 82.1 Louisiana 5,545 118.9 Ohio 4,925 42.3 Connecticut 4,513 126 Maryland 3,957 65.9 Indiana 3,669 55.3 North Carolina 3,629 35.7 South Carolina 3,442 69.5 Virginia 3,267 38.8 Mississippi 3,011 100.7 Tennessee 2,560 38.5 Alabama 2,558 52.6 Missouri 2,177 35.7 Washington 2,142 29.4 Minnesota 2,126 38.5 Colorado 2,060 37.2 Nevada 1,620 55.4 Arkansas 1,407 47 Iowa 1,381 44.1 Wisconsin 1,372 23.7 Kentucky 1,205 27.1 Rhode Island 1,118 105.8 Oklahoma 1,051 26.8 New Mexico 890 42.5 Kansas 690 23.7 Puerto Rico 681 20.1 Delaware 645 67.9 District of Columbia 627 91.6 Oregon 571 14 Nebraska 497 26.1 Idaho 480 28.4 Utah 476 15.6 New Hampshire 442 32.9 West Virginia 363 19.8 North Dakota 271 36 South Dakota 248 28.7 Montana 186 17.9 Hawaii 153 10.8 Maine 142 10.7 Alaska 58 7.9 Vermont 58 9.3 Wyoming 53 9.1 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 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 a 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 California's Department of Public Health. 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. 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. 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 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/
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Florida COVID Cases Increase To 786,834 Deaths To 14,803
niman posted a topic in Florida (2019-nCoV)
https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/d2726d6c01c4486181fec2d4373b01fa -
CASES 158,380 TOTAL STATEWIDE 139,726 CONFIRMED 18,654 PROBABLE LAST 14 DAYS 14,902 CASES 106,214 TESTED (DIAGNOSTIC) *TOTAL HOSPITALIZATIONS To Date Updates M-F at 3 p.m. 17,420 STATEWIDE DEATHS 2,558 TOTAL STATEWIDE 2,416 CONFIRMED 142 PROBABLE TOTAL TESTED 1,156,045 DIAGNOSTIC 59,075 ANTIBODY PRESUMED RECOVERIES Updated Weekly 67,948 STATEWIDE https://alpublichealth.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/6d2771faa9da4a2786a509d82c8cf0f7
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Interviews On Novel 2019-nCoV Coronavirus In Wuhan
niman replied to niman's topic in Interviews (COVID)
Oct 2 http://mediaarchives.gsradio.net/rense/special/rense_100220_hr3.mp3 -
y Los Angeles Times Staff Updated Oct. 2, 11:01 p.m. Pacific 826,577 confirmed cases +3,938 on Friday 16,073 deaths +83 on Friday The COVID-19 pandemic has spread rapidly across California. Experts say the true number of people infected is unknown and likely much higher than official tallies. To better understand the spread of the virus, The Times is conducting an independent, continual survey of dozens of local health agencies across the state. What we know Officials point to positive signs. State and local officials see signs of hope in the recent drops in new cases and hospitalizations. The death toll keeps climbing. The state has averaged 76.7 deaths per day over the last seven days. More tests are coming back positive. The statewide positivity rate has held steady at 2.8%. Most of the state is still on lockdown. The governor’s new system rates 18 counties as too risky to reopen. Together they're home to 43% of the population. Disparities in age and race persist. Roughly 74% of the dead were 65 or older. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 3.4 times more likely than whites to test positive. California counties +Other trackers +More coverage + Jump to a section Totals Hotspots Maps Hospitals Tests Demographics Nursing homes 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 175.9 days, a number used to measure how quickly the virus is spreading. CasesDeaths Cumulative cases Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.0200,000400,000600,000800,000Stay athome orderStay athome orderGovernoreases limitsGovernoreases limits826,577Oct. 2 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 3,212 new cases and 76.7 new deaths per day. New cases by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.02,0004,0006,0008,00010,00012,00014,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverageData collectionerrors reportedData collectionerrors reported Deaths by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.0501001502007-dayaverage7-dayaverage The lines above are seven-day averages. They offer a more stable view of the trend than daily totals. The gray range marks 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 counties to determine when and how businesses reopen. After adjusting for population, the virus is now categorized as widespread in 18 counties, keeping those areas largely locked down. Together they are home to 43% of California residents. The government doesn't release enough data to replicate its analysis, but the rate of new cases over the last seven days provides some insight into where the virus is spreading. Metric CasesDeaths Counties ranked by new cases per 100,000 residents 1. Imperial 122.6 cases per 100k in last 7 days122.6 cases per 100k in last 7 days7-day average │March 1Oct. 3 2. Tehama 104.1104.17-day average │March 1Oct. 3 3. Madera 103.9103.97-day average │March 1Oct. 3 4. Shasta 98.398.37-day average │March 1Oct. 3 5. Monterey 95.195.17-day average │March 1Oct. 3 6. San Bernardino 93.893.87-day average │March 1Oct. 3 7. Tulare 93.293.27-day average │March 1Oct. 3 8. Mendocino 91.591.57-day average │March 1Oct. 3 9. Glenn 89.689.67-day average │March 1Oct. 3 10. Sonoma 86.286.27-day average │March 1Oct. 3 11. Kings 80.680.67-day average │March 1Oct. 3 12. Riverside 73.773.77-day average │March 1Oct. 3 13. Fresno 70.570.57-day average │March 1Oct. 3 14. Los Angeles 67.867.87-day average │March 1Oct. 3 15. Lake 65.565.57-day average │March 1Oct. 3 16. Merced 59.859.87-day average │March 1Oct. 3 17. Santa Cruz 55.255.27-day average │March 1Oct. 3 18. San Diego 54.254.27-day average │March 1Oct. 3 19. Kern 54.154.17-day average │March 1Oct. 3 20. Ventura 53.653.67-day average │March 1Oct. 3 21. Contra Costa 52.952.97-day average │March 1Oct. 3 22. San Luis Obispo 50.150.17-day average │March 1Oct. 3 23. Solano 48.148.17-day average │March 1Oct. 3 24. Santa Barbara 47.847.87-day average │March 1Oct. 3 25. Napa 47477-day average │March 1Oct. 3 26. Yuba 46.446.47-day average │March 1Oct. 3 27. San Benito 45.445.47-day average │March 1Oct. 3 28. Sutter 44.944.97-day average │March 1Oct. 3 29. San Mateo 44.544.57-day average │March 1Oct. 3 30. Sacramento 44.544.57-day average │March 1Oct. 3 31. Colusa 41.941.97-day average │March 1Oct. 3 32. San Joaquin 39.739.77-day average │March 1Oct. 3 33. Orange 38.438.47-day average │March 1Oct. 3 34. El Dorado 38387-day average │March 1Oct. 3 35. Santa Clara 37.637.67-day average │March 1Oct. 3 36. San Francisco 37377-day average │March 1Oct. 3 37. Stanislaus 35.635.67-day average │March 1Oct. 3 38. Alameda 29.229.27-day average │March 1Oct. 3 39. Butte 29.129.17-day average │March 1Oct. 3 40. Mono 28.228.27-day average │March 1Oct. 3 41. Yolo 27277-day average │March 1Oct. 3 42. Marin 26.926.97-day average │March 1Oct. 3 43. Del Norte 25.525.57-day average │March 1Oct. 3 44. Placer 22.622.67-day average │March 1Oct. 3 45. Inyo 22.122.17-day average │March 1Oct. 3 46. Calaveras 15.515.57-day average │March 1Oct. 3 47. Amador 13.213.27-day average │March 1Oct. 3 48. Humboldt 12.512.57-day average │March 1Oct. 3 49. Nevada 10.110.17-day average │March 1Oct. 3 50. Lassen 6.46.47-day average │March 1Oct. 3 51. Mariposa 5.75.77-day average │March 1Oct. 3 52. Tuolumne 5.65.67-day average │March 1Oct. 3 53. Plumas 5.35.37-day average │March 1Oct. 3 54. Siskiyou 4.64.67-day average │March 1Oct. 3 55. Alpine 007-day average │March 1Oct. 3 56. Modoc 007-day average │March 1Oct. 3 57. Sierra 007-day average │March 1Oct. 3 58. Trinity 007-day average │March 1Oct. 3 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 you live? See how the governor has rated your area, 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 cases1209001.4k2.1k2.9k5.1k6.7k Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingReddingFresnoFresno Cumulative totals County Cases Per 100k Friday Deaths Per 100k Friday Imperial » 12,002 6,659.8 +9 323 179.2 – Kings » 7,682 5,118.8 – 80 53.3 – Kern » 32,343 3,662.6 +159 381 43.1 +10 Tulare » 16,399 3,561.3 +77 265 57.5 +2 Merced » 9,033 3,357.1 +14 145 53.9 – Stanislaus » 16,628 3,083.3 +55 368 68.2 +3 Madera » 4,642 2,994.6 +28 70 45.2 +2 Fresno » 28,796 2,944 +90 399 40.8 +9 San Joaquin » 20,485 2,797.7 +28 470 64.2 +4 Los Angeles » 272,659 2,700.1 +1,216 6,626 65.6 +13 San Bernardino » 55,671 2,607 +277 962 45 +7 Marin » 6,764 2,598.6 +13 119 45.7 – Riverside » 59,934 2,514.8 +446 1,231 51.7 +5 Colusa » 538 2,506.5 – 6 28 – Lassen » 742 2,379.3 – 0 0 – Monterey » 10,219 2,358.9 +38 74 17.1 – San Benito » 1,358 2,285.6 +3 11 18.5 – Glenn » 603 2,161.5 +5 3 10.8 – Santa Barbara » 9,249 2,084.3 +26 115 25.9 – Sutter » 1,748 1,823.3 +15 11 11.5 – Orange » 54,118 1,710.3 +209 1,281 40.5 +6 Yuba » 1,188 1,573.7 +5 9 11.9 +1 Sonoma » 7,752 1,546.3 +84 122 24.3 – Ventura » 12,943 1,526.1 +76 153 18 +1 Sacramento » 22,855 1,513.6 +100 430 28.5 +4 Contra Costa » 17,069 1,506.2 +96 211 18.6 +2 Solano » 6,520 1,486.8 +45 71 16.2 – San Diego » 47,791 1,447 +306 794 24 +2 Yolo » 2,847 1,324.3 +11 55 25.6 – San Mateo » 10,126 1,322 +57 152 19.8 +2 San Luis Obispo » 3,685 1,309.3 +36 31 11 – Alameda » 21,508 1,308.5 +50 420 25.6 – San Francisco » 11,360 1,305.7 +28 107 12.3 +1 Butte » 2,840 1,250.7 +16 45 19.8 – Napa » 1,734 1,233.9 +7 12 8.5 – Mono » 169 1,192.3 +2 2 14.1 – Mendocino » 988 1,130.2 +17 19 21.7 – Santa Clara » 21,605 1,124 +148 330 17.2 +5 Inyo » 191 1,056.1 +1 15 82.9 – Tehama » 605 954.7 +10 6 9.5 +1 Placer » 3,628 954.5 +11 49 12.9 +1 Santa Cruz » 2,481 906.3 +54 12 4.4 – Lake » 581 905.7 +12 11 17.1 – Calaveras » 324 716.3 +2 14 30.9 – Amador » 259 684.7 – 15 39.7 – El Dorado » 1,180 632.2 +22 4 2.1 – Nevada » 543 548 – 7 7.1 – Del Norte » 146 532.4 +2 1 3.6 – Shasta » 953 532.1 +26 22 12.3 +2 Mariposa » 76 433.3 – 2 11.4 – Tuolumne 230 426.5 +1 4 7.4 – Siskiyou » 167 383.6 +1 0 0 – Humboldt » 518 381.5 +3 8 5.9 – Modoc » 27 302.1 – 0 0 – Plumas » 51 272.7 +1 0 0 – Sierra » 6 204.8 – 0 0 – Alpine » 2 174.5 – 0 0 – Trinity » 16 124.4 – 0 0 – Show less Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 1,075 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, Del Norte, Glenn, Inyo, Lake, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoc, San Benito, Sierra, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity and Tuolumne Filter by countyAlameda Amador Butte Calaveras Contra Costa El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Imperial Kern Kings 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 Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Tulare Ventura Yolo Yuba Search by name Area Confirmed cases East Los Angeles 6,419 Pomona 5,608 South Gate 4,522 El Monte 4,423 Boyle Heights 4,322 Palmdale 4,225 Downey 4,207 Compton 4,105 North Hollywood 4,006 Glendale 3,854 Santa Clarita 3,575 Pacoima 3,548 Lancaster 3,536 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone 3,479 Lynwood 3,378 Sylmar 3,337 Norwalk 3,334 Van Nuys 3,076 Baldwin Park 3,068 Vernon Central 3,033 Panorama City 3,003 Huntington Park 2,995 West Covina 2,955 Inglewood 2,910 90805: Long Beach 2,866 Pasadena 2,605 Pico Rivera 2,464 Paramount 2,444 Wholesale District 2,421 Bellflower 2,419 Westlake 2,418 West Vernon 2,391 Florence-Firestone 2,355 Montebello 2,351 Whittier 2,297 Reseda 2,222 Central 2,195 Castaic 2,091 90813: Long Beach 2,073 South Park 2,060 Bell Gardens 2,008 Watts 1,977 Hawthorne 1,968 Melrose 1,967 San Pedro 1,962 Canoga Park 1,943 Vermont Vista 1,932 Carson 1,867 North Hills 1,867 South Whittier 1,838 Pico-Union 1,823 Wilmington 1,807 Sun Valley 1,702 Harvard Park 1,653 Bell 1,635 Burbank 1,613 Azusa 1,570 Athens-Westmont 1,557 La Puente 1,544 Century Palms/Cove 1,509 Arleta 1,485 Willowbrook 1,481 Northridge 1,460 Maywood 1,458 Torrance 1,455 Covina 1,443 90806: Long Beach 1,395 Exposition Park 1,352 Lakewood 1,319 Alhambra 1,292 Winnetka 1,278 Gardena 1,273 Glendora 1,270 El Sereno 1,262 Temple-Beaudry 1,255 Hollywood 1,236 Granada Hills 1,231 Koreatown 1,192 University Park 1,178 Highland Park 1,126 Cudahy 1,119 Wilshire Center 1,119 Sherman Oaks 1,107 Lincoln Heights 1,087 90810: Long Beach 1,080 Lake Balboa 1,068 Hacienda Heights 1,061 90804: Long Beach 1,026 Harbor Gateway 1,007 West Whittier/Los Nietos 995 90802: Long Beach 993 Monterey Park 981 San Fernando 961 Green Meadows 954 Woodland Hills 941 West Adams 903 Santa Monica 894 La Mirada 864 Rosemead 842 Downtown 833 Hyde Park 812 Mission Hills 810 South El Monte 808 Monrovia 766 Valinda 761 San Jose Hills 749 Altadena 730 Vermont Knolls 722 Walnut Park 722 Glassell Park 717 Lennox 708 Beverly Hills 701 Rowland Heights 691 East Rancho Dominguez 690 Chatsworth 688 Tarzana 684 90815: Long Beach 681 Eagle Rock 681 Valley Glen 680 Bassett 668 San Gabriel 658 Lawndale 642 East Hollywood 641 Silver Lake 631 Baldwin Hills 622 Encino 621 90807: Long Beach 613 Commerce 596 West Hollywood 580 Duarte 578 Cerritos 577 Santa Fe Springs 575 Harvard Heights 568 Lakeview Terrace 564 Redondo Beach 564 Mt. Washington 560 Diamond Bar 559 Palms 556 West Hills 550 San Dimas 541 Hawaiian Gardens 538 Temple City 537 Valley Village 536 Tujunga 527 Unincorporated - Azusa 521 Arcadia 514 Harbor City 510 West Los Angeles 508 Little Bangladesh 501 La Verne 490 90808: Long Beach 481 Sunland 470 Unincorporated - Covina 459 West Carson 449 Historic Filipinotown 447 Westchester 426 90803: Long Beach 423 Westwood 402 West Puente Valley 400 Little Armenia 398 Culver City 396 Claremont 391 Porter Ranch 388 Artesia 383 Alsace 379 Country Club Park 372 Manhattan Beach 365 Del Rey 361 Northeast San Gabriel 348 Vermont Square 346 Mar Vista 327 Leimert Park 319 Covina (Charter Oak) 318 Figueroa Park Square 315 Rancho Palos Verdes 314 Crenshaw District 306 Hollywood Hills 305 Cloverdale/Cochran 303 Avocado Heights 300 Venice 299 Brentwood 298 South Pasadena 289 Mid-city 283 Signal Hill 281 Walnut 280 Calabasas 277 Adams-Normandie 269 Elysian Valley 266 90814: Long Beach 261 Echo Park 259 Jefferson Park 255 Gramercy Place 254 Studio City 254 Athens Village 245 Atwater Village 242 Lake Los Angeles 241 Lomita 241 Hancock Park 239 Carthay 221 Victoria Park 219 Hermosa Beach 217 North Whittier 216 Los Feliz 214 La Crescenta-Montrose 206 Manchester Square 195 Crestview 193 La Canada Flintridge 185 Miracle Mile 184 Quartz Hill 183 South San Gabriel 175 Stevenson Ranch 171 Beverlywood 168 Sun Village 166 Agoura Hills 164 Thai Town 161 St Elmo Village 155 Unincorporated - Duarte 154 El Camino Village 148 View Park/Windsor Hills 145 Canyon Country 143 Playa Vista 143 Pacific Palisades 134 Cadillac-Corning 133 El Segundo 132 Beverly Crest 129 Wiseburn 129 South Carthay 126 Wellington Square 126 Chinatown 120 Santa Monica Mountains 120 Century City 119 Reseda Ranch 118 Longwood 117 Park La Brea 111 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez 110 Toluca Lake 108 Malibu 104 East La Mirada 102 Palos Verdes Estates 101 Ladera Heights 99 Elysian Park 98 Bel Air 95 Littlerock/Pearblossom 94 Unincorporated - Arcadia 94 Little Tokyo 93 East Whittier 92 San Marino 91 Unincorporated - South El Monte 91 Rancho Park 90 Littlerock 85 Lafayette Square 84 East Pasadena 83 Cheviot Hills 82 Unincorporated - Monrovia 82 Exposition 81 La Rambla 78 Sierra Madre 78 Val Verde 78 Angelino Heights 76 Del Aire 76 Rancho Dominguez 74 Acton 73 Marina del Rey 72 Unincorporated - Whittier 70 Irwindale 68 Shadow Hills 67 Unincorporated - Hawthorne 60 Sunrise Village 53 University Hills 53 Desert View Highlands 49 Valencia 47 View Heights 46 White Fence Farms 45 La Habra Heights 44 Unincorporated - West LA 44 Rolling Hills Estates 43 Kagel/Lopez Canyons 39 Reynier Village 39 Faircrest Heights 37 Marina Peninsula 37 Industry 36 Unincorporated - La Verne 34 Westlake Village 34 Rosewood 32 Pellissier Village 31 Regent Square 30 Rosewood/East Gardena 30 Palisades Highlands 29 Playa Del Rey 29 Agua Dulce 28 Saugus 28 Mandeville Canyon 27 Santa Catalina Island 25 Lake Manor 24 Pearblossom/Llano 24 Unincorporated - Claremont 24 Harbor Pines 23 Toluca Terrace 23 West Rancho Dominguez 22 Toluca Woods 21 Unincorporated - Palmdale 21 Leona Valley 20 Del Sur 19 North Lancaster 19 Unincorporated - Cerritos 18 Anaverde 16 Unincorporated - Pomona 16 Bradbury 14 Newhall 14 Southeast Antelope Valley 14 Unincorporated - Glendora 13 Rolling Hills 12 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain 12 Vernon 12 Littlerock/Juniper Hills 11 Roosevelt 11 San Pasqual 10 Bouquet Canyon 9 Westhills 9 Hi Vista 8 Hidden Hills 8 Westfield/Academy Hills 8 Elizabeth Lake 7 Sand Canyon 7 Sycamore Square 7 Avalon 6 South Antelope Valley 6 Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest 6 Unincorporated - El Monte 6 West Antelope Valley 5 East Covina 4 Lake Hughes 4 Saugus/Canyon Country 4 Unincorporated - Bradbury 4 Unincorporated - La Habra Heights 4 Brookside 3 Llano 3 Padua Hills 3 Palos Verdes Peninsula 3 Unincorporated - Del Rey 3 Whittier Narrows 3 Angeles National Forest 2 Show less Hospitals and patients Lockdown measures aim to slow the virus in hope of preventing hospitals from being overrun. To keep tabs on capacity, officials watch out for rapid increases in the number of patients. There are now 2,339 hospital patients statewide with a confirmed case, a change of -13% from two weeks ago. ConfirmedSuspectedBoth Intensive care and other hospitalized patients AprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.02,0004,0006,0008,000 California Department of Public Health Confirmed patients County ICU Other Total Los Angeles » 202 496 698 San Diego » 73 113 186 Orange » 48 127 175 San Bernardino » 43 130 173 Riverside » 39 91 130 Sacramento » 29 79 108 Fresno » 19 75 94 Alameda » 28 66 94 Santa Clara » 28 56 84 San Francisco » 14 45 59 Show all Officials also closely monitor the number of beds open in intensive-care units. In late July, the state changed its tracking method to exclude beds that are only for infants from the count. Available ICU beds AprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.01,0002,0003,0004,0005,000State changestracking methodState changestracking method2,776Oct. 1 California Department of Public Health Testing After a fitful start, California has increased coronavirus testing in the state. Over the last week, an average of 116,598 tests have been conducted each day. New tests by day MayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.050,000100,000150,000200,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage California Department of Public Health In the last seven days, about 2.8% of the 816,184 tests conducted have returned a positive result. Positive test rate, seven-day average MayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.0%2%4%6%8%10%2.8%Oct. 2 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 890 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 3.4 times more likely to test positive than white people. Cumulative cases by race per 100,000 people JuneJulyAug.Sept.05001,0001,5002,000AsianAsianBlackBlackLatino2,262 casesper 100,000Latino2,262 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 7,638 48.4% 36.3% White 4,721 29.9% 38.8% Asian 1,925 12.2% 16.5% Black 1,205 7.6% 6.1% Note: There are 147 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 coronavirus outbreak. Residents and staff have accounted for 7% the state's COVID-19 cases, but 36% of its deaths. CasesDeaths Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere JuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.02,0004,0006,0008,00010,00012,00014,00016,00018,000 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. California in context To date, the United States has recorded 7,328,725 coronavirus cases and 208,640 deaths. In the last week, the country has averaged 42,452 new cases and 705 deaths per day. While California — America’s most populous state — leads the nation in cases, it ranks much lower after adjusting for population. Home to 12% of the country's population, thus far it has accounted for roughly 11% of cases. New cases in California vs. the rest of the country MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.020,00040,00060,00080,000 Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey State Cases Per 100k New cases FewerMore California 826,577 2,111.4 Mar 1Oct 2 Texas 782,306 2,805.5 Florida 711,804 3,455.7 New York 461,629 2,353 Georgia 320,634 3,113.7 Illinois 300,340 2,342.5 Arizona 219,763 3,163.6 North Carolina 214,684 2,113.9 New Jersey 206,629 2,326.4 Tennessee 198,403 2,983 Louisiana 167,401 3,589.5 Pennsylvania 166,238 1,299.6 Ohio 156,809 1,346.9 Alabama 156,698 3,221.1 Virginia 149,490 1,776.7 South Carolina 149,185 3,010.2 Michigan 139,996 1,405.9 Massachusetts 133,631 1,956.5 Missouri 130,981 2,150.7 Wisconsin 127,906 2,213.5 Maryland 126,222 2,102.5 Indiana 122,640 1,847.7 Minnesota 101,366 1,833.9 Mississippi 99,558 3,331.1 Iowa 91,482 2,920.4 Oklahoma 89,559 2,285.8 Washington 88,810 1,217.5 Arkansas 85,779 2,868.2 Nevada 81,182 2,777.5 Utah 75,157 2,467.9 Colorado 71,876 1,299.5 Kentucky 70,727 1,592.9 Kansas 60,468 2,078.8 Connecticut 58,297 1,627.7 Puerto Rico 49,747 1,468.8 Nebraska 46,977 2,466.3 Idaho 43,238 2,561.8 Oregon 34,163 836.9 New Mexico 30,000 1,433.7 Rhode Island 25,076 2,373.2 South Dakota 23,522 2,721.5 North Dakota 22,694 3,017 Delaware 20,937 2,205.1 West Virginia 16,307 891.6 District of Columbia 15,326 2,239 Montana 13,855 1,330 Hawaii 12,601 886.1 New Hampshire 8,534 635.1 Alaska 8,073 1,093.1 Wyoming 6,214 1,068 Maine 5,466 410.1 Vermont 1,768 282.9 Show less The same is true for deaths. So far, California has accounted for 8% of deaths nationwide. It still trails far behind New York, where deaths surged in the early days of the pandemic. New deaths in California vs. the rest of the country MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.05001,0001,5002,0002,500 Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey State Deaths Per 100k New deaths FewerMore New York 33,199 169.2 Mar 1Oct 2 Texas 16,224 58.2 New Jersey 16,131 181.6 California 16,073 41.1 Florida 14,554 70.7 Massachusetts 9,490 138.9 Illinois 8,992 70.1 Pennsylvania 8,162 63.8 Michigan 7,110 71.4 Georgia 7,106 69 Arizona 5,693 82 Louisiana 5,545 118.9 Ohio 4,905 42.1 Connecticut 4,513 126 Maryland 3,950 65.8 Indiana 3,656 55.1 North Carolina 3,608 35.5 South Carolina 3,409 68.8 Virginia 3,247 38.6 Mississippi 2,999 100.3 Alabama 2,550 52.4 Tennessee 2,515 37.8 Missouri 2,146 35.2 Washington 2,143 29.4 Minnesota 2,112 38.2 Colorado 2,057 37.2 Nevada 1,609 55 Arkansas 1,391 46.5 Iowa 1,377 44 Wisconsin 1,353 23.4 Kentucky 1,197 27 Rhode Island 1,118 105.8 Oklahoma 1,044 26.6 New Mexico 887 42.4 Kansas 688 23.7 Puerto Rico 673 19.9 Delaware 642 67.6 District of Columbia 627 91.6 Oregon 563 13.8 Nebraska 493 25.9 Utah 474 15.6 Idaho 474 28.1 New Hampshire 442 32.9 West Virginia 361 19.7 North Dakota 264 35.1 South Dakota 237 27.4 Montana 186 17.9 Hawaii 142 10 Maine 141 10.6 Vermont 58 9.3 Alaska 57 7.7 Wyoming 53 9.1 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 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 a 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 California's Department of Public Health. 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. 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. 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 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/