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niman

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  1. Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Illinois Confirmed Cases 190,508 Confirmed Deaths 7,613 Total Tests Performed* 2,984,618 Recovery Rate** 95% *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. ** 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 8/7/2020. Information to be updated daily. Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Probable Cases and Deaths Probable Cases 1,300 Probable Deaths 209 Information regarding the number of probable cases and deaths updated on 8/7/2020 Information updated weekly each friday.
  2. Cumulative Cases and Deaths by County Totals of all reported COVID-19 cases for 2020, including those in long-term care (LTC) facilities. 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 Total LTC Facility Cases Total LTC Facility Deaths Adams 610 25 46 12 Alcorn 397 5 1 1 Amite 225 6 13 2 Attala 515 25 89 20 Benton 142 0 1 0 Bolivar 1093 33 47 9 Calhoun 407 9 23 4 Carroll 260 11 45 9 Chickasaw 450 19 35 11 Choctaw 131 4 0 0 Claiborne 398 13 43 9 Clarke 325 25 19 9 Clay 392 14 2 1 Coahoma 715 11 33 2 Copiah 945 28 30 4 Covington 610 13 4 1 De Soto 3574 30 44 7 Forrest 1758 55 101 32 Franklin 119 2 3 1 George 549 4 1 0 Greene 236 11 35 6 Grenada 838 21 76 12 Hancock 373 14 8 4 Harrison 2406 35 141 15 Hinds 5544 117 265 52 Holmes 873 48 97 20 Humphreys 283 11 19 6 Issaquena 25 1 0 0 Itawamba 348 10 34 7 Jackson 2225 42 68 7 Jasper 381 9 1 0 Jefferson 194 6 8 1 Jefferson Davis 228 6 3 1 Jones 1850 58 169 35 Kemper 227 14 38 9 Lafayette 956 15 84 12 Lamar 1192 14 4 2 Lauderdale 1397 90 205 56 Lawrence 312 7 13 0 Leake 786 25 4 0 Lee 1383 33 83 15 Leflore 907 62 184 42 Lincoln 796 41 119 28 Lowndes 1058 37 71 20 Madison 2396 64 180 32 Marion 643 20 15 2 Marshall 674 9 14 1 Monroe 769 52 146 43 Montgomery 315 3 0 0 Neshoba 1284 92 108 35 Newton 537 11 7 1 Noxubee 448 11 16 3 Oktibbeha 1096 38 176 25 Panola 1026 12 7 1 Pearl River 529 37 57 15 Perry 223 7 0 0 Pike 896 35 72 17 Pontotoc 809 8 5 1 Prentiss 403 10 25 3 Quitman 252 1 0 0 Rankin 2251 32 96 10 Scott 995 20 15 3 Sharkey 194 4 12 2 Simpson 786 30 32 14 Smith 397 13 54 8 Stone 186 4 4 2 Sunflower 992 24 13 3 Tallahatchie 522 10 7 2 Tate 705 27 33 12 Tippah 342 13 0 0 Tishomingo 363 5 30 0 Tunica 322 6 12 2 Union 601 16 26 8 Walthall 491 19 65 9 Warren 1033 32 94 15 Washington 1606 40 46 13 Wayne 753 21 57 10 Webster 225 12 52 11 Wilkinson 201 13 8 3 Winston 611 16 40 11 Yalobusha 312 10 35 7 Yazoo 815 12 21 2 Total 65,436 1,848 3,889 810 Case Classifications Mississippi investigates and reports both probable and confirmed cases and deaths according to the CSTE case definition. Confirmed Probable Total Cases 64,295 1,141 65,436 Deaths 1,793 55 1,848 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. Long-Term Care Facility Cases and Outbreaks Based on updated national guidelines, the MSDH Office of Epidemiology has modified the definition of COVID-19 outbreaks in Long-Term Care Facilities (LTCF). Beginning August 1, 2020, a single case of COVID-19 in only one employee or staff member will no longer constitute an outbreak. Updated COVID-19 outbreak definition in LTCFs: A single confirmed COVID-19 infection in an LTCF resident, or more than one COVID-19 infection in employees or staff in a 14-day period. This change will affect the number of outbreaks reported in long-term care facilities from August 1 forward. One case of COVID-19 in an employee of a LTCF will still prompt an investigation by MSDH. Long-term care (LTC) facilities like nursing homes are considered high risk locations because their residents are older or in poor health. We investigate residents, staff and close contacts of infected individuals for possible exposure. Residential care facilities also represent group living facilities where COVID-19 can be easily spread. 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. Active Outbreaks The table of active outbreaks lists all facilities that have reported a current COVID-19 outbreak. Resident and employee totals are for those cases associated with the current outbreak only. The reported deaths are those which have occurred only among the cases in the current outbreak. Mississippi long-term care facilities with active COVID-19 outbreaks PDF As of July 31, 2020 Mississippi COVID-19 Data Charts and Map All data reports below are updated as they become available. Updates are made daily except where noted. Hospitalizations and Bed Availability Interactive chart of hospitalizations by date NEW: Interactive chart of local and state hospital bed availability Daily hospital capacity reports Cases and Deaths 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 High Case and High Incidence Counties These weekly tables count cases based on the date of testing, not the date the test result was reported, and count only those cases where the date of testing is known. They rank counties by weekly cases, and by 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 August 6 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. 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. Total tests PCR Antibody MSDH Public Health Laboratory 84,917 84,917 0 Other testing providers 418,250 401,154 17,096 Total tests for COVID-19 statewide 503,167 486,071 17,096 MSDH Individuals Tested as of August 6 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: 67,469 Total positive individuals from MPHL tests: 7,565
  3. https://covid19.ncdhhs.gov/dashboard/cases
  4. 128,746 Cases Reported* 4,089 Deaths Reported* 1,505,002 Tests Reported* Presumed Recovered 89,083 as of 8/3/2020 COVID-positive Patients 1,406 in Hospitals COVID-positive Patients 207 https://ldh.la.gov/coronavirus/ on Ventilators
  5. https://coronavirus.iowa.gov/pages/case-counts
  6. https://www.health.pa.gov/topics/disease/coronavirus/Pages/Cases.aspx
  7. CASES 94,827 CONFIRMED 3,474 PROBABLE LAST 14 DAYS 19,231 CASES 160,669 TESTED TOTAL TESTED 745,942 STATEWIDE DEATHS 1,674 CONFIRMED 61 PROBABLE *TOTAL HOSPITALIZATIONS To Date Updates M-F at 3 p.m. 11,537 STATEWIDE PRESUMED RECOVERIES Updated Weekly 37,923 https://alpublichealth.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/6d2771faa9da4a2786a509d82c8cf0f7
  8. https://www.azdhs.gov/preparedness/epidemiology-disease-control/infectious-disease-epidemiology/covid-19/dashboards/index.php
  9. Number of confirmed cases : 93,806 Number of persons tested negative : 913,018 Total testing volume : 1,377,459 Number of confirmed deaths : 3,429 Number of probable deaths : 136 Currently hospitalized : 528 Acute care : 393 Intensive care : 135 Ever hospitalized : 13,047 Released from isolation : 5,838 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 280 (18) Anne Arundel 7,243 (213) 9* Baltimore City 12,239 (408) 16* Baltimore County 12,915 (537) 22* Calvert 672 (27) 1* Caroline 445 (3) Carroll 1,530 (115) 2* Cecil 689 (29) 1* Charles 1,983 (89) 2* Dorchester 365 (5) Frederick 3,050 (114) 7* Garrett 46 Harford 1,922 (66) 3* Howard 3,779 (100) 6* Kent 238 (22) 1* Montgomery 18,139 (762) 39* Prince George's 23,372 (726) 23* Queen Anne's 420 (24) 1* St. Mary's 962 (52) Somerset 133 (3) Talbot 384 (4) Washington 1,003 (31) Wicomico 1,322 (45) Worcester 675 (19) 1* Data not available (17) 2* By Age Range and Gender Age/Gender Cases Deaths 0-9 3,195 10-19 6,022 (1) 20-29 16,389 (20) 1* 30-39 17,645 (45) 6* 40-49 15,725 (109) 3* 50-59 14,017 (272) 15* 60-69 9,636 (562) 12* 70-79 5,971 (845) 22* 80+ 5,206 (1,560) 75* Data not available (15) 2* Female 49,386 (1,686) 71* Male 44,420 (1,743) 65* By Race and Ethnicity Race/Ethnicity Cases Deaths African-American (NH) 29,141 (1,406) 51* Asian (NH) 1,701 (128) 6* White (NH) 20,498 (1,446) 67* Hispanic 23,496 (397) 10* Other (NH) 4,140 (35) Data not available 14,830 (17) 2* https://coronavirus.maryland.gov/
  10. COVID-19 Case Trends https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/infectious-disease/epi/airborne/coronavirus/data.shtml Maine COVID-19 Reopening Gating Metrics Cumulative COVID-19 Cases by ZIP Code Tables of COVID-19 Testing Data, Hospital Use, and Case Demographics View Tables of Data for the Previous 14 Days Not all labs report results to the Maine CDC electronically. Labs reporting manually report only the positive results and are therefore excluded for purposes of calculating the percent positivity rate. Molecular testing includes PCR, isothermal, and NAAT methods. Syndromic data has a 2 day lag to increase completeness of ICD codes. Total number of emergency room/urgent care visits reported. Percentage of emergency room/urgent care visits for influenza-like illness symptoms or influenza-like illness discharge diagnosis. Percentage of emergency room/urgent care visits for COVID-19-like symptoms or COVID-19 discharge diagnosis. View a Table of All Reported COVID-19 Tests in Maine
  11. https://www.vdh.virginia.gov/coronavirus/covid-19-daily-dashboard/
  12. Aug 6 http://mediaarchives.gsradio.net/rense/special/rense_080620_hr3.mp3
  13. Aug 5 http://mediaarchives.gsradio.net/rense/special/rense_080520_hr3.mp3
  14. By Los Angeles Times Staff Updated Aug. 6, 9:56 p.m. Pacific 541,494 confirmed cases +8,659 on Thursday 10,028 deaths +154 on Thursday The coronavirus 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 Technical problems are hampering the count. The state's top public health official said the data system used to process test results is marred with technical issues. Officials warn that this week's numbers are likely an undercount. Most of the state is on notice. Deteriorating conditions prompted the governor to put 38 counties on his watchlist. Together they are home to 97% of the state population. Deaths keep climbing. A new single-day death record was set last week. Fewer tests are coming back positive. The statewide positivity rate has decreased to 5.1%. The reopening is rolling back. The governor has returned to stricter lockdown, and masks are required across the state. Disparities are widening. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 3.2 times more likely to test positive than white people. The highest toll is among seniors. Roughly 75% of the dead were 65 or older. At least 4,270 were living at a nursing home. No state has more cases. California has overtaken New York and now has the nation's highest case count. California counties +Other trackers +More coverage + Jump to a section Trends Maps Hospitals Tests Demographics Nursing homes Reopenings State rankings The latest trends The number of cases in California is now on pace to double every 54.6 days, a number used to measure how quickly the virus is spreading. 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 this line. CasesDeaths Cumulative cases Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.0100,000200,000300,000400,000500,000Stay athome orderStay athome orderGovernoreases limitsGovernoreases limits541,494Aug. 6 Times survey of county and local health departments Local governments announce new cases and deaths each day, though bottlenecks in testing and reporting lags can introduce delays. For instance, some agencies do not report new totals on weekends, leading to lower numbers on those days. Over the past week, the state has averaged 6,913 new cases and 144.4 new deaths per day. New cases by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.02,0004,0006,0008,00010,00012,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverageData collectionerrors reportedData collectionerrors reported Deaths by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJuneJulyAug.0501001502007-dayaverage7-dayaverage The lines above are seven-day averages. They offer a more stable view of the trend than daily totals. That's why experts wait for lines like these to flatten before they say conditions are improving. The chart below is adjusted to show how quickly new cases are being confirmed in each county. A good sign is when a line flattens, which indicates that transmission is slowing in that area. Cumulative cases by county Current doubling time5 days7142130 15 dayssince 10th case30456075901051201020501002005001,0002,0005,00010,00020,00050,000100,000200,000Doublingevery dayDoublingevery dayEvery3 daysEvery3 daysEvery weekEvery weekEverymonthEverymonthInyoInyoAmadorAmadorSiskiyouSiskiyouYubaYubaMendocinoMendocinoSutterSutterCalaverasCalaverasMercedMercedMaderaMaderaTehamaTehamaNapaNapaColusaColusaFresnoFresnoEl DoradoEl DoradoLakeLakeSan Luis ObispoSan Luis ObispoButteButteSanta ClaraSanta ClaraHumboldtHumboldtMontereyMontereyKernKernVenturaVenturaGlennGlennMariposaMariposaSan FranciscoSan FranciscoNevadaNevadaPlumasPlumasLassenLassenSan BernardinoSan BernardinoSan DiegoSan DiegoLos AngelesLos AngelesMonoMonoImperialImperial This chart tracks cumulative cases after each county confirmed its 10th case. Case counts are plotted on a logarithmic scale, which makes it easier to see when cases level off. Doubling rate is the estimate of how long it would take the county to double its number of cases, given the trend in the last week. Compare the slope of a county's curve to the slope of the guide lines to estimate its doubling rate at any point. How COVID-19 crushed California’s workforce The coronavirus outbreak decimated California's economy. The Times is tracking the fallout as businesses begin to reopen. Cases by county and city While initial outbreaks were centered in the San Francisco Bay Area, most new cases and deaths are now concentrated in Southern California. In the last 14 days Metric CasesDeaths Time frame Last 14 daysCumulative Confirmed cases05001,6604,8606,0608,45034,170 Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingRedding The state uses the latest data to monitor the spread of the virus. One metric asks counties to keep new cases under 100 per 100,000 residents over the last 14 days. Across the state, 14 counties are currently passing the test, while 44 are failing to meet the standard. In the last 14 days County Cases Per 100k Thursday Deaths Per 100k Thursday Kern » 9,401 1,064.6 +291 37 4.2 – Merced » 1,732 643.7 +95 35 13 +2 Tulare » 2,458 533.8 +256 28 6.1 +3 Colusa » 111 517.1 +2 2 9.3 – Kings » 757 504.4 – 11 7.3 – Fresno » 4,869 497.8 +353 53 5.4 – Madera » 668 430.9 +59 18 11.6 +3 San Bernardino » 8,450 395.7 +398 132 6.2 +3 Imperial » 682 378.4 +55 70 38.8 +6 Stanislaus » 2,007 372.1 +49 72 13.4 +6 Mono » 51 359.8 +6 – – – Los Angeles » 34,170 338.4 +3,023 606 6 +41 Glenn » 93 333.4 – 2 7.2 – Monterey » 1,394 321.8 +71 13 3 +1 San Joaquin » 2,293 313.2 +85 85 11.6 +5 San Benito » 186 313 +5 2 3.4 – Yuba » 234 310 +19 1 1.3 – Sutter » 292 304.6 +12 2 2.1 – Lassen » 91 291.8 +1 – – – Riverside » 6,928 290.7 +764 133 5.6 +18 Santa Barbara » 1,208 272.2 +66 36 8.1 +1 Inyo » 46 254.4 +2 2 11.1 +2 Marin » 658 252.8 +6 28 10.8 – Amador » 95 251.1 +6 2 5.3 +2 Napa » 314 223.4 +18 1 0.7 – Ventura » 1,879 221.6 +82 19 2.2 +3 San Luis Obispo » 580 206.1 +77 8 2.8 – Solano » 889 202.7 +75 4 0.9 +1 Orange » 6,063 191.6 +580 154 4.9 +32 San Francisco » 1,664 191.3 +147 8 0.9 +1 Alameda » 3,015 183.4 +748 33 2 +13 Sonoma » 908 181.1 – 20 4 – Yolo » 385 179.1 +24 5 2.3 – Contra Costa » 1,944 171.5 +208 32 2.8 +3 San Diego » 5,519 167.1 +263 71 2.1 +5 Tehama » 98 154.6 +14 – – – Sacramento » 2,297 152.1 +300 57 3.8 +2 Butte » 338 148.8 +31 3 1.3 – Mendocino » 129 147.6 +7 6 6.9 – Santa Clara » 2,803 145.8 +208 15 0.8 – Placer » 508 133.7 +41 7 1.8 +1 San Mateo » 1,006 131.3 +133 6 0.8 – Santa Cruz » 335 122.4 +17 – – – El Dorado » 208 111.4 +14 – – – Calaveras » 42 92.8 – – – – Mariposa » 16 91.2 +1 1 5.7 – Shasta » 135 75.4 +7 1 0.6 – Lake » 46 71.7 – 1 1.6 – Nevada » 70 70.6 +4 – – – Siskiyou » 30 68.9 +1 – – – Sierra » 2 68.3 – – – – Humboldt » 77 56.7 +25 – – – Tuolumne 30 55.6 +3 2 3.7 – Modoc » 4 44.8 – – – – Del Norte » 12 43.8 +6 – – – Plumas » 6 32.1 +1 – – – Trinity » 2 15.5 – – – – Alpine » – – – – – – Show less Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 1,025 places as released by county health departments. Confirmed cases 10 100 500 1,000 2,000 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, Shasta, 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 Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Tulare Ventura Yolo Yuba Search by name Area Confirmed cases East Los Angeles 4,884 Pomona 3,998 South Gate 3,522 Boyle Heights 3,437 El Monte 3,347 Downey 3,157 Compton 3,039 Palmdale 2,817 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone 2,677 North Hollywood 2,599 Lynwood 2,549 Glendale 2,547 Pacoima 2,537 Norwalk 2,492 Sylmar 2,453 Vernon Central 2,364 Santa Clarita 2,331 Lancaster 2,276 West Covina 2,223 Huntington Park 2,207 Inglewood 2,150 Baldwin Park 2,141 Van Nuys 2,099 Panorama City 2,093 Pasadena 2,035 Westlake 2,016 90805: Long Beach 1,989 Wholesale District 1,962 Castaic 1,866 Pico Rivera 1,829 Paramount 1,824 Florence-Firestone 1,819 Bellflower 1,789 West Vernon 1,760 Montebello 1,724 Central 1,692 Reseda 1,685 Whittier 1,633 San Pedro 1,611 South Park 1,611 Melrose 1,505 90813: Long Beach 1,490 Hawthorne 1,485 Vermont Vista 1,477 Pico-Union 1,474 Bell Gardens 1,464 Watts 1,426 Canoga Park 1,375 Carson 1,366 North Hills 1,345 South Whittier 1,276 Wilmington 1,264 Harvard Park 1,262 Bell 1,210 Century Palms/Cove 1,201 Athens-Westmont 1,184 Azusa 1,127 Willowbrook 1,126 La Puente 1,123 Sun Valley 1,110 Torrance 1,092 Burbank 1,072 Maywood 1,070 Arleta 1,064 Northridge 1,055 90806: Long Beach 1,016 Covina 1,015 Exposition Park 1,008 Glendora 1,006 Alhambra 972 Temple-Beaudry 969 Lakewood 942 Winnetka 942 El Sereno 927 Gardena 911 Hollywood 910 Koreatown 900 Granada Hills 892 Wilshire Center 881 Cudahy 864 Lincoln Heights 862 Highland Park 856 90810: Long Beach 775 Sherman Oaks 773 Hacienda Heights 769 90804: Long Beach 752 Green Meadows 741 90802: Long Beach 740 Lake Balboa 729 Harbor Gateway 724 West Whittier/Los Nietos 722 West Adams 713 Woodland Hills 674 Monterey Park 671 Santa Monica 666 San Fernando 661 La Mirada 658 Rosemead 634 Hyde Park 618 University Park 607 South El Monte 600 Vermont Knolls 575 Mission Hills 571 Downtown 570 Valinda 568 Monrovia 555 Walnut Park 548 Beverly Hills 546 San Jose Hills 545 Glassell Park 525 Lennox 521 East Hollywood 516 90815: Long Beach 515 Chatsworth 514 Tarzana 508 Eagle Rock 505 East Rancho Dominguez 505 Silver Lake 505 Rowland Heights 498 Lawndale 495 Altadena 493 Bassett 487 90807: Long Beach 481 Baldwin Hills 480 Harvard Heights 449 Lakeview Terrace 446 West Hollywood 446 Palms 443 San Gabriel 437 Commerce 436 Redondo Beach 434 Cerritos 432 Valley Glen 431 Mt. Washington 421 Temple City 419 Diamond Bar 412 Encino 410 Valley Village 407 Hawaiian Gardens 396 West Hills 396 West Los Angeles 395 Santa Fe Springs 393 Little Bangladesh 390 San Dimas 387 Unincorporated - Azusa 387 Duarte 386 Harbor City 379 Arcadia 359 Sunland 348 Historic Filipinotown 343 La Verne 341 90808: Long Beach 339 90803: Long Beach 338 Little Armenia 337 Culver City 331 Unincorporated - Covina 324 West Carson 304 Westchester 304 Tujunga 294 West Puente Valley 288 Alsace 281 Manhattan Beach 277 Del Rey 276 Vermont Square 271 Westwood 268 Claremont 267 Northeast San Gabriel 264 Figueroa Park Square 255 Mar Vista 251 Porter Ranch 251 Crenshaw District 249 Mid-city 246 Artesia 245 Leimert Park 241 Covina (Charter Oak) 240 Cloverdale/Cochran 239 Country Club Park 234 Hollywood Hills 233 Rancho Palos Verdes 233 South Pasadena 225 Brentwood 219 Venice 216 Walnut 213 Calabasas 209 Avocado Heights 208 Elysian Valley 206 Jefferson Park 206 Studio City 196 90814: Long Beach 195 Signal Hill 193 Gramercy Place 191 Adams-Normandie 185 Lomita 183 Carthay 178 Echo Park 176 Hancock Park 176 Athens Village 175 Atwater Village 170 Victoria Park 160 Hermosa Beach 153 Crestview 152 Los Feliz 152 Lake Los Angeles 148 North Whittier 146 South San Gabriel 137 Manchester Square 136 Miracle Mile 132 La Canada Flintridge 131 Quartz Hill 125 La Crescenta-Montrose 122 Stevenson Ranch 122 Agoura Hills 121 Beverlywood 121 Thai Town 121 El Camino Village 120 St Elmo Village 110 View Park/Windsor Hills 110 Playa Vista 106 Sun Village 103 Wiseburn 101 El Segundo 100 Pacific Palisades 100 Cadillac-Corning 95 Wellington Square 95 Century City 94 Longwood 94 Unincorporated - Duarte 92 Santa Monica Mountains 90 South Carthay 90 Chinatown 89 Beverly Crest 88 Canyon Country 86 Reseda Ranch 86 Malibu 85 Park La Brea 85 Toluca Lake 84 East La Mirada 78 Elysian Park 78 Palos Verdes Estates 75 Unincorporated - Arcadia 74 La Rambla 73 Lafayette Square 69 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez 68 Unincorporated - Monrovia 67 Ladera Heights 65 Rancho Dominguez 64 Exposition 63 Marina del Rey 62 San Marino 62 Unincorporated - South El Monte 62 Bel Air 61 Littlerock/Pearblossom 61 Rancho Park 61 Sierra Madre 60 Littlerock 57 Little Tokyo 55 East Pasadena 54 East Whittier 54 Irwindale 54 Angelino Heights 53 Del Aire 53 Unincorporated - Whittier 52 Cheviot Hills 51 Acton 50 Val Verde 47 Unincorporated - Hawthorne 46 University Hills 46 Shadow Hills 43 Sunrise Village 40 Unincorporated - West LA 37 Valencia 37 White Fence Farms 36 View Heights 35 Rolling Hills Estates 31 Desert View Highlands 30 La Habra Heights 30 Reynier Village 28 Industry 27 Marina Peninsula 27 Faircrest Heights 26 Kagel/Lopez Canyons 26 Unincorporated - La Verne 23 Regent Square 22 Westlake Village 22 Agua Dulce 20 Playa Del Rey 20 Unincorporated - Palmdale 20 Palisades Highlands 19 Pearblossom/Llano 19 Pellissier Village 19 West Rancho Dominguez 19 Mandeville Canyon 18 North Lancaster 18 Saugus 18 Toluca Terrace 17 Rosewood 16 Harbor Pines 15 Leona Valley 15 Lake Manor 14 Rosewood/East Gardena 14 Toluca Woods 14 Bradbury 13 Unincorporated - Cerritos 12 Southeast Antelope Valley 11 Santa Catalina Island 10 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain 10 Anaverde 9 San Pasqual 9 Unincorporated - Glendora 9 Unincorporated - Pomona 9 Del Sur 8 Vernon 8 Westhills 8 Littlerock/Juniper Hills 7 Roosevelt 7 Hidden Hills 6 Newhall 6 Unincorporated - El Monte 6 Avalon 5 Elizabeth Lake 5 Hi Vista 5 Rolling Hills 5 Sand Canyon 5 Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest 5 East Covina 4 Sycamore Square 4 Unincorporated - Bradbury 4 Unincorporated - Claremont 4 West Antelope Valley 4 Westfield/Academy Hills 4 Brookside 3 Llano 3 Padua Hills 3 Palos Verdes Peninsula 3 Unincorporated - Del Rey 3 Angeles National Forest 2 Bouquet Canyon 2 Lake Hughes 1 Saugus/Canyon Country 1 South Antelope Valley 1 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. In late July, the Trump administration changed how hospitals must report data. The California Department of Public Health says this has led to an undercount of COVID-related hospitalizations in the state. There are now 6,069 hospital patients statewide with a confirmed case, a change of -11% from two weeks ago. ConfirmedSuspectedBoth Intensive care and other hospitalized patients AprilMayJuneJulyAug.02,0004,0006,0008,000Reporting processchangesReporting processchanges California Department of Public Health The state asks counties with more than 20 patients to keep recent increases under 10%. Currently, 55 counties are passing the test and one are failing. If conditions don't improve, those areas may face increased oversight by state officials. Confirmed patients County ICU Other Total Trend Yuba » 5 20 25 +15.8% Kern » 76 146 222 +7.7% Solano » 17 28 45 +7.1% Tulare » 15 83 98 +6.3% Imperial » 19 28 47 +5.4% Placer » 12 55 67 +4.0% Merced » 13 38 51 +3.9% Ventura » 26 53 79 +1.2% Monterey » 17 35 52 +0.7% San Joaquin » 65 141 206 -0.5% Show all The percent change in patients is calculated by comparing the average number over the past three days to the three days prior. Officials also closely monitor the number of beds open in intensive-care units. Available ICU beds AprilMayJuneJulyAug.01,0002,0003,0004,0005,000Reporting processchangesReporting processchanges2,589Aug. 5 California Department of Public Health If a county’s available ICU beds falls below 20% of capacity, the area is added to governor’s watchlist. Currently, the state is not evaluating counties against this metric due to problems with data reporting. ICU beds available by county County Open ICU beds Alameda » 98 Amador » 1 Butte » 5 Calaveras » 8 Colusa » 0 Contra Costa » 47 Del Norte » 3 El Dorado » 4 Fresno » 14 Glenn » 0 Show all Testing After a fitful start, California has increased coronavirus testing in the state. Over the last week, an average of 123,803 tests have been conducted each day. New tests by day MayJuneJulyAug.050,000100,000150,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage California Department of Public Health In the last seven days, about 5.1% of the 866,623 tests conducted have returned a positive result. Positive test rate, seven-day average MayJuneJulyAug.0%2%4%6%8%10%5.1%Aug. 6 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 by age 0%10%20%30%40%50%80+75-7970-7465-6960-6450-5935-4918-345-170-4 Percentage of deaths by age 0%10%20%30%40%50%80+75-7970-7465-6960-6450-5935-4918-345-170-4 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. The gap is widening. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 3.2 times more likely to test positive than white people. Cumulative cases by race per 100,000 people JuneJulyAug.02004006008001,0001,2001,400AsianAsianBlackBlackLatino1307 casesper 100,000Latino1307 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 population vs. deaths 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 4,438 46.7% 36.3% White 2,836 29.8% 38.8% Asian 1,221 12.8% 16.5% Black 797 8.4% 6.1% Nursing homes Nursing homes are a tragic focal point of the coronavirus outbreak. At least 4,270 residents have died from COVID-19, 43% of the statewide total. CasesDeaths Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere MayJuneJulyAug.02,0004,0006,0008,00010,000 California Department of Public Health California's Department of Public Health is currently listing 1,073 skilled nursing and 238 assisted-living facilities across the state with COVID-19 outbreaks. Filter by countyAlameda Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Contra Costa El Dorado Fresno Glenn Humboldt Imperial Inyo Kern Kings Los Angeles Madera Marin Mendocino Merced 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 Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Tulare Tuolumne Ventura Yolo Yuba Search by name Residents Staff Facility Cases Deaths Cases Deaths AFFINITY HEALTHCARE CENTER 34 15 39 - ALAMEDA CARE CENTER 54 21 37 10 or fewer ALAMITOS BELMONT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - ALCOTT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ALDEN TERRACE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 107 25 39 - ALEXANDRIA CARE CENTER 51 24 38 - ALHAMBRA HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LP 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 13 - ALHAMBRA HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF - - 10 or fewer - ALL SAINTS HEALTHCARE 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ANGELS NURSING HEALTH CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - Show all The state last updated the list on August 6. Officials have withheld the precise number where there are 10 or fewer cases. The totals are cumulative counts. Lives lost to COVID-19 Learn more about those we've lost by reading Times obituaries of Californians who have died from coronavirus. Reopening the state California's reopening has rolled back, with renewed statewide restrictions on indoor dining and bars, movie theaters, zoos and museums. Much of the state is now caught between the second and third phases of Gov. Newsom's reopening plan. Newsom's roadmap for reopening Stage 1 March 19 - May 7 Strictest restrictions in place. Stage 2 Began May 8 Lower-risk businesses can reopen with social distancing guidelines. Advanced Stage 2: Retail and dine-in restaurants are reopened with social distancing guidelines Stage 3 Began June 12 Higher-risk businesses and venues (such as movie theaters and gyms) can reopen with social distancing guidelines. Stage 4 No date set Concerts, conventions and sports with a live crowd can reopen. Some counties are charting their own path to reopening independent of the state's guidelines. But Newsom is using new state rules to prevent most California public and private school campuses from reopening this fall. No restrictions lifted All restrictions lifted Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingRedding What's open in every county We're tracking what's open, closed and restricted throughout the state in ten different categories, including parks, retail, restaurants and more. Find out what's open where you live. Our state in context To date, the United States has recorded 4,825,043 coronavirus cases and 158,902 deaths. In the last week, the country has averaged 57,117 new cases and 1,049 deaths per day. The chart below is adjusted to show how quickly new cases are being confirmed in each state. A good sign is when a line flattens, which indicates that transmission is slowing in that area. Cumulative cases by state Current doubling time5 days7142130 15 dayssince 100th case30456075901055001,0002,0005,00010,00050,000100,000200,000500,000Doublingevery dayDoublingevery dayEvery3 daysEvery3 daysEvery weekEvery weekEverymonthEverymonthHawaiiHawaiiPuerto RicoPuerto RicoMontanaMontanaNevadaNevadaWest VirginiaWest VirginiaKentuckyKentuckyTexasTexasAlabamaAlabamaGeorgiaGeorgiaDistrict of ColumbiaDistrict of ColumbiaMassachusettsMassachusettsVermontVermont This chart tracks cumulative cases after each state confirmed its 100th case. Case counts are plotted on a logarithmic scale, which makes it easier to see when cases level off. Doubling rate is the estimate of how long it would take the state to double its number of cases, given the trend in the last week. Compare the slope of a state's curve to the slope of the guide lines to estimate its doubling rate at any point. California, America’s most populous state, leads the nation in cases. It ranks much lower after adjusting for population. The states with the fastest-growing outbreaks over the past two weeks, based on population, are Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi. State Cases Per 100k New cases FewerMore California 532,835 1,361.1 Mar 1Aug 5 Florida 502,739 2,440.7 Texas 476,999 1,710.6 New York 418,225 2,131.8 Georgia 201,713 1,958.9 Illinois 187,752 1,464.4 New Jersey 183,327 2,064.1 Arizona 182,203 2,622.9 North Carolina 129,733 1,277.4 Louisiana 125,943 2,700.5 Pennsylvania 120,446 941.6 Massachusetts 119,643 1,751.7 Tennessee 114,098 1,715.5 Ohio 96,305 827.2 South Carolina 95,472 1,926.4 Virginia 95,049 1,129.7 Alabama 94,654 1,945.7 Michigan 93,893 942.9 Maryland 92,426 1,539.6 Indiana 69,975 1,054.2 Mississippi 63,444 2,122.8 Washington 60,084 823.7 Minnesota 57,779 1,045.3 Wisconsin 56,940 985.4 Missouri 55,614 913.2 Nevada 52,828 1,807.4 Connecticut 50,225 1,402.3 Colorado 48,970 885.4 Iowa 46,836 1,495.2 Arkansas 46,293 1,547.9 Utah 42,328 1,389.9 Oklahoma 40,564 1,035.3 Kentucky 32,741 737.4 Kansas 29,256 1,005.8 Nebraska 27,489 1,443.2 Idaho 22,708 1,345.4 New Mexico 21,566 1,030.7 Oregon 19,978 489.4 Puerto Rico 19,651 580.2 Rhode Island 19,481 1,843.7 Delaware 15,296 1,611 District of Columbia 12,443 1,817.8 South Dakota 9,168 1,060.8 West Virginia 7,162 391.6 North Dakota 7,057 938.2 New Hampshire 6,719 500.1 Montana 4,429 425.2 Maine 3,994 299.7 Alaska 3,448 466.9 Wyoming 2,923 502.4 Hawaii 2,763 194.3 Vermont 1,436 229.8 Show less No state has had more deaths than New York, though its pace has declined in recent months. State Deaths Per 100k New deaths FewerMore New York 32,754 167 Mar 1Aug 5 New Jersey 15,842 178.4 California 9,874 25.2 Massachusetts 8,659 126.8 Texas 8,310 29.8 Illinois 7,770 60.6 Florida 7,627 37 Pennsylvania 7,254 56.7 Michigan 6,478 65.1 Connecticut 4,437 123.9 Louisiana 4,096 87.8 Georgia 3,984 38.7 Arizona 3,932 56.6 Ohio 3,596 30.9 Maryland 3,536 58.9 Indiana 3,007 45.3 Virginia 2,274 27 North Carolina 2,085 20.5 South Carolina 1,894 38.2 Colorado 1,851 33.5 Mississippi 1,804 60.4 Alabama 1,695 34.8 Minnesota 1,670 30.2 Washington 1,624 22.3 Missouri 1,297 21.3 Tennessee 1,144 17.2 Rhode Island 1,012 95.8 Wisconsin 970 16.8 Iowa 900 28.7 Nevada 890 30.4 Kentucky 752 16.9 New Mexico 667 31.9 Delaware 587 61.8 District of Columbia 587 85.8 Oklahoma 583 14.9 Arkansas 508 17 New Hampshire 418 31.1 Kansas 372 12.8 Nebraska 340 17.9 Oregon 338 8.3 Utah 327 10.7 Puerto Rico 246 7.3 Idaho 217 12.9 South Dakota 137 15.9 West Virginia 124 6.8 Maine 124 9.3 North Dakota 108 14.4 Montana 65 6.2 Vermont 57 9.1 Wyoming 27 4.6 Hawaii 27 1.9 Alaska 25 3.4 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 Lives lost to COVID-19 Unemployment and economic fallout Housing homeless people Which counties are open Which beaches are closed 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 continual 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. The tallies here are limited to residents of California, which is the standard method used to count patients by the state’s health authorities. Those totals do not include people from other states who are quarantined or hospitalized here, but do include inmates at state prisons. Cases and deaths are recorded here based on the date they were reported by public health officials. 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. Data on hospitalizations, tests, demographics and nursing homes come from California's Department of Public Health. Closures and restrictions are drawn from an ongoing Times survey of county governments. In an effort to aid scientists and researchers in the fight against COVID-19, The Times has released its database of California coronavirus cases to the public. The database is available on Github, a popular website for hosting data and computer code. The files will be updated daily at github.com/datadesk/california-coronavirus-data. 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]. https://www.latimes.com/projects/california-coronavirus-cases-tracking-outbreak/
  15. https://www.doh.wa.gov/Emergencies/NovelCoronavirusOutbreak2020COVID19/DataDashboard
  16. Total Cases 3,484 Includes active, recovered, & deceased. https://coronavirus-response-alaska-dhss.hub.arcgis.com/ Recovered and 1,044 Presumed Recovered Cases Hospitalizations 141 Total count (does not reflect current stays) Deaths 25
  17. https://health.wyo.gov/publichealth/infectious-disease-epidemiology-unit/disease/novel-coronavirus/covid-19-map-and-statistics/
  18. https://montana.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=7c34f3412536439491adcc2103421d4b
  19. https://health.hawaii.gov/coronavirusdisease2019/what-you-should-know/current-situation-in-hawaii/
  20. https://coronavirus.idaho.gov/
  21. Total Cases 1,445 9 New Currently Hospitalized 1 Hospitalized Under Investigation 5 Total People Recovered 1,258 Deaths 58 https://www.healthvermont.gov/response/coronavirus-covid-19/current-activity-vermont
  22. New Hampshire 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Summary Report (data updated as of August 6, 2020, 9:00 AM) https://www.nh.gov/covid19/ Number of Persons with COVID-19 1 6,742 Recovered 5,941 (88%) Deaths Attributed to COVID-19 419 (6%) Total Current COVID-19 Cases 382 Persons Who Have Been Hospitalized for COVID-19 699 (10%) Current Hospitalizations 21 Total Persons Tested at Selected Laboratories, Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)2 168,465 Total Persons Tested at Selected Laboratories, Antibody Laboratory Tests2 27,611 Persons with Specimens Submitted to NH PHL 37,804 Persons with Test Pending at NH PHL3 1,093 Persons Being Monitored in NH (approximate point in time) 2,950 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, 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 Dashboard | Active Cases Map Cumulative Cases Dashboard | Cumulative Cases Map
  23. 1,847 Douglas 546 Lancaster 521 Sarpy 123 Buffalo 74 Hall 58 Dodge 55 Dawson 55 Platte 50 Seward 42 Saunders 42 Madison 39 Cass 35 Dakota 33 Washington 30 Scotts Bluff 30 Kearney 29 Saline 28 Adams 24 Lincoln 21 Cuming 21 Thurston 18 Merrick 17 York 16 Nemaha 16 Hamilton 14 Gage 13 Burt 12 Colfax 9 Keith 8 Polk 8 Perkins 7 Knox 7 Clay 7 Pawnee 6 Sherman 6 Gosper 6 Holt 6 Otoe 6 Howard 5 Richardson 5 Butler 5 Phelps 5 Dawes 4 Red Willow 4 Franklin 3 Fillmore 3 Cheyenne 3 Stanton 3 Jefferson 3 Johnson 3 Pierce 3 Boyd 3 Furnas 3 Thayer 3 Morrill 2 Cedar 2 Nance 2 Box Butte 2 Wayne 2 Antelope 2 Chase 1 Dixon 1 Arthur 1 Rock 1 Custer 1 McPherson 1 Greeley 1 Dundy 1 Webster 1 Deuel 1 Valley https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/ece0db09da4d4ca68252c3967aa1e9dd 1 Cherry
  24. Atlantic County 10 New Positives 237 Confirmed Deaths 3,442 Positive Test Results 15 Probable Deaths Bergen County 28 New Positives 1,786 Confirmed Deaths 20,669 Positive Test Results 251 Probable Deaths Burlington County 22 New Positives 431 Confirmed Deaths 5,927 Positive Test Results 40 Probable Deaths Camden County 24 New Positives 522 Confirmed Deaths 8,464 Positive Test Results 56 Probable Deaths Cape May County 4 New Positives 82 Confirmed Deaths 823 Positive Test Results 5 Probable Deaths Cumberland County 20 New Positives 146 Confirmed Deaths 3,309 Positive Test Results 12 Probable Deaths Essex County 30 New Positives 1,868 Confirmed Deaths 19,644 Positive Test Results 239 Probable Deaths Gloucester County 30 New Positives 202 Confirmed Deaths 3,193 Positive Test Results 7 Probable Deaths Hudson County 23 New Positives 1,335 Confirmed Deaths 19,580 Positive Test Results 167 Probable Deaths Hunterdon County 1 New Positives 70 Confirmed Deaths 1,144 Positive Test Results 56 Probable Deaths Mercer County 15 New Positives 579 Confirmed Deaths 8,087 Positive Test Results 39 Probable Deaths Middlesex County 26 New Positives 1,197 Confirmed Deaths 17,821 Positive Test Results 204 Probable Deaths Monmouth County 32 New Positives 759 Confirmed Deaths 10,227 Positive Test Results 97 Probable Deaths Morris County 15 New Positives 679 Confirmed Deaths 7,209 Positive Test Results 148 Probable Deaths Ocean County 36 New Positives 949 Confirmed Deaths 10,551 Positive Test Results 67 Probable Deaths Passaic County 36 New Positives 1,091 Confirmed Deaths 17,585 Positive Test Results 148 Probable Deaths Salem County 4 New Positives 81 Confirmed Deaths 886 Positive Test Results 6 Probable Deaths Somerset County 15 New Positives 487 Confirmed Deaths 5,217 Positive Test Results 75 Probable Deaths Sussex County 4 New Positives 160 Confirmed Deaths 1,320 Positive Test Results 37 Probable Deaths Union County 19 New Positives 1,178 Confirmed Deaths 16,622 Positive Test Results 170 Probable Deaths Warren County 3 New Positives 157 Confirmed Deaths 1,339 Positive Test Results 14 Probable Deaths https://www.nj.gov/health/cd/topics/covid2019_dashboard.shtml
  25. There are 57,075 confirmed COVID-19 patients in Missouri, including 1,356 deaths https://www.kshb.com/news/coronavirus/covid-19-case-tracker-where-we-stand-in-mo-ks-nationwide Adair County 150 0 Andrew County 89 1 Atchison County 14 0 Audrain County 199 1 Barry County 245 2 Barton County 66 0 Bates County 44 1 Benton County 87 1 Bollinger County 67 1 Boone County 1,318 4 Buchanan County 1,075 10 Butler County 264 3 Caldwell County 36 1 Callaway County 137 1 Camden County 335 5 Cape Girardeau County 627 5 Carroll County 99 0 Carter County 20 1 Cass County 716 14 Cedar County 37 0 Chariton County 16 0 Christian County 324 1 Clark County 18 0 Clay County 984 22 Clinton County 72 0 Cole County 362 3 Cooper County 111 0 Crawford County 69 0 Dade County 14 0 Dallas County 58 1 Daviess County 17 0 DeKalb County 36 1 Dent County 10 0 Douglas County 84 2 Dunklin County 288 4 Franklin County 586 18 Gasconade County 20 0 Gentry County 83 9 Greene County 1,408 12 Grundy County 25 1 Harrison County 59 1 Henry County 76 3 Hickory County 25 0 Holt County 6 0 Howard County 47 0 Howell County 145 2 Iron County 23 0 Jackson County 3,810 62 Jasper County 1,721 30 Jefferson County 1,646 28 Johnson County 476 2 Knox County 26 0 Laclede County 191 1 Lafayette County 171 3 Lawrence County 205 2 Lewis County 37 1 Lincoln County 352 1 Linn County 30 1 Livingston County 54 0 McDonald County 1,000 7 Macon County 56 0 Madison County 24 0 Maries County 20 0 Marion County 171 1 Mercer County 10 0 Miller County 111 1 Mississippi County 136 0 Moniteau County 143 2 Monroe County 26 0 Montgomery County 41 0 Morgan County 76 0 New Madrid County 216 2 Newton County 889 10 Nodaway County 174 0 Oregon County 14 0 Osage County 44 0 Ozark County 9 0 Pemiscot County 227 9 Perry County 218 4 Pettis County 473 4 Phelps County 84 0 Pike County 97 1 Platte County 345 10 Polk County 200 0 Pulaski County 195 1 Putnam County 13 1 Ralls County 25 0 Randolph County 64 1 Ray County 117 0 Reynolds County 16 0 Ripley County 48 0 St. Charles County 3,922 100 St. Clair County 18 0 Ste. Genevieve County 52 1 St. Francois County 349 2 St. Louis County 14,362 653 Saline County 421 7 Schuyler County 10 0 Scotland County 14 1 Scott County 368 13 Shannon County 43 1 Shelby County 31 0 Stoddard County 221 9 Stone County 111 1 Sullivan County 140 0 Taney County 521 5 Texas County 47 0 Vernon County 48 0 Warren County 189 0 Washington County 67 1 Wayne County 52 0 Webster County 128 1 Worth County 9 0 Wright County 60 0 St. Louis city 4,935 171 Kansas City 6,365 74
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