-
Posts
74,774 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
31
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Articles
Events
Blogs
Everything posted by niman
-
New Positive Cases 493 between 05/04/2020 and 05/21/2020 New Deaths 27 between 05/06/2020 and 05/21/2020 New Tests 5,605 between 03/16/2020 and 05/21/2020 Total Positive Cases 30,409 Total Deaths 1,791 Total Tested 208,56114.6% Positive https://www.coronavirus.in.gov/
-
State of Delaware 8,52989.0 per 10,000 people New Castle County 3,13254.0 per 10,000 people Kent County 1,29674.0 per 10,000 people Sussex County 4,048210.0 per 10,000 people Unknown 53 https://coronavirus.delaware.gov/
-
https://www.azdhs.gov/preparedness/epidemiology-disease-control/infectious-disease-epidemiology/covid-19/dashboards/index.php
-
COVID-19 Testing at Kane (As of 5/22/2020) Residents Tested Positive Negative Pending Recovered** COVID-19 Deaths COVID-19 Hospitalizations Glen Hazel 116 78 36 2 55 18 6 Scott 27 0 27 0 0 0 0 McKeesport 56 1 55 0 0 0 0 Ross 37 0 37 0 0 0 0 * Indicates that within the prior calendar day this facility has had an occurrence of a single confirmed infection of COVID-19, or three or more residents or staff with new-onset of respiratory symptoms occurring within 72 hours of each other. This information is provided in compliance with Federal regulations. ** A resident who has tested positive for COVID-19 is determined to have recovered when it has been at least 14 days since the onset of symptoms or a positive test, the resident has been asymptomatic for at least three days and the resident’s physician has been consulted and agrees with the determination of recovery. https://www.alleghenycounty.us/kane/index.aspx PLEASE NOTE: The numbers reported here do not match those reported by the state on its website. This information is what is submitted to the state and so we have reached out to the department to work with them to determine why there are discrepancies. COVID-19 Testing at Kane (As of 5/22/2020) Staff Tested Positive Negative Pending Recovered Glen Hazel 81 43 37 1 39 Scott 23 1 22 0 1 McKeesport 30 1 29 0 1 Ross 29 1 28 0 1
-
Pennsylvania COVID Cases Increase To 66,258 Deaths To 4,984
niman replied to niman's topic in Pennsylvania (2019-nCoV)
COVID-19 Death Data for Pennsylvania* * This information has been extracted from death records registered with the Department’s Vital Records Program as of 11:59 pm on May 21, 2020. COVID-19 Deaths Registered : 4984 Deaths Per County of Residency Fifty-three (53) counties have reported COVID-19 deaths County # of Deaths County Population Death Rate Per 100,000 Residents Adams 5 102,811 4.9 Allegheny 154 1,218,452 12.6 Armstrong 2 65,263 3.1 Beaver 71 164,742 43.1 Bedford 2 48,176 4.2 Berks 283 420,152 67.4 Blair 1 122,492 0.8 Bradford 3 60,833 4.9 Bucks 454 628,195 72.3 Butler 12 187,888 6.4 Cambria 2 131,730 1.5 Carbon 22 64,227 34.3 Centre 5 162,805 3.1 Chester 242 522,046 46.4 Clarion 2 38,779 5.2 Columbia 29 65,456 44.3 Cumberland 43 251,423 17.1 Dauphin 57 277,097 20.6 Delaware 501 564,751 88.7 Erie 4 272,061 1.5 Fayette 4 130,441 3.1 Franklin 28 154,835 18.1 Fulton 1 14,523 6.9 Huntingdon 1 45,168 2.2 Indiana 4 84,501 4.7 Juniata 4 24,704 16.2 Lackawanna 148 210,793 70.2 Lancaster 272 543,557 50 Lawrence 8 86,184 9.3 Lebanon 24 141,314 17 Lehigh 197 368,100 53.5 Luzerne 133 317,646 41.9 Lycoming 12 113,664 10.6 Mckean 1 40,968 2.4 Mercer 4 110,683 3.6 Mifflin 1 46,222 2.2 Monroe 97 169,507 57.2 Montgomery 619 828,604 74.7 Northampton 192 304,807 63 Northumberland 2 91,083 2.2 Perry 1 46,139 2.2 Philadelphia 1196 1,584,138 75.5 Pike 18 55,933 32.2 Schuylkill 26 142,067 18.3 Snyder 1 40,540 2.5 Susquehanna 15 40,589 37 Tioga 2 40,763 4.9 Union 1 44,785 2.2 Washington 5 207,346 2.4 Wayne 6 51,276 11.7 Westmoreland 38 350,611 10.8 Wyoming 7 27,046 25.9 York 22 448,273 4.9 * 2018 population data used from the Pennsylvania State Data Center at Penn State Harrisburg. ** Death rate per 100,000 residents. Deaths Histogram Weekly Report for Deaths Attributed to COVID-19 View the weekly report issued May 22, 2020 https://www.health.pa.gov/topics/disease/coronavirus/Pages/Death-Data.aspx -
COVID-19 Data for Pennsylvania* * Map, tables, case counts and deaths last updated at 12:00 p.m. on 5/22/2020 Source: Pennsylvania National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (PA-NEDSS) as of 12:00 a.m. on 5/22/2020 Page last updated: 12:00 p.m. on 5/22/2020 Case Counts, Deaths, and Negatives Total Cases* Deaths Negative** 66,258 4,984 312,743 * Total case counts include confirmed and probable cases. ** Negative case data only includes negative PCR tests. Negative case data does not include negative antibody tests. Hospital Data View hospital dataOpens In A New Window (desktop version) View hospital dataOpens In A New Window (mobile version) Trajectory Animations COVID-19 Trajectory Animations Positive Cases by Age Range to Date Age Range Percent of Cases* 0-4 < 1% 5-12 < 1% 13-18 2% 19-24 6% 25-49 37% 50-64 26% 65+ 29% * Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding Hospitalization Rates by Age Range to Date Age Range Percent of Cases 0-29 2% 30-49 5% 50-64 10% 65-79 20% 80+ 19% Death Data View COVID-19 death data County Case Counts to Date County Total Cases Negatives Adams 214 2418 Allegheny 1739 25517 Armstrong 58 1099 Beaver 550 3122 Bedford 36 601 Berks 3838 9867 Blair 46 2292 Bradford 43 1272 Bucks 4764 16192 Butler 209 3325 Cambria 55 3042 Cameron 2 116 Carbon 224 1948 Centre 138 1763 Chester 2320 9921 Clarion 25 628 Clearfield 33 918 Clinton 48 474 Columbia 342 1139 Crawford 21 964 Cumberland 572 3674 Dauphin 1049 8426 Delaware 6060 17041 Elk 6 280 Erie 190 3658 Fayette 93 2797 Forest 7 63 Franklin 697 4463 Fulton 14 186 Greene 27 688 Huntingdon 223 719 Indiana 89 1103 Jefferson 7 453 Juniata 94 293 Lackawanna 1451 5040 Lancaster 2736 13286 Lawrence 73 1115 Lebanon 892 3926 Lehigh 3613 12182 Luzerne 2620 9271 Lycoming 155 1915 McKean 11 474 Mercer 102 1303 Mifflin 57 1076 Monroe 1295 4885 Montgomery 6366 28819 Montour 50 3105 Northampton 2842 11306 Northumberland 155 1205 Perry 43 579 Philadelphia 17057 48077 Pike 475 1807 Potter 4 126 Schuylkill 560 3881 Snyder 35 341 Somerset 37 1431 Sullivan 2 80 Susquehanna 93 600 Tioga 16 474 Union 61 909 Venango 8 448 Warren 3 313 Washington 134 3713 Wayne 115 833 Westmoreland 436 8001 Wyoming 33 387 York 895 11373 View as a clickable county or zip code level mapOpens In A New Window Incidence by County Incidence is calculated by dividing the current number of confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases reported to the Department by the 2018 county population data available from the Bureau of Health Statistics. The counties are divided into 6 relatively equally-sized groups based on their incidence rate (i.e. sestiles). Cases are determined using a national COVID-19 case definition. There currently is no way to estimate the true number of infected persons. Incidence rates are based on the number of known cases, not the number of true infected persons. Case Counts by Sex to Date Sex Positive Cases Percent of Cases* Female 36,420 55% Male 29,153 44% Neither 3 0% Not reported 682 1% * Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding Case Counts by Race to Date* Race Positive Cases Percent of Cases African American/Black 7930 12% Asian 885 1% White 17,518 26% Other 366 1% Not reported 39,559 60% * 60% of race is not reported. Little data is available on ethnicity. ** Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding Case Counts by Region to Date Region Positive Negative Inconclusive Northcentral 988 12803 17 Northeast 12487 48259 140 Northwest 413 10733 18 Southcentral 4663 40026 75 Southeast 42772 147084 887 Southwest 3228 53838 44 EpiCurve by Region Case counts are displayed by the date that the cases were first reported to the PA-NEDSS surveillance system. Case counts by date of report can vary significantly from day to day for a variety of reasons. In addition to changes due to actual changes in disease incidence, trends are strongly influenced by testing patterns (who gets tested and why), testing availability, lab analysis backlogs, lab reporting delays, new labs joining our electronic laboratory reporting system, mass screenings, etc. Trends need to be sustained for at least 2-3 weeks before any conclusions can be made regarding the progress of the pandemic. COVID-19 Cases Associated with Nursing Homes and Personal Care Homes to Date This data represents long-term care facilities in Pennsylvania, including Department of Health and Department of Human Services regulated facilities. COVID-19 Long-Term Care Facilities Data (updated 5/22/2020 at 8:00 a.m.) * is less than 5 cases https://www.health.pa.gov/topics/disease/coronavirus/Pages/Cases.aspx
-
https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/96dd742462124fa0b38ddedb9b25e429
-
By LOS ANGELES TIMES STAFF UPDATED MAY 21, 9:42 P.M. PACIFIC 88,479 confirmed cases +2,313 on Thursday 3,605 deaths +104 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 Tallies continue to climb. Over the past week, the state has averaged 1,932 new cases and 79 new deaths per day. Cities have been hit hard. The largest concentration is in Los Angeles County, home to 48% of confirmed cases so far. Hospitals are holding up. The number of patients has remained steady, a goal of the stay-at-home policies. Testing is more widespread. The state has yet to hit the governor's goal of 60,000 tests per day, but the numbers are on the increase. The highest toll is among seniors. Roughly 79% of the dead were 65 or older. At least 1,724 were living at a nursing home. The state has started to gradually reopen. Some counties are opening nonessential businesses. California's totals sit far below New York, where more than 28,700 people have died. California counties Alameda Kern Los Angeles Orange Riverside San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara 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 30.2 days, a reflection of 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.MarchAprilMay020,00040,00060,00080,000 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.MarchAprilMay05001,0001,5002,0002,5007-dayaverage7-dayaverage Deaths by day Feb.MarchAprilMay0501007-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. Growth varies from county to county, but most areas are still climbing. 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 case304560751020501002005001,0002,0005,00010,00020,00040,000Doublingevery dayDoublingevery dayEvery2 daysEvery2 daysEvery3 daysEvery3 daysEvery weekEvery weekEverymonthEverymonthLos AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSanta ClaraSanta ClaraAmadorAmadorInyoInyoMariposaMariposaNevadaNevadaDel NorteDel NorteImperialImperialButteButteKingsKingsHumboldtHumboldtMarinMarinMercedMercedSan BernardinoSan BernardinoTulareTulareVenturaVenturaSanta CruzSanta CruzKernKernAlamedaAlamedaYubaYubaMontereyMontereyStanislausStanislausYoloYoloPlacerPlacerCalaverasCalaveras 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. 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 Cases have been reported in 55 of the state’s 58 counties, from Siskiyou County south to the border. CasesDeaths Confirmed cases03501,0702,1903,9806,31042,130 Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingRedding Total cases Per 100k Thursday New cases FewerMore Total deaths Per 100k Thursday New deaths FewerMore Los Angeles » 42,138 417.3 +1,163 Mar. 1May 21 2,021 20 +45 Mar. 1May 21 Riverside » 6,343 266.1 +159 284 11.9 +14 San Diego » 6,315 191.2 +175 241 7.3 +11 Orange » 4,841 153 +99 112 3.5 +14 San Bernardino » 3,984 186.6 +189 164 7.7 +6 Alameda » 2,609 158.7 +49 90 5.5 +2 Santa Clara » 2,492 129.6 – 138 7.2 – San Francisco » 2,198 252.6 +13 37 4.3 – San Mateo » 1,738 226.9 +41 75 9.8 – Kern » 1,644 186.2 +39 25 2.8 – Tulare » 1,603 348.1 +51 74 16.1 +1 Santa Barbara » 1,540 347.1 +20 11 2.5 – Fresno 1,372 140.3 +34 22 2.2 +2 Sacramento 1,266 83.8 +11 56 3.7 – Contra Costa 1,234 108.9 +25 36 3.2 +3 Imperial 1,076 597.1 +91 21 11.7 +2 Ventura » 883 104.1 +25 29 3.4 – San Joaquin 733 100.1 +17 33 4.5 – Stanislaus 611 113.3 +13 28 5.2 +2 Kings 488 325.2 +31 2 1.3 – Solano 449 102.4 +14 19 4.3 +1 Sonoma 444 88.6 +11 4 0.8 – Monterey 362 83.6 +7 8 1.8 – Marin 352 135.2 +9 14 5.4 – San Luis Obispo 251 89.2 +2 1 0.4 – Merced 234 87 +8 6 2.2 – Yolo 186 86.5 +1 22 10.2 – Placer 176 46.3 – 8 2.1 – Santa Cruz 174 63.6 +6 2 0.7 – Napa 95 67.6 +1 3 2.1 – Humboldt 88 64.8 – 2 1.5 – Madera 83 53.5 +1 2 1.3 – El Dorado 67 35.9 – 0 0 – San Benito 66 111.1 +2 2 3.4 – Nevada 41 41.4 – 1 1 – Sutter 40 41.7 – 2 2.1 – Shasta 34 19 – 4 2.2 – Mono 34 239.9 – 1 7.1 – Butte 31 13.7 +1 0 0 – Yuba 28 37.1 – 1 1.3 – Del Norte 20 72.9 +5 0 0 – Inyo 19 105.1 – 1 5.5 – Mariposa 15 85.5 – 1 5.7 – Mendocino 15 17.2 – 0 0 – Calaveras 13 28.7 – 0 0 – Glenn 12 43 – 0 0 – Lake 12 18.7 – 0 0 – Amador 10 26.4 – 0 0 – Siskiyou 6 13.8 – 1 2.3 +1 Plumas 4 21.4 – 0 0 – Colusa 4 18.6 – 0 0 – Tehama 2 3.2 – 1 1.6 – Tuolumne 2 3.7 – 0 0 – Trinity 1 7.8 – 0 0 – Alpine 1 87.3 – 0 0 – Show less Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 839 places as released by county health departments. Confirmed cases 10 100 500 1,000 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 Long Beach 1,495 Glendale 876 San Pedro 807 Pasadena 790 East Los Angeles 659 Sylmar 647 Santa Clarita 623 Panorama City 603 Palmdale 599 Van Nuys 593 North Hollywood 586 Pacoima 577 Westlake 568 Wholesale District 533 Inglewood 517 Lancaster 503 Boyle Heights 496 Melrose 484 Downey 483 Pico-Union 456 Reseda 446 Canoga Park 441 Vernon Central 440 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone 433 South Gate 422 Compton 419 Lynwood 392 Pico Rivera 378 West Vernon 375 El Monte 371 Burbank 363 Carson 361 Torrance 345 North Hills 343 Hawthorne 341 Huntington Park 330 Pomona 328 Norwalk 327 Montebello 304 Bellflower 300 Castaic 287 Florence-Firestone 281 Central 277 Northridge 274 Temple-Beaudry 264 South Park 260 Whittier 259 Vermont Vista 257 Winnetka 253 West Covina 252 Hollywood 248 Sun Valley 246 Santa Monica 244 Harvard Park 238 Granada Hills 237 Paramount 233 Bell 232 Koreatown 230 Baldwin Park 224 Gardena 220 Arleta 217 Exposition Park 212 Sherman Oaks 207 Watts 202 Wilshire Center 202 East Hollywood 197 Bell Gardens 194 Athens-Westmont 189 Lincoln Heights 189 Valley Village 189 Palms 176 Century Palms/Cove 174 West Adams 174 Wilmington 174 San Fernando 173 Little Armenia 172 Glassell Park 169 Lake Balboa 167 West Hollywood 165 Alhambra 163 Chatsworth 160 Silver Lake 159 Maywood 158 Highland Park 155 Eagle Rock 150 Woodland Hills 148 Cudahy 147 Lakewood 146 El Sereno 144 Baldwin Hills 142 University Park 142 La Mirada 140 Covina 136 Culver City 134 Willowbrook 133 Monrovia 131 Redondo Beach 131 South Whittier 131 Altadena 129 Azusa 128 Green Meadows 128 Beverly Hills 126 Mission Hills 126 West Hills 126 Sunland 125 Monterey Park 124 Hyde Park 123 South Pasadena 119 Tarzana 119 Temple City 119 Downtown 115 Encino 115 Vermont Knolls 115 Historic Filipinotown 112 Harbor Gateway 111 Little Bangladesh 111 Valley Glen 110 Glendora 109 Harvard Heights 107 Tujunga 105 Hacienda Heights 104 Rowland Heights 104 Duarte 100 West Whittier/Los Nietos 100 Cerritos 98 Lakeview Terrace 97 Lawndale 94 West Carson 90 Walnut Park 89 San Gabriel 88 Westchester 86 Lennox 85 La Puente 83 Country Club Park 82 Rancho Palos Verdes 81 Porter Ranch 80 Crestview 79 Hollywood Hills 77 Hancock Park 75 Mar Vista 75 Brentwood 74 Manhattan Beach 74 Vermont Square 74 Mt. Washington 73 Carthay 72 Bassett 71 Rosemead 71 Studio City 71 Harbor City 70 Arcadia 69 West Los Angeles 69 Crenshaw District 66 Del Rey 65 South El Monte 65 Valinda 64 Venice 62 Westwood 61 Diamond Bar 54 Cloverdale/Cochran 53 Calabasas 52 Gramercy Place 52 Unincorporated - Covina 52 Leimert Park 50 Victoria Park 50 San Jose Hills 49 Santa Fe Springs 49 La Canada Flintridge 48 Lomita 48 Mid-city 48 Los Feliz 46 Pacific Palisades 45 Unincorporated - Azusa 45 Alsace 44 Atwater Village 43 Elysian Valley 42 Commerce 41 Echo Park 41 Palos Verdes Estates 41 St Elmo Village 41 Adams-Normandie 40 Miracle Mile 40 San Dimas 40 Northeast San Gabriel 37 Beverly Crest 36 East Rancho Dominguez 36 Canyon Country 35 Covina (Charter Oak) 35 Malibu 35 Walnut 35 Jefferson Park 34 West Puente Valley 34 Agoura Hills 33 Bel Air 33 Beverlywood 33 Claremont 33 Figueroa Park Square 33 Quartz Hill 33 Century City 32 El Segundo 32 Hawaiian Gardens 31 View Park/Windsor Hills 31 South Carthay 30 Reseda Ranch 29 Stevenson Ranch 29 Hermosa Beach 28 Cadillac-Corning 27 Lake Los Angeles 27 Thai Town 27 La Crescenta-Montrose 26 South San Gabriel 26 La Verne 25 Artesia 22 Athens Village 22 Playa Vista 22 Unincorporated - West LA 22 San Marino 21 Santa Monica Mountains 20 Wellington Square 20 Avocado Heights 19 Cheviot Hills 19 El Camino Village 19 Littlerock/Pearblossom 19 Longwood 19 Ladera Heights 18 Manchester Square 18 Signal Hill 18 Park La Brea 17 Unincorporated - Monrovia 17 Elysian Park 16 Lafayette Square 16 Toluca Lake 16 Chinatown 15 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez 15 Unincorporated - Duarte 15 Val Verde 15 Angelino Heights 14 Littlerock 14 Marina del Rey 14 Rolling Hills Estates 14 Little Tokyo 13 Rancho Dominguez 13 Wiseburn 13 Del Aire 12 Rancho Park 12 Unincorporated - Whittier 12 East La Mirada 11 Industry 11 Sun Village 11 University Hills 11 Acton 10 Marina Peninsula 10 North Whittier 10 Reynier Village 10 Shadow Hills 10 Sierra Madre 9 Harbor Pines 8 La Habra Heights 8 View Heights 8 East Whittier 7 Exposition 7 La Rambla 7 Valencia 7 Agua Dulce 6 Unincorporated - Arcadia 6 Westlake Village 6 Desert View Highlands 5 Kagel/Lopez Canyons 5 Rosewood 5 Toluca Terrace 5 Unincorporated - Hawthorne 5 West Rancho Dominguez 5 Faircrest Heights 4 Irwindale 4 North Lancaster 4 Saugus 4 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain 4 Unincorporated - Palmdale 4 Unincorporated - South El Monte 4 Bradbury 3 East Pasadena 3 Elizabeth Lake 3 Lake Manor 3 Palisades Highlands 3 Regent Square 3 Toluca Woods 3 Unincorporated - La Verne 3 White Fence Farms 3 Del Sur 2 Leona Valley 2 Littlerock/Juniper Hills 2 Pearblossom/Llano 2 Playa Del Rey 2 Rolling Hills 2 Santa Catalina Island 2 Sunrise Village 2 Unincorporated - Glendora 2 West Antelope Valley 2 Anaverde 1 Hi Vista 1 Hidden Hills 1 Lake Hughes 1 Llano 1 Mandeville Canyon 1 San Pasqual 1 Sycamore Square 1 Unincorporated - Pomona 1 Vernon 1 Show less Learn more about your county Explore the latest data by visiting our dedicated pages for Los Angeles, Alameda, Kern, Orange, San Diego, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, 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 April 4April 11April 18April 25May 2May 9May 1601,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,000 California Department of Public Health ICU Other Patient totals by day FewerMore Status Los Angeles » 539 1,528 Apr. 1May 20 Declining San Diego » 150 254 Stable Orange » 130 258 Stable Riverside » 95 195 Stable San Bernardino » 65 151 Declining Alameda » 63 152 Climbing Sacramento 17 86 Climbing Fresno 18 79 Declining Santa Clara » 21 75 Stable Imperial 22 61 Stable Contra Costa 15 67 Climbing San Francisco » 27 52 Declining San Mateo » 17 57 Stable Ventura » 21 41 Stable Placer 5 51 Climbing Kern » 23 33 Climbing Solano 11 44 Climbing Stanislaus 8 40 Climbing Tulare » 12 33 Stable San Joaquin 9 29 Climbing Sonoma 4 32 Climbing Marin 0 29 Climbing Santa Barbara » 12 15 Declining Kings 5 21 Stable Humboldt 2 10 Low Monterey 4 6 Stable Merced 4 5 Declining San Luis Obispo 3 5 Low Butte 2 3 Low Madera 0 4 Low Santa Cruz 0 3 Low El Dorado 2 0 Low Mariposa 0 2 Low Lake 0 2 Low San Benito 1 0 Stable Modoc 0 1 Low Lassen 0 1 Low Mendocino 1 0 Low Napa 2 -1 Low Yuba 0 1 Low Show less Healthcare workers have been hit hard by the virus. Statewide 8,793 have tested positive as of Thursday, accounting for 10% of total infections. The number has continued to grow since state officials started releasing tallies. Confirmed cases among healthcare workers Feb.MarchAprilMay02,0004,0006,0008,000State startsreleasing data 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. The state has yet to achieve that goal, but numbers are increasing. Over the last week, an average of 45,211 tests have been conducted each day. New tests by day April 25April 29May 3May 7May 11May 15May 19020,00040,00060,00080,000Governor's daily goal 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 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 117 74.1% 41.5% White 13 8.2% 32.5% Asian 10 6.4% 17.9% Black 14 8.9% 5.9% Other 4 2.6% 2.1% Nursing homes Nursing homes are a tragic focal point of the coronavirus outbreak. At least 1,724 residents have died from COVID-19, 49% of the statewide total. CasesDeaths Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere May 2May 9May 1605001,0001,5002,0002,5003,0003,5004,000 California Department of Public Health California's Department of Public Health is currently listing 281 skilled nursing and 80 assisted-living facilities across the state with COVID-19 outbreaks. Filter by countyAlameda Contra Costa Fresno Humboldt Imperial Kern Los Angeles Marin Monterey Orange Placer Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Shasta Solano Stanislaus Tulare Ventura Yolo Residents Facility Cases Deaths AFFINITY HEALTHCARE CENTER-PARAMOUNT 16 10 or fewer ALAMEDA CARE CENTER-BURBANK 10 or fewer 21 ALCOTT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL-LOS ANGELES 11 - ALDEN TERRACE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-LOS ANGELES - 21 ALEXANDRIA CARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 22 18 ARARAT CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ARBOR GLEN CARE CENTER-GLENDORA 34 10 or fewer ASTORIA NURSING AND REHAB CENTER-SYLMAR 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ATLANTIC MEMORIAL HEALTHCARE CENTER-LONG BEACH 13 10 or fewer AUTUMN HILLS HEALTH CARE CENTER-GLENDALE 41 10 or fewer ARARAT HOME OF LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ARBOR VISTA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ATRIA PARK OF PACIFIC PALISADES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer AVANTGARDE SENIOR LIVING OF TARZANA 12 10 or fewer BALDWIN GARDENS NURSING CENTER-TEMPLE CITY 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BEACHWOOD POSTACUTE AND REHAB-SANTA MONICA 10 or fewer - BEACON HEALTHCARE CENTER-WEST COVINA 10 or fewer - BEL TOOREN VILLA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-BELLFLOWER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BELL CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-BELL - 27 BIXBY KNOLLS TOWERS HEALTH CARE AND REHAB CENTER-LONG BEACH - 10 or fewer BONNIE BRAE SKILLED NURSING-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BRIGHTON CARE CENTER-PASADENA 50 16 BROADWAY BY THE SEA-LONG BEACH 41 11 BROOKFIELD HEALTHCARE CENTER-DOWNEY 35 10 or fewer BUENA VENTURA POST ACUTE CARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 45 14 BURBANK HEALTHCARE AND REHABILITATION CENTER-BURBANK 37 12 BURLINGTON CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer - BELMONT VILLAGE ENCINO 23 10 or fewer BELMONT VILLAGE HOLLYWOOD 20 10 or fewer BELMONT VILLAGE RANCHO PALOS VERDES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BEVERLY HILLS CARMEL RETIREMENT HOTEL 15 10 or fewer BEVERLY HILLS GARDENS CARE CENTER 12 10 or fewer BROOKDALE MONROVIA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BROOKDALE NORTHRIDGE 21 10 or fewer CALIFORNIA HEALTHCARE AND REHABILITATION CENTER-VAN NUYS 11 10 or fewer CALIFORNIA POST ACUTE-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer CALIFORNIA POSTACUTE CARE-LYNWOOD 20 10 or fewer CAMELLIA GARDENS CARE CENTER-PASADENA - 10 or fewer CANYON OAKS NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER-CANOGA PARK - 10 or fewer CASITAS CARE CENTER-GRANADA HILLS 21 10 or fewer CATERED MANOR NURSING CENTER-LONG BEACH 10 or fewer 10 or fewer CENTINELA SKILLED NURSING AND WELLNESS CENTRE-INGLEWOOD 10 or fewer 10 or fewer CENTURY VILLA INC-INGLEWOOD - 11 CHANDLER CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-GLENDALE 16 10 or fewer CHATSWORTH PARK HEALTH CARE CENTER-CHATSWORTH 10 or fewer 10 or fewer CLARA BALDWIN STOCKER HOME-WEST COVINA 10 or fewer - COLONIAL CARE CENTER-LONG BEACH 10 or fewer - COLONIAL GARDENS NURSING HOME-PICO RIVERA 31 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA EAST NURSING CENTER-LOS ANGELES - 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA NORTH CONVALESCENT CENTER-LOS ANGELES - 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA PAVILION NURSING CENTER-LOS ANGELES 32 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA REHABILITATION CENTER-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA SHERATON NURSING AND REHAB CENTER-NORTH HILLS 26 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA SOUTH CONVALESCENT CENTER-LOS ANGELES 54 15 COVINA REHABILITATION CENTER-COVINA - 10 or fewer CULVER WEST HEALTH CENTER-LOS ANGELES - 10 or fewer CARSON SENIOR ASSISTED LIVING 10 or fewer 10 or fewer CEDARS ASSISTED LIVING, THE 16 10 or fewer CITY VIEW LA LLC 10 or fewer - DOWNEY POST ACUTE-DOWNEY 22 10 or fewer EISENBERG VILLAGE-RESEDA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer EL ENCANTO HEALTHCARE AND HABILITATION CENTER-CITY OF INDUSTRY 10 or fewer - EL RANCHO VISTA HEALTH CARE CENTER-PICO RIVERA - 18 ELMCREST CARE CENTER-EL MONTE 11 10 or fewer EMERALD TERRACE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-LOS ANGELES - 10 or fewer FLOWER VILLA INC-LOS ANGELES - 10 or fewer FOUR SEASONS HEALTHCARE AND WELLNESS CENTER LP-NORTH HOLLYWOOD - 10 or fewer FALLBROOK GLEN OF WEST HILLS 16 10 or fewer GARDENA CONVALESCENT CENTER-GARDENA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer GEM TRANSITIONAL CARE CENTER-PASADENA 31 10 or fewer GLENDALE ADVENTIST MEDICAL CENTER DP SNF-GLENDALE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer GLENDALE HEALTHCARE CENTER-GLENDALE - 10 or fewer GLENDALE POST ACUTE CENTER-GLENDALE 33 10 or fewer GLENHAVEN HEALTHCARE-GLENDALE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer GOLDEN CROSS HEALTH CARE-PASADENA 40 10 or fewer GRANADA POST ACUTE-LYNWOOD 17 10 or fewer GRAND PARK CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 24 GREEN ACRES HEALTHCARE CENTER-ROSEMEAD 10 or fewer - GOLDEN ASSISTED LIVING 11 - GRANDVIEW, THE 17 10 or fewer HARBOR POST ACUTE CARE CENTER-TORRANCE 17 10 or fewer HAWTHORNE HEALTHCARE AND WELLNESS CENTRE LP-HAWTHORNE - 10 or fewer HOLLYWOOD PREMIER HEALTHCARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 51 10 or fewer HUNTINGTON DRIVE HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER-ARCADIA 10 or fewer - HUNTINGTON HEALTHCARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 14 HUNTINGTON POST ACUTE-PASADENA - 10 or fewer IMPERIAL HEALTHCARE CENTER-LA MIRADA 32 10 or fewer INGLEWOOD HEALTH CARE CENTER-INGLEWOOD - 10 or fewer JASMIN TERRACE AT EL MOLINO 66 12 KEIAI LOS ANGELES HEALTHCARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 39 10 or fewer KEIAI SOUTH BAY HEALTHCARE CENTER-GARDENA 10 or fewer 13 KINGSLEY MANOR CARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 15 10 or fewer LA BREA REHABILITATION CENTER-LOS ANGELES 12 10 or fewer LA CRESCENTA HEALTHCARE CENTER-LA CRESCENTA 11 10 or fewer LAKEVIEW TERRACE-LOS ANGELES 19 10 or fewer LAKEWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER-DOWNEY 36 10 or fewer LANDMARK MEDICAL CENTER-POMONA 10 or fewer - LAS FLORES CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-GARDENA - 10 or fewer LEGACY HEALTHCARE CENTER-PASADENA 10 or fewer - LEISURE GLEN POST ACUTE CARE CENTER-GLENDALE 57 10 or fewer LONG BEACH CARE CENTER-LONG BEACH 20 10 or fewer LONG BEACH HEALTHCARE CENTER-LONG BEACH 19 10 or fewer LONGWOOD MANOR CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-LOS ANGELES 26 - LYNWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER-LYNWOOD 16 12 LAKEWOOD PARK MANOR 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MACLAY HEALTHCARE CENTER-SYLMAR 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MAGNOLIA GARDENS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-GRANADA HILLS 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MARINA POINTE HEALTHCARE AND SUBACUTE-CULVER CITY 12 10 or fewer MAYFLOWER GARDENS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-LANCASTER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MAYWOOD SKILLED NURSING AND WELLNESS CENTRE-MAYWOOD 33 10 or fewer MIDWILSHIRE HEALTH CARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 24 11 MONROVIA GARDENS HEALTHCARE CENTER-MONROVIA 27 11 MONTE VISTA HEALTHCARE CENTER-DUARTE - 11 MONTEBELLO CARE CENTER-MONTEBELLO 10 or fewer - MONTROSE HEALTHCARE CENTER-MONTROSE 12 10 or fewer MONTROSE SPRINGS SKILLED NURSING AND WELLNESS CENTER-MONTROSE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MOTION PICTURE AND TELEVISION HOSPITAL DP SNF-WOODLAND HILLS 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MOUNTAIN VIEW CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-SYLMAR 20 13 MONTECEDRO 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MUGUNGWHA SILVER TOWN 10 or fewer 10 or fewer NORTHRIDGE CARE CENTER-RESEDA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer OAKPARK HEALTHCARE CENTER-TUJUNGA - 10 or fewer OCEAN POINTE HEALTHCARE CENTER-SANTA MONICA 29 10 or fewer OLYMPIA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-LOS ANGELES 41 15 OSAGE HEALTHCARE AND WELLNESS CENTRE-INGLEWOOD 22 10 or fewer OAKMONT OF SANTA CLARITA 14 10 or fewer OAKMONT OF VALENCIA 17 10 or fewer PACIFIC PALMS HEALTHCARE-LONG BEACH 11 10 or fewer PACIFIC VILLA INC-LONG BEACH 10 or fewer 10 or fewer PALAZZO POST ACUTE-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer - PANORAMA GARDENS NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER-PANORAMA CITY 51 10 or fewer PASADENA CARE CENTER LLC-PASADENA 10 or fewer - PASADENA GROVE HEALTH CENTER - 10 or fewer PASADENA PARK HEALTHCARE AND WELLNESS CENTER-PASADENA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer PENN MAR THERAPEUTIC CENTER-EL MONTE 14 - PLAYA DEL REY CENTER-PLAYA DEL REY 13 - PRIMROSE POSTACUTE-INGLEWOOD 11 10 or fewer PROVIDENCE LITTLE COMPANY OF MARY SUBACUTE CARE CENTER-SAN PEDRO 10 or fewer 10 or fewer PACIFICA SENIOR LIVING NORTHRIDGE 21 10 or fewer PALMCREST GRAND RESIDENCE 14 10 or fewer RAMONA NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER-EL MONTE - 10 or fewer RINALDI CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-GRANADA HILLS 10 or fewer 10 or fewer RIO HONDO SUBACUTE AND NURSING CENTER-MONTEBELLO 41 - RIVIERA HEALTHCARE CENTER - 10 or fewer ROSE GARDEN HEALTHCARE CENTER-PASADENA - 10 or fewer ROYAL CARE SKILLED NURSING CENTER-LONG BEACH - 10 or fewer ROYAL VISTA CARE CENTER-SAN GABRIEL - 10 or fewer ROYALWOOD CARE CENTER-TORRANCE - 13 ROSECRANS VILLA RESIDENTIAL CARE 11 - SANTA ANITA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-TEMPLE CITY 21 14 SANTA TERESITA MANOR-DUARTE - 10 or fewer SHADOW HILLS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL-SUNLAND - 10 or fewer SHERMAN OAKS HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER-SHERMAN OAKS 10 or fewer - SOLHEIM SENIOR COMMUNITY-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer - SOUTH PASADENA CARE CENTER-SOUTH PASADENA 13 14 SOUTHLAND-NORWALK 10 or fewer - STONEY POINT HEALTHCARE CENTER-CHATSWORTH 14 10 or fewer STUDIO CITY REHABILITATION CENTER-STUDIO CITY 25 - SUNNYVIEW CARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES - 10 or fewer SUNRAY HEALTHCARE CENTER - 13 SYLMAR HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER-SYLMAR 39 - SILVERADO SENIOR LIVING CALABASAS 48 10 or fewer SILVERADO SENIOR LIVING – BEVERLY PLACE 53 12 SUNRISE ASSISTED LIVING OF STUDIO CITY 10 or fewer 10 or fewer SUNRISE VILLA CULVER CITY 10 or fewer 10 or fewer THE EARLWOOD-TORRANCE - 10 or fewer THE ELLISON JOHN TRANSITIONAL CARE CENTER-LANCASTER - 10 or fewer THE GARDENS OF EL MONTE-EL MONTE 10 or fewer 10 or fewer THE GROVE POSTACUTE CARE CENTER-SYLMAR - 12 THE MEADOWS POST ACUTE-PANORAMA CITY 17 13 THE ORCHARD POST ACUTE CARE-WHITTIER 24 10 or fewer THE REHABILITATION CENTER OF SANTA MONICA-SANTA MONICA 18 12 THE REHABILITATION CENTRE OF BEVERLY HILLS-LOS ANGELES 18 10 or fewer TORRANCE CARE CENTER WEST INC-TORRANCE - 11 THE KENSINGTON REDONDO BEACH 23 10 or fewer VALLEY PALMS CARE CENTER-NORTH HOLLYWOOD 13 10 or fewer VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA WEST LOS ANGELES-LOS ANGELES - 10 or fewer VIEW PARK CONVALESCENT CENTER-LOS ANGELES 18 10 or fewer VILLA DEL RIO GARDENS-BELL GARDENS - 10 or fewer VILLA DEL RIO-BELL GARDENS - 10 or fewer VIRGIL REHABILITATION AND SKILLED NURSING CENTER-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer 13 VISTA DEL SOL CARE CENTER-LOS ANGELES 10 or fewer - VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA-WLA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer VILLA GARDENS 16 10 or fewer WEST HAVEN HEALTHCARE-WEST COVINA 10 or fewer 10 or fewer WEST HILLS HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER-CANOGA PARK - 19 WEST VALLEY POST ACUTE-WEST HILLS 40 10 or fewer WHITTIER HILLS HEALTH CARE CENTER-WHITTIER 10 or fewer 10 or fewer WHITTIER PACIFIC CARE CENTER-WHITTIER 16 10 or fewer WINDSOR CARE CENTER OF CHEVIOT HILLS-LOS ANGELES 22 10 or fewer WINDSOR CONVALESCENT CENTER OF NORTH LONG BEACH-LONG BEACH 10 or fewer - WINDSOR TERRACE HEALTHCARE CENTER-VAN NUYS 10 or fewer 10 or fewer WOODLAND CARE CENTER-RESEDA 10 or fewer - Show less The state last updated the list on May 21. Officials have withheld the precise number where there are 10 or fewer cases. The case totals reflect "point in time" counts limited to the current number patients infected, which can result in the numbers declining over time. 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 currently in the second phase of Gov. Gavin Newsom's four-phase plan to gradually reopen the state amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Newsom's roadmap for reopening Phase 1 March 19 - May 7 Strictest restrictions in place. Phase 2 Began May 8 Lower-risk businesses can reopen with social distancing guidelines. Phase 3 No date set Higher-risk businesses and venues can reopen with social distancing guidelines. Phase 4 No date set Concerts, conventions and sports with a live crowd can reopen. Most of California's 58 counties have moved into Phase 2, including Los Angeles County. Number of restrictions lifted 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. Total cases Per 100k New cases FewerMore Total deaths Per 100k New deaths FewerMore New York 356,458 1817 Mar. 1May 21 28,743 146.5 Mar. 1May 21 New Jersey 151,586 1706.7 10,846 122.1 Illinois 102,688 800.9 4,607 35.9 Massachusetts 90,084 1318.9 6,148 90 California 88,479 226 3,605 9.2 Pennsylvania 69,252 541.4 4,869 38.1 Michigan 53,510 537.4 5,129 51.5 Texas 53,053 190.3 1,460 5.2 Florida 48,675 236.3 2,144 10.4 Maryland 43,531 725.1 2,159 36 Georgia 40,663 394.9 1,775 17.2 Connecticut 39,208 1094.7 3,583 100 Louisiana 36,504 782.7 2,629 56.4 Virginia 34,137 405.7 1,100 13.1 Ohio 30,167 259.1 1,837 15.8 Indiana 29,936 451 1,913 28.8 Colorado 23,191 419.3 1,310 23.7 North Carolina 20,512 202 728 7.2 Washington 19,117 262.1 1,044 14.3 Tennessee 18,961 285.1 313 4.7 Minnesota 18,200 329.3 818 14.8 Iowa 16,170 516.2 410 13.1 Arizona 15,348 220.9 764 11 Wisconsin 13,885 240.3 487 8.4 Rhode Island 13,571 1284.4 556 52.6 Alabama 13,288 273.2 529 10.9 Mississippi 12,222 408.9 580 19.4 Missouri 11,689 191.9 668 11 Nebraska 11,427 599.9 138 7.2 South Carolina 9,381 189.3 416 8.4 Kansas 8,625 296.5 204 7 Delaware 8,386 883.2 317 33.4 Kentucky 8,286 186.6 386 8.7 Utah 7,874 258.6 92 3 Washington D.C. 7,788 1137.8 412 60.2 Nevada 7,400 253.2 383 13.1 New Mexico 6,472 309.3 294 14.1 Oklahoma 5,680 145 304 7.8 Arkansas 5,458 182.5 110 3.7 South Dakota 4,177 483.3 48 5.6 New Hampshire 3,935 292.9 199 14.8 Oregon 3,817 93.5 145 3.6 Puerto Rico 2,913 86 126 3.7 Idaho 2,506 148.5 77 4.6 North Dakota 2,229 296.3 51 6.8 Maine 1,877 140.8 73 5.5 West Virginia 1,593 87.1 70 3.8 Vermont 950 152 54 8.6 Wyoming 801 137.7 12 2.1 Hawaii 647 45.5 17 1.2 Montana 479 46 16 1.5 Alaska 401 54.3 10 1.4 Show less Tracking the coronavirus California counties Alameda Kern Los Angeles Orange Riverside San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara 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 and Paul Duginski. 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/
-
https://coronavirus.iowa.gov/pages/case-counts
-
https://dph.georgia.gov/covid-19-daily-status-report
-
Maryland COVID Cases Increase To 44,424 Deaths To 2,207
niman posted a topic in Maryland (2019-nCoV)
COVID-19 Statistics in Maryland Number of confirmed cases : 44,424 Number of negative test results : 183,478 Number of confirmed deaths : 2,092 Number of probable deaths : 115 Currently hospitalized : 1,329 Acute care : 823 Intensive care : 506 Ever hospitalized : 7,634 Released from isolation : 3,243 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 168 (14) Anne Arundel 3,207 (141) 8* Baltimore City 4,492 (213) 7* Baltimore County 5,170 (277) 15* Calvert 291 (14) 1* Caroline 223 Carroll 755 (71) 2* Cecil 339 (20) Charles 956 (65) 2* Dorchester 126 (2) Frederick 1,625 (88) 7* Garrett 7 Harford 746 (43) 3* Howard 1,586 (46) 4* Kent 146 (15) Montgomery 9,432 (502) 38* Prince George's 13,077 (455) 22* Queen Anne's 141 (12) St. Mary's 370 (13) Somerset 71 (1) Talbot 73 (1) Washington 389 (10) Wicomico 854 (22) Worcester 180 (7) 1* Data not available (60) 5* By Age Range and Gender Age/Gender Cases Deaths 0-9 956 10-19 1,785 (1) 20-29 5,967 (11) 1* 30-39 8,189 (28) 4* 40-49 8,052 (56) 3* 50-59 7,392 (145) 10* 60-69 5,336 (327) 12* 70-79 3,498 (514) 15* 80+ 3,249 (952) 65* Data not available (58) 5* Female 23,141 (1,038) 68* Male 21,283 (1,054) 47* By Race and Ethnicity Race/Ethnicity Cases Deaths African-American (NH) 13,320 (874) 36* Asian (NH) 855 (80) 6* White (NH) 8,897 (870) 59* Hispanic 10,726 (181) 8* Other (NH) 2,187 (26) Data not available 8,439 (61) 6* https://coronavirus.maryland.gov/ -
Virginia COVID Cases Increase To 34,950 Deaths To 1,136
niman posted a topic in Virginia (2019-nCoV)
https://www.vdh.virginia.gov/coronavirus/ -
Summary Background Hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine, often in combination with a second-generation macrolide, are being widely used for treatment of COVID-19, despite no conclusive evidence of their benefit. Although generally safe when used for approved indications such as autoimmune disease or malaria, the safety and benefit of these treatment regimens are poorly evaluated in COVID-19. Methods We did a multinational registry analysis of the use of hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine with or without a macrolide for treatment of COVID-19. The registry comprised data from 671 hospitals in six continents. We included patients hospitalised between Dec 20, 2019, and April 14, 2020, with a positive laboratory finding for SARS-CoV-2. Patients who received one of the treatments of interest within 48 h of diagnosis were included in one of four treatment groups (chloroquine alone, chloroquine with a macrolide, hydroxychloroquine alone, or hydroxychloroquine with a macrolide), and patients who received none of these treatments formed the control group. Patients for whom one of the treatments of interest was initiated more than 48 h after diagnosis or while they were on mechanical ventilation, as well as patients who received remdesivir, were excluded. The main outcomes of interest were in-hospital mortality and the occurrence of de-novo ventricular arrhythmias (non-sustained or sustained ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation). Findings 96032 patients (mean age 53·8 years, 46·3% women) with COVID-19 were hospitalised during the study period and met the inclusion criteria. Of these, 14 888 patients were in the treatment groups (1868 received chloroquine, 3783 received chloroquine with a macrolide, 3016 received hydroxychloroquine, and 6221 received hydroxychloroquine with a macrolide) and 81 144 patients were in the control group. 10698 (11·1%) patients died in hospital. After controlling for multiple confounding factors (age, sex, race or ethnicity, body-mass index, underlying cardiovascular disease and its risk factors, diabetes, underlying lung disease, smoking, immunosuppressed condition, and baseline disease severity), when compared with mortality in the control group (9·3%), hydroxychloroquine (18·0%; hazard ratio 1·335, 95% CI 1·223–1·457), hydroxychloroquine with a macrolide (23·8%; 1·447, 1·368–1·531), chloroquine (16·4%; 1·365, 1·218–1·531), and chloroquine with a macrolide (22·2%; 1·368, 1·273–1·469) were each independently associated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality. Compared with the control group (0·3%), hydroxychloroquine (6·1%; 2·369, 1·935–2·900), hydroxychloroquine with a macrolide (8·1%; 5·106, 4·106–5·983), chloroquine (4·3%; 3·561, 2·760–4·596), and chloroquine with a macrolide (6·5%; 4·011, 3·344–4·812) were independently associated with an increased risk of de-novo ventricular arrhythmia during hospitalisation. Interpretation We were unable to confirm a benefit of hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine, when used alone or with a macrolide, on in-hospital outcomes for COVID-19. Each of these drug regimens was associated with decreased in-hospital survival and an increased frequency of ventricular arrhythmias when used for treatment of COVID-19.
-
Antimalarial drug touted by President Trump is linked to increased risk of death in coronavirus patients, study says An analysis of 96,000 patients shows those treated with hydroxychloroquine were also more likely to suffer irregular heart rhythms President Trump spoke about taking an antimalarial drug earlier this week. (Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock) By Ariana Eunjung Cha and Laurie McGinley May 22, 2020 at 8:28 a.m. EDT PLEASE NOTE The Washington Post is providing this important information about the coronavirus for free. For more free coverage of the coronavirus pandemic, sign up for our daily Coronavirus Updates newsletter where all stories are free to read. A study of 96,000 hospitalized coronavirus patients on six continents found that those who received an antimalarial drug promoted by President Trump as a “game changer” in the fight against the virus had a significantly higher risk of death compared with those who did not. People treated with hydroxychloroquine, or the closely related drug chloroquine, were also more likely to develop a type of irregular heart rhythm, or arrhythmia, that can lead to sudden cardiac death, it concluded. The study, published Friday in the medical journal the Lancet, is the largest analysis to date of the risks and benefits of treating covid-19 patients with antimalarial drugs. It is based on a retrospective analysis of medical records, not a controlled study in which patients are divided randomly into treatment groups — a method considered the gold standard of medicine. But the sheer size of the study was convincing to some scientists. “It’s one thing not to have benefit, but this shows distinct harm,” said Eric Topol, a cardiologist and director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute. “If there was ever was hope for this drug, this is the death of it.” David Maron, director of preventive cardiology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, said that “these findings provide absolutely no reason for optimism that these drugs might be useful in the prevention or treatment of covid-19.” Past studies also found scant or no evidence of hydroxychloroquine’s benefit in treating sick patients, while reports mounted of dangerous heart problems associated with its use. As a result, the Food and Drug Administration last month warned against the use of the drug outside hospital settings or clinical trials. The new analysis — by Mandeep Mehra, a Harvard Medical School professor and physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and colleagues at other institutions — included patients with a positive laboratory test for covid-19 who were hospitalized between Dec. 20, 2019, and April 14, 2020, at 671 medical centers worldwide. The mean age was 54 years, and 53 percent were men. Those who were on mechanical ventilators or who received remdesivir, an antiviral drug made by Gilead Sciences that has shown promise in decreasing recovery times, were excluded. Nearly 15,000 of the 96,000 patients in the analysis were treated with hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine alone or in combination with a type of antibiotics known as a macrolide, such as azithromycin, within 48 hours of their diagnosis. The difference between patients who received the antimalarials and those who did not was striking. For those given hydroxychloroquine, there was a 34 percent increase in risk of mortality and a 137 percent increased risk of a serious heart arrhythmias. For those receiving hydroxychloroquine and an antibiotic — the cocktail endorsed by Trump — there was a 45 percent increased risk of death and a 411 percent increased risk of serious heart arrhythmias. Those given chloroquine had a 37 percent increased risk of death and a 256 percent increased risk of serious heart arrhythmias. For those taking chloroquine and an antibiotic, there was a 37 percent increased risk of death and a 301 percent increased risk of serious heart arrhythmias. Cardiologist Steven Nissen of the Cleveland Clinic said the new data, combined with data from smaller previous studies, suggests that the drug “is maybe harmful and that no one should be taking it outside of a clinical trial.” Jesse Goodman, a former FDA chief scientist who is now a Georgetown University professor, called the report “very concerning.” He noted, however, that it is an observational study, rather than a randomized controlled trial, so it shows correlation between the drugs and certain outcomes, rather than a clear cause and effect. Peter Lurie, a former top FDA official who now heads the Center for Science in the Public Interest, called the report “another nail in the coffin for hydroxychloroquine — this time from the largest study ever.” He said it was time to revoke the emergency use authorization issued by the FDA, which approved the drug for seriously ill patients who were hospitalized or for whom a clinical trial was not available. The new study’s findings cannot necessarily be extrapolated to people with mild illness at home or those, like Trump, who are taking the antimalarials as a prophylactic. The president stunned many doctors earlier this week when he said he was taking a pill “every day” — despite FDA warnings that the use of the drug should be limited to those in a hospital setting or in clinical trials. (He has since said he is close to finishing his course of treatment and would stop taking the medication in “a day or two.”) A large study of health-care workers that examines the use of hydroxychloroquine as a preventive measure against covid-19 is in the works, but no results have been released. There have been at least 13 studies in recent months on hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine as a treatment for covid-19 patients. They have included randomized controlled studies and observational analyses encompassing patients on the continuum from mild illness to those near death. Evidence of any benefit, such as viral clearance or improved symptoms, has been almost nonexistent. But many found an increased risk in adverse cardiac reactions — especially when combined with the antibiotic azithromycin. Earlier this month, some proponents of hydroxychloroquine seized on a study out of New York University’s Langone Health center that threw zinc into the mix with hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin, and showed the treated group had a higher rate of survival. But researchers emphasized that it only showed that the combination had some promise. They said the results also could have been due to other factors, such as the zinc being added to patients’ regimens later in the pandemic when hospital treatments and procedures had been refined. Last week, the National Institutes of Health announced a clinical trial of 2,000 adults to determine if hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin could be used to treat coronavirus patients. Topol, of the Scripps Research Translational Institute, suggested that the researchers should reconsider the ethics of those trials, given the increasing evidence of potential harm. “It’s very hard to ignore that signal, and it’s worrisome to continue giving it,” he said. Geoffrey Barnes, a cardiovascular specialist at the University of Michigan, said the study’s approach and its findings were “striking” in making the case that “the risk with these drugs is real.” However, he said that due to the enthusiasm some Americans have for the drug and the Lancet study’s findings, randomized trials are even more important. “There has been so much discussion about this drug that I think the scientific and medical community has an obligation to define what the potential benefit or risk is in the best way possible,” Barnes said. When the first large wave of sick patients began showing up at hospitals in March, doctors had very little to offer them. As a result, many took a gamble on hydroxychloroquine. The drug had been shown to have strong antiviral properties in cell cultures, was widely available and was thought to be rather benign in terms of side effects. For years, hydroxychloroquine has been considered a generally safe and effective treatment for malaria, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. But those findings of safety were at lower doses than were being used at hospitals during the early days of the surge in patients in the United States and mostly in patients who were healthy. The population infected with covid-19 in hospitals, it turned out, was already at higher risk of cardiovascular complications because many suffer from high blood pressure or other heart issues. Doctors also discovered that, to their surprise, the novel coronavirus appeared to directly or indirectly attack the heart, including by reducing its ability to pump, creating an imbalance in its electrical rhythms, and attacking blood vessels. Peter Whoriskey contributed to this report. The letter from White House physician Sean P. Conley about President Trump taking hydroxychloroquine. (Jon Elswick/AP)
-
Autauga County: 147 confirmed cases 1,672 tested 3 deaths Baldwin County: 270 confirmed cases 6,575 tested 8 deaths Barbour County: 100 confirmed cases 639 tested 1 deaths Bibb County: 52 confirmed cases 1,145 tested 1 deaths Blount County: 48 confirmed cases 1,260 tested 1 deaths Bullock County: 71 confirmed cases 349 tested 1 deaths Butler County: 321 confirmed cases 1,222 tested 11 deaths Calhoun County: 136 confirmed cases 3,009 tested 3 deaths Chambers County: 330 confirmed cases 1,307 tested 23 deaths Cherokee County: 31 confirmed cases 542 tested 0 deaths Chilton County: 84 confirmed cases 1,168 tested 1 deaths Choctaw County: 133 confirmed cases 409 tested 3 deaths Clarke County: 91 confirmed cases 908 tested 2 deaths Clay County: 27 confirmed cases 427 tested 2 deaths Cleburne County: 13 confirmed cases 199 tested 1 deaths Coffee County: 184 confirmed cases 1,518 tested 1 deaths Colbert County: 112 confirmed cases 2,115 tested 2 deaths Conecuh County: 23 confirmed cases 280 tested 1 deaths Coosa County: 33 confirmed cases 241 tested 1 deaths Covington County: 62 confirmed cases 979 tested 1 deaths Crenshaw County: 52 confirmed cases 594 tested 2 deaths Cullman County: 73 confirmed cases 2,308 tested 0 deaths Dale County: 76 confirmed cases 937 tested 0 deaths Dallas County: 179 confirmed cases 1,600 tested 3 deaths DeKalb County: 209 confirmed cases 1,618 tested 3 deaths Elmore County: 238 confirmed cases 2,480 tested 7 deaths Escambia County: 39 confirmed cases 985 tested 3 deaths Etowah County: 226 confirmed cases 3,725 tested 10 deaths Fayette County: 10 confirmed cases 482 tested 0 deaths Franklin County: 411 confirmed cases 1,676 tested 5 deaths Geneva County: 28 confirmed cases 513 tested 0 deaths Greene County: 88 confirmed cases 428 tested 4 deaths Hale County: 110 confirmed cases 720 tested 3 deaths Henry County: 48 confirmed cases 379 tested 1 deaths Houston County: 154 confirmed cases 2,732 tested 3 deaths Jackson County: 69 confirmed cases 2,112 tested 2 deaths Jefferson County: 1,469 confirmed cases 31,813 tested 85 deaths Lamar County: 18 confirmed cases 419 tested 0 deaths Lauderdale County: 119 confirmed cases 3,313 tested 2 deaths Lawrence County: 40 confirmed cases 569 tested 0 deaths Lee County: 467 confirmed cases 5,279 tested 32 deaths Limestone County: 71 confirmed cases 1,785 tested 0 deaths Lowndes County: 164 confirmed cases 474 tested 10 deaths Macon County: 58 confirmed cases 547 tested 2 deaths Madison County: 284 confirmed cases 13,081 tested 4 deaths Marengo County: 121 confirmed cases 1,236 tested 6 deaths Marion County: 108 confirmed cases 1,277 tested 10 deaths Marshall County: 643 confirmed cases 4,814 tested 9 deaths Mobile County: 1,874 confirmed cases 17,591 tested 107 deaths Monroe County: 23 confirmed cases 456 tested 2 deaths Montgomery County: 1,052 confirmed cases 7,143 tested 28 deaths Morgan County: 142 confirmed cases 3,097 tested 1 deaths Perry County: 26 confirmed cases 496 tested 0 deaths Pickens County: 86 confirmed cases 816 tested 4 deaths Pike County: 125 confirmed cases 1,159 tested 0 deaths Randolph County: 122 confirmed cases 847 tested 7 deaths Russell County: 118 confirmed cases 1,184 tested 0 deaths Shelby County: 419 confirmed cases 7,705 tested 19 deaths St. Clair County: 98 confirmed cases 2,671 tested 1 deaths Sumter County: 170 confirmed cases 840 tested 5 deaths Talladega County: 84 confirmed cases 2,521 tested 2 deaths Tallapoosa County: 384 confirmed cases 2,469 tested 59 deaths Tuscaloosa County: 454 confirmed cases 7,625 tested 9 deaths Unknown or Out of State County: 0 confirmed cases 0 tested 0 deaths Walker County: 172 confirmed cases 2,312 tested 1 deaths Washington County: 63 confirmed cases 475 tested 5 deaths Wilcox County: 110 confirmed cases 461 tested 6 deaths Winston County: 52 confirmed cases 863 tested 0 deaths https://alpublichealth.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/6d2771faa9da4a2786a509d82c8cf0f7
-
New Hampshire 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Summary Report (data updated as of May 21, 2020, 9:00 AM) https://www.nh.gov/covid19/ Number of Persons with COVID-19 1 3,935 Recovered 1,767 (45%) Deaths Attributed to COVID-19 199 (5%) Total Current COVID-19 Cases 1,969 Persons Who Have Been Hospitalized for COVID-19 393 (10%) Current Hospitalizations 97 Total Persons Tested at Selected Laboratories, Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)2 55,100 Total Persons Tested at Selected Laboratories, Antibody Laboratory Tests2 7,835 Persons with Specimens Submitted to NH PHL 19,102 Persons with Test Pending at NH PHL3 1,526 Persons Being Monitored in NH (approximate point in time) 3,925 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. Cases by County County Cases Belknap 54 Carroll 46 Cheshire 50 Coos 4 Grafton 66 Hillsborough - Other 644 Hillsborough - Manchester 955 Hillsborough - Nashua 364 Merrimack 299 Rockingham 1,179 Strafford 243 Sullivan 16 County TBD 15 Grand Total 3,935
-
https://health.wyo.gov/publichealth/infectious-disease-epidemiology-unit/disease/novel-coronavirus/covid-19-map-and-statistics/
-
https://montana.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=7c34f3412536439491adcc2103421d4b
-
Statewide COVID-19 Positive* Cases Total Cases 647 (4 newly reported) Released from Isolation† 579 Required Hospitalization 83 Deaths 17 https://health.hawaii.gov/coronavirusdisease2019/what-you-should-know/current-situation-in-hawaii/
-
2,798 Douglas 1,489 Dakota 1,452 Hall 995 Lancaster 813 Dawson 573 Colfax 515 Platte 463 Saline 404 Sarpy 295 Dodge 294 Madison 258 Adams 136 Buffalo 58 Scotts Bluff 52 Hamilton 48 Lincoln 44 Gage 38 Howard 37 Butler 32 Merrick 30 York 29 Custer 27 Cass 27 Seward 26 Cuming 26 Washington 24 Dixon 23 Thurston 22 Saunders 20 Clay 16 Phelps 15 Stanton 13 Gosper 11 Kearney 10 Morrill 9 Polk 9 Cheyenne 8 Kimball 8 Knox 7 Wayne 7 Burt 7 Johnson 7 Antelope 6 Otoe 6 Jefferson 6 Cedar 6 Franklin 6 Furnas 5 Nance 5 Webster 5 Red Willow 5 Fillmore 3 Boone 3 Nemaha 3 Valley 2 Pierce 2 Keith 2 Greeley 2 Sherman 1 Sheridan 1 Thomas 1 Holt 1 Nuckolls 1 Box Butte 1 Hitchcock 1 Dawes 1 Richardson 1 Harlan 1 Frontier 1 Cherry
-
Abbeville Rate (per 100k): 146.78 Positives: 36 Deaths: 0 Aiken Rate (per 100k): 94.22 Positives: 161 Deaths: 7 Allendale Rate (per 100k): 391.34 Positives: 34 Deaths: 3 Anderson Rate (per 100k): 107.13 Positives: 217 Deaths: 8 Bamberg Rate (per 100k): 142.19 Positives: 20 Deaths: 0 Barnwell Rate (per 100k): 196.49 Positives: 41 Deaths: 1 Beaufort Rate (per 100k): 159.27 Positives: 306 Deaths: 12 Berkeley Rate (per 100k): 91.7 Positives: 209 Deaths: 15 Calhoun Rate (per 100k): 61.84 Positives: 9 Deaths: 1 Charleston Rate (per 100k): 127.13 Positives: 523 Deaths: 11 Cherokee Rate (per 100k): 43.63 Positives: 25 Deaths: 2 Chester Rate (per 100k): 127.16 Positives: 41 Deaths: 0 Chesterfield Rate (per 100k): 236.58 Positives: 108 Deaths: 1 Clarendon Rate (per 100k): 853.46 Positives: 288 Deaths: 36 Colleton Rate (per 100k): 167.21 Positives: 63 Deaths: 8 Darlington Rate (per 100k): 360.26 Positives: 240 Deaths: 6 Dillon Rate (per 100k): 452.77 Positives: 138 Deaths: 3 Dorchester Rate (per 100k): 73.71 Positives: 120 Deaths: 3 Edgefield Rate (per 100k): 168.75 Positives: 46 Deaths: 2 Fairfield Rate (per 100k): 680.18 Positives: 152 Deaths: 9 Florence Rate (per 100k): 407.11 Positives: 563 Deaths: 30 Georgetown Rate (per 100k): 84.56 Positives: 53 Deaths: 3 Greenville Rate (per 100k): 225.39 Positives: 1,180 Deaths: 50 Greenwood Rate (per 100k): 107.33 Positives: 76 Deaths: 1 Hampton Rate (per 100k): 156.07 Positives: 30 Deaths: 0 Horry Rate (per 100k): 94.05 Positives: 333 Deaths: 21 Jasper Rate (per 100k): 93.11 Positives: 28 Deaths: 1 Kershaw Rate (per 100k): 422.23 Positives: 281 Deaths: 13 Lancaster Rate (per 100k): 118.35 Positives: 116 Deaths: 5 Laurens Rate (per 100k): 84.45 Positives: 57 Deaths: 3 Lee Rate (per 100k): 1,057.76 Positives: 178 Deaths: 13 Lexington Rate (per 100k): 175.73 Positives: 525 Deaths: 29 McCormick Rate (per 100k): 73.97 Positives: 7 Deaths: 1 Marion Rate (per 100k): 185.93 Positives: 57 Deaths: 4 Marlboro Rate (per 100k): 336.93 Positives: 88 Deaths: 0 Newberry Rate (per 100k): 93.65 Positives: 36 Deaths: 1 Oconee Rate (per 100k): 51.54 Positives: 41 Deaths: 0 Orangeburg Rate (per 100k): 138.09 Positives: 119 Deaths: 2 Pickens Rate (per 100k): 81.96 Positives: 104 Deaths: 3 Richland Rate (per 100k): 313.16 Positives: 1,302 Deaths: 62 Saluda Rate (per 100k): 644.75 Positives: 132 Deaths: 0 Spartanburg Rate (per 100k): 131.65 Positives: 421 Deaths: 14 Sumter Rate (per 100k): 310.15 Positives: 331 Deaths: 17 Union Rate (per 100k): 113.49 Positives: 31 Deaths: 0 Williamsburg Rate (per 100k): 622.37 Positives: 189 Deaths: 10 York Rate (per 100k): 115.31 Positives: 324 Deaths: 5 https://www.scdhec.gov/infectious-diseases/viruses/coronavirus-disease-2019-covid-19/sc-testing-data-projections-covid-19