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niman

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  1. Total COVID-19 Positive 9,933 Source: RIDOH COVID-19 Fatalities 355 Source: RIDOH Newly Reported Fatalities 14 Source: RIDOH Total Covid-19 Tests 76,435 Source: RIDOH Covid-19 Negative 66,502 Source: RIDOH Newly Reported Positive Tests 281 Source: RIDOH Currently Hospitalized 327 Source: RIDOH Currently in ICU 89 Source: RIDOH Currently on Vent 62 Source: RIDOH https://ri-department-of-health-covid-19-data-rihealth.hub.arcgis.com/
  2. 29,996 Cases Reported* Presumed Recovered** 20,316 as of 5/2/2020 Tests Completed 8,616 by State Lab Reported COVID-19 Patients in Hospitals 1,512 194 of those on ventilators Deaths Reported 2,042 73 Probable Deaths*** Commercial Tests 179,615 Performed http://ldh.la.gov/coronavirus/
  3. https://www.vdh.virginia.gov/coronavirus/
  4. New Positive Cases 541 between 05/03/2020 and 05/04/2020 New Deaths 62 between 03/31/2020 and 05/04/2020 New Tests 2,550 between 04/05/2020 and 05/04/2020 Total Positive Cases 21,033 Total Deaths 1,213 Total Tested 115,83418.2% Positive https://www.coronavirus.in.gov/
  5. https://dph.georgia.gov/covid-19-daily-status-report
  6. COVID-19 Statistics in Maryland Number of confirmed cases : 27,117 Number of negative test results : 112,986 Number of confirmed deaths : 1,290 Number of probable deaths : 100 Currently hospitalized : 1,693 Acute care : 1,120 Intensive care : 573 Ever hospitalized : 5,337 Released from isolation : 1,810 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 129 (12) Anne Arundel 2,045 (98) 9* Baltimore City 2,609 (124) 9* Baltimore County 3,430 (142) 15* Calvert 174 (10) 1* Caroline 99 Carroll 513 (52) Cecil 195 (13) Charles 660 (47) 3* Dorchester 76 (2) Frederick 1,071 (59) 7* Garrett 4 Harford 499 (15) 4* Howard 1,010 (22) 1* Kent 95 (7) Montgomery 5,541 (292) 28* Prince George's 7,831 (280) 15* Queen Anne's 65 (8) St. Mary's 170 (7) Somerset 37 Talbot 45 (1) Washington 238 (6) Wicomico 500 (11) Worcester 81 (2) 1* Data not available (80) 7* By Age Range and Gender Age/Gender Cases Deaths 0-9 398 10-19 791 20-29 3,287 (9) 30-39 4,687 (17) 1* 40-49 4,841 (32) 3* 50-59 4,820 (86) 9* 60-69 3,636 (199) 12* 70-79 2,465 (311) 14* 80+ 2,192 (553) 55* Data not available (83) 6* Female 14,316 (619) 54* Male 12,801 (671) 46* By Race and Ethnicity Race/Ethnicity Cases Deaths African-American (NH) 9,424 (521) 35* Asian (NH) 565 (44) 3* White (NH) 6,129 (537) 51* Hispanic 5,144 (83) 5* Other (NH) 937 (19) Data not available 4,918 (86) 6* https://coronavirus.maryland.gov/
  7. Autauga County: 53 confirmed cases 926 total tests 3 deaths Baldwin County: 189 confirmed cases 3,446 total tests 5 deaths Barbour County: 45 confirmed cases 381 total tests 1 deaths Bibb County: 43 confirmed cases 828 total tests 0 deaths Blount County: 40 confirmed cases 791 total tests 0 deaths Bullock County: 16 confirmed cases 123 total tests 0 deaths Butler County: 116 confirmed cases 470 total tests 2 deaths Calhoun County: 108 confirmed cases 1,729 total tests 3 deaths Chambers County: 303 confirmed cases 1,109 total tests 21 deaths Cherokee County: 17 confirmed cases 311 total tests 0 deaths Chilton County: 59 confirmed cases 704 total tests 1 deaths Choctaw County: 52 confirmed cases 184 total tests 0 deaths Clarke County: 43 confirmed cases 457 total tests 1 deaths Clay County: 23 confirmed cases 283 total tests 1 deaths Cleburne County: 13 confirmed cases 107 total tests 1 deaths Coffee County: 134 confirmed cases 923 total tests 0 deaths Colbert County: 41 confirmed cases 1,035 total tests 2 deaths Conecuh County: 9 confirmed cases 137 total tests 0 deaths Coosa County: 30 confirmed cases 165 total tests 1 deaths Covington County: 45 confirmed cases 523 total tests 1 deaths Crenshaw County: 26 confirmed cases 284 total tests 0 deaths Cullman County: 58 confirmed cases 1,496 total tests 0 deaths Dale County: 34 confirmed cases 535 total tests 0 deaths Dallas County: 66 confirmed cases 725 total tests 3 deaths DeKalb County: 94 confirmed cases 1,242 total tests 2 deaths Elmore County: 113 confirmed cases 1,412 total tests 3 deaths Escambia County: 32 confirmed cases 622 total tests 2 deaths Etowah County: 148 confirmed cases 2,238 total tests 10 deaths Fayette County: 6 confirmed cases 319 total tests 0 deaths Franklin County: 139 confirmed cases 778 total tests 0 deaths Geneva County: 11 confirmed cases 269 total tests 0 deaths Greene County: 61 confirmed cases 236 total tests 2 deaths Hale County: 58 confirmed cases 372 total tests 2 deaths Henry County: 27 confirmed cases 230 total tests 1 deaths Houston County: 98 confirmed cases 1,324 total tests 4 deaths Jackson County: 50 confirmed cases 1,343 total tests 2 deaths Jefferson County: 995 confirmed cases 17,130 total tests 49 deaths Lamar County: 12 confirmed cases 279 total tests 0 deaths Lauderdale County: 63 confirmed cases 1,767 total tests 2 deaths Lawrence County: 14 confirmed cases 379 total tests 0 deaths Lee County: 404 confirmed cases 3,236 total tests 28 deaths Limestone County: 48 confirmed cases 1,368 total tests 0 deaths Lowndes County: 75 confirmed cases 235 total tests 2 deaths Macon County: 41 confirmed cases 337 total tests 2 deaths Madison County: 238 confirmed cases 8,462 total tests 4 deaths Marengo County: 66 confirmed cases 563 total tests 3 deaths Marion County: 87 confirmed cases 927 total tests 6 deaths Marshall County: 399 confirmed cases 3,235 total tests 8 deaths Mobile County: 1,226 confirmed cases 9,122 total tests 68 deaths Monroe County: 13 confirmed cases 239 total tests 1 deaths Montgomery County: 439 confirmed cases 3,279 total tests 8 deaths Morgan County: 76 confirmed cases 1,963 total tests 0 deaths Perry County: 16 confirmed cases 318 total tests 0 deaths Pickens County: 56 confirmed cases 504 total tests 2 deaths Pike County: 79 confirmed cases 725 total tests 0 deaths Randolph County: 79 confirmed cases 454 total tests 4 deaths Russell County: 63 confirmed cases 566 total tests 0 deaths Shelby County: 330 confirmed cases 4,385 total tests 13 deaths St. Clair County: 76 confirmed cases 1,425 total tests 0 deaths Sumter County: 81 confirmed cases 352 total tests 3 deaths Talladega County: 66 confirmed cases 1,445 total tests 2 deaths Tallapoosa County: 299 confirmed cases 1,542 total tests 22 deaths Tuscaloosa County: 239 confirmed cases 4,724 total tests 3 deaths Unknown or Out of State County: 0 confirmed cases 7,001 total tests 0 deaths Walker County: 100 confirmed cases 1,048 total tests 0 deaths Washington County: 38 confirmed cases 227 total tests 2 deaths Wilcox County: 72 confirmed cases 252 total tests 4 deaths Winston County: 16 confirmed cases 457 total tests 0 deaths https://alpublichealth.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/6d2771faa9da4a2786a509d82c8cf0f7
  8. https://coronavirus.iowa.gov/
  9. Updated daily by 11 a.m. Last updated 11:00 a.m., May 5, 2020. https://www.ncdhhs.gov/divisions/public-health/covid19/covid-19-nc-case-count#nc-counties-with-cases Laboratory-Confirmed Cases Deaths Completed Tests Currently Hospitalized Number of Counties 12,256 452 151,800 534 99 Knowing when to dial up or down social distancing and other protections depends on two factors: our Trends in key metrics, and our capacity to conduct Testing and Tracing. Governor Cooper and Secretary Cohen announced a combination of key metrics that North Carolina is watching to inform decisions to ease restrictions. These key metrics are included below. Laboratory-Confirmed Cases reflect cases that were tested and returned positive, including the NC State Laboratory of Public Health and reporting hospital and commercial labs. All data are preliminary. Not all cases of COVID-19 are tested, so this does not represent the total number of people in North Carolina who have or had COVID-19. Deaths reflect deaths in persons with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 reported by local health departments to the NC Department of Health and Human Services.
  10. May 4 http://mediaarchives.gsradio.net/rense/special/rense_050420_hr3.mp3
  11. New York City 176,874 Albany County 1,294 Allegany County 35 Broome County 338 Cattaraugus County 53 Cayuga County 51 Chautauqua County 37 Chemung County 126 Chenango County 100 Clinton County 69 Columbia County 229 Cortland County 28 Delaware County 62 Dutchess County 3,151 Erie County 3,891 Essex County 30 Franklin County 16 Fulton County 97 Genesee County 159 Greene County 154 Hamilton County 3 Herkimer County 67 Jefferson County 63 Lewis County 9 Livingston County 86 Madison County 223 Monroe County 1,623 Montgomery County 61 Nassau County 37,152 Niagara County 508 Oneida County 574 Onondaga County 1,002 Ontario County 97 Orange County 9,144 Orleans County 99 Oswego County 68 Otsego County 67 Putnam County 1,031 Rensselaer County 339 Rockland County 12,144 Saratoga County 368 Schenectady County 537 Schoharie County 45 Schuyler County 7 Seneca County 46 St. Lawrence County 178 Steuben County 221 Suffolk County 35,275 Sullivan County 984 Tioga County 92 Tompkins County 129 Ulster County 1,357 Warren County 192 Washington County 188 Wayne County 76 Westchester County 30,240 Wyoming County 70 Yates County 19 New York State Total 321,192 New York State Deaths 19,645 New York City Deaths (Note: includes confirmed COVID-19 deaths as reported by the state and probable deaths as reported by the NYC Health Department) 19,057 https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/how-many-in-tri-state-have-tested-positive-for-coronavirus-here-are-latest-cases-by-the-numbers/2317721/
  12. COVID-19 Data for Pennsylvania* * Map, tables, case counts and deaths last updated at 12:00 p.m. on 5/5/2020 Source: Pennsylvania National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (PA-NEDSS) as of 12:00 a.m. on 5/5/2020 Case Counts, Deaths, and Negatives Total Cases* Deaths Negative 50,957 3,012 199,925 * Total case counts include confirmed and probable cases. 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 1% 19-24 6% 25-49 38% 50-64 27% 65+ 27% * 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% County Case Counts to Date County Total Cases Negatives Deaths Adams 148 1670 5 Allegheny 1375 17636 109 Armstrong 53 753 3 Beaver 466 2187 73 Bedford 26 253 1 Berks 3004 6252 147 Blair 25 1174 0 Bradford 35 769 2 Bucks 3445 9540 283 Butler 184 2524 6 Cambria 34 1525 1 Cameron 2 65 0 Carbon 185 1161 15 Centre 106 1071 1 Chester 1601 5990 149 Clarion 23 518 1 Clearfield 21 503 0 Clinton 33 285 0 Columbia 298 715 16 Crawford 19 725 0 Cumberland 382 1796 25 Dauphin 695 4176 29 Delaware 4269 10186 318 Elk 4 190 0 Erie 93 2290 2 Fayette 84 1992 4 Forest 7 30 0 Franklin 396 3242 9 Fulton 7 99 0 Greene 27 463 1 Huntingdon 59 340 0 Indiana 74 782 5 Jefferson 6 348 0 Juniata 86 176 1 Lackawanna 1038 2904 103 Lancaster 2018 8759 144 Lawrence 67 810 7 Lebanon 766 2880 15 Lehigh 2999 7828 94 Luzerne 2280 5684 104 Lycoming 86 1253 4 McKean 6 194 0 Mercer 67 817 1 Mifflin 42 757 0 Monroe 1186 2978 60 Montgomery 4687 18738 443 Montour 50 2970 0 Northampton 2279 6853 117 Northumberland 107 683 0 Perry 34 289 1 Philadelphia 13563 31631 627 Pike 412 1365 17 Potter 4 88 0 Schuylkill 405 2279 7 Snyder 33 234 1 Somerset 30 705 1 Sullivan 1 41 0 Susquehanna 86 338 11 Tioga 16 272 1 Union 38 601 1 Venango 7 269 0 Warren 1 190 0 Washington 120 2364 2 Wayne 109 586 5 Westmoreland 405 5094 27 Wyoming 27 199 2 York 716 7846 11 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 and Deaths by Sex to Date Sex Positive Cases Percent of Cases* Deaths Female 27,713 54% 1473 Male 22,634 44% 1522 Neither 3 <1% 0 Not reported 607 1% 17 * Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding Case Counts and Deaths by Race to Date* Race Positive Cases Percent of Cases** Deaths African American/Black 5548 11% 312 Asian 592 1% 34 White 11,498 23% 1099 Other 243 <1% 10 Not reported 33,076 65% 1557 * 65% 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 770 8982 13 Northeast 10510 29896 99 Northwest 290 6949 12 Southcentral 3300 24698 44 Southeast 32556 93375 605 Southwest 2745 36025 26 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 Facility County Number of Facilities with Cases Number of Cases Among Residents Number of Cases Among Employees Number of Deaths ADAMS 1 19 4 4 ALLEGHENY 35 306 96 86 ARMSTRONG 1 5 4 1 BEAVER 3 305 23 66 BERKS 19 543 69 99 BUCKS 48 869 163 216 BUTLER 5 12 10 2 CAMBRIA 1 1 . 0 CARBON 2 48 5 12 CENTRE 3 4 4 0 CHESTER 31 498 57 129 CLARION 1 1 1 0 CLEARFIELD 2 2 . 0 COLUMBIA 2 82 27 19 CUMBERLAND 4 181 45 23 DAUPHIN 3 132 29 21 DELAWARE 42 1027 150 237 ERIE 4 3 2 0 FAYETTE 1 3 . 1 FRANKLIN 6 49 6 2 INDIANA 3 13 1 4 LACKAWANNA 14 425 60 85 LANCASTER 27 453 114 121 LAWRENCE 2 0 2 0 LEBANON 5 55 9 9 LEHIGH 26 436 87 63 LUZERNE 16 308 46 68 LYCOMING 2 26 6 3 MERCER 1 1 . 0 MIFFLIN 2 1 1 0 MONROE 8 127 28 25 MONTGOMERY 80 1509 49 355 NORTHAMPTON 13 530 118 75 NORTHUMBERLAND 1 6 2 0 PHILADELPHIA 53 1398 7 261 PIKE 2 29 4 5 SCHUYLKILL 6 31 7 0 SUSQUEHANNA 3 44 12 11 UNION 1 0 1 0 WASHINGTON 3 6 2 1 WAYNE 1 0 1 0 WESTMORELAND 8 129 30 24 YORK 4 8 2 1 PENNSYLVANIA 495 9625 1284 2029 https://www.health.pa.gov/topics/disease/coronavirus/Pages/Cases.aspx
  13. COVID-19 Testing at Kane (As of 5/4/2020) Residents Tested Positive Negative Pending Recovered* COVID-19 Deaths COVID-19 Hospitalizations Glen Hazel 103 67 35 1 43 12 9 Scott 19 0 18 1 0 0 0 McKeesport 35 1 34 0 0 0 0 Ross 20 0 19 1 0 0 0 * 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. COVID-19 Testing at Kane (As of 5/4/2020) Staff Tested Positive Negative Pending Recovered Glen Hazel 78 41 36 1 18 Scott 14 1 12 1 0 McKeesport 23 1 22 0 0 Ross 26 1 25 0 0 https://www.alleghenycounty.us/kane/index.aspx
  14. 15 Children Are Hospitalized With Mysterious Illness Possibly Tied to Covid-19 The health authorities in New York City issued an alert saying that the children had a syndrome that doctors do not yet fully understand. The boardwalk in the Rockaways in Queens. Children are less likely to become seriously ill with Covid-19 than adults. But some do.Credit...Kirsten Luce for The New York Times By Joseph Goldstein May 5, 2020Updated 7:55 a.m. ET Fifteen children, many of whom had the coronavirus, have recently been hospitalized in New York City with a mysterious syndrome that doctors do not yet fully understand but that has also been reported in several European countries, health officials announced on Monday night. Many of the children, ages 2 to 15, have shown symptoms associated with toxic shock or Kawasaki disease, a rare illness in children that involves inflammation of the blood vessels, including coronary arteries, the city’s health department said. None of the New York City patients with the syndrome have died, according to a bulletin from the health department, which describes the illness as a “multisystem inflammatory syndrome potentially associated with Covid-19.” Reached late Monday night, the state health commissioner, Dr. Howard A. Zucker, said state officials were also investigating the unexplained syndrome. The syndrome has received growing attention in recent weeks as cases began appearing in European countries hit hard by the coronavirus. “There are some recent rare descriptions of children in some European countries that have had this inflammatory syndrome, which is similar to the Kawasaki syndrome, but it seems to be very rare,” Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, a World Health Organization scientist, said at a news briefing last week. Some states that have partially reopened are still seeing an increase in coronavirus cases, including Iowa, Minnesota, Tennessee and Texas, according to Times data. Indiana, Kansas, Nebraska and Arizona also are seeing an increase in cases and are planning on some kind of reopening soon. Alaska has also reopened and is seeing a small number of increasing cases. While the country has stabilized, it has not really improved, as shown by data collected by The Times. Case and death numbers remain stuck on a numbing, tragic plateau that is tilting only slightly downward. At least 1,000 people with the virus, and sometimes more than 2,000, have died every day for the last month. On a near-daily basis, at least 25,000 new cases of the virus are being identified across the country. And even as New York City, New Orleans and Detroit have shown improvement, other urban centers, including Chicago and Los Angeles, are reporting steady growth in cases. The situation has devolved most dramatically in parts of rural America that were largely spared in the early stages of the pandemic. As food processing facilities and prisons have emerged as some of the country’s largest case clusters, the counties that include Logansport, Ind., South Sioux City, Neb., and Marion, Ohio, have surpassed New York City in cases per capita. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/04/us/coronavirus-updates.html
  15. May 4, 2020 Dear Colleagues, A pediatric multi-system inflammatory syndrome, recently reported by authorities in the United Kingdom, 1 is also being observed among children and young adults in New York City and elsewhere in the United States. Clinical features vary, depending on the affected organ system, but have been noted to include features of Kawasaki disease or features of shock; however, the full spectrum of disease is not yet known. Persistent fever and elevated inflammatory markers (CRP, troponin, etc.) have been seen among affected patients. Patients with this syndrome who have been admitted to pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) have required cardiac and/or respiratory support. Only severe cases may have been recognized at this time. The NYC Health Department contacted PICUs in NYC during April 29-May 3, 2020 and identified 15 patients aged 2-15 years who had been hospitalized from April 17- May 1, 2020 with illnesses compatible with this syndrome (i.e., typical Kawasaki disease, incomplete Kawasaki disease, and/or shock). All patients had subjective or measured fever and more than half reported rash, abdominal pain, vomiting, or diarrhea. Respiratory symptoms were reported in less than half of these patients. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing for SARS-CoV-2 has been positive (4), negative (10), and initially indeterminate and then negative (1). Six patients with negative testing by PCR were positive by serology. More than half of the reported patients required blood pressure support and five required mechanical ventilation. No fatalities have been reported among these cases. If the above-described inflammatory syndrome is suspected, pediatricians should immediately refer patients to a specialist in pediatric infectious disease, rheumatology, and/or critical care, as indicated. Early diagnosis and treatment of patients meeting full or partial criteria for Kawasaki disease is critical to preventing end-organ damage and other long-term complications. Patients meeting criteria for Kawasaki disease should be treated with intravenous immunoglobulin and aspirin. Consistent with the NYC Health Code Article 11, which requires reporting of outbreaks and suspected outbreaks of syndromes of known or unknown etiology and of unusual manifestations of disease of public health interest, any patient who meets the following criteria should immediately be reported to the NYC Health Department by calling the Provider Access Line at 866-692-3641: • Less than 21 years old, with persistent fever (four or more days), and either incomplete Kawasaki disease, typical Kawasaki disease, and/or toxic shock syndrome-like presentation; and • No alternative etiology identified that explains the clinical presentation (note: patients should be reported regardless of SARS-CoV-2 PCR test result). Thank you for your ongoing collaboration. Sincerely, Demetre C. Daskalakis, MD, MPH Deputy Commissioner Division of Disease Control New York City Health Department 1 Pediatric Intensive Care Society. PICS Statement: Increased number of reported cases of novel presentation of multi-system inflammatory disease. April 27, 2020. Available at https://picsociety.uk/wpcontent/uploads/2020/04/PICS-statement-re-novel-KD-C19-presentation-v2-27042020.pdf
  16. Fifteen cases compatible with multi-system inflammatory syndrome have been identified in children in New York City hospitals. • Characterized by persistent fever and features of Kawasaki disease and/or toxic shock syndrome; abdominal symptoms common • Cases may require intensive care unit admission for cardiac and/or respiratory support • Polymerase chain reaction testing for SARS-CoV-2 may be positive or negative • Early recognition and specialist referral are essential, including to critical care if warranted • Immediately report cases to the New York City Health Department’s Provider Access Line: 866-692-3641 https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/doh/downloads/pdf/han/alert/2020/covid-19-pediatric-multi-system-inflammatory-syndrome.pdf
  17. May 1 http://mediaarchives.gsradio.net/rense/special/rense_050120_hr3.mp3
  18. 370 Cumulative (includes recovered cases) https://coronavirus-response-alaska-dhss.hub.arcgis.com/ Total Recovered Cases 263 Total Hospitalizations 37 Cumulative (does not reflect current stays) Total Deaths 9
  19. https://health.wyo.gov/publichealth/infectious-disease-epidemiology-unit/disease/novel-coronavirus/covid-19-map-and-statistics/
  20. https://montana.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=7c34f3412536439491adcc2103421d4b
  21. Statewide COVID-19 Positive* Cases Total Cases 621 (1 newly reported) Released from Isolation† 548 Required Hospitalization 73 Deaths 17 https://health.hawaii.gov/coronavirusdisease2019/what-you-should-know/current-situation-in-hawaii/
  22. https://www.health.nd.gov/diseases-conditions/coronavirus/north-dakota-coronavirus-cases
  23. Total Cases 902 Currently Hospitalized 8 Hospitalized Under Investigation 7 Deaths 52 Total Tests 17,332 People Being Monitored 12 People Completed Monitoring 841 https://www.healthvermont.gov/response/coronavirus-covid-19/current-activity-vermont
  24. Maine COVID‑19 Cumulative Case Data Updated: May 4, 2020 at 12:30 PM Total Cases1 Confirmed Cases Probable Cases Recovered Hospitalizations Deaths 1,205 1,136 69 720 186 57 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 Number of Individuals with Negative COVID‑19 Test Results in Maine Updated: April 29, 202019,546 Maine CDC will publish negative results once a week on Wednesdays. Because of the number of outside labs that are testing samples from Maine, it is not currently possible to post a complete count of negative tests on a daily basis. View a Table of Maine COVID-19 Current Hospital Use and Capacity Data Hospitalized: Confirmed Cases Total Hospitalized 37 In Critical Care 18 On a Ventilator 11
  25. https://dhhr.wv.gov/COVID-19/Pages/default.aspx
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