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Bergen County: 15446 Positive Test Results 1057 Deaths Hudson County: 14596 Positive Test Results 758 Deaths Essex County: 13445 Positive Test Results 1139 Deaths Union County: 12380 Positive Test Results 653 Deaths Passaic County: 12185 Positive Test Results 516 Deaths Middlesex County: 11436 Positive Test Results 531 Deaths Ocean County: 6253 Positive Test Results 367 Deaths Monmouth County: 5907 Positive Test Results 317 Deaths Morris County: 5213 Positive Test Results 387 Deaths Mercer County: 3725 Positive Test Results 220 Deaths Camden County: 3385 Positive Test Results 136 Deaths Somerset County: 3372 Positive Test Results 252 Deaths Burlington County: 2606 Positive Test Results 117 Deaths Gloucester County: 1208 Positive Test Results 40 Deaths Atlantic County: 908 Positive Test Results 37 Deaths Sussex County: 900 Positive Test Results 99 Deaths Warren County: 880 Positive Test Results 81 Deaths Cumberland County: 687 Positive Test Results 10 Deaths Hunterdon County: 583 Positive Test Results 23 Deaths Cape May County: 305 Positive Test Results 21 Deaths Salem County: 227 Positive Test Results 9 Deaths https://www.nj.gov/health/cd/topics/covid2019_dashboard.shtml
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New York City 164,841 Albany County 1,067 Allegany County 35 Broome County 273 Cattaraugus County 47 Cayuga County 48 Chautauqua County 31 Chemung County 119 Chenango County 96 Clinton County 59 Columbia County 165 Cortland County 28 Delaware County 60 Dutchess County 2,881 Erie County 3,196 Essex County 27 Franklin County 15 Fulton County 67 Genesee County 152 Greene County 114 Hamilton County 3 Herkimer County 58 Jefferson County 60 Lewis County 9 Livingston County 67 Madison County 126 Monroe County 1,404 Montgomery County 51 Nassau County 35,505 Niagara County 401 Oneida County 422 Onondaga County 782 Ontario County 90 Orange County 8,488 Orleans County 85 Oswego County 63 Otsego County 66 Putnam County 946 Rensselaer County 262 Rockland County 11,586 Saratoga County 346 Schenectady County 479 Schoharie County 39 Schuyler County 7 Seneca County 38 St. Lawrence County 170 Steuben County 214 Suffolk County 33,265 Sullivan County 811 Tioga County 84 Tompkins County 127 Ulster County 1,252 Warren County 152 Washington County 134 Wayne County 70 Westchester County 28,626 Wyoming County 65 Yates County 17 New York State Total 299,691 New York State Deaths 18,015 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) 18,076 https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/how-many-in-tri-state-have-tested-positive-for-coronavirus-here-are-latest-cases-by-the-numbers/2317721/
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Remdesivir Accelerates Recovery Of Advanced COVID Patients
niman replied to niman's topic in Coronavirus (COVID)
Critical study of Gilead’s Covid-19 drug shows patients are responding to treatment, NIH says By MATTHEW HERPER @matthewherper and ADAM FEUERSTEIN @adamfeuerstein APRIL 29, 2020 ULRICH PERREY/POOL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Agovernment-run study of Gilead’s remdesivir, perhaps the most closely watched experimental drug to treat the novel coronavirus, showed that the medicine is effective against Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus. In a statement on Wednesday, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which is conducting the study, said preliminary data show patients who received remdesivir recovered faster than similar patients who received placebo. The finding — although difficult to fully characterize without full, detailed data for the study — would represent the first treatment shown to improve outcomes in patients infected with the virus that put the global economy in a standstill and killed at least 218,000 people worldwide. During an appearance alongside President Trump in the Oval Office, Anthony Fauci, the director of NIAID, part of the National Institutes of Health, said the data are a “very important proof of concept” and that there was reason for optimism. He cautioned the data were not a “knockout.” At the same time, the study achieved its primary goal, which was to improve the time to recovery, which was reduced by four days for patients on remdesivir. Over the past few weeks, there have been conflicting reports about the potential benefit of remdesivir, a drug that was previously tried in Ebola. As previously reported by STAT, an early peek at Gilead’s study in severe Covid-19 patients, based on data from a trial at a Chicago hospital, suggested patients were doing better than expected on remdesivir. Days later, a summary of results from a study in China showed that patients on the drug did not improve more than those in a control group. Full results from the China study were also released Wednesday. But the NIAID study, which was not expected to be released so soon, was by far the most important and rigorously designed test of remdesivir in Covid-19. The study compared remdesivir to placebo in 800 patients, with neither patients nor physicians knowing who got the drug instead of a placebo, meaning that unconscious biases will not affect the conclusions. The main goal of the study is the time until patients improve, with different measures of improvement depending on how sick they were to begin with. While the result means that the drug helps patients improve faster, it is not possible to say how dramatic those improvements are. Scott Gottlieb, the former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, said he expected there was enough evidence for the agency to issue an “emergency use authorization” for remdesivir. “Remdesivir isn’t a home run but looks active and can be part of a toolbox of drugs and diagnostics that substantially lower our risk heading into the fall,” he said. The FDA previously issued an emergency authorization for the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine to treat Covid-19, even though at least some studies suggesting the medicine was not effective. “If hydroxychloroquine met [the emergency] standard, then remdesivir would have seemed to cross that line a while ago, especially in the setting of treating critically ill patients,” Gottlieb said. Remdesivir, which must be given intravenously, is likely to remain a treatment for patients who are hospitalized. But it is also likely that it will be most effective in patients who have been infected more recently, said Nahid Bhadelia, medical director of the special pathogens unit at Boston Medical Center. “We know that with most antiviral medications the earlier you give it the better it is.” said Bhadelia, who had experience giving remdesivir as an experimental treatment for Ebola in Africa, where results are less encouraging. That means that better diagnostic testing will be essential to identifying patients who could benefit. “What will be important is that we find people on the outpatient side,” Bhadelia said. “Again, testing becomes important, we want to have them come to the hospital as soon as possible.” Although the data have not yet been released, it’s standard procedure for pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies to release market-moving information as soon as they have it, due to regulatory requirements. Gilead on Wednesday did release data from its own study of remdesivir in patients with severe Covid-19. This study showed similar rates of clinical improvement in patients treated with a five-day and 10-day course of remdesivir, the company said. “Unlike traditional drug development, we are attempting to evaluate an investigational agent alongside an evolving global pandemic. Multiple concurrent studies are helping inform whether remdesivir is a safe and effective treatment for COVID-19 and how to best utilize the drug,” said Merdad Parsey, Gilead’s chief medical officer, in a statement. Gilead said that its own study in severe patients showed that it may be possible to treat patients with a five-day treatment of remdesivir, not the 10-day course that was used in the NIAID trial. The company’s study is enrolling approximately 6,000 participants from 152 different clinical trial sites all over the world. The data disclosed Wednesday are from 397 patients, with a statistical comparison of patient improvement between the two remdesivir treatment arms — the five-day and 10-day treatment course. Improvement was measured using a seven-point numerical scale that encompasses death (at worst) and discharge from hospital (best outcome), with various degrees of supplemental oxygen and intubation in between. The study design means that by itself it doesn’t reveal much about how well remdesivir is working, because there is no group of patients who were not treated with the drug. The conclusion is that the two durations of treatment are basically the same. Peter Bach, the director of the Center for Health Policy and Outcomes at Memorial Sloan Kettering Medical Center, said he is eager to see the data from the NIAID study but renewed his criticism of Gilead’s severe study for lacking a control group of untreated patients. That would have allowed researchers to make important conclusions about how the drug works that are just not possible now, he said. “They’ve squandered an unbelievable opportunity,” Bach said. “It’s not going to tell us what to do with 80-year-olds with multiple comorbidities compared to 30-year-olds who are otherwise healthy. We’re still going to be foundering around in the dark, or at least in a dim room, when we could have learned more.” In the study, the median time to clinical improvement was 10 days in the five-day treatment group and 11 days in the 10-day treatment group. More than half of the patients in both groups were discharged from the hospital by day 14. At day 14, 64.5% of the patients in the five-day group and 53.8% of the patients in the 10-day group achieved clinical recovery. Patients in the trial generally lived, though this may be because their illness was not that severe to begin with. For most of the study, patients already on ventilators were not enrolled. Eight percent of the patients treated with five days of remdesivir died, compared to 11% of the patients treated for 10 days. Outside of Italy, where 77 patients were treated, the overall mortality rate across the entire study was 7%, Gilead said. Those mortality rates are lower than those seen in other studies, which have been in the teens and twenties. Only 5% of patients in the five-day group and 10% in the 10-day group had side effects that led to a discontinuation. The most common bad effects — and it’s impossible to tell which were from the drug — were nausea and acute respiratory failure. High liver enzymes occurred in 7.3% of patients, with 3% of patients discontinuing the drug due to elevated liver tests. A full evaluation of the results will have to wait until complete data are available. In the China study, also published Wednesday in the Lancet, investigators found that remdesivir “did not significantly improve the time to clinical improvement, mortality, or time to clearance of virus in patients with serious COVID-19 compared with placebo.” There was a 23% improvement in time to clinical improvement for remdesivir compared to placebo, but the difference was not statistically significant. At the median, remdesivir-treated patients improved in 20 days compared to 23 days for placebo patients. At one month, 14% of the remdesivir patients had died compared to 13% of the placebo-treated patients. The China study enrolled patients with more severe Covid-19 than the study conducted by NIAID. The China study was also stopped early because of difficulties enrolling patients as the pandemic waned in China. https://www.statnews.com/2020/04/29/gilead-says-critical-study-of-covid-19-drug-shows-patients-are-responding-to-treatment/ About the Authors Matthew Herper Senior Writer, Medicine Matthew covers medical innovation — both its promise and its perils. [email protected] @matthewherper Adam Feuerstein Senior Writer, Biotech Adam is STAT’s national biotech columnist, reporting on the intersection of biotech and Wall Street. [email protected] @adamfeuerstein -
Remdesivir Accelerates Recovery Of Advanced COVID Patients
niman replied to niman's topic in Coronavirus (COVID)
NIH Clinical Trial Shows Remdesivir Accelerates Recovery from Advanced COVID-19 April 29, 2020 Hospitalized patients with advanced COVID-19 and lung involvement who received remdesivir recovered faster than similar patients who received placebo, according to a preliminary data analysis from a randomized, controlled trial involving 1063 patients, which began on February 21. The trial (known as the Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial, or ACTT), sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, is the first clinical trial launched in the United States to evaluate an experimental treatment for COVID-19. An independent data and safety monitoring board (DSMB) overseeing the trial met on April 27 to review data and shared their interim analysis with the study team. Based upon their review of the data, they noted that remdesivir was better than placebo from the perspective of the primary endpoint, time to recovery, a metric often used in influenza trials. Recovery in this study was defined as being well enough for hospital discharge or returning to normal activity level. Preliminary results indicate that patients who received remdesivir had a 31% faster time to recovery than those who received placebo (p<0.001). Specifically, the median time to recovery was 11 days for patients treated with remdesivir compared with 15 days for those who received placebo. Results also suggested a survival benefit, with a mortality rate of 8.0% for the group receiving remdesivir versus 11.6% for the placebo group (p=0.059). More detailed information about the trial results, including more comprehensive data, will be available in a forthcoming report. As part of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s commitment to expediting the development and availability of potential COVID-19 treatments, the agency has been engaged in sustained and ongoing discussions with Gilead Sciences regarding making remdesivir available to patients as quickly as possible, as appropriate. The trial closed to new enrollments on April 19. NIAID will also provide an update on the plans for the ACTT trial moving forward. This trial was an adaptive trial designed to incorporate additional investigative treatments. The first trial participant in the ACTT trial was an American who was repatriated after being quarantined on the Diamond Princess cruise ship that docked in Yokohama, Japan, and volunteered to participate in the study at the first study site, the University of Nebraska Medical Center/Nebraska Medicine, in February 2020. A total of 68 sites ultimately joined the study—47 in the United States and 21 in countries in Europe and Asia. Remdesivir, developed by Gilead Sciences Inc., is an investigational broad-spectrum antiviral treatment administered via daily infusion for 10 days. It has shown promise in animal models for treating SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) infection and has been examined in various clinical trials. Contact To schedule interviews, contact NIAID Office of Communications (301) 402-1663 [email protected] -
Hospitalized patients with advanced COVID-19 and lung involvement who received remdesivir recovered faster than similar patients who received placebo, according to a preliminary data analysis from a randomized, controlled trial involving 1063 patients, which began on February 21. The trial (known as the Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial, or ACTT), sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, is the first clinical trial launched in the United States to evaluate an experimental treatment for COVID-19. https://www.niaid.nih.gov/news-events/nih-clinical-trial-shows-remdesivir-accelerates-recovery-advanced-covid-19
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Case Counts, Deaths, and Negatives Total Cases* Deaths Negative 44,366 2,195 170,517 * 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+ 26% * 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+ 20% County Case Counts to Date County Total Cases Negatives Deaths Adams 130 1481 4 Allegheny 1273 15426 86 Armstrong 50 647 2 Beaver 392 2007 65 Bedford 24 177 1 Berks 2637 5313 116 Blair 23 937 0 Bradford 29 616 2 Bucks 2733 7915 185 Butler 175 2140 6 Cambria 25 1056 1 Cameron 1 49 0 Carbon 170 1006 14 Centre 95 878 1 Chester 1304 5070 101 Clarion 23 477 1 Clearfield 14 414 0 Clinton 30 222 0 Columbia 283 574 14 Crawford 19 678 0 Cumberland 324 1375 15 Dauphin 558 3418 21 Delaware 3619 8429 224 Elk 3 153 0 Erie 87 1850 2 Fayette 80 1716 4 Forest 7 29 0 Franklin 264 2746 6 Fulton 5 81 0 Greene 26 407 0 Huntingdon 29 255 0 Indiana 63 647 4 Jefferson 4 310 0 Juniata 82 130 1 Lackawanna 873 2288 81 Lancaster 1703 7423 103 Lawrence 64 711 6 Lebanon 648 2493 9 Lehigh 2719 6973 72 Luzerne 2111 4635 82 Lycoming 61 1061 0 McKean 6 162 0 Mercer 65 707 1 Mifflin 36 647 0 Monroe 1111 2583 54 Montgomery 4177 16694 329 Montour 47 2955 0 Northampton 2008 6092 85 Northumberland 92 518 0 Perry 30 204 1 Philadelphia 11885 26601 424 Pike 369 1170 14 Potter 4 77 0 Schuylkill 343 1912 5 Snyder 33 185 1 Somerset 26 539 0 Sullivan 1 30 0 Susquehanna 81 256 8 Tioga 14 233 1 Union 33 514 0 Venango 7 245 0 Warren 1 168 0 Washington 113 2033 2 Wayne 95 496 5 Westmoreland 386 4378 25 Wyoming 19 145 2 York 624 6761 9 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 23,992 54% 1,037 Male 19,789 45% 1,146 Neither 2 0% 0 Not reported 583 1% 12 * 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 4,538 10% 218 Asian 466 1% 26 White 9,327 21% 791 Other 204 <1% 7 Not reported 29,831 67% 1,153 * 67% 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 691 7863 12 Northeast 9496 25644 85 Northwest 273 5953 9 Southcentral 2718 20705 36 Southeast 28092 79357 512 Southwest 2532 30996 21 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 16 3 4 ALLEGHENY 34 285 89 65 ARMSTRONG 1 3 4 0 BEAVER 3 251 20 58 BERKS 19 457 63 75 BUCKS 45 594 110 132 BUTLER 4 11 10 2 CAMBRIA 1 1 . 0 CARBON 2 41 3 11 CENTRE 2 2 . 0 CHESTER 28 349 38 88 CLARION 1 1 1 0 CLEARFIELD 2 2 . 0 COLUMBIA 2 74 21 17 CUMBERLAND 3 148 37 13 DAUPHIN 4 90 14 13 DELAWARE 42 738 103 163 ERIE 4 3 2 0 FAYETTE 1 3 . 1 FRANKLIN 4 15 1 2 INDIANA 3 13 1 4 LACKAWANNA 13 345 50 65 LANCASTER 25 382 93 81 LAWRENCE 2 0 2 0 LEBANON 3 24 4 4 LEHIGH 22 329 60 48 LUZERNE 15 256 29 53 LYCOMING 2 5 3 0 MERCER 1 1 . 0 MIFFLIN 2 1 1 0 MONROE 8 106 28 22 MONTGOMERY 76 1290 35 259 NORTHAMPTON 12 451 95 49 NORTHUMBERLAND 1 4 2 0 PERRY 1 4 . 0 PHILADELPHIA 50 1193 4 163 PIKE 2 20 4 4 SCHUYLKILL 2 2 1 0 SUSQUEHANNA 3 44 11 9 WASHINGTON 3 6 2 1 WESTMORELAND 8 131 29 22 YORK 4 7 2 0 PENNSYLVANIA 461 7698 975 1428 https://www.health.pa.gov/topics/disease/coronavirus/Pages/Cases.aspx
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Maryland COVID Cases Increase To 20,849 Deaths To 1,078
niman posted a topic in Maryland (2019-nCoV)
COVID-19 Statistics in Maryland Number of confirmed cases: 20,849 Number of negative test results: 90,080 Number of confirmed deaths: 985 Number of probable deaths: 93 Currently hospitalized: 1645 Acute care: 1,060 Intensive care: 585 Ever hospitalized: 4,402 Released from isolation: 1,361 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 116 (6) Anne Arundel 1,662 (75) 8* Baltimore City 2,014 (94) 7* Baltimore County 2,740 (104) 14* Calvert 142 (8) Caroline 69 Carroll 421 (45) Cecil 164 (8) Charles 551 (41) 1* Dorchester 51 (2) Frederick 893 (45) 6* Garrett 4 Harford 371 (6) 7* Howard 831 (18) 1* Kent 73 (4) Montgomery 4,152 (218) 24* Prince George's 5,738 (213) 11* Queen Anne's 55 (4) St. Mary's 145 (7) 1* Somerset 21 Talbot 34 (1) Washington 197 (3) Wicomico 350 (7) Worcester 55 (2) Data Not Available (74) 13* By Age Range and Gender Age/Gender Cases Deaths 0-9 256 10-19 539 20-29 2,393 (7) 30-39 3,511 (14) 1* 40-49 3,696 (24) 2* 50-59 3,792 (65) 7* 60-69 2,927 (152) 11* 70-79 2,035 (234) 12* 80+ 1,700 (413) 49* Age Data Not Available (76) 11* Female: 11,130 (483) 52* Male: 9,719 (502) 41* Gender Data Not Available: By Race and Ethnicity Race/Ethnicity Cases Deaths African-American (NH) 7,615 (404) 27* Asian (NH) 434 (36) 3* White (NH) 4,808 (390) 49* Hispanic 3,473 (64) 3* Other (NH) 747 (17) Data Not Available 3,772 (74) 11* https://coronavirus.maryland.gov/ -
Confirmed Cases / Deaths by County County Confirmed Cases Deaths Adams 46 0 Asotin 17 2 Benton 415 39 Chelan 96 5 Clallam 17 0 Clark 313 18 Columbia 1 0 Cowlitz 39 0 Douglas 75 1 Ferry 1 0 Franklin 265 7 Garfield 0 0 Grant 155 3 Grays Harbor 12 0 Island 168 9 Jefferson 28 0 King 6,001 429 Kitsap 148 2 Kittitas 15 0 Klickitat 16 3 Lewis 29 3 Lincoln 2 0 Mason 23 1 Okanogan 21 1 Pacific 4 0 Pend Oreille 2 0 Pierce 1,293 48 San Juan 14 0 Skagit 308 12 Skamania 3 0 Snohomish 2,365 108 Spokane 350 20 Stevens 9 1 Thurston 100 1 Wahkiakum 2 0 Walla Walla 57 0 Whatcom 293 28 Whitman 14 0 Yakima 1,046 45 Unassigned 79 0 Total 13,842 786 Number of Individuals Tested Result Number of Individuals Tested Percent of Tests Negative 168,673 92% Positive 13,842 8% Patients Hospitalized and in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) with Laboratory-Confirmed COVID‑19 Date Hospitals Reporting Total Patients Hospitalized with COVID‑19 Total Patients in the ICU with COVID‑19 4/21/2020 81 544 151 4/22/2020 83 551 164 4/23/2020 82 523 192 4/24/2020 76 506 150 4/25/2020 52 537 115 4/26/2020 51 436 158 4/27/2020 83 490 156 Every day, acute care hospitals in Washington report the number of lab confirmed COVID-19 cases in their hospital and in their intensive care unit (ICU) to the Washington Department of Health (DOH). The numbers in the columns represent the total hospitals reporting, total number of patients hospitalized, and in the ICU with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 at the hospitals reporting on that day. The number of hospitals reporting varies on a day-to-day basis, so counts are not directly comparable from day to day. There are 92 acute care hospitals in Washington, excluding our two military hospitals. Behavioral health hospitals are not included in these data. DOH receives data through partnerships with the Northwest Healthcare Response Network, for Western Washington, the Regional Emergency and Disaster (REDi) Healthcare Coalition, for Eastern Washington, and the Region IV Healthcare Preparedness Alliance, for Southwest Washington, and the Washington State Hospital Association. Confirmed Cases / Deaths by Age Age Group Percent of Cases Percent of Deaths 0-19 4% 0% 20-39 29% 1% 40-59 34% 8% 60-79 24% 38% 80+ 10% 53% Unknown 0% 0% Confirmed Cases / Deaths by Gender Sex at Birth Percent of Cases Percent of Deaths Female 52% 44% Male 46% 56% Unknown 2% 1% Confirmed Cases by Race/Ethnicity Race/Ethnicity Confirmed Cases Percent of Cases *Out of total with reported race/ethnicity Percent of Total WA Population Hispanic 2,640 30% 13% Non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native 115 1% 1% Non-Hispanic Asian 885 10% 9% Non-Hispanic Black 631 7% 4% Non-Hispanic White 4,326 48% 68% Non-Hispanic Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander 158 2% 1% Non-Hispanic Multiracial 1 0% 4% Non-Hispanic Other Race 179 2% NA Total with Race/Ethnicity Available 8,935 100% Unknown Race/Ethnicity (Percent out of Total Cases) 4,907 35% NA Total Number of Cases 13,842 100% * Out of total with reported race/ethnicity Deaths by Race/Ethnicity Race/Ethnicity Deaths Percent of Deaths *Out of total with reported race/ethnicity Percent of Total WA Population Hispanic 53 8% 13% Non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native 7 1% 1% Non-Hispanic Asian 69 10% 9% Non-Hispanic Black 22 3% 4% Non-Hispanic White 518 74% 68% Non-Hispanic Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander 4 1% 1% Non-Hispanic Multiracial 9 1% 4% Non-Hispanic Other Race 16 2% NA Total with Race/Ethnicity Available 698 100% Unknown Race/Ethnicity (Percent out of Total Deaths) 88 11% NA Total Number of Deaths 786 100% * Out of total with reported race/ethnicity Note on the county and unassigned data: This data changes rapidly as labs conduct tests and discover new cases. Labs assign those cases to a county. Counties or the Department of Health then determine the appropriate county of jurisdiction. Those don’t always match initially. We’re working to reduce the “unassigned” number to 0. Contact the local health department for county specific information. Note on the deaths: Some deaths may be reported by health care providers, medical examiners/coroners, local health departments, or others before they are included in the statewide count. It takes longer for the state to announce deaths because they are often reported first to the local health department and then to us. Note on the number of infections: Public health experts agree that the true number of people who have been infected with COVID-19 in Washington greatly exceeds the number of COVID-19 infections that have been laboratory-confirmed. It is very difficult to know exactly how many people in Washington have been infected to date since most people with COVID-19 experience mild illness and the ability to get tested is still not widely available. https://www.doh.wa.gov/Emergencies/Coronavirus
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https://coronavirus.utah.gov/case-counts/
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https://coronavirus.iowa.gov/
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Alachua (262 Cases) Baker (20 Cases) Bay (70 Cases) Bradford (46 Cases) Brevard (270 Cases) Broward (4,898 Cases) Calhoun (8 Cases) Charlotte (223 Cases) Citrus (97 Cases) Clay (272 Cases) Collier (581 Cases) Columbia (57 Cases) Dade (11,927 Cases) Desoto (28 Cases) Dixie (6 Cases) Duval (1,007 Cases) Escambia (496 Cases) Flagler (133 Cases) Franklin (2 Cases) Gadsden (94 Cases) Gilchrist (4 Cases) Glades (6 Cases) Gulf (1 Cases) Hamilton (6 Cases) Hardee (16 Cases) Hendry (80 Cases) Hernando (89 Cases) Highlands (81 Cases) Hillsborough (1,105 Cases) Holmes (9 Cases) Indian River (90 Cases) Jackson (14 Cases) Jefferson (28 Cases) Lafayette (1 Cases) Lake (227 Cases) Lee (1,003 Cases) Leon (214 Cases) Levy (18 Cases) Liberty (3 Cases) Madison (49 Cases) Manatee (567 Cases) Marion (165 Cases) Martin (186 Cases) Monroe (78 Cases) Nassau (56 Cases) Okaloosa (153 Cases) Okeechobee (10 Cases) Orange (1,371 Cases) Osceola (479 Cases) Palm Beach (2,911 Cases) Pasco (241 Cases) Pinellas (718 Cases) Polk (468 Cases) Putnam (103 Cases) Santa Rosa (153 Cases) Sarasota (338 Cases) Seminole (373 Cases) St. Johns (207 Cases) St. Lucie (239 Cases) Sumter (176 Cases) Suwannee (129 Cases) Taylor (3 Cases) Union (4 Cases) Unknown (7 Cases) Volusia (448 Cases) Wakulla (22 Cases) Walton (35 Cases) Washington (12 Cases) https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/96dd742462124fa0b38ddedb9b25e429
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https://dph.georgia.gov/covid-19-daily-status-report
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Arkansas Totals Cumulative Cases 3,137 Last update: a few seconds ago Recoveries 1,235 Last update: a few seconds ago Deaths 57 Last update: a few s https://adem.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/f533ac8a8b6040e5896b05b47b17a647
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Autauga County: 40 confirmed cases 651 total tests 4 deaths Baldwin County: 171 confirmed cases 2,452 total tests 3 deaths Barbour County: 37 confirmed cases 262 total tests 0 deaths Bibb County: 42 confirmed cases 575 total tests 0 deaths Blount County: 34 confirmed cases 520 total tests 0 deaths Bullock County: 12 confirmed cases 91 total tests 0 deaths Butler County: 45 confirmed cases 237 total tests 1 deaths Calhoun County: 92 confirmed cases 1,189 total tests 3 deaths Chambers County: 291 confirmed cases 951 total tests 19 deaths Cherokee County: 15 confirmed cases 141 total tests 0 deaths Chilton County: 52 confirmed cases 493 total tests 1 deaths Choctaw County: 39 confirmed cases 135 total tests 0 deaths Clarke County: 28 confirmed cases 343 total tests 1 deaths Clay County: 19 confirmed cases 212 total tests 1 deaths Cleburne County: 12 confirmed cases 77 total tests 1 deaths Coffee County: 105 confirmed cases 638 total tests 0 deaths Colbert County: 27 confirmed cases 744 total tests 2 deaths Conecuh County: 9 confirmed cases 99 total tests 0 deaths Coosa County: 31 confirmed cases 101 total tests 1 deaths Covington County: 35 confirmed cases 361 total tests 1 deaths Crenshaw County: 16 confirmed cases 222 total tests 0 deaths Cullman County: 52 confirmed cases 813 total tests 0 deaths Dale County: 25 confirmed cases 283 total tests 0 deaths Dallas County: 37 confirmed cases 458 total tests 3 deaths DeKalb County: 76 confirmed cases 906 total tests 2 deaths Elmore County: 82 confirmed cases 1,061 total tests 1 deaths Escambia County: 27 confirmed cases 378 total tests 1 deaths Etowah County: 130 confirmed cases 1,126 total tests 8 deaths Fayette County: 5 confirmed cases 243 total tests 0 deaths Franklin County: 44 confirmed cases 424 total tests 0 deaths Geneva County: 8 confirmed cases 164 total tests 0 deaths Greene County: 47 confirmed cases 135 total tests 1 deaths Hale County: 41 confirmed cases 233 total tests 2 deaths Henry County: 22 confirmed cases 161 total tests 1 deaths Houston County: 84 confirmed cases 705 total tests 3 deaths Jackson County: 46 confirmed cases 975 total tests 2 deaths Jefferson County: 861 confirmed cases 13,184 total tests 41 deaths Lamar County: 10 confirmed cases 212 total tests 0 deaths Lauderdale County: 30 confirmed cases 1,337 total tests 2 deaths Lawrence County: 12 confirmed cases 285 total tests 0 deaths Lee County: 377 confirmed cases 2,619 total tests 25 deaths Limestone County: 44 confirmed cases 1,012 total tests 0 deaths Lowndes County: 53 confirmed cases 140 total tests 1 deaths Macon County: 35 confirmed cases 276 total tests 2 deaths Madison County: 222 confirmed cases 4,916 total tests 4 deaths Marengo County: 44 confirmed cases 408 total tests 3 deaths Marion County: 76 confirmed cases 676 total tests 6 deaths Marshall County: 313 confirmed cases 1,720 total tests 6 deaths Mobile County: 994 confirmed cases 6,863 total tests 46 deaths Monroe County: 12 confirmed cases 168 total tests 1 deaths Montgomery County: 302 confirmed cases 2,391 total tests 5 deaths Morgan County: 68 confirmed cases 1,224 total tests 0 deaths Perry County: 9 confirmed cases 200 total tests 0 deaths Pickens County: 47 confirmed cases 342 total tests 1 deaths Pike County: 65 confirmed cases 566 total tests 0 deaths Randolph County: 62 confirmed cases 269 total tests 4 deaths Russell County: 55 confirmed cases 405 total tests 0 deaths Shelby County: 319 confirmed cases 3,331 total tests 10 deaths St. Clair County: 70 confirmed cases 969 total tests 0 deaths Sumter County: 55 confirmed cases 183 total tests 2 deaths Talladega County: 59 confirmed cases 1,016 total tests 2 deaths Tallapoosa County: 279 confirmed cases 1,296 total tests 17 deaths Tuscaloosa County: 199 confirmed cases 3,248 total tests 0 deaths Unknown or Out of State County: 0 confirmed cases 6,603 total tests 0 deaths Walker County: 94 confirmed cases 801 total tests 0 deaths Washington County: 33 confirmed cases 165 total tests 1 deaths Wilcox County: 60 confirmed cases 196 total tests 1 deaths Winston County: 13 confirmed cases 323 total tests 0 deaths https://alpublichealth.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/6d2771faa9da4a2786a509d82c8cf0f7
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COVID-19 Testing at Kane (As of 4/28/2020) Residents Tested Positive Negative Pending Recovered* COVID-19 Deaths COVID-19 Hospitalizations Glen Hazel 97 62 34 1 35 10 9 Scott 17 0 16 1 0 0 0 McKeesport 30 1 25 4 0 0 0 Ross 17 0 17 0 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 4/28/2020) Staff Tested Positive Negative Pending Glen Hazel 74 37 34 3 Scott 12 1 11 0 McKeesport 20 1 18 1 Ross 26 1 24 1 https://www.alleghenycounty.us/kane/index.aspx
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New Hampshire 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Summary Report (data updated as of April 28, 2020, 9:00 AM) https://www.nh.gov/covid19/ Number of Persons with COVID-191 2,010 Recovered 936 (47%) Deaths Attributed to COVID-19 60 (3%) Total Current COVID-19 Cases 1,014 Persons Who Have Been Hospitalized for COVID-19 249 (12%) Current Hospitalizations 2 106 Persons Tested Negative at Selected Laboratories 3 18,736 Persons with Specimens Submitted to NH PHL 8,635 Persons with Test Pending at NH PHL 4 81 Persons Being Monitored in NH (approximate point in time) 2,550 1 Includes specimens presumptive-positive at any laboratory and those confirmed by CDC confirmatory testing.2 Number of patients currently hospitalized with COVID-19 as reported by hospitals.3 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.4 Includes specimens received and awaiting testing at NH PHL. Does not include tests pending at commercial laboratories. Cases by County County Cases Belknap 34 Carroll 31 Cheshire 40 Coos 2 Grafton 48 Hillsborough - Other 280 Hillsborough - Manchester 436 Hillsborough - Nashua 180 Merrimack 144 Rockingham 664 Strafford 133 Sullivan 11 County TBD 7 Grand Total 2,010
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New York clinical trial quietly tests heartburn remedy against coronavirus By Brendan BorrellApr. 26, 2020 , 12:00 PM Science’s COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center. The fast-growing list of possible treatments for the novel coronavirus includes an unlikely candidate: famotidine, the active compound in the over-the-counter heartburn drug Pepcid. On 7 April, the first COVID-19 patients at Northwell Health in the New York City area began to receive famotidine intravenously, at nine times the heartburn dose. Unlike other drugs the 23-hospital system is testing, including Regeneron’s sarilumab and Gilead Sciences’s remdesivir, Northwell kept the famotidine study under wraps to secure a research stockpile before other hospitals, or even the federal government, started to buy it. “If we talked about this to the wrong people or too soon, the drug supply would be gone,” says Kevin Tracey, a former neurosurgeon in charge of the hospital system’s research. As of Saturday, 187 COVID-19 patients in critical status, including many on ventilators, have been enrolled in the trial, which aims for a total of 1174 people. Reports from China and molecular modeling results suggest the drug, which seems to bind to a key enzyme in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), could make a difference. But the hype surrounding hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine—the unproven antimalarial drugs touted by President Donald Trump and some physicians and scientists—has made Tracey wary of sparking premature enthusiasm. He is tight-lipped about famotidine’s prospects, at least until interim results from the first 391 patients are in. “If it does work, we’ll know in a few weeks,” he says. A globe-trotting infectious disease doctor named Michael Callahan was the first to call attention to the drug in the United States. Callahan, who is based at Massachusetts General Hospital and has extensive connections in the biodefense world, has spent time in disease hot zones around the world, including the 2003 outbreak of another coronavirus disease, SARS, in Hong Kong. In mid-January, he was in Nanjing, China, working on an avian flu project. As the COVID-19 epidemic began to explode in Wuhan, he followed his Chinese colleagues to the increasingly desperate city. The virus was killing as many as one out of five patients older than 80. Patients of all ages with hypertension and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were faring poorly. Callahan and his Chinese colleagues got curious about why many of the survivors tended to be poor. “Why are these elderly peasants not dying?” he asks. In reviewing 6212 COVID-19 patient records, the doctors noticed that many survivors had been suffering from chronic heartburn and were on famotidine rather than more-expensive omeprazole (Prilosec), the medicine of choice both in the United States and among wealthier Chinese. Hospitalized COVID-19 patients on famotidine appeared to be dying at a rate of about 14% compared with 27% for those not on the drug, although the analysis was crude and the result was not statistically significant. But that was enough for Callahan to pursue the issue back home. After returning from Wuhan, he briefed Robert Kadlec, assistant secretary for preparedness and response at the Department of Health and Human Services, then checked in with Robert Malone, chief medical officer of Florida-based Alchem Laboratories, a contract manufacturing organization. Malone is part of a classified project called DOMANE that uses computer simulations, artificial intelligence, and other methods to rapidly identify U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs and other safe compounds that can be repurposed against threats such as new viruses. Malone had his eyes on a viral enzyme called the papainlike protease, which helps the pathogen replicate. To see whether famotidine binds to the protein, he would ordinarily need the enzyme’s 3D structure, but that would not be available for months. So Malone recruited computational chemist Joshua Pottel, president of Montreal-based Molecular Forecaster, to predict it from two crystal structures of the protease from the 2003 SARS coronavirus, combined with the new coronavirus’ RNA sequence. It was hardly plug-and-play. Among other things, they compared the gene sequences of the new and old proteases to rule out crucial differences in structure. Pottel then tested how 2600 different compounds interact with the new protease. The modeling yielded several dozen promising hits that pharmaceutical chemists and other experts narrowed to three. Famotidine was one. (The compound has not popped up in in vitro screens of existing drug libraries for antiviral activity, however.) “If it does work, we’ll know in a few weeks,” says Northwell Health’s Kevin Tracey, who leads the famotidine study. NORTHWELL HEALTH With both the tantalizing Chinese data and the modeling pointing toward famotidine, a low-cost, generally safe drug, Callahan contacted Tracey about running a double-blind randomized study. COVID-19 patients with decreased kidney function would be excluded because high doses of famotidine can cause heart problems in them. After getting FDA approval, Northwell used its own funds to launch the effort. Just getting half of the needed famotidine in sterile vials took weeks, because the injectable version is not widely used. On 14 April, the U.S. Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), which operates under Kadlec, gave Alchem a $20.7 million contract for the trial, most of which paid Northwell’s costs. The study’s draft protocol was aimed only at evaluating famotidine’s efficacy, but Trump’s “game-changer” antimalarial drug was rapidly becoming the standard of care for hospitalized COVID-19 patients. That meant investigators would only be able to recruit enough subjects for a trial that tested a combination of famotidine and hydroxychloroquine. Those patients would be compared with a hydroxychloroquine-only arm and a historic control arm made up of hundreds of patients treated earlier in the outbreak. “Is it good science? No,” Tracey says. “It’s the real world.” Michael Callahan during a medical evacuation of COVID-19 patients from a cruise ship MICHAEL CALLAHAN Anecdotal evidence has encouraged the Northwell researchers. After speaking to Tracey, David Tuveson, director of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Cancer Center, recommended famotidine to his 44-year-old sister, an engineer with New York City hospitals. She had tested positive for COVID-19 and developed a fever. Her lips became dark blue from hypoxia. She took her first megadose of oral famotidine on 28 March. The next morning, her fever broke and her oxygen saturation returned to a normal range. Five sick co-workers, including three with confirmed COVID-19, also showed dramatic improvements after taking over-the-counter versions of the drug, according a spreadsheet of case histories Tuveson shared with Science. Many COVID-19 patients recover with simple symptom-relieving medications, but Tuveson credits the heartburn drug. “I would say that was a penicillin effect,” he says. After an email chain about Tuveson’s experience spread widely among doctors, Timothy Wang, head of gastroenterology at Columbia University Medical Center, saw more hints of famotidine’s promise in his own retrospective review of records from 1620 hospitalized COVID-19 patients. Last week, he shared the results with Tracey and Callahan, and he added them as a co-authors on a paper now under review at the Annals of Internal Medicine. All three researchers emphasize, though, that the real test is the trial now underway. “We still don’t know if it will work or not,” Tracey says. Callahan has kept busy since his return from China. Kadlec deployed him on medical evacuation missions of Americans on two heavily infected cruise ships. Now back to doing patient rounds in Boston, he says the famotidine lead underscores the importance of science diplomacy in the face of an infectious disease that knows no borders. When it comes to experience with COVID-19, he says, “No amount of smart people at the [National Institutes of Health] or Harvard or Stanford can outclass an average doctor in Wuhan.” Posted in: Health Coronavirus doi:10.1126/science.abc4739 Brendan Borrell Brendan Borrell is a freelance journalist in Los Angeles. Twitter https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/04/new-york-clinical-trial-quietly-tests-heartburn-remedy-against-coronavirus
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By LOS ANGELES TIMES STAFF UPDATED APRIL 28, 4:03 P.M. PACIFIC 46,163 confirmed cases +964 so far today +1,496 yesterday 1,862 deaths +76 so far today +66 yesterday 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. So far today, 33 of the 57 agencies we’re monitoring have reported new numbers. What we know Tallies continue to climb. Over the past week, the state has averaged 1,618 new cases and 79.9 new deaths per day. Cities have been hit hard. The largest concentration is in Los Angeles County, home to half of the deaths so far. Hospitals are holding up. The number of patients has remained steady, a goal of the stay-at-home policies. Nursing homes are a focal point. The state is currently listing 253 skilled-nursing and assisted-living facilities with a confirmed case. California's totals sit far below New York, where more than 22,600 people have died. More: Symptoms How it spreads Get our newsletter Jump to a section of the page What's the trend over time? Where are the confirmed cases? Where are the cases in SoCal? Where are the cases in L.A.? How does California compare? How many people are hospitalized? Which nursing homes are affected? How many tests have been run? Who has COVID-19? What is closed or restricted? What is the trend over time? The state’s first case was confirmed near the end of January. The total grew slowly at first, then much faster as tests became more widely available. The number of cases in California is now on pace to double every 21 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. Cumulative cases by day Feb. 1Feb. 15Mar. 1Mar. 15Apr. 1Apr. 15010,00020,00030,00040,00050,000State increasestesting 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. 1Feb. 15Mar. 1Mar. 15Apr. 1Apr. 1505001,0001,5002,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage Deaths by day Feb. 1Feb. 15Mar. 1Mar. 15Apr. 1Apr. 150204060801001207-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 10 dayssince 10th case203040501020501002005001,0002,0005,00010,00020,000Doublingevery dayDoublingevery dayEvery2 daysEvery2 daysEvery3 daysEvery3 daysEvery weekEvery weekEverymonthEverymonthSan DiegoSan DiegoLos AngelesLos AngelesSanta ClaraSanta ClaraSacramentoSacramentoButteButteMendocinoMendocinoYubaYubaKingsKingsImperialImperialFresnoFresnoTulareTulareStanislausStanislausSolanoSolanoKernKernOrangeOrangeMaderaMaderaSan Luis ObispoSan Luis ObispoMercedMercedAlamedaAlamedaNapaNapaSan FranciscoSan FranciscoShastaShastaSan BernardinoSan BernardinoCalaverasCalaverasSanta CruzSanta CruzVenturaVenturaYoloYoloMonoMono 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. Where are the confirmed cases? Cases have been reported in 54 of the state’s 58 counties, from Siskiyou County south to the border. CasesDeaths Confirmed cases12808401,4601,8203,14020,990 Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingRedding Early on, the largest concentrations were in the San Francisco Bay Area. Since then, cases have spread across the state and growth has accelerated in urban centers, like Los Angeles. Total cases Per 100k New cases (7-day average) 03102550100500 Total deaths Per 100k New deaths (7-day average) 012351020 Los Angeles 20,996 207.9 Mar. 1Apr. 28 1,002 9.9 Mar. 1Apr. 28 Riverside 3,735 156.7 141 5.9 San Diego 3,141 95.1 113 3.4 Orange 2,151 68 42 1.3 Santa Clara 2,122 110.4 106 5.5 San Bernardino 1,827 85.6 85 4 Alameda 1,533 93.3 55 3.3 San Francisco 1,468 168.7 23 2.6 San Mateo 1,099 143.5 48 6.3 Sacramento 1,053 69.7 41 2.7 Kern 847 95.9 5 0.6 Contra Costa 842 74.3 25 2.2 Tulare 578 125.5 35 7.6 San Joaquin 529 72.2 25 3.4 Ventura 508 59.9 17 2 Fresno 498 50.9 7 0.7 Santa Barbara 473 106.6 7 1.6 Stanislaus 312 57.9 7 1.3 Imperial 284 157.6 8 4.4 Solano 249 56.8 4 0.9 Marin 224 86.1 12 4.6 Sonoma 222 44.3 2 0.4 Monterey 185 42.7 4 0.9 San Luis Obispo 173 61.5 1 0.4 Yolo 162 75.4 16 7.4 Placer 145 38.2 8 2.1 Santa Cruz 125 45.7 2 0.7 Merced 116 43.1 3 1.1 Kings 71 47.3 1 0.7 Napa 66 47 2 1.4 Humboldt 53 39 0 0 San Benito 48 80.8 2 3.4 Madera 44 28.4 2 1.3 El Dorado 44 23.6 0 0 Nevada 39 39.4 1 1 Shasta 30 16.8 4 2.2 Sutter 29 30.2 2 2.1 Mono 26 183.4 1 7.1 Inyo 19 105.1 1 5.5 Butte 16 7 0 0 Yuba 16 21.2 1 1.3 Calaveras 13 28.7 0 0 Mendocino 11 12.6 0 0 Amador 8 21.1 0 0 Lake 6 9.4 0 0 Siskiyou 5 11.5 0 0 Glenn 5 17.9 0 0 Tuolumne 4 7.4 0 0 Plumas 4 21.4 0 0 Del Norte 3 10.9 0 0 Colusa 3 14 0 0 Tehama 1 1.6 1 1.6 Alpine 1 87.3 0 0 Mariposa 1 5.7 0 0 Show less Do you know someone who has lost the battle with COVID-19? We'd like to hear from the loved ones of people who have died from the coronavirus. Please consider sharing their stories with us here. Where are the cases in Southern California? Residents of cities and neighborhoods all across the Southland have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies released by each area's health department. 5500San DiegoSan DiegoSan ClementeSan ClementeOxnardOxnardSanta BarbaraSanta BarbaraPalm SpringsPalm SpringsPismo BeachPismo BeachBakersfieldBakersfieldVictorvilleVictorvilleSAN LUIS OBISPOSAN LUIS OBISPOKERNKERNSANTA BARBARASANTA BARBARAVENTURAVENTURALOS ANGELESLOS ANGELESORANGEORANGERIVERSIDERIVERSIDESAN BERNARDINOSAN BERNARDINOSAN DIEGOSAN DIEGO Search: Area County Cases San Diego San Diego 1,432 Riverside Riverside 651 Long Beach Los Angeles 602 Glendale Los Angeles 502 Bakersfield East Kern 456 Chula Vista San Diego 395 Palmdale Los Angeles 379 Moreno Valley Riverside 378 Pasadena Los Angeles 362 East Los Angeles Los Angeles 342 Santa Clarita Los Angeles 332 North Hollywood Los Angeles 314 Santa Ana Orange 313 Melrose Los Angeles 313 Other/unknown San Diego 307 Sylmar Los Angeles 299 Anaheim Orange 291 Inglewood Los Angeles 290 Lancaster Los Angeles 280 Van Nuys Los Angeles 257 Bakersfield West Kern 250 Torrance Los Angeles 245 Panorama City Los Angeles 244 Westlake Los Angeles 230 Carson Los Angeles 228 South Gate Los Angeles 226 Burbank Los Angeles 226 Pacoima Los Angeles 224 Canoga Park Los Angeles 223 Fontana San Bernardino 222 San Bernardino San Bernardino 209 Huntington Beach Orange 198 Downey Los Angeles 195 Compton Los Angeles 190 San Pedro Los Angeles 185 Hollywood Los Angeles 182 El Cajon San Diego 181 Corona Riverside 180 West Vernon Los Angeles 178 Reseda Los Angeles 178 Boyle Heights Los Angeles 175 Hemet Riverside 175 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone Los Angeles 174 Norwalk Los Angeles 173 Pico-Union Los Angeles 171 Yucaipa San Bernardino 168 Vernon Central Los Angeles 164 Lynwood Los Angeles 163 Hawthorne Los Angeles 161 Perris Riverside 157 Santa Monica Los Angeles 156 Pomona Los Angeles 151 Northridge Los Angeles 150 Pico Rivera Los Angeles 147 Gardena Los Angeles 142 Temple-Beaudry Los Angeles 142 North Hills Los Angeles 141 Winnetka Los Angeles 135 West Hollywood Los Angeles 134 El Monte Los Angeles 133 Simi Valley Ventura 133 Huntington Park Los Angeles 132 Ontario San Bernardino 127 Indio Riverside 127 Irvine Orange 127 Santa Maria Santa Barbara 126 Exposition Park Los Angeles 124 Jurupa Valley Riverside 123 Coachella Riverside 122 Florence-Firestone Los Angeles 122 Chino San Bernardino 120 West Covina Los Angeles 119 Koreatown Los Angeles 119 Montebello Los Angeles 119 Sherman Oaks Los Angeles 119 Bell Los Angeles 119 East Hollywood Los Angeles 118 Paramount Los Angeles 118 Beaumont Riverside 115 Oxnard Ventura 114 Bellflower Los Angeles 114 Harvard Park Los Angeles 112 National City San Diego 110 Whittier Los Angeles 108 Granada Hills Los Angeles 108 South Park Los Angeles 108 Rancho Cucamonga San Bernardino 107 Silver Lake Los Angeles 107 Sun Valley Los Angeles 107 Central Los Angeles 106 Beverly Hills Los Angeles 105 West Adams Los Angeles 105 Federal Prison, Lompoc Santa Barbara 104 Woodland Hills Los Angeles 103 Redondo Beach Los Angeles 103 Valley Kern 102 Glassell Park Los Angeles 102 Vermont Vista Los Angeles 102 Palms Los Angeles 101 Wilshire Center Los Angeles 100 Menifee Riverside 100 Newport Beach Orange 96 Lake Elsinore Riverside 95 Redlands San Bernardino 94 Athens-Westmont Los Angeles 92 Murrieta Riverside 91 Arleta Los Angeles 91 Palm Springs Riverside 91 Bell Gardens Los Angeles 90 Garden Grove Orange 90 Thousand Oaks Ventura 89 Temecula Riverside 89 El Sereno Los Angeles 88 Valley Village Los Angeles 86 Covina Los Angeles 86 Upland San Bernardino 86 Escondido San Diego 86 Wilmington Los Angeles 85 Watts Los Angeles 85 Wholesale District Los Angeles 85 Victorville San Bernardino 84 Eagle Rock Los Angeles 82 Alhambra Los Angeles 82 Spring Valley San Diego 82 Rialto San Bernardino 81 Little Armenia Los Angeles 81 Cathedral City Riverside 81 Century Palms/Cove Los Angeles 80 Encino Los Angeles 80 Palm Desert Riverside 79 Lompoc Santa Barbara 79 Other/unknown Orange 79 Valley Glen Los Angeles 79 Highland Park Los Angeles 78 Orange Orange 78 San Fernando Los Angeles 77 Baldwin Park Los Angeles 77 Undetermined San Bernardino 77 Lake Balboa Los Angeles 76 Chatsworth Los Angeles 75 Lakewood Los Angeles 75 University Park Los Angeles 73 Buena Park Orange 73 Sunland Los Angeles 72 La Mesa San Diego 71 Tarzana Los Angeles 71 Fullerton Orange 69 Oceanside San Diego 68 South Pasadena Los Angeles 68 Lincoln Heights Los Angeles 66 Altadena Los Angeles 66 Manhattan Beach Los Angeles 66 Little Bangladesh Los Angeles 65 Monterey Park Los Angeles 65 Carthay Los Angeles 65 Brentwood Los Angeles 64 Cudahy Los Angeles 63 South Whittier Los Angeles 63 Tujunga Los Angeles 63 Mission Hills Los Angeles 63 Hancock Park Los Angeles 62 Highland San Bernardino 61 Azusa Los Angeles 61 Westchester Los Angeles 61 Crestview Los Angeles 61 Maywood Los Angeles 60 La Quinta Riverside 59 Harbor Gateway Los Angeles 59 Country Club Park Los Angeles 58 Culver City Los Angeles 58 Baldwin Hills Los Angeles 57 Hollywood Hills Los Angeles 57 Eastvale Riverside 57 Downtown Los Angeles 57 Paso Robles San Luis Obispo 57 San Jacinto Riverside 56 West Carson Los Angeles 56 Hyde Park Los Angeles 56 Rancho Palos Verdes Los Angeles 56 Chino Hills San Bernardino 56 Santa Barbara Santa Barbara 55 La Mirada Los Angeles 55 Hesperia San Bernardino 54 Historic Filipinotown Los Angeles 54 Harvard Heights Los Angeles 54 Lawndale Los Angeles 53 West Los Angeles Los Angeles 53 Duarte Los Angeles 52 Mar Vista Los Angeles 52 Porter Ranch Los Angeles 52 Vermont Knolls Los Angeles 51 Green Meadows Los Angeles 50 Carlsbad San Diego 50 Placentia Orange 50 Hacienda Heights Los Angeles 49 Lakeview Terrace Los Angeles 49 Cerritos Los Angeles 49 Yorba Linda Orange 48 Temple City Los Angeles 48 Vista San Diego 47 Colton San Bernardino 47 West Hills Los Angeles 46 Rowland Heights Los Angeles 46 Del Rey Los Angeles 46 La Habra Orange 45 Westwood Los Angeles 45 Wildomar Riverside 45 San Clemente Orange 45 Camarillo Ventura 44 Venice Los Angeles 44 Crenshaw District Los Angeles 44 Harbor City Los Angeles 42 Glendora Los Angeles 42 Mission Viejo Orange 42 Willowbrook Los Angeles 42 Walnut Park Los Angeles 41 Cypress Orange 41 Lennox Los Angeles 41 Loma Linda San Bernardino 40 Monrovia Los Angeles 39 Costa Mesa Orange 37 Palos Verdes Estates Los Angeles 37 La Canada Flintridge Los Angeles 37 Vermont Square Los Angeles 37 Arcadia Los Angeles 37 Tustin Orange 36 Pacific Palisades Los Angeles 36 Ventura Ventura 36 La Puente Los Angeles 36 Laguna Beach Orange 36 Orcutt Santa Barbara 36 Studio City Los Angeles 36 Westminster Orange 36 Val Verde Los Angeles 36 Calabasas Los Angeles 35 Mt. Washington Los Angeles 35 Mid-city Los Angeles 35 Miracle Mile Los Angeles 35 Diamond Bar Los Angeles 34 Encinitas San Diego 34 Laguna Niguel Orange 33 Victoria Park Los Angeles 33 Mead Valley Riverside 33 Cloverdale/Cochran Los Angeles 33 Los Feliz Los Angeles 33 French Valley Riverside 33 Lomita Los Angeles 32 Beverly Crest Los Angeles 32 Leimert Park Los Angeles 31 West Whittier/Los Nietos Los Angeles 31 Rosemead Los Angeles 30 Agoura Hills Los Angeles 30 Desert Hot Springs Riverside 30 Beverlywood Los Angeles 30 Century City Los Angeles 30 Atascadero San Luis Obispo 29 Bel Air Los Angeles 29 Fountain Valley Orange 29 San Gabriel Los Angeles 29 Santee San Diego 29 Banning Riverside 28 Malibu Los Angeles 28 Poway San Diego 28 Lemon Grove San Diego 28 San Marcos San Diego 28 Lake Forest Orange 27 San Dimas Los Angeles 27 Bassett Los Angeles 27 El Segundo Los Angeles 27 Moorpark Ventura 27 Valinda Los Angeles 27 Gramercy Place Los Angeles 26 Quartz Hill Los Angeles 26 Alsace Los Angeles 26 Adams-Normandie Los Angeles 26 View Park/Windsor Hills Los Angeles 25 Rancho Mirage Riverside 24 North County Santa Barbara 24 Bonita San Diego 24 South Carthay Los Angeles 24 Atwater Village Los Angeles 23 Dana Point Orange 23 Mecca Riverside 23 Montclair San Bernardino 23 Lakeland Village Riverside 23 Walnut Los Angeles 23 Hermosa Beach Los Angeles 23 El Sobrante Riverside 23 Imperial Beach San Diego 23 San Juan Capistrano Orange 22 South El Monte Los Angeles 22 Lakeside San Diego 22 Claremont Los Angeles 22 Adelanto San Bernardino 21 Mountain Kern 21 South County Santa Barbara 21 Canyon Country Los Angeles 21 Bloomington San Bernardino 21 Home Gardens Riverside 21 Los Alamitos Orange 20 Stanton Orange 20 Figueroa Park Square Los Angeles 20 Apple Valley San Bernardino 20 East Rancho Dominguez Los Angeles 20 Good Hope Riverside 19 Elysian Valley Los Angeles 19 Unincorporated - Covina Los Angeles 19 San Jose Hills Los Angeles 19 Playa Vista Los Angeles 19 Arroyo Grande San Luis Obispo 19 Norco Riverside 19 Brea Orange 19 Laguna Hills Orange 18 Castaic Los Angeles 18 Temescal Valley Riverside 18 Desert Kern 18 Unincorporated - West LA Los Angeles 18 Jefferson Park Los Angeles 18 Aliso Viejo Orange 18 Cadillac-Corning Los Angeles 17 Woodcrest Riverside 17 Santa Fe Springs Los Angeles 17 Echo Park Los Angeles 17 Reseda Ranch Los Angeles 17 La Verne Los Angeles 16 Stevenson Ranch Los Angeles 16 Cheviot Hills Los Angeles 16 Lake Los Angeles Los Angeles 16 Yucca Valley San Bernardino 16 La Crescenta-Montrose Los Angeles 16 Calimesa Riverside 15 Unincorporated - Azusa Los Angeles 15 West Puente Valley Los Angeles 15 Ladera Heights Los Angeles 15 Rancho Santa Fe San Diego 14 Rancho Santa Margarita Orange 14 Ramona San Diego 14 Nipomo San Luis Obispo 14 Santa Paula Ventura 14 Grand Terrace San Bernardino 14 San Luis Obispo San Luis Obispo 14 Longwood Los Angeles 14 La Palma Orange 14 Covina (Charter Oak) Los Angeles 13 Avocado Heights Los Angeles 13 Other San Luis Obispo 13 Manchester Square Los Angeles 13 Rolling Hills Estates Los Angeles 13 Artesia Los Angeles 13 Goleta Valley & Gaviota Santa Barbara 13 St Elmo Village Los Angeles 13 Northeast San Gabriel Los Angeles 13 Santa Monica Mountains Los Angeles 13 Athens Village Los Angeles 13 Lafayette Square Los Angeles 12 Fallbrook San Diego 12 Thai Town Los Angeles 12 Ladera Ranch Orange 12 Oak Park Ventura 12 Del Mar San Diego 12 Seal Beach Orange 11 Rancho Park Los Angeles 11 El Cerrito Riverside 11 Wellington Square Los Angeles 11 Port Hueneme Ventura 11 Fillmore Ventura 11 Marina del Rey Los Angeles 11 San Marino Los Angeles 11 Commerce Los Angeles 11 Park La Brea Los Angeles 11 Indian Wells Riverside 11 Mentone San Bernardino 11 Nuevo Riverside 10 East Hemet Riverside 10 Rancho Dominguez Los Angeles 10 Trabuco Canyon Orange 10 Shadow Hills Los Angeles 10 Thermal Riverside 10 Barstow San Bernardino 10 Hawaiian Gardens Los Angeles 9 Marina Peninsula Los Angeles 9 Oak Hills San Bernardino 9 Chinatown Los Angeles 9 Toluca Lake Los Angeles 9 Elysian Park Los Angeles 9 Canyon Lake Riverside 9 Coronado San Diego 8 Reynier Village Los Angeles 8 Laguna Woods Orange 8 Unincorporated - Duarte Los Angeles 8 Acton Los Angeles 8 Twentynine Palms San Bernardino 8 South San Gabriel Los Angeles 8 Garnet Riverside 8 Oasis Riverside 8 East La Mirada Los Angeles 7 Pismo Beach San Luis Obispo 7 San Miguel San Luis Obispo 7 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez Los Angeles 7 Homeland Riverside 7 Phelan San Bernardino 7 Goleta Santa Barbara 7 El Camino Village Los Angeles 7 Templeton San Luis Obispo 7 View Heights Los Angeles 7 Del Aire Los Angeles 7 Signal Hill Los Angeles 7 Cherry Valley Riverside 7 Anza Riverside 6 Unincorporated - Monrovia Los Angeles 6 Littlerock/Pearblossom Los Angeles 6 Valle Vista Riverside 6 Solana Beach San Diego 6 La Rambla Los Angeles 6 Morro Bay San Luis Obispo 6 Westlake Village Los Angeles 6 Lake Mathews Riverside 6 Angelino Heights Los Angeles 6 Midway City Orange 6 North Whittier Los Angeles 6 Rancho Mission Viejo Orange 6 Jamul San Diego 6 Villa Park Orange 6 Crestline San Bernardino 5 Sierra Madre Los Angeles 5 Santa Ynez Valley Santa Barbara 5 Desert Palms Riverside 5 Wiseburn Los Angeles 5 Morongo Valley San Bernardino 5 Ojai Ventura 5 Valley Center San Diego 5 Little Tokyo Los Angeles 5 Coto de Caza Orange 5 Big Bear Lake San Bernardino 5 Valencia Los Angeles 4 Blythe Riverside 4 Sun Village Los Angeles 4 Littlerock Los Angeles 4 Thousand Palms Riverside 4 University Hills Los Angeles 4 Unincorporated - Whittier Los Angeles 4 Unincorporated - Hawthorne Los Angeles 4 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain Los Angeles 4 Alpine San Diego 4 Unincorporated - Arcadia Los Angeles 4 Joshua Tree San Bernardino 4 East Whittier Los Angeles 4 Bermuda Dunes Riverside 4 Idyllwild-Pine Cove Riverside 3 Sky Valley Riverside 3 Toluca Woods Los Angeles 3 Blue Jay San Bernardino 3 Rosewood Los Angeles 3 Palisades Highlands Los Angeles 3 Piñon Hills San Bernardino 3 Exposition Los Angeles 3 Desert Edge Riverside 3 Cabazon Riverside 3 Piru Ventura 3 Lake Manor Los Angeles 3 Pala San Diego 2 Potrero San Diego 2 Desert View Highlands Los Angeles 2 Ranchita San Diego 2 Regent Square Los Angeles 2 Unincorporated - Palmdale Los Angeles 2 Running Springs San Bernardino 2 Pearblossom/Llano Los Angeles 2 Fort Irwin San Bernardino 2 Boulevard San Diego 2 Toluca Terrace Los Angeles 2 Faircrest Heights Los Angeles 2 Del Sur Los Angeles 2 Coronita Riverside 2 West Antelope Valley Los Angeles 2 Santa Catalina Island Los Angeles 2 West Rancho Dominguez Los Angeles 2 Irwindale Los Angeles 2 Saugus Los Angeles 2 La Habra Heights Los Angeles 2 Oak View Ventura 2 White Fence Farms Los Angeles 2 Big Bear City San Bernardino 2 Julian San Diego 2 Somis Ventura 2 Meadowbrook Riverside 1 Playa Del Rey Los Angeles 1 Lakeview Riverside 1 Unincorporated - La Verne Los Angeles 1 Elizabeth Lake Los Angeles 1 Rolling Hills Los Angeles 1 Angelus Oaks San Bernardino 1 Winchester Riverside 1 Green Acres Riverside 1 Bonsall San Diego 1 Pauma Valley San Diego 1 Borrego Springs San Diego 1 North Lancaster Los Angeles 1 Isla Vista Santa Barbara 1 Anaverde Los Angeles 1 Sunrise Village Los Angeles 1 Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest Los Angeles 1 Agua Dulce Los Angeles 1 Wrightwood San Bernardino 1 Industry Los Angeles 1 Vista Santa Rosa Riverside 1 Mandeville Canyon Los Angeles 1 Kagel/Lopez Canyons Los Angeles 1 Rimforest San Bernardino 1 Unincorporated - Glendora Los Angeles 1 Unincorporated - South El Monte Los Angeles 1 Descanso San Diego 1 Llano Los Angeles 1 Romoland Riverside 1 Bradbury Los Angeles 1 Littlerock/Juniper Hills Los Angeles 1 Leona Valley Los Angeles 1 North Shore Riverside 1 Tecate San Diego 1 Landers San Bernardino 0 Unincorporated - Walnut Los Angeles 0 Southeast Antelope Valley Los Angeles 0 Lake Hughes Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Bradbury Los Angeles 0 Universal City Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Cerritos Los Angeles 0 East Pasadena Los Angeles 0 East Lancaster Los Angeles 0 Charter Oak Los Angeles 0 Sand Canyon Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Claremont Los Angeles 0 South Edwards Los Angeles 0 East Covina Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Del Rey Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - El Monte Los Angeles 0 Westfield/Academy Hills Los Angeles 0 Westhills Los Angeles 0 Brookside Los Angeles 0 San Pasqual Los Angeles 0 Rosewood/East Gardena Los Angeles 0 Placerita Canyon Los Angeles 0 Pellissier Village Los Angeles 0 San Francisquito Canyon/Bouquet Canyon Los Angeles 0 Angeles National Forest Los Angeles 0 Whittier Narrows Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Harbor Gateway Los Angeles 0 Palos Verdes Peninsula Los Angeles 0 Campo San Diego 0 Bouquet Canyon Los Angeles 0 Vernon Los Angeles 0 South Antelope Valley Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - La Habra Heights Los Angeles 0 Saugus/Canyon Country Los Angeles 0 Hidden Hills Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Lakewood Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Lynwood Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Miracle Mile Los Angeles 0 Hi Vista Los Angeles 0 Sycamore Square Los Angeles 0 San Clemente Island Los Angeles 0 Unincorporated - Pomona Los Angeles 0 Roosevelt Los Angeles 0 Newhall Los Angeles 0 Bandini Islands Los Angeles 0 Harbor Pines Los Angeles 0 Avalon Los Angeles 0 West Chatsworth Los Angeles 0 Franklin Canyon Los Angeles 0 Show less The locations of some cases have not been disclosed. Orange and Los Angeles counties only report a range for areas with lower populations. Kern County only provides data for generalized regions. Where are the cases in L.A.? No county has recorded more cases than Los Angeles, home to a quarter of California’s population. Here's where cases have been confirmed so far, provided by the county’s health department. 25250DowntownDowntownSanta MonicaSanta MonicaLong BeachLong BeachLancasterLancaster Search: Cases Long Beach 602 Glendale 502 Palmdale 379 Pasadena 362 East Los Angeles 342 Show all How does California compare? 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 (7-day average) 0251005001k2.5k5k Total deaths Per 100k New deaths (7-day average) 051050100200500 New York 291,996 1488.4 Mar. 1Apr. 27 22,668 115.5 Mar. 1Apr. 27 New Jersey 111,188 1251.9 6,044 68 Massachusetts 56,462 826.7 3,003 44 Illinois 45,883 357.9 1,983 15.5 California 45,199 115.5 1,786 4.6 Pennsylvania 43,558 340.5 1,886 14.7 Michigan 38,210 383.7 3,407 34.2 Florida 32,138 156 1,088 5.3 Louisiana 27,068 580.4 1,740 37.3 Connecticut 25,997 725.9 2,012 56.2 Texas 25,321 90.8 666 2.4 Georgia 24,302 236 995 9.7 Maryland 19,487 324.6 945 15.7 Ohio 16,325 140.2 753 6.5 Indiana 15,961 240.5 844 12.7 Colorado 13,879 250.9 706 12.8 Washington 13,686 187.6 764 10.5 Virginia 13,538 160.9 460 5.5 Tennessee 9,918 149.1 184 2.8 North Carolina 9,428 92.8 340 3.3 Rhode Island 7,708 729.5 233 22.1 Missouri 7,305 119.9 343 5.6 Arizona 6,725 96.8 275 4 Alabama 6,539 134.4 228 4.7 Mississippi 6,094 203.9 229 7.7 Wisconsin 6,081 105.2 281 4.9 Iowa 5,868 187.3 127 4.1 South Carolina 5,613 113.3 177 3.6 Nevada 4,700 160.8 206 7 Utah 4,236 139.1 41 1.3 Delaware 4,162 438.3 125 13.2 Kentucky 4,156 93.6 213 4.8 Washington D.C. 3,892 568.6 185 27 Minnesota 3,811 68.9 286 5.2 Kansas 3,473 119.4 126 4.3 Nebraska 3,358 176.3 56 2.9 Oklahoma 3,281 83.7 197 5 Arkansas 3,069 102.6 51 1.7 New Mexico 2,825 135 99 4.7 Oregon 2,354 57.7 92 2.3 South Dakota 2,244 259.6 11 1.3 New Hampshire 1,938 144.2 60 4.5 Idaho 1,897 112.4 56 3.3 Puerto Rico 1,389 41 84 2.5 West Virginia 1,063 58.1 34 1.9 Maine 1,023 76.8 51 3.8 North Dakota 942 125.2 19 2.5 Vermont 855 136.8 47 7.5 Hawaii 607 42.7 16 1.1 Wyoming 520 89.4 7 1.2 Montana 449 43.1 14 1.3 Alaska 345 46.7 9 1.2 Show less How many people are hospitalized? One goal of the state's stay-at-home mandate is to slow the virus in hope of preventing hospitals from being overrun. The state health department started tracking hospitalizations of confirmed and suspected COVID-19 patients on April 1. Since then, the number of people admitted to California hospitals and intensive-care units has remained steady. Intensive care and other hospitalized patients Apr. 1Apr. 1501,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,000 California Department of Public Health Nearly half of the patients are being treated in Los Angeles County, home to a quarter of the state's population. ICU Other Patient totals by day 0501003007001.2k2.5k Los Angeles 709 1,840 Apr. 1Apr. 27 Riverside 98 240 San Diego 130 206 Orange 99 203 San Bernardino 67 170 Santa Clara 66 98 Alameda 47 81 Ventura 16 87 San Francisco 32 69 Fresno 20 71 Show all Which nursing homes are affected? Nursing homes have become a tragic focal point of the coronavirus outbreak. California's Department of Public Health is currently listing skilled nursing and assisted-living facilities across the state with COVID-19 outbreaks. The state last updated the list on April 25. Officials have withheld the precise number where there are 10 or fewer cases. State officials say the numbers reflect "point in time" counts that are limited to the current number of staff and patients infected, which can result in the numbers for many facilities declining over time. Filter by countyAlameda Contra Costa Fresno Kern Los Angeles Marin Orange Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Shasta Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Tulare Ventura Yolo Facility Type Staff Residents AFFINITY HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ALAMITOS BELMONT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - ALCOTT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer ALDEN TERRACE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ALEXANDRIA CARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer ARARAT HOME OF LOS ANGELES Assisted living 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ARARAT NURSING FACILITY Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - ASTORIA NURSING AND REHAB CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer BAY CREST CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - BEACHWOOD POST-ACUTE & REHAB Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 13 BELL CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing - 26 BELMONT VILLAGE HOLLYWOOD Assisted living 21 17 BEVERLY HILLS CARMEL RETIREMENT HOTEL Assisted living 12 10 or fewer BIXBY KNOLLS TOWERS HEALTH CARE & REHAB CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - BONNIE BRAE SKILLED NURSING Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BRENTWOOD HEALTH CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - BRIER OAK ON SUNSET Skilled nursing 29 60 BRIGHTON CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 15 54 BROADWAY BY THE SEA Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 20 BROOKDALE NORTHRIDGE Assisted living 14 - BROOKFIELD HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer BUENA VENTURA POST ACUTE CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 29 BURLINGTON CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - CALIFORNIA HEALTHCARE AND REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer CALIFORNIA POST ACUTE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - CALIFORNIA POST-ACUTE CARE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - CENTURY VILLA, INC. Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer CHATSWORTH PARK HEALTH CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 12 10 or fewer CLEAR VIEW SANITARIUM Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - COAST CARE CONVALESCENT CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - COLONIAL GARDENS NURSING HOME Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA NORTH CONVALESCENT CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer COUNTRY VILLA PAVILION NURSING CENTER Skilled nursing 11 28 COUNTRY VILLA REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - COUNTRY VILLA SHERATON NURSING AND REHAB. CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - COUNTRY VILLA TERRACE NURSING CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - CULVER WEST HEALTH CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - DRIFTWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - EAST LOS ANGELES DOCTORS HOSPITAL D/P SNF Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer EL RANCHO VISTA HEALTH CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 15 FOUR SEASONS HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTER, LP Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 52 GARDEN CREST REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer GARDENA CONVALESCENT CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 18 GLENDALE HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer GLENDALE POST ACUTE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer GLENHAVEN HEALTHCARE Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer GOLDEN LEGACY CARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer GRANADA POST ACUTE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - GRANCELL VILLAGE OF THE JEWISH HOMES FOR THE AGING Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - GRAND PARK CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 29 HARBOR POST ACUTE CARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer HAWTHORNE HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LP Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer HIGHLAND PARK SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTRE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer HOLLENBECK PALMS Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - HOLLYWOOD PREMIER HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 53 HUNTINGTON POST ACUTE Skilled nursing - 21 IMPERIAL CREST HEALTH CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - INGLEWOOD HEALTH CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer JASMIN TERRACE AT EL MOLINO Assisted living 23 16 JOYCE EISENBERG KEEFER MEDICAL CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - KEI-AI LOS ANGELES HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer KEI-AI SOUTH BAY HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 16 10 or fewer KENSINGTON REDONDO BEACH, THE Assisted living 23 19 LA BREA REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer LA CRESCENTA HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - LAKE BALBOA CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer LANDMARK MEDICAL CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - LEGACY HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - LIGHTHOUSE HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - LONG BEACH HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer LONGWOOD MANOR CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - LYNWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 14 10 or fewer MACLAY HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MAPLE HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 21 MAYFLOWER GARDENS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer MAYWOOD SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTRE Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer MID-WILSHIRE HEALTH CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 18 MONTE VISTA HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer MONTECITO HEIGHTS HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LP. Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer MONTROSE HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 20 15 MONTROSE SPRINGS SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer MOTION PICTURE & TELEVISION HOSPITAL D/P SNF Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer NEW VISTA NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer OAKMONT OF SANTA CLARITA Assisted living 11 10 or fewer OAKMONT OF VALENCIA Assisted living 12 10 or fewer PACIFIC PALMS HEALTHCARE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer PACIFIC VILLA, INC. Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - PALAZZO POST ACUTE Skilled nursing - 13 PALMCREST GRAND RESIDENCE Assisted living 10 or fewer 10 or fewer PARK REGENCY CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - PASADENA GROVE HEALTH CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - PASADENA PARK HEALTHCARE AND WELLNESS CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer PLAYA DEL REY CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer PRESBYTERIAN INTERCOMMUNITY HOSPITAL D/P SNF Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - PRIMROSE POST-ACUTE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer PROVIDENCE LITTLE COMPANY OF MARY SUBACUTE CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - RINALDI CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer RIVIERA HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer ROYAL CARE SKILLED NURSING CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer ROYAL GARDENS HEALTHCARE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - ROYALWOOD CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 35 SANTA ANITA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - SANTA TERESITA MANOR Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer SHARON CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - SHERMAN OAKS HEALTH & REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer SILVERADO SENIOR LIVING - BEVERLY PLACE Assisted living 28 22 SOCAL POST-ACUTE CARE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - SOUTH PASADENA CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 25 STUDIO CITY REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - SUNRAY HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer SUNSET MANOR CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - SYLMAR HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer THE CALIFORNIAN - PASADENA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - THE CARE CENTER ON HAZELTINE, LLC Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer THE EARLWOOD Skilled nursing 12 15 THE GARDENS OF EL MONTE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - THE GROVE POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 15 THE MEADOWS POST ACUTE Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 18 THE ORCHARD - POST ACUTE CARE Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer THE REHABILITATION CENTER OF SANTA MONICA Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer THE REHABILITATION CENTRE OF BEVERLY HILLS Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 13 TORRANCE CARE CENTER WEST, INC. Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer VALLEY PALMS CARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA - WEST LOS ANGELES Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer VIEW HEIGHTS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - VIRGIL REHABILITATION AND SKILLED NURSING CENTER Skilled nursing 18 10 or fewer WEST HILLS HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 16 WHITTIER HILLS HEALTH CARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer WINDSOR CARE CENTER OF CHEVIOT HILLS Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - WINDSOR GARDENS CONVALESCENT CENTER OF LONG BEACH Skilled nursing 10 or fewer - WINDSOR TERRACE HEALTHCARE CENTER Skilled nursing 10 or fewer 10 or fewer WOODLAND CARE CENTER Skilled nursing - 10 or fewer Show less How many tests have been run? A disorganized web of city, county and state facilities, as well as a growing number of private for-profit labs, are conducting tests. Officials have struggled to keep tabs. After a series of what he called “fits and starts” in test tracking, Gov. Newsom promised better organization and a “new day.” His administration now sets the total number of tests conducted in California at 553,409 following a sudden shift Thursday in how tests are counted. Cumulative tests conducted by day Feb. 1Feb. 15Mar. 1Mar. 15Apr. 1Apr. 150100,000200,000300,000400,000500,000600,000Data releasebeginsMore labscountedNewsom vows'new day'Methodologychange California Department of Public Health After initially counting the number of people tested, the administration has switched to tallying the total number of tests, which includes some people who have been tested more than once. That change, bottlenecks at testing labs and other troubles with the tally have caused numbers to suddenly rise and fall over time. Pending vs. completed tests Feb. 1Feb. 15Mar. 1Mar. 15Apr. 1Apr. 150100,000200,000300,000400,000500,000 California Department of Public Health Who has COVID-19? Information is limited about those who have contracted coronavirus in California. Here's what we know about those who have tested positive, according to data released by the state. An almost equal number of men and women have tested positive. Men 49.7% Women 49.6% Unknown 0.7% Those who are diagnosed have tended to be older, though people of all ages have tested positive. 65 and older 23% 50-64 26% 18-49 48% Younger than 18 2% Unknown 0.2% State officials do not know the race or ethnicity of 35% of people who have tested positive in California. When the race of the patient is known, the demographics hew closely to the state's overall demographic makeup. Latino 44.1% White 28% Asian 12.4% Black 6.6% Other 9.2% Healthcare workers have been hit hard by the virus. Statewide 4,709 have tested positive as of Monday, accounting for 11% of total infections. The number has continued to grow since state officials started releasing tallies. Confirmed cases among healthcare workers Feb. 1Feb. 15Mar. 1Mar. 15Apr. 1Apr. 1501,0002,0003,0004,0005,000State startsreleasing data California Department of Public Health What is closed or restricted? Gov. Newsom has ordered all Californians to stay at home, placing mandatory restrictions on the lives of all 40 million residents. https://www.latimes.com/projects/california-coronavirus-cases-tracking-outbreak/
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https://public.tableau.com/profile/idaho.division.of.public.health#!/vizhome/DPHIdahoCOVID-19Dashboard_V2/Story1
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Total Cases 862 Currently Hospitalized 12 Hospitalized Under Investigation 17 Deaths 47 Total Tests 15,215 People Being Monitored 16 People Completed Monitoring 831 https://www.healthvermont.gov/response/coronavirus-covid-19/current-activity-vermont
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https://coronavirus-response-alaska-dhss.hub.arcgis.com/
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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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Total Cases 609 (2 newly reported) Released from Isolation† 505 Required Hospitalization 69 Deaths 16 https://health.hawaii.gov/coronavirusdisease2019/what-you-should-know/current-situation-in-hawaii/