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Bergen County: 18901 Positive Test Results 1673 Deaths Hudson County: 18744 Positive Test Results 1255 Deaths Essex County: 18388 Positive Test Results 1751 Deaths Passaic County: 16664 Positive Test Results 1006 Deaths Middlesex County: 16474 Positive Test Results 1085 Deaths Union County: 16320 Positive Test Results 1130 Deaths Ocean County: 9279 Positive Test Results 826 Deaths Monmouth County: 8786 Positive Test Results 687 Deaths Mercer County: 7381 Positive Test Results 522 Deaths Camden County: 7040 Positive Test Results 417 Deaths Morris County: 6599 Positive Test Results 640 Deaths Burlington County: 4929 Positive Test Results 364 Deaths Somerset County: 4767 Positive Test Results 438 Deaths Cumberland County: 2728 Positive Test Results 114 Deaths Atlantic County: 2539 Positive Test Results 180 Deaths Gloucester County: 2423 Positive Test Results 164 Deaths Warren County: 1205 Positive Test Results 140 Deaths Sussex County: 1161 Positive Test Results 150 Deaths Hunterdon County: 1042 Positive Test Results 66 Deaths Salem County: 711 Positive Test Results 58 Deaths Cape May County: 681 Positive Test Results 61 Deaths https://www.nj.gov/health/cd/topics/covid2019_dashboard.shtml
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https://www.azdhs.gov/preparedness/epidemiology-disease-control/infectious-disease-epidemiology/covid-19/dashboards/index.php
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Interviews On Novel 2019-nCoV Coronavirus In Wuhan
niman replied to niman's topic in Interviews (COVID)
June 15 http://mediaarchives.gsradio.net/rense/special/rense_061520_hr3.mp3 -
COVID Spike Mutation D614G On Italian Lineage Increases Infectivity
niman replied to niman's topic in Coronavirus (COVID)
HEALTH NEWS JUNE 15, 2020 / 8:10 AM / A DAY AGO Mutation in new coronavirus increases chance of infection: study (Reuters) - A specific mutation in the new coronavirus can significantly increase its ability to infect cells, according to a study by U.S. researchers. The research may explain why early outbreaks in some parts of the world did not end up overwhelming health systems as much as other outbreaks in New York and Italy, according to experts at Scripps Research. The mutation, named D614G, increased the number of “spikes” on the coronavirus - which is the part that gives it its distinctive shape. Those spikes are what allow the virus to bind to and infect cells. “The number—or density—of functional spikes on the virus is 4 or 5 times greater due to this mutation,” said Hyeryun Choe, one of the senior authors of the study. The researchers say that it is still unknown whether this small mutation affects the severity of symptoms of infected people, or increases mortality. The researchers conducting lab experiments say that more research, including controlled studies - widely considered a gold standard for clinical trials, needs to be done to confirm their findings from test tube experiments. Older research has showed that the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is mutating and evolving as it adapts to its human hosts. The D614G mutation in particular has been flagged as an urgent concern because it appeared to be emerging as a dominant mutation. The Scripps Research study is currently undergoing peer review and was released on Friday amid reports of its findings. Reporting by Manas Mishra in Bengaluru: Editing by Bernard Orr Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. -
The research may explain why early outbreaks in some parts of the world did not end up overwhelming health systems as much as other outbreaks in New York and Italy, according to experts at Scripps Research. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-infectivity/mutation-in-new-coronavirus-increases-chance-of-infection-study-idUSKBN23M1M9
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26,524 CONFIRMED 388 PROBABLE LAST 14 DAYS 7,986 CASES 89,245 TESTED TOTAL TESTED 305,036 DEATHS 779 CONFIRMED 6 PROBABLE HOSPITALIZATIONS Since March 13 2,315 STATEWIDE PRESUMED RECOVERIES Updated Weekly 13,508 STATEWIDE https://alpublichealth.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/6d2771faa9da4a2786a509d82c8cf0f7
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Dexamethasone reduces death by one third in patients with severe COVID
niman replied to niman's topic in Coronavirus (COVID)
Major study finds common steroid reduces deaths among patients with severe Covid-19 By MATTHEW HERPER @matthewherper JUNE 16, 2020 Reprints APSTOCK Acheap, readily available steroid drug reduced deaths by a third in patients hospitalized with Covid-19 in a large study, the first time a therapy has been shown to possibly improve the odds of survival with the condition in the sickest patients. Full data from the study have not been published or subjected to scientific scrutiny. But outside experts on Tuesday immediately embraced the top-line results. The drug, dexamethasone, is widely available and is used to treat conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, and some cancers. In a statement, Patrick Vallance, the U.K. government’s chief scientific adviser, called the result “tremendous news” and “a ground-breaking development in our fight against the disease.” Scott Gottlieb, a former commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, called it “a very positive finding” in an interview on CNBC. “I think it needs to be validated, but it certainly suggests that this could be beneficial in this setting.” Atul Gawande, the surgeon, writer and public health researcher, urged caution, tweeting, “after all the retractions and walk backs, it is unacceptable to tout study results by press release without releasing the paper.” The study randomly assigned 2,104 patients to receive six milligrams of dexamethasone once a day, by mouth or intravenous injection. These were compared to 4,321 patients assigned to receive usual care alone. ADVERTISEMEN In patients who needed to be on a ventilator, dexamethasone reduced the death rate by 35%, meaning that doctors would prevent one death by treating eight ventilated patients. In those who needed oxygen but were not ventilated, the death rate was reduced 20%, meaning doctors would need to treat 25 patients to save one life. Both results were statistically significant. There was no benefit in patients who didn’t require any oxygen. The researchers running the study, called RECOVERY, decided to stop enrolling patients on dexamethasone on June 8 because they believed they had enough data to get a clear result. “Dexamethasone is the first drug to be shown to improve survival in COVID-19,” Peter Horby, one of the lead investigators of the study and a professor in the Nuffield Department of Medicine at the University of Oxford, said in a statement. He added that the drug should now become the standard treatment for patients with Covid-19 who need oxygen. “Dexamethasone is inexpensive, on the shelf, and can be used immediately to save lives worldwide.’” A different arm of the same study showed on June 5 that hydroxychloroquine, widely touted as a potential Covid treatment, had no benefit in hospitalized patients. Yesterday, based in part on those results, the Food and Drug Administration revoked an Emergency Use Authorization for using hydroxychloroquine in those patients. From the start of the pandemic in March, researchers have focused on two different stages of Covid-19, which will likely require very different interventions. Some drugs are designed to directly combat the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, that causes the disease. The first medicine shown to have a benefit, remdesivir from the biotech firm Gilead Sciences, falls into this category, even though, because it must be given intravenously, it has been tested in hospitalized patients. Remdesivir shortens the course of infection, but has not been shown to save lives. After patients have become profoundly sick, the problem starts to become not only the virus but their own immune system, which attacks the lungs, a condition called acute respiratory distress syndrome, or ARDS. For these patients, doctors have believed, they would need to dampen patients’ immune response even as they fought the virus. Initially, excitement in this area fell on new and expensive drugs, such as Actemra, a rheumatoid arthritis drug from Roche that is used to treat a similar condition caused by some cancer immunotherapies. But a study in patients who needed oxygen showed no benefit from a similar drug, although another arm in sicker patients is continuing. The National Institutes of Health is conducting a study of an Eli Lilly pill targeting rheumatoid arthritis, an extension of the study that showed remdesivir has a benefit. Dexamethasone, which reached the market 59 years ago, seemed an unlikely candidate to help these patients; it was seen as too crude a way of tamping down the immune system. In guidelines for physicians treating the disease, the NIH doesn’t even mention the therapy. Studies that are testing other medicines may now need to incorporate the use of the drug, which could complicate analyzing the results. A spokesperson for Regeneron, which is testing Covid-19 drugs focused on both attacking the virus and dampening the immune system, said the company’s studies are written so that when a new medicine becomes the standard of care, it becomes available to patients in the trial. Some studies have shown a benefit for using dexamethasone in acute respiratory distress syndrome not related to Covid-19, although the benefit was smaller than in RECOVERY. The result, should it hold up to further scrutiny, shows the benefit of the strategy of Horby and Martin Landray, the Oxford researchers who designed the study, leveraging the U.K. health system to start a study of multiple inexpensive potential Covid-19 therapies — including hydroxychloroquine, dexamethasone, and also some older HIV medicines. Several months into the Covid-19 pandemic, two of the most important results come from this single study. Neither of those results, however, have been scrutinized or published. About the AuthorReprints Matthew Herper Senior Writer, Medicine Matthew covers medical innovation — both its promise and its perils. [email protected] @matthewherper https://www.statnews.com/2020/06/16/major-study-finds-common-steroid-reduces-deaths-among-patients-with-severe-covid-19/ -
Dexamethasone reduces death by one third in patients with severe COVID
niman replied to niman's topic in Coronavirus (COVID)
Coronavirus breakthrough: dexamethasone is first drug shown to save lives In a large trial, a cheap and widely available steroid cut deaths by one-third among patients critically ill with COVID-19. Heidi Ledford The steroid dexamethasone was given to thousands of people critically ill with coronavirus in a randomized, controlled trial.Credit: Dr P. Marazzi/Science Photo Library An inexpensive and commonly used steroid can save the lives of people seriously ill with COVID-19, a randomized, controlled clinical trial in the United Kingdom has found. The drug, called dexamethasone, is the first shown to reduce deaths from the coronavirus that has killed more than 430,000 people globally. In the trial, it cut deaths by about one-third in patients who were on ventilators because of coronavirus infection. “It’s a startling result,” says Kenneth Baillie, an intensive-care physician at the University of Edinburgh, UK, who serves on the steering committee of the trial, called RECOVERY. “It will clearly have a massive global impact.” The RECOVERY trial, launched in March, is one of the world’s biggest randomized, controlled trials for coronavirus treatments; it is testing a range of potential therapies. The study enrolled 2,100 participants who received dexamethasone at a low or moderate dose of six milligrams per day for ten days, and compared how they fared against about 4,300 people who received standard care for coronavirus infection. The effect of dexamethasone was most striking among critically ill patients on ventilators. Those who were receiving oxygen therapy but were not on ventilators also saw improvement: their risk of dying was reduced by 20%. The steroid had no effect on people with mild cases of COVID-19 — those not receiving oxygen or ventilation. The RECOVERY study announced the findings in a press release on 16 June, but its researchers say that they are aiming to publish their results quickly and that they are sharing their findings with regulators in the United Kingdom and internationally. Rigorous study “It is a major breakthrough,” says Peter Horby, an infectious-disease specialist at the University of Oxford, UK, and a chief investigator on the trial. Use of steroids to treat viral respiratory infections such as COVID-19 has been controversial, Horby notes. Data from steroid trials during outbreaks of SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) and Middle East respiratory syndrome caused by related coronaviruses were inconclusive, he says. Nevertheless, given dexamethasone’s widespread availability, and some promising results from steroid studies in previous outbreaks, Horby says RECOVERY investigators felt it important to test the treatment in a rigorous clinical trial. Treatment guidelines from the World Health Organization and many countries have cautioned against treating people with coronavirus with steroids, and some investigators were concerned about anecdotal reports of widespread steroid treatment. The drugs suppress the immune system, which could provide some relief from patients whose lungs are ravaged by an over-active immune response that sometimes manifests in severe cases of COVID-19. But such patients may still need a fully functioning immune system to fend off the virus itself. Dozens of coronavirus drugs are in development — what happens next? The RECOVERY trial suggests that at the doses tested, the benefits of steroid treatment may outweigh the potential harm. The study found no outstanding adverse events from the treatment, investigators said. “This treatment can be given to pretty much anyone,” says Horby. And the pattern of response — with a greater impact on severe COVID-19 and no effect on mild infections — matches the notion that a hyperactive immune response is more likely to be harmful in long-term, serious infections, says Anthony Fauci, head of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease. “When you’re so far advanced that you’re on a ventilator, it’s usually that you have an aberrant or hyperactive inflammatory response that contributes as much to the morbidity and mortality as any direct viral effect.” “Finding effective treatments like this will transform the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on lives and economies across the world,” said Nick Cammack, head of the COVID-19 Therapeutics Accelerator at Wellcome, a UK biomedical research charity in London, in a statement. “While this study suggests dexamethasone only benefits severe cases, countless lives will be saved globally.” Easy to administer So far, the only drug shown to benefit COVID-19 patients in a large, randomized, controlled clinical trial is the antiviral drug remdesivir. Although remdesivir1 was shown to shorten the amount of time that patients may need to spend in the hospital, it did not have a statistically significant effect on deaths. Remdesivir is also in short supply. Although the drug’s maker — Gilead Sciences of Foster City, California — has taken steps to ramp up production of remdesivir, it is currently available only to a limited number of hospitals around the world. And remdesivir is complex to administer: it must be given by injection over the course of several days. Dexamethasone, by contrast, is a medical staple found on pharmaceutical shelves worldwide and is available as a pill — a particular benefit as coronavirus infections continue to rise in countries with limited access to healthcare. “For less than £50, you can treat 8 patients and save one life,” said Martin Landray, an epidemiologist at the University of Oxford, and another chief investigator on the RECOVERY trial. The findings could also have implications for other severe respiratory illnesses, Baillie adds. For example, steroid treatments for a condition called acute respiratory distress syndrome are also controversial. “This really gives us a very good reason to look closely at that, because the mortality benefit is so extraordinarily large,” Baillie says. “I think this will affect patients well beyond COVID-19.” doi: 10.1038/d41586-020-01824-5 https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-01824-5?utm_source=Nature+Briefing&utm_campaign=7fb7c54efa-briefing-dy-20200616&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c9dfd39373-7fb7c54efa-44664341 -
Dexamethasone reduces death by one third in patients with severe COVID
niman replied to niman's topic in Coronavirus (COVID)
Low-cost dexamethasone reduces death by up to one third in hospitalised patients with severe respiratory complications of COVID-19 In March 2020, the RECOVERY (Randomised Evaluation of COVid-19 thERapY) trial was established as a randomised clinical trial to test a range of potential treatments for COVID-19, including low-dose dexamethasone (a steroid treatment). Over 11,500 patients have been enrolled from over 175 NHS hospitals in the UK. On 8 June, recruitment to the dexamethasone arm was halted since, in the view of the trial Steering Committee, sufficient patients had been enrolled to establish whether or not the drug had a meaningful benefit. A total of 2104 patients were randomised to receive dexamethasone 6 mg once per day (either by mouth or by intravenous injection) for ten days and were compared with 4321 patients randomised to usual care alone. Among the patients who received usual care alone, 28-day mortality was highest in those who required ventilation (41%), intermediate in those patients who required oxygen only (25%), and lowest among those who did not require any respiratory intervention (13%). Dexamethasone reduced deaths by one-third in ventilated patients (rate ratio 0.65 [95% confidence interval 0.48 to 0.88]; p=0.0003) and by one fifth in other patients receiving oxygen only (0.80 [0.67 to 0.96]; p=0.0021). There was no benefit among those patients who did not require respiratory support (1.22 [0.86 to 1.75]; p=0.14). Based on these results, 1 death would be prevented by treatment of around 8 ventilated patients or around 25 patients requiring oxygen alone. Given the public health importance of these results, we are now working to publish the full details as soon as possible. Peter Horby, Professor of Emerging Infectious Diseases in the Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, and one of the Chief Investigators for the trial, said: ‘Dexamethasone is the first drug to be shown to improve survival in COVID-19. This is an extremely welcome result. The survival benefit is clear and large in those patients who are sick enough to require oxygen treatment, so dexamethasone should now become standard of care in these patients. Dexamethasone is inexpensive, on the shelf, and can be used immediately to save lives worldwide.’ Martin Landray, Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology at the Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, one of the Chief Investigators, said: ‘Since the appearance of COVID-19 six months ago, the search has been on for treatments that can improve survival, particularly in the sickest patients. These preliminary results from the RECOVERY trial are very clear – dexamethasone reduces the risk of death among patients with severe respiratory complications. COVID-19 is a global disease – it is fantastic that the first treatment demonstrated to reduce mortality is one that is instantly available and affordable worldwide.’ The UK Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, said: ‘This is tremendous news today from the Recovery trial showing that dexamethasone is the first drug to reduce mortality from COVID-19. It is particularly exciting as this is an inexpensive widely available medicine. ‘This is a ground-breaking development in our fight against the disease, and the speed at which researchers have progressed finding an effective treatment is truly remarkable. It shows the importance of doing high quality clinical trials and basing decisions on the results of those trials.’ -
Dexamethasone reduced deaths by one-third in ventilated patients (rate ratio 0.65 [95% confidence interval 0.48 to 0.88]; p=0.0003) and by one fifth in other patients receiving oxygen only (0.80 [0.67 to 0.96]; p=0.0021). There was no benefit among those patients who did not require respiratory support (1.22 [0.86 to 1.75]; p=0.14). https://www.recoverytrial.net/files/recovery_dexamethasone_statement_160620_v2final.pdf
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https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/96dd742462124fa0b38ddedb9b25e429
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By LOS ANGELES TIMES STAFF UPDATED JUNE 15, 9:50 P.M. PACIFIC 155,732 confirmed cases +3,377 on Monday 5,115 deaths +33 on Monday 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 Tallies continue to climb. Over the past week, the state has averaged 3,101 new cases and 65.4 new deaths per day. SoCal remains a hot spot. Los Angeles County has recorded 45% of new cases in the last two weeks, while home to only a quarter of the state's population. Hospitals are holding up. The number of patients remains steady, a goal of the stay-at-home policies. Testing is increasing. Numbers are rising. The state is hovering near its goal of 60,000 tests per day. The highest toll is among seniors. Roughly 78% of the dead were 65 or older. At least 2,589 were living at a nursing home. The state is gradually reopening. Most counties continue to ease restrictions. California's totals still sit far below New York, where more than 30,800 people have died. California counties Alameda Contra Costa Fresno Imperial Kern Kings Los Angeles Monterey Orange Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Sonoma Tulare Ventura Other trackers Beach closures Housing homeless people Reopenings by county The lives lost More coverage Symptoms How it spreads Get our newsletter 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 32.3 days, a number used to measure how quickly the virus is spreading. Coronavirus can infect people so rapidly that government officials have issued shutdown orders aimed at slowing the growth of new cases and flattening this line. CasesDeaths Cumulative cases Feb.MarchAprilMayJune020,00040,00060,00080,000100,000120,000140,000160,000 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. New cases by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJune01,0002,0003,0004,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage Deaths by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJune0501007-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 rate varies from county to county, but most areas are still reporting new cases every day. 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 case30456075901020501002005001,0002,0005,00010,00020,00040,00060,000Doublingevery dayDoublingevery dayEvery2 daysEvery2 daysEvery3 daysEvery3 daysEvery weekEvery weekEverymonthEverymonthGlennGlennMontereyMontereyMercedMercedSan BernardinoSan BernardinoTulareTulareLos AngelesLos AngelesSan Luis ObispoSan Luis ObispoSacramentoSacramentoSanta ClaraSanta ClaraDel NorteDel NorteMonoMonoTehamaTehamaSutterSutterImperialImperialMaderaMaderaSiskiyouSiskiyouCalaverasCalaverasSan BenitoSan BenitoVenturaVenturaRiversideRiversideMendocinoMendocinoSolanoSolanoYubaYubaKingsKingsNevadaNevadaAmadorAmadorInyoInyoMariposaMariposa 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. Help us track the coronavirus by subscribing Your support makes our reporting possible. Get unlimited digital access today. Already a subscriber? Your contributions help us maintain this page. Thank you. 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. Officials are watching the latest figures as they weigh when and how to reopen. One metric is whether counties have kept new cases over the last 14 days to less than 25 per 100,000 residents. Currently, 28 of 58 counties pass the test. Metric CasesDeaths Time frame Last 14 daysCumulative Confirmed cases02406801,9502,3103,00018,020 Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingRedding In the last 14 days Cases Per 100k Status Monday Deaths Per 100k Monday Los Angeles » 18,022 178.5 Failing +809 545 5.4 +19 Riverside » 3,004 126 Failing +795 60 2.5 +1 Imperial » 2,523 1,400 Failing +141 16 8.9 +4 Orange » 2,312 73.1 Failing +186 74 2.3 – San Bernardino » 2,113 99 Failing +156 24 1.1 – San Diego » 1,959 59.3 Failing +170 50 1.5 +1 Kern » 1,031 116.8 Failing +86 15 1.7 – Alameda » 930 56.6 Failing +53 16 1 – Fresno » 804 82.2 Failing +159 17 1.7 +3 San Joaquin » 794 108.4 Failing +64 8 1.1 – Tulare » 720 156.4 Failing +100 14 3 – Kings » 683 455.1 Failing +26 1 0.7 +2 Contra Costa » 509 44.9 Failing +24 7 0.6 – Stanislaus 468 86.8 Failing +30 5 0.9 +1 San Mateo » 449 58.6 Failing +41 15 2 – Ventura » 440 51.9 Failing +115 7 0.8 +1 Santa Clara » 421 21.9 Passing +33 10 0.5 – Monterey » 419 96.7 Failing +46 2 0.5 – San Francisco » 370 42.5 Failing +24 3 0.3 – Sacramento » 353 23.4 Passing +41 7 0.5 – Santa Barbara » 322 72.6 Failing +98 6 1.4 – Marin 247 94.9 Failing +21 3 1.2 – Sonoma » 205 40.9 Failing – – – – Placer 157 41.3 Failing +18 – – – Solano 140 31.9 Failing +28 1 0.2 – Merced 126 46.8 Failing – – – – Madera 92 59.3 Failing +28 1 0.6 – Napa 71 50.5 Failing +7 – – – San Luis Obispo 55 19.5 Passing +23 – – – Santa Cruz 44 16.1 Passing – – – – Yolo 42 19.5 Passing +2 – – – Sutter 40 41.7 Failing +2 – – +1 San Benito 38 64 Failing +4 – – – Butte 30 13.2 Passing +8 1 0.4 – El Dorado 23 12.3 Passing +4 – – – Tehama 17 26.8 Failing +6 – – – Calaveras 11 24.3 Passing – – – – Lake 11 17.1 Passing +2 – – – Nevada 11 11.1 Passing +3 – – – Shasta 11 6.1 Passing +1 – – – Siskiyou 9 20.7 Passing +2 – – – Glenn 8 28.7 Failing +8 – – – Mendocino 8 9.2 Passing +7 – – – Humboldt 5 3.7 Passing – 1 0.7 – Tuolumne 5 9.3 Passing – – – – Yuba 5 6.6 Passing +1 – – – Lassen 4 12.8 Passing – – – – Colusa 2 9.3 Passing – – – – Del Norte 2 7.3 Passing – – – – Inyo 2 11.1 Passing +2 – – – Trinity 1 7.8 Passing – – – – Alpine – – Passing – – – – Amador – – Passing +1 – – – Mariposa – – Passing +1 – – – Modoc – – Passing – – – – Mono – – Passing – – – – Plumas – – Passing +1 – – – Sierra – – Passing – – – – Show less Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 939 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, Madera, Mariposa, Modoc, San Benito, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Tuolumne and Yuba Filter by countyAlameda Amador Butte Calaveras Contra Costa El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Imperial Kern Kings Los Angeles 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 Tulare Ventura Yolo City/community Confirmed cases Castaic 1,715 East Los Angeles 1,679 Boyle Heights 1,169 Glendale 1,133 South Gate 1,084 Downey 1,050 Pasadena 1,042 Sylmar 1,040 Panorama City 1,036 San Pedro 1,029 Westlake 1,027 Pacoima 1,007 Van Nuys 956 Compton 954 Wholesale District 945 Palmdale 943 El Monte 938 Lynwood 935 Vernon Central 925 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone 919 North Hollywood 915 Santa Clarita 894 Pomona 848 Huntington Park 783 Lancaster 771 Reseda 766 Inglewood 763 Norwalk 744 Pico-Union 743 Pico Rivera 703 Melrose 695 West Vernon 670 Central 650 Florence-Firestone 628 Canoga Park 617 South Park 608 North Hills 606 Montebello 585 Bellflower 567 Paramount 554 West Covina 549 Carson 541 Hawthorne 538 Vermont Vista 538 Baldwin Park 513 Bell 486 90805: Long Beach 475 Watts 472 Whittier 462 Bell Gardens 453 Torrance 453 Harvard Park 448 Burbank 445 Granada Hills 444 Maywood 443 Northridge 432 90813: Long Beach 427 Century Palms/Cove 426 Temple-Beaudry 421 Wilmington 401 Sun Valley 399 Lincoln Heights 377 Koreatown 374 Willowbrook 371 Winnetka 370 Gardena 359 Cudahy 350 Exposition Park 345 Arleta 343 Hollywood 340 Highland Park 338 Santa Monica 336 Wilshire Center 326 Athens-Westmont 323 90806: Long Beach 320 West Adams 315 Alhambra 289 Tarzana 285 Sherman Oaks 283 Lakewood 280 Azusa 279 El Sereno 278 University Park 273 Covina 256 Lake Balboa 256 East Hollywood 255 Green Meadows 254 South Whittier 252 Valley Village 251 West Whittier/Los Nietos 247 90804: Long Beach 246 San Fernando 246 90810: Long Beach 240 La Puente 235 90807: Long Beach 234 La Mirada 232 Vermont Knolls 232 Chatsworth 231 90802: Long Beach 230 Glassell Park 230 Little Armenia 228 Monterey Park 225 Eagle Rock 224 Palms 222 Hacienda Heights 221 Silver Lake 220 Baldwin Hills 211 Mission Hills 208 Woodland Hills 206 Downtown 201 West Hollywood 201 Harbor Gateway 198 Glendora 195 Rowland Heights 195 Hyde Park 194 Temple City 194 Monrovia 190 Little Bangladesh 187 Walnut Park 187 Altadena 183 San Gabriel 183 Historic Filipinotown 180 South El Monte 179 West Hills 178 Sunland 177 Harvard Heights 176 Culver City 175 Beverly Hills 174 Valley Glen 170 Redondo Beach 167 Rosemead 164 Valinda 160 Lawndale 159 Bassett 157 Cerritos 157 Encino 157 90815: Long Beach 154 Duarte 151 Lennox 146 Lakeview Terrace 145 Harbor City 143 Tujunga 141 Mid-city 138 South Pasadena 137 90803: Long Beach 133 Mt. Washington 130 San Jose Hills 130 West Carson 127 Commerce 124 Westchester 122 Country Club Park 117 East Rancho Dominguez 115 Hawaiian Gardens 115 Vermont Square 110 Porter Ranch 109 Rancho Palos Verdes 109 Arcadia 107 Santa Fe Springs 102 Unincorporated - Azusa 101 West Los Angeles 101 Calabasas 98 Cloverdale/Cochran 98 Crestview 98 Hancock Park 98 Del Rey 96 Crenshaw District 95 Mar Vista 94 Carthay 93 Gramercy Place 92 Westwood 92 San Dimas 91 90808: Long Beach 90 Brentwood 90 Hollywood Hills 90 Diamond Bar 89 Studio City 89 Manhattan Beach 88 Alsace 81 Elysian Valley 73 Leimert Park 73 Venice 73 Adams-Normandie 72 Claremont 72 Unincorporated - Covina 72 Northeast San Gabriel 70 Victoria Park 69 Jefferson Park 68 Figueroa Park Square 67 Covina (Charter Oak) 64 Echo Park 64 Los Feliz 64 Walnut 63 West Puente Valley 63 Artesia 62 El Camino Village 62 Pacific Palisades 61 La Canada Flintridge 57 South San Gabriel 57 Atwater Village 56 Lomita 56 90814: Long Beach 55 Signal Hill 51 St Elmo Village 50 Miracle Mile 49 Athens Village 48 Quartz Hill 48 La Verne 46 Palos Verdes Estates 46 Avocado Heights 45 View Park/Windsor Hills 45 Beverly Crest 42 Beverlywood 42 Hermosa Beach 42 La Rambla 42 Century City 41 Malibu 40 South Carthay 40 Stevenson Ranch 40 Bel Air 39 Canyon Country 39 Thai Town 39 Agoura Hills 38 El Segundo 38 Cadillac-Corning 36 La Crescenta-Montrose 36 Playa Vista 36 Wellington Square 36 Little Tokyo 34 Lake Los Angeles 33 Manchester Square 33 Reseda Ranch 33 Longwood 32 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez 30 Chinatown 28 Santa Monica Mountains 28 Littlerock/Pearblossom 27 Sun Village 26 Ladera Heights 25 Lafayette Square 25 North Whittier 24 San Marino 24 Unincorporated - West LA 24 East La Mirada 23 Park La Brea 23 Toluca Lake 23 Unincorporated - Monrovia 23 Val Verde 23 Cheviot Hills 22 Wiseburn 22 Angelino Heights 21 Rancho Dominguez 21 Unincorporated - Duarte 21 Rancho Park 20 Sierra Madre 20 Acton 19 Del Aire 18 East Whittier 17 Elysian Park 17 Littlerock 17 Rolling Hills Estates 17 Exposition 16 Marina del Rey 16 University Hills 16 White Fence Farms 16 Marina Peninsula 15 Unincorporated - Whittier 15 Reynier Village 14 Unincorporated - Arcadia 13 Industry 12 La Habra Heights 12 Shadow Hills 12 Valencia 12 View Heights 11 Faircrest Heights 10 Regent Square 10 Unincorporated - Hawthorne 10 Unincorporated - South El Monte 10 West Rancho Dominguez 10 Agua Dulce 9 Harbor Pines 9 Kagel/Lopez Canyons 8 Palisades Highlands 8 Rosewood 8 Sunrise Village 8 Toluca Terrace 8 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain 7 Westlake Village 7 Desert View Highlands 6 North Lancaster 6 Unincorporated - La Verne 6 Unincorporated - Palmdale 6 Irwindale 5 Playa Del Rey 5 Saugus 5 Vernon 5 Bradbury 4 East Pasadena 4 Lake Manor 4 Pearblossom/Llano 4 Unincorporated - Pomona 4 Elizabeth Lake 3 Hidden Hills 3 Leona Valley 3 Mandeville Canyon 3 Santa Catalina Island 3 Toluca Woods 3 Unincorporated - Glendora 3 Anaverde 2 Del Sur 2 Littlerock/Juniper Hills 2 Rolling Hills 2 Rosewood/East Gardena 2 San Pasqual 2 Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest 2 West Antelope Valley 2 Angeles National Forest 1 Bouquet Canyon 1 Brookside 1 Hi Vista 1 Lake Hughes 1 Llano 1 Newhall 1 Pellissier Village 1 Roosevelt 1 South Antelope Valley 1 Sycamore Square 1 Unincorporated - Del Rey 1 Show less Learn more about your county Explore the latest data by visiting our dedicated pages for Los Angeles, Alameda, Contra Costa, Fresno, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Monterey, Orange, Riverside, Sacramento, San Diego, San Bernardino, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Sonoma, Tulare and Ventura counties. Hospitals and patients One goal of the state's stay-at-home mandate is to slow the virus in hope of preventing hospitals from being overrun. To keep tabs on capacity, the state health department tracks hospitalizations of confirmed and suspected COVID-19 patients. All casesConfirmedSuspected Intensive care and other hospitalized patients AprilMayJune01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,000 California Department of Public Health In order to reopen, counties must show that hospitalizations have stabilized, meaning that daily increases have averaged less 5% over a seven-day period, or that a county can’t have more than 20 hospitalizations on any single day over a 14-day period. Currently, 52 of the state's 58 counties pass the test. County ICU Other Total Status Los Angeles » 477 1,320 1,797 Declining Orange » 164 257 421 Stable San Diego » 132 234 366 Stable Riverside » 89 231 320 Stable San Bernardino » 95 200 295 Stable Alameda » 42 82 124 Declining Kern » 35 68 103 Declining Fresno » 24 69 93 Declining Imperial » 20 70 90 Stable Ventura » 19 70 89 Stable San Joaquin » 18 56 74 Stable Stanislaus 17 39 56 Climbing Santa Clara » 15 39 54 Declining Sacramento » 17 34 51 Declining San Francisco » 15 34 49 Stable Contra Costa » 12 30 42 Declining Santa Barbara » 10 31 41 Climbing Tulare » 7 33 40 Climbing Kings » 9 31 40 Climbing Sonoma » 2 32 34 Climbing San Mateo » 10 19 29 Declining Solano 7 14 21 Declining Monterey » 1 14 15 Stable Placer 4 9 13 Declining San Luis Obispo 6 6 12 Low Marin 3 8 11 Low Santa Cruz 0 9 9 Low Yuba 3 4 7 Low Madera 2 3 5 Declining Merced 2 2 4 Declining El Dorado 4 0 4 Low Humboldt 0 4 4 Low Napa 1 2 3 Low Butte 3 0 3 Climbing Lake 1 0 1 Low Nevada 1 0 1 Low Siskiyou 1 0 1 Low Glenn 0 1 1 Low Yolo 2 – 0 Low Sutter 0 0 0 Low San Benito 0 0 0 Low Tehama 0 0 0 Low Calaveras 0 0 0 Low Shasta 0 0 0 Low Mendocino 0 0 0 Low Tuolumne 0 0 0 Low Lassen 0 0 0 Low Colusa 0 0 0 Low Del Norte 0 0 0 Low Inyo 0 0 0 Low Trinity 0 0 0 Low Alpine 0 0 0 Low Amador 0 0 0 Low Mariposa 0 0 0 Low Modoc 0 0 0 Low Mono 0 0 0 Low Plumas 0 0 0 Low Sierra 0 0 0 Low Show less Healthcare workers have been hit hard by the virus. Statewide 12,237 have tested positive as of Monday, accounting for 8% of total infections. The number has continued to grow since state officials started releasing tallies. Confirmed cases among healthcare workers MayJune02,0004,0006,0008,00010,00012,000 California Department of Public Health Testing After a fitful start, Gov. Newsom has promised to dramatically increase coronavirus testing in the state. The governor’s goal is to reach at least 60,000 tests per day. Over the last week, an average of 62,427 tests have been conducted each day. New tests by day May 2May 8May 14May 20May 26June 1June 7June 13020,00040,00060,00080,000Governor's daily goal California Department of Public Health As tests have become more widely available, a smaller share are coming back positive. That’s because more people without symptoms have been able to get tested, skewing the trend downward. In the last seven days, about 4.6% of the 436,992 tests conducted have returned a positive result. Positive test rate, seven-day average May 2May 9May 16May 23May 30June 6June 130%2%4%6%8% California Department of Public Health Demographics While Californians of all ages have tested positive for COVID-19, deaths attributed to the virus have tilted heavily toward the elderly. Percentage of cases by age 0-1718-3435-4950-6465-7980+0%10%20%30%40%50% Percentage of deaths by age 0-1718-3435-4950-6465-7980+0%10%20%30%40%50% California Department of Public Health Among most age groups, and especially younger people, Blacks 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%OtherBlackAsianWhiteLatino Race Deaths Deaths Pct. Population Pct. Latino 1,991 40.4% 36.3% White 1,639 33.2% 38.8% Asian 724 14.7% 16.2% Black 471 9.5% 6.1% Other 86 1.7% 2.2% Nursing homes Nursing homes are a tragic focal point of the coronavirus outbreak. At least 2,589 residents have died from COVID-19, 51% of the statewide total. CasesDeaths Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere May 2May 9May 16May 23May 30June 6June 1301,0002,0003,0004,0005,000 California Department of Public Health California's Department of Public Health is currently listing 750 skilled nursing and 107 assisted-living facilities across the state with COVID-19 outbreaks. Filter by countyAlameda Butte Contra Costa El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Imperial Kern Kings Los Angeles Madera Marin Merced Monterey Napa Orange Placer 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 Tuolumne Ventura Yolo Residents Staff Facility Cases Deaths Cases Deaths AFFINITY HEALTHCARE CENTER 32 13 33 - ALAMEDA CARE CENTER 50 21 37 10 or fewer ALAMITOS BELMONT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - ALCOTT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL - - - 10 or fewer ALDEN TERRACE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 106 22 36 - ALEXANDRIA CARE CENTER 46 23 27 - ALHAMBRA HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LP 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ALHAMBRA HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF - - 10 or fewer - ANGELS NURSING HEALTH CENTER - - 10 or fewer - ANTELOPE VALLEY CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ARARAT CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 16 - ARARAT NURSING FACILITY 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ARBOR GLEN CARE CENTER 54 10 or fewer 19 - ASTORIA NURSING AND REHAB CENTER 80 12 61 - ATHERTON BAPTIST HOME-SAM B. WEST 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - ATLANTIC MEMORIAL HEALTHCARE CENTER 41 10 or fewer 16 - AUTUMN HILLS HEALTH CARE CENTER 56 13 24 - ARARAT HOME OF LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - ARBOR VISTA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - ATRIA PARK OF PACIFIC PALISADES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - AVANTGARDE SENIOR LIVING OF TARZANA 17 10 or fewer 22 - BALDWIN GARDENS NURSING CENTER 19 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BAY CREST CARE CENTER - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BEACHSIDE POST ACUTE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BEACHWOOD POST-ACUTE & REHAB 46 10 or fewer 19 10 or fewer BEACON HEALTHCARE CENTER 11 - 10 or fewer - BEL TOOREN VILLA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 203 10 or fewer 13 10 or fewer BEL VISTA HEALTHCARE CENTER - - - 10 or fewer BELL CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 51 27 29 - BELLFLOWER POST ACUTE - - 10 or fewer - BERKLEY VALLEY CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - BEVERLY WEST HEALTHCARE 17 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BIXBY KNOLLS TOWERS HEALTH CARE & REHAB CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BONNIE BRAE SKILLED NURSING 17 10 or fewer 15 - BRIARCREST NURSING CENTER - - 10 or fewer - BRIER OAK ON SUNSET 12 10 or fewer - - BRIGHTON CARE CENTER 77 16 61 - BROADWAY BY THE SEA 63 16 34 - BROADWAY MANOR CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BROOKDALE NORTHRIDGE - - 10 or fewer - BROOKFIELD HEALTHCARE CENTER 71 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BUENA VENTURA POST ACUTE CARE CENTER 69 15 22 - BURBANK HEALTHCARE AND REHABILITATION CENTER 65 17 33 - BURLINGTON CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 34 10 or fewer 17 - BELMONT VILLAGE ENCINO 25 10 or fewer 24 - BELMONT VILLAGE HOLLYWOOD 20 10 or fewer 17 - BELMONT VILLAGE RANCHO PALOS VERDES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BEVERLY HILLS CARMEL RETIREMENT HOTEL 15 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BEVERLY HILLS GARDENS CARE CENTER 12 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BROOKDALE CENTRAL WHITTIER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - BROOKDALE MONROVIA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - BROOKDALE NORTHRIDGE 22 13 10 or fewer - CALIFORNIA HEALTHCARE AND REHABILITATION CENTER 51 11 46 10 or fewer CALIFORNIA POST ACUTE 24 10 or fewer 20 - CALIFORNIA POST-ACUTE CARE 49 10 or fewer 23 - CAMELLIA GARDENS CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer CANYON OAKS NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - CASITAS CARE CENTER 54 10 or fewer 36 - CATERED MANOR NURSING CENTER 22 10 or fewer 25 - CENTINELA SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTRE 23 10 or fewer 17 - CENTURY VILLA, INC. 65 11 38 - CHANDLER CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 26 10 or fewer 13 10 or fewer CHATSWORTH PARK HEALTH CARE CENTER 34 10 or fewer 27 - CHINO VALLEY HEALTH CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - CLARA BALDWIN STOCKER HOME 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 11 - CLAREMONT CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - CLAREMONT MANOR CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - CLEAR VIEW SANITARIUM - - 10 or fewer - COLLEGE VISTA POST-ACUTE - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - COLONIAL CARE CENTER 66 10 or fewer 35 - COLONIAL GARDENS NURSING HOME 75 10 or fewer 27 10 or fewer COMMUNITY CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - COUNTRY MANOR HEALTHCARE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - COUNTRY VILLA BAY VISTA HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - COUNTRY VILLA BELMONT HEIGHTS HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - COUNTRY VILLA CLAREMONT HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - COUNTRY VILLA EAST NURSING CENTER 92 13 19 - COUNTRY VILLA LOS FELIZ NURSING CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - COUNTRY VILLA MAR VISTA NURSING CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 11 - COUNTRY VILLA NORTH CONVALESCENT CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - COUNTRY VILLA PAVILION NURSING CENTER 77 10 or fewer 22 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA REHABILITATION CENTER 24 10 or fewer 16 - COUNTRY VILLA SHERATON NURSING AND REHAB. CENTER 59 17 25 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA SOUTH CONVALESCENT CENTER 171 19 16 - COUNTRY VILLA TERRACE NURSING CENTER 10 or fewer - 13 - COUNTRY VILLA WESTWOOD CONVALESCENT CENTER 10 or fewer - 17 - COUNTRY VILLA WILSHIRE CONVALESCENT CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - COURTYARD CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - COVINA REHABILITATION CENTER 17 10 or fewer 22 - CRENSHAW NURSING HOME 10 or fewer - - - CULVER WEST HEALTH CENTER 39 10 or fewer 20 - CANYON TRAILS AT TOPANGA SENIOR LIVING 18 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - CARSON SENIOR ASSISTED LIVING 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - CEDARS ASSISTED LIVING, THE 38 10 or fewer 12 - CITY VIEW LA, LLC 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - CROFTON MANOR INN 28 10 or fewer 16 - DEL AMO GARDENS CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - DEL RIO CONVALESCENT CENTER 30 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - DEL RIO GARDENS CARE CENTER 21 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - DESERT CANYON POST ACUTE, LLC - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - DOWNEY COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER 93 10 or fewer 42 - DOWNEY POST ACUTE 39 10 or fewer 20 - EAST LOS ANGELES DOCTORS HOSPITAL D/P SNF 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - EASTLAND SUBACUTE AND REHABILITATION CENTER - - 10 or fewer - EDGEWATER SKILLED NURSING CENTER - - 10 or fewer - EISENBERG VILLAGE 16 10 or fewer 24 - EL ENCANTO HEALTHCARE AND HABILITATION CENTER - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - EL MONTE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - EL RANCHO VISTA HEALTH CARE CENTER 46 20 19 10 or fewer ELMCREST CARE CENTER 41 10 or fewer 15 10 or fewer EMERALD TERRACE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 20 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ENCINO HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER - - 10 or fewer - FIRESIDE HEALTH CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - FLOWER VILLA, INC. 18 10 or fewer 14 10 or fewer FOOTHILL HEIGHTS CARE CENTER 19 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - FOUNTAIN VIEW SUBACUTE AND NURSING CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - FOUR SEASONS HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTER, LP 95 14 54 - FALLBROOK GLEN OF WEST HILLS 19 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - GARDEN VIEW POST-ACUTE REHABILITATION - - 10 or fewer - GARDENA CONVALESCENT CENTER 36 10 or fewer 22 - GEM TRANSITIONAL CARE CENTER 47 15 22 - GLENDALE ADVENTIST MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF 24 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - GLENDALE HEALTHCARE CENTER 11 10 or fewer 11 - GLENDALE POST ACUTE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - GLENDORA CANYON TRANSITIONAL CARE UNIT - - 10 or fewer - GLENDORA GRAND, INC. 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - GLENHAVEN HEALTHCARE 19 10 or fewer 16 - GLENOAKS CONV. HOSPITAL 27 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - GOLDEN LEGACY CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - GOLDEN STATE COLONIAL HEALTHCARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - GOOD SHEPHERD HEALTH CARE CENTER OF SANTA MONICA 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - GRANADA HILLS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer GRANADA POST ACUTE 47 12 20 - GRANCELL VILLAGE OF THE JEWISH HOMES FOR THE AGING 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - GRAND PARK CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 62 27 33 - GRAND VALLEY HEALTH CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - GREATER EL MONTE COMMUNITY HOSPITAL D/P SNF - - 10 or fewer - GREEN ACRES HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 15 - GREENFIELD CARE CENTER OF SOUTH GATE 37 10 or fewer 14 - GRIFFITH PARK HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - GUARDIAN REHABILITATION HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - GOLDEN ASSISTED LIVING 12 - 10 or fewer - GRANDVIEW, THE 18 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - HARBOR POST ACUTE CARE CENTER 36 10 or fewer 18 - HAWTHORNE HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LP 31 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - HERITAGE REHABILITATION CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - HIGH VALLEY LODGE 17 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - HIGHLAND PARK SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTRE 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - HOLIDAY MANOR CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - HOLLENBECK PALMS 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - HOLLYWOOD PREMIER HEALTHCARE CENTER 29 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - HUNTINGTON DRIVE HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - HUNTINGTON HEALTHCARE CENTER 22 14 18 - HUNTINGTON POST ACUTE 62 10 or fewer 23 - HYDE PARK HEALTHCARE CENTER 12 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - HEIGHTS AT BURBANK, THE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - IMPERIAL CREST HEALTH CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - IMPERIAL HEALTHCARE CENTER 51 10 or fewer 19 - INFINITY CARE OF EAST LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 13 - INGLEWOOD HEALTH CARE CENTER 42 10 or fewer 16 - INLAND VALLEY CARE AND REHABILITATION CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - INTERCOMMUNITY CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - INTERCOMMUNITY HEALTHCARE & REHABILITATION CENTER - - 10 or fewer - IVY CREEK HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE - - 10 or fewer - JOYCE EISENBERG KEEFER MEDICAL CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - JASMIN TERRACE AT EL MOLINO 65 16 25 - KEI-AI LOS ANGELES HEALTHCARE CENTER 80 22 41 - KEI-AI SOUTH BAY HEALTHCARE CENTER 44 13 40 - KENNEDY POST ACUTE CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - KINGSLEY MANOR CARE CENTER 19 10 or fewer 20 - KENSINGTON REDONDO BEACH, THE 23 10 or fewer 22 - KENSINGTON SIERRA MADRE, THE 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - KINGSLEY MANOR - - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer LA BREA REHABILITATION CENTER 11 10 or fewer 16 - LA CRESCENTA HEALTHCARE CENTER 19 10 or fewer 15 - LA HABRA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - LA PAZ GEROPSYCHIATRIC CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - LAKE BALBOA CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - LAKEVIEW TERRACE 34 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - LAKEWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER 58 10 or fewer 49 - LANDMARK MEDICAL CENTER 33 - 23 - LAS FLORES CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - LAUREL PARK BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CENTER 10 or fewer - - - LAWNDALE HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LLC 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - LEGACY HEALTHCARE CENTER 22 - 10 or fewer - LEISURE GLEN POST ACUTE CARE CENTER 23 10 or fewer 22 - LIGHTHOUSE HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - LIVE OAK REHABILITATION CENTER - - 10 or fewer - LOMITA POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - LONG BEACH CARE CENTER 56 10 or fewer 28 10 or fewer LONG BEACH HEALTHCARE CENTER 29 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer LONGWOOD MANOR CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 11 10 or fewer - - LOS ANGELES COMMUNITY HOSPITAL D/P SNF - - 10 or fewer - LOS PALOS POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER 33 - 10 or fewer - LYNWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER 41 13 29 - LAKEWOOD PARK MANOR 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - MACLAY HEALTHCARE CENTER 55 12 60 - MAGNOLIA GARDENS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 31 10 or fewer 15 10 or fewer MANCHESTER MANOR CVLT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - - - MARINA POINTE HEALTHCARE & SUBACUTE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - MARLORA POST ACUTE REHABILITATION HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - MAYFLOWER CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - MAYFLOWER GARDENS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 21 10 or fewer 12 - MAYWOOD SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTRE 37 11 32 - MEADOWBROOK BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF GARDENA D/P SNF - - 10 or fewer - MESA GLEN CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - MID-WILSHIRE HEALTH CARE CENTER 39 12 13 - MISSION CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - MONROVIA GARDENS HEALTHCARE CENTER 57 21 23 - MONTE VISTA HEALTHCARE CENTER 46 12 24 - MONTEBELLO CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - - MONTECITO HEIGHTS HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LP. 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - MONTEREY HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LP 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - MONTEREY PARK CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - - - MONTROSE HEALTHCARE CENTER 36 12 22 - MONTROSE SPRINGS SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTER 15 10 or fewer 12 - MOTION PICTURE & TELEVISION HOSPITAL D/P SNF 17 10 or fewer 17 - MOUNTAIN VIEW CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 37 16 26 - MONTECEDRO 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - MUGUNGWHA SILVER TOWN 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - NEW VISTA NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER 45 - 37 10 or fewer NEW VISTA POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - NORTH VALLEY NURSING CENTER 10 or fewer - - - NORTHRIDGE CARE CENTER 20 10 or fewer 11 10 or fewer NORWALK MEADOWS NURSING CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - NORWALK SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTRE 59 10 or fewer 34 10 or fewer OAKPARK HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - - OCEAN POINTE HEALTHCARE CENTER 33 10 or fewer 11 - OLIVE VISTA BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CENTER - - 10 or fewer - OLYMPIA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 62 21 30 - OSAGE HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE 25 11 10 or fewer - OAKMONT OF SANTA CLARITA 14 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - OAKMONT OF VALENCIA 15 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - PACIFIC CARE NURSING CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - PACIFIC PALMS HEALTHCARE 17 10 or fewer 15 - PACIFIC POST - ACUTE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - PACIFIC VILLA, INC. 50 10 or fewer 14 10 or fewer PACIFICA HOSPITAL OF THE VALLEY D/P SNF 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - PALAZZO POST ACUTE 22 - 12 10 or fewer PALOS VERDES HEALTH CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - PANORAMA GARDENS NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER 66 15 42 - PARAMOUNT CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - PARK AVENUE HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTER - - 10 or fewer - PARK REGENCY CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - PARKWEST HEALTHCARE CENTER 29 10 or fewer 21 - PASADENA CARE CENTER, LLC 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - PASADENA GROVE HEALTH CENTER 41 10 or fewer 24 - PASADENA PARK HEALTHCARE AND WELLNESS CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 12 - PENN MAR THERAPEUTIC CENTER 18 - 10 or fewer - PICO RIVERA HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - PILGRIM PLACE HEALTH SERVICES CENTER - - 10 or fewer - PLAYA DEL REY CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 18 - PRESBYTERIAN INTERCOMMUNITY HOSPITAL D/P SNF - - 10 or fewer - PRIMROSE POST-ACUTE 24 10 or fewer 19 - PROVIDENCE HOLY CROSS MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - PROVIDENCE LITTLE COMPANY OF MARY SUBACUTE CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 14 - PROVIDENCE LITTLE COMPANY OF MARY TRANSITIONAL CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - PROVIDENCE ST. ELIZABETH CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - PACIFICA SENIOR LIVING NORTHRIDGE 41 15 26 - PALMCREST GRAND RESIDENCE 15 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - RAMONA NURSING & REHABILITATION CENTER 46 10 or fewer 28 - REGENCY OAKS POST ACUTE CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - RINALDI CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 25 10 or fewer 16 - RIO HONDO SUBACUTE & NURSING CENTER 26 - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer RIVIERA HEALTHCARE CENTER 87 11 24 - ROSE GARDEN HEALTHCARE CENTER 33 10 or fewer 34 - ROSE VILLA HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ROSECRANS CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ROYAL CARE SKILLED NURSING CENTER 11 10 or fewer 12 - ROYAL CREST HEALTH CARE - - 10 or fewer - ROYAL GARDENS HEALTHCARE 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ROYAL OAKS MANOR - BRADBURY OAKS - - 10 or fewer - ROYAL PALMS POST ACUTE 10 or fewer - 15 - ROYAL TERRACE HEALTH CARE - - 10 or fewer - ROYAL VISTA CARE CENTER 31 10 or fewer 17 10 or fewer ROYALWOOD CARE CENTER 65 15 43 - ROSECRANS VILLA RESIDENTIAL CARE 14 - 10 or fewer - SAINT VINCENT HEALTHCARE 13 - 14 10 or fewer SAN GABRIEL CONVALESCENT CENTER - - 10 or fewer - SANTA ANITA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 58 23 23 - SANTA CLARITA POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - SANTA FE HEIGHTS HEALTHCARE CENTER LLC 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - SANTA FE LODGE 17 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - SANTA MONICA CONVALESCENT CENTER II 21 - 24 - SANTA MONICA HEALTH CARE CENTER 15 10 or fewer 15 - SANTA TERESITA MANOR 16 10 or fewer 13 - SEACREST POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER 25 - - - SHADOW HILLS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 39 10 or fewer 27 10 or fewer SHARON CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - SHERMAN OAKS HEALTH & REHABILITATION CENTER 14 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - SHERMAN VILLAGE HEALTHCARE CENTER - - 12 - SHORELINE HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - SIERRA VIEW CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - SKYLINE HEALTHCARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer - 12 - SOCAL POST-ACUTE CARE - - 10 or fewer - SOLHEIM SENIOR COMMUNITY 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 12 - SOUTH PASADENA CARE CENTER 82 15 29 - SOUTHLAND 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ST. JOHN OF GOD RETIREMENT AND CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 22 - STONEY POINT HEALTHCARE CENTER 33 12 32 - STUDIO CITY REHABILITATION CENTER - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - SUNNY VILLAGE CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - SUNNYSIDE NURSING CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - SUNNYVIEW CARE CENTER 24 12 12 10 or fewer SUNRAY HEALTHCARE CENTER 40 15 14 10 or fewer SUNSET MANOR CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - SYLMAR HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER 41 - 33 - SILVERADO SENIOR LIVING - CALABASAS 49 10 or fewer 17 - SILVERADO SENIOR LIVING – BEVERLY PLACE 57 13 33 10 or fewer SOLHEIM SENIOR COMMUNITY 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - SUNRISE ASSISTED LIVING OF STUDIO CITY 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - SUNRISE VILLA CULVER CITY 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - TARZANA HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER 77 10 or fewer 36 - TEMPLE CITY HEALTHCARE 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - TEMPLE PARK CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - THE CALIFORNIAN - PASADENA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - THE CARE CENTER ON HAZELTINE, LLC 10 or fewer - - - THE EARLWOOD 33 10 or fewer 24 - THE ELLISON JOHN TRANSITIONAL CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - THE GARDENS OF EL MONTE 27 10 or fewer 12 - THE GROVE POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER 43 12 17 - THE MEADOWS POST ACUTE 49 15 25 10 or fewer THE ORCHARD - POST ACUTE CARE 33 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - THE REHABILITATION CENTER OF SANTA MONICA 37 12 24 - THE REHABILITATION CENTRE OF BEVERLY HILLS 29 10 or fewer 36 - THE ROWLAND 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - TOPANGA TERRACE - - 17 - TORRANCE CARE CENTER WEST, INC. 55 12 17 10 or fewer TORRANCE MEMORIAL MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - UNIVERSITY PARK HEALTHCARE CENTER 23 10 or fewer 14 - VALLEY PALMS CARE CENTER 28 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - VALLEY VISTA NURSING AND TRANSITIONAL CARE LLC 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - VERMONT HEALTHCARE CENTER 14 12 24 - VERNON HEALTHCARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA - WEST LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - VICTORIA CARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - VIEW HEIGHTS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - VIEW PARK CONVALESCENT CENTER 44 18 41 - VILLA ELENA HEALTHCARE CENTER - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - VILLA GARDENS HEALTH CARE UNIT 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - VILLA SCALABRINI SPECIAL CARE UNIT 10 or fewer - 12 - VIRGIL REHABILITATION AND SKILLED NURSING CENTER 21 13 20 - VISTA DEL SOL CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 14 - VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA – WEST LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - VILLA GARDENS 16 10 or fewer 26 - VISTA DEL MAR SENIOR LIVING 12 - 10 or fewer - WELLSPRINGS POST-ACUTE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - WEST COVINA HEALTHCARE CENTER - - 10 or fewer - WEST COVINA MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF - - 10 or fewer - WEST HAVEN HEALTHCARE 41 10 or fewer 15 - WEST HILLS HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER 77 28 39 - WEST VALLEY POST ACUTE 62 21 22 10 or fewer WESTERN CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer 10 or fewer WESTLAKE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - WHITTIER HILLS HEALTH CARE CENTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 12 - WHITTIER PACIFIC CARE CENTER 18 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - WINDSOR CARE CENTER OF CHEVIOT HILLS 53 10 or fewer 31 - WINDSOR CONVALESCENT CENTER OF NORTH LONG BEACH 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - WINDSOR GARDENS CONVALESCENT CENTER OF HAWTHORNE 14 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - WINDSOR GARDENS CONVALESCENT CENTER OF LONG BEACH 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - WINDSOR GARDENS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - WINDSOR GARDENS HEALTHCARE CENTER OF THE VALLEY 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - WINDSOR MANOR - - 10 or fewer - WINDSOR PALMS CARE CENTER OF ARTESIA - - 10 or fewer - WINDSOR TERRACE HEALTHCARE CENTER 39 10 or fewer 35 - WOODLAND CARE CENTER 24 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer WOODRUFF CONVALESCENT CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - WEST VALLEY ASSISTED LIVING 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - - WINDSOR HALL CARE HOME INC. 10 or fewer 10 or fewer 10 or fewer - YORK HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE 33 10 or fewer 21 - Show less The state last updated the list on June 15. 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 is moving into the third stage of Gov. Gavin Newsom's four-phase plan to gradually reopen the state amid the COVID-19 pandemic. 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. All of California's 58 counties have moved into Stage 2, including Los Angeles County. 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 The coronavirus has hit most of the U.S., with the largest concentrations in and around New York City. California, America's most populous state, has one of the highest totals. It ranks much lower after adjusting for population. State Cases Per 100k New cases FewerMore New York 383,324 1,953.9 Mar 1Jun 14 New Jersey 166,881 1,878.9 California 152,355 389.2 Illinois 132,543 1,033.8 Massachusetts 105,603 1,546.1 Texas 88,523 317.5 Pennsylvania 83,203 650.5 Florida 75,568 366.9 Michigan 66,054 663.4 Maryland 61,701 1,027.8 Georgia 57,681 560.1 Virginia 54,506 647.8 Louisiana 46,619 999.6 Connecticut 45,088 1,258.9 North Carolina 44,264 435.9 Ohio 41,148 353.4 Indiana 39,909 601.3 Arizona 35,706 514 Minnesota 30,471 551.3 Tennessee 30,343 456.2 Colorado 29,115 526.4 Washington 25,834 354.2 Alabama 25,615 526.6 Iowa 23,926 763.8 Wisconsin 22,758 393.8 Mississippi 19,516 653 South Carolina 18,795 379.2 Nebraska 16,730 878.3 Missouri 16,262 267 Rhode Island 15,947 1,509.3 Utah 14,313 470 Arkansas 12,501 418 Kentucky 12,445 280.3 Nevada 11,201 383.2 Kansas 11,101 381.6 Delaware 10,264 1,081 District of Columbia 9,767 1,426.9 New Mexico 9,723 464.7 Oklahoma 8,231 210.1 South Dakota 5,898 682.4 Puerto Rico 5,811 171.6 Oregon 5,377 131.7 New Hampshire 5,318 395.8 Idaho 3,399 201.4 North Dakota 3,080 409.5 Maine 2,793 209.6 West Virginia 2,290 125.2 Vermont 1,127 180.3 Wyoming 1,060 182.2 Hawaii 728 51.2 Alaska 660 89.4 Montana 601 57.7 Show less No state has had more deaths than New York, though its pace has declined in recent weeks. State Deaths Per 100k New deaths FewerMore New York 30,825 157.1 Mar 1Jun 14 New Jersey 12,659 142.5 Massachusetts 7,624 111.6 Illinois 6,308 49.2 Pennsylvania 6,215 48.6 Michigan 6,016 60.4 California 5,082 13.0 Connecticut 4,201 117.3 Louisiana 3,014 64.6 Maryland 2,939 49.0 Florida 2,931 14.2 Ohio 2,559 22.0 Georgia 2,451 23.8 Indiana 2,422 36.5 Texas 1,984 7.1 Colorado 1,598 28.9 Virginia 1,546 18.4 Minnesota 1,329 24.0 Washington 1,217 16.7 Arizona 1,191 17.1 North Carolina 1,132 11.1 Mississippi 891 29.8 Missouri 885 14.5 Rhode Island 833 78.8 Alabama 773 15.9 Wisconsin 692 12.0 Iowa 652 20.8 South Carolina 600 12.1 District of Columbia 515 75.2 Kentucky 499 11.2 Tennessee 474 7.1 Nevada 463 15.8 New Mexico 435 20.8 Delaware 422 44.4 Oklahoma 359 9.2 New Hampshire 320 23.8 Kansas 245 8.4 Nebraska 215 11.3 Arkansas 179 6.0 Oregon 173 4.2 Puerto Rico 147 4.3 Utah 139 4.6 Maine 100 7.5 West Virginia 88 4.8 Idaho 87 5.2 South Dakota 75 8.7 North Dakota 74 9.8 Vermont 55 8.8 Montana 19 1.8 Wyoming 18 3.1 Hawaii 17 1.2 Alaska 12 1.6 Show less Tracking the coronavirus California counties Alameda Contra Costa Fresno Imperial Kern Kings Los Angeles Monterey Orange Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Sonoma Tulare Ventura Other trackers Beach closures Housing homeless people Reopenings by county The lives lost More coverage Symptoms How it 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 Times switched to using this method on March 18, leading to increases over what it had published previously using state data. The tallies here are mostly 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 here, such as the passengers and crew of the Grand Princess cruise ship that docked in Oakland. 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. Closures and restrictions are drawn from an ongoing Times survey of county governments. National and global case data are collected by the the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and researchers at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering. If you see information here that you believe is incorrect or out of date, please contact Data and Graphics Editor Ben Welsh. https://www.latimes.com/projects/california-coronavirus-cases-tracking-outbreak/
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Total Cases 664 Cumulative (includes recovered cases) https://coronavirus-response-alaska-dhss.hub.arcgis.com/ Total Recovered Cases 417 Total Hospitalizations 53 Cumulative (does not reflect current stays) Total Deaths 12
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https://health.wyo.gov/publichealth/infectious-disease-epidemiology-unit/disease/novel-coronavirus/covid-19-map-and-statistics/
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https://montana.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=7c34f3412536439491adcc2103421d4b
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https://health.hawaii.gov/coronavirusdisease2019/what-you-should-know/current-situation-in-hawaii/
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Total Cases 1,128 1 New Currently Hospitalized 2 Hospitalized Under Investigation 14 Total People Recovered 912 Deaths 55 People Tested 52,557 People Being Monitored 476 People Completed Monitoring 948 https://www.healthvermont.gov/response/coronavirus-covid-19/current-activity-vermont
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Updated: June 15, 2020 at 12:15 PM Total Cases1 Confirmed Cases Probable Cases Recovered Hospitalizations Deaths 2,810 2,495 315 2,189 317 101 1Maine's total case count includes both confirmed and probable cases. For more information about this data, please see the "Read Details About the Data" section below. https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/infectious-disease/epi/airborne/coronavirus.shtml View a Table of All Reported COVID-19 Tests in Maine All Reported COVID-19 Tests in Maine Result Antibody Molecular Testing Total Positive 287 3,425 3,712 Negative 5,622 68,161 73,783 Indeterminate 8 111 119 Total 5,917 71,697 77,614 Results from Labs Reporting Electronically (Used for Percent Positivity Calculations)* Result Antibody Molecular Testing Total Positive 214 3,230 3,444 Negative 5,619 68,145 73,764 Indeterminate 8 110 118 Total 5,841 71,485 77,326 Percent Positive 3.66 4.57 4.45 *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. Updated June 15, 2020 at 12:15 PM View a Table of Maine COVID-19 Current Hospital Use and Capacity Data View a Table of Cumulative COVID‑19 Cases by County
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New Hampshire 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Summary Report (data updated as of June 15, 2020, 9:00 AM) https://www.nh.gov/covid19/ Number of Persons with COVID-19 1 5,345 Recovered 4,041 (76%) Deaths Attributed to COVID-19 320 (6%) Total Current COVID-19 Cases 984 Persons Who Have Been Hospitalized for COVID-19 519 (10%) Current Hospitalizations 69 Total Persons Tested at Selected Laboratories, Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)2 98,873 Total Persons Tested at Selected Laboratories, Antibody Laboratory Tests2 16,080 Persons with Specimens Submitted to NH PHL 30,762 Persons with Test Pending at NH PHL3 123 Persons Being Monitored in NH (approximate point in time) 3,625 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