Jump to content

niman

Super Administrators
  • Posts

    74,774
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    31

Everything posted by niman

  1. Virus name: hCoV-19/USA/VA-DCLS-0065/2020 Accession ID: EPI_ISL_426472 Type: betacoronavirus Passage details/history: Original Sample information Collection date: 2020-04-03 Location: North America/USA/Virginia Host: Human
  2. Virus name: hCoV-19/USA/VA-DCLS-0066/2020 Accession ID: EPI_ISL_426473 Type: betacoronavirus Passage details/history: Original Sample information Collection date: 2020-04-03 Location: North America/USA/Virginia Host: Human
  3. Virus name: hCoV-19/USA/VA-DCLS-0067/2020 Accession ID: EPI_ISL_426474 Type: betacoronavirus Passage details/history: Original Sample information Collection date: 2020-04-03 Location: North America/USA/Virginia Host: Human
  4. Virus name: hCoV-19/USA/VA-DCLS-0068/2020 Accession ID: EPI_ISL_426475 Type: betacoronavirus Passage details/history: Original Sample information Collection date: 2020-04-04 Location: North America/USA/Virginia Host: Human
  5. Division of Consolidated Laboratories released 22 recent (collected between 3/23-4/04) sequences from Virginia patients. 21 were the Italian lineage.
  6. Dow futures rally 900 points after report says Gilead drug showing effectiveness against coronavirus PUBLISHED THU, APR 16 20205:13 PM EDTUPDATED 9 MIN AGO Fred Imbert@FOIMBERT WATCH NOW VIDEO06:09 Gilead up on positive early data on Remdesivir and coronavirus U.S. stock futures surged on Thursday night after a report said a Gilead Sciences drug was showing effectiveness in treating the coronavirus. The move pointed to a jump for the stock market on Friday. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures were up 903 points, or about 3.9%. S&P 500 futures gained 3.4% while Nasdaq 100 futures were up by 2.6%. Gilead shares jumped by 14% in after-hours trading after STAT news reported that a Chicago hospital treating coronavirus patients with Remdesivir in a trial were recovering rapidly from severe symptoms. The publication cited a video it obtained where the trial results were discussed. close dialog The top moments in business and politics - wrapped with exclusive color and context - right in you“This is obviously good news. Of course, we’ve heard a few other pieces of good news like this recently and they didn’t pan-out as well as people had hoped,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak, in an email. “The big question is whether it’s going to be enough to help the economy ‘re-open’ more quickly than people are thinking right now.” “To me, the critical issue is employment,” Maley added. “If the economy can bounce back quickly enough to take the unemployment rate back into the low-single digits quickly, that’s going to be very bullish.” Other studies have shown Remdesivir to be an effective treatment against the coronavirus. However, they have been smaller in scale. “An effective treatment is a huge deal and would create a path to open the economy and resume normal ‘social activities’ way sooner than a vaccine,” said Tom Lee, head of research at Fundstrat Global Advisors. “A treatment is safer and more scalable because it is only given to people who need to be treated.” Boeing shares also jumped about 7% after the airplane maker said it would resume production in the Seattle area as early as April 20. Stocks tumbled from record highs in February into a bear market a month later as the spread of the coronavirus roiled market sentiment and the economic outlook. More than 2 million cases have been confirmed worldwide, including over 650,000 in the U.S., according to Johns Hopkins University. Governments urged people to stay home, effectively shutting down the global economy. However, the stock market has rallied since March 23 as new coronavirus cases in the U.S. and globally showed signs of plateauing. President Donald Trump said Thursday that “our experts say the curve has flattened and the peak … is behind us.” He also issued guidelines to open up parts of the U.S. Since late March, the S&P 500 has jumped more than 25% while the Dow has gained 26.6% in that time. Stocks also got a boost after the Federal Reserve cut rates to zero and stabilized credit markets while Congress passed a stimulus plan. To be sure, the outbreak has already dealt a massive blow to the economy. In four weeks, about 22 million Americans have lost their jobs. Retail sales posted last month their biggest fall on record. Some investors have also said that news of an effective treatment or vaccine would be needed for stocks to mount a sustainable comeback. “If it is effective in keeping someone from contracting the virus or, more likely, simply reduces its severity, that would be a game changer and [would] allow the economy to restart both more quickly and more fully,” said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at The Leuthold Group, about the Remdesivir trial report. —CNBC’s Yun Li, Pippa Stevens and Tom Franck contributed to this report. https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/16/sp-500-etf-jumps-2percent-after-hours-on-report-gilead-drug-showing-effectiveness-treating-coronavirus.html
  7. Early peek at data on Gilead coronavirus drug suggests patients are responding to treatment By ADAM FEUERSTEIN @adamfeuerstein and MATTHEW HERPER @matthewherper APRIL 16, 2020 A vial of the remdesivir, an investigational drug from Gilead.GILEAD SCIENCES VIA AP AChicago hospital treating severe Covid-19 patients with Gilead Sciences’ antiviral medicine remdesivir in a closely watched clinical trial is seeing rapid recoveries in fever and respiratory symptoms, with nearly all patients discharged in less than a week, STAT has learned. Remdesivir was one of the first medicines identified as having the potential to impact SARS-CoV-2, the novel coronavirus that causes Covid-19, in lab tests. The entire world has been waiting for results from Gilead’s clinical trials, and positive results would likely lead to fast approvals by the Food and Drug Administration and other regulatory agencies. If safe and effective, it could become the first approved treatment against the disease. The University of Chicago Medicine recruited 125 people with Covid-19 into Gilead’s two Phase 3 clinical trials. Of those people, 113 had severe disease. All the patients have been treated with daily infusions of remdesivir. “The best news is that most of our patients have already been discharged, which is great. We’ve only had two patients perish,” said Kathleen Mullane, the University of Chicago infectious disease specialist overseeing the remdesivir studies for the hospital. Her comments were made this week during a video discussion about the trial results with other University of Chicago faculty members. The discussion was recorded and STAT obtained a copy of the video. The outcomes offer only a snapshot of remdesivir’s effectiveness. The same trials are being run concurrently at other institutions, and it’s impossible to determine the full study results with any certainty. Still, no other clinical data from the Gilead studies have been released to date, and excitement is high. Last month, President Trump touted the potential for remdesivir — as he has for many still-unproven treatments — and said it “seems to have a very good result.” In a statement Thursday, Gilead said: “What we can say at this stage is that we look forward to data from ongoing studies becoming available.” Gilead had said to expect results for its trial involving severe cases in April. Mullane said during her presentation that data for the first 400 patients in the study would be “locked” by Gilead Thursday, meaning that results could come any day. Mullane, while encouraged by the University of Chicago data, made clear her own hesitancy about drawing too many conclusions. “It’s always hard,” she said, because the severe trial doesn’t include a placebo group for comparison. “But certainly when we start [the] drug, we see fever curves falling,” she said. “Fever is now not a requirement for people to go on trial, we do see when patients do come in with high fevers, they do [reduce] quite quickly. We have seen people come off ventilators a day after starting therapy. So, in that realm, overall our patients have done very well.” She added: “Most of our patients are severe and most of them are leaving at six days, so that tells us duration of therapy doesn’t have to be 10 days. We have very few that went out to 10 days, maybe three,” she said. Related: Immunomedics halts late-stage clinical trial, confirming drug benefit for aggressive type of breast cancer Reached by STAT, Mullane confirmed the authenticity of the footage but declined to comment further. Asked about the data, Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute, described them as “encouraging.” “The severely hit patients are at such high-risk of fatality. So if it’s true that many of the 113 patients were in this category and were discharged, it’s another positive signal that the drug has efficacy,” he said, adding that it will be important to see more data from randomized controlled studies. Gilead’s severe Covid-19 study includes 2,400 participants from 152 different clinical trial sites all over the world. Its moderate Covid-19 study includes 1,600 patients in 169 different centers, also all over the world. The trial is investigating five- and 10-day treatment courses of remdesivir. The primary goal is a statistical comparison of patient improvement between the two treatment arms. Improvement is 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 lack of a control arm in the study could make interpreting the results more challenging. A lack of data has led to yo-yoing expectations for the drug. Two studies in China had enrollment suspended partway through because there were not enough patients available. A recent report of patients given the drug under a special program to make it available to those who are very ill generated both excitement and skepticism. In scientific terms, all the data are anecdotal until the full trial reads out, meaning that they should not be used to draw final conclusions. But some of the anecdotes are dramatic. Slawomir Michalak, a 57-year-old factory worker from a suburb west of Chicago, was among the participants in the Chicago study. One of his daughters started feeling ill in late March and was later diagnosed with mild Covid-19. Michalak, by contrast, came down with a high fever and reported shortness of breath and severe pain in his back. “It felt like someone was punching me in the lungs,” he told STAT. STAT Plus: Exclusive analysis of biopharma, health policy, and the life sciences. At his wife’s urging, Michalak went to the University of Chicago Medicine hospital on Friday, April 3. His fever had spiked to 104 and he was struggling to breath. At the hospital, he was given supplemental oxygen. He also agreed to participate in Gilead’s severe Covid-19 clinical trial. His first infusion of remdesivir was on Saturday, April 4. “My fever dropped almost immediately and I started to feel better,” he said. By his second dose on Sunday, Michalak said he was being weaned off oxygen. He received two more daily infusions of remdesivir and recovered enough to be discharged from the hospital on Tuesday, April 7. “Remdesivir was a miracle,” he said. The world is waiting to find out if it is really so. About the Authors Adam Feuerstein Senior Writer, Biotech Adam is STAT’s national biotech columnist, reporting on the intersection of biotech and Wall Street.
  8. AChicago hospital treating severe Covid-19 patients with Gilead Sciences’ antiviral medicine remdesivir in a closely watched clinical trial is seeing rapid recoveries in fever and respiratory symptoms, with nearly all patients discharged in less than a week, STAT has learned. https://www.statnews.com/2020/04/16/early-peek-at-data-on-gilead-coronavirus-drug-suggests-patients-are-responding-to-treatment/
  9. New York City 123,146 Albany County 581 Allegany County 28 Broome County 167 Cattaraugus County 32 Cayuga County 36 Chautauqua County 24 Chemung County 70 Chenango County 73 Clinton County 46 Columbia County 99 Cortland County 24 Delaware County 47 Dutchess County 2,085 Erie County 1,850 Essex County 12 Franklin County 13 Fulton County 25 Genesee County 78 Greene County 74 Hamilton County 3 Herkimer County 43 Jefferson County 48 Lewis County 8 Livingston County 32 Madison County 105 Monroe County 932 Montgomery County 32 Nassau County 27,772 Niagara County 216 Oneida County 249 Onondaga County 462 Ontario County 65 Orange County 5,888 Orleans County 34 Oswego County 44 Otsego County 44 Putnam County 573 Rensselaer County 137 Rockland County 8,752 Saratoga County 231 Schenectady County 245 Schoharie County 20 Schuyler County 6 Seneca County 18 St. Lawrence County 93 Steuben County 154 Suffolk County 24,182 Sullivan County 437 Tioga County 27 Tompkins County 116 Ulster County 761 Warren County 81 Washington County 46 Wayne County 49 Westchester County 21,828 Wyoming County 34 Yates County 7 New York State Total 222,284 New York State Deaths 12,192 New York City Deaths (Note: includes confirmed and presumed COVID-19 deaths as reported by the NYC Health Department) 12,952 https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/how-many-in-tri-state-have-tested-positive-for-coronavirus-here-are-latest-cases-by-the-numbers/2317721/
  10. This information is updated daily at 3 p.m., with COVID-19 results included as of 10 a.m. https://www.michigan.gov/coronavirus/0,9753,7-406-98163_98173---,00.html Note on 4/16/20 death data: MDHHS staff has put in place, a weekly review death certificate data maintained in Vital Records reporting systems. As a part of this process, records that identify COVID-19 infection as a contributing factor to death are compared against all laboratory confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the Michigan Disease Surveillance System (MDSS). If a death certificate is matched to a confirmed COVID-19 case and that record in the MDSS does not indicate a death, the MDSS record is updated to indicate the death and the appropriate local health department is notified. These matched deaths are then included with mortality information posted to the Michigan Coronavirus website. As a result of this week’s assessment, today’s data includes 65 additional deaths that have been identified through this methodology. Confirmed COVID-19 Cases by Jurisdiction updated 4/16/2020 County Confirmed Cases Reported Deaths Case Fatality Rate Alcona 1 Allegan 25 Alpena 2 Antrim 9 Arenac 7 Baraga 1 Barry 20 1 5% Bay 67 2 3% Berrien 133 7 5% Branch 31 2 6% Calhoun 119 4 3% Cass 19 1 5% Charlevoix 11 1 9% Cheboygan 12 1 8% Clare 7 1 14% Clinton 102 6 6% Crawford 18 1 6% Delta 10 1 10% Detroit City 7383 546 7% Dickinson 3 2 67% Eaton 84 5 6% Emmet 21 2 10% Genesee 1147 99 9% Gladwin 8 Gogebic 4 1 25% Grand Traverse 17 3 18% Gratiot 7 Hillsdale 84 9 11% Houghton 2 Huron 8 Ingham 278 6 2% Ionia 20 2 10% Iosco 6 1 17% Isabella 45 5 11% Jackson 209 8 4% Kalamazoo 118 8 7% Kalkaska 17 2 12% Kent 385 17 4% Lake 2 Lapeer 131 13 10% Leelanau 6 Lenawee 59 Livingston 263 9 3% Luce 1 Mackinac 4 Macomb 3992 354 9% Manistee 11 Marquette 27 5 19% Mason 4 Mecosta 11 1 9% Menominee 1 Midland 41 1 2% Missaukee 3 1 33% Monroe 217 10 5% Montcalm 23 1 4% Montmorency 2 Muskegon 110 5 5% Newaygo 7 Oakland 5778 420 7% Oceana 3 1 33% Ogemaw 5 Osceola 6 Oscoda 4 Otsego 44 2 5% Ottawa 82 2 2% Presque Isle 2 Roscommon 9 Saginaw 349 20 6% Sanilac 25 2 8% Schoolcraft 3 Shiawassee 70 2 3% St Clair 232 8 3% St Joseph 23 1 4% Tuscola 50 10 20% Van Buren 26 2 8% Washtenaw 826 25 3% Wayne 5619 435 8% Wexford 7 1 14% MDOC* 486 12 2% FCI** 39 Unknown 76 4 5% Out of State 144 2 1% Totals 29263 2093 7%
  11. Outbreaks in long-term care facilities (LTCs) https://msdh.ms.gov/msdhsite/_static/14,0,420.html#caseTable Long-term care (LTC) facilities like nursing homes are considered high risk locations because their residents are older or in poor health. Even one case of COVID-19 in these facilities among residents or employees is considered an outbreak. We investigate residents, staff and close contacts of infected individuals for possible exposure. The number of LTC facilities with outbreaks are shown for each county in the table below. County Cases Deaths LTCs with Outbreaks Adams 70 4 2 Alcorn 7 Amite 16 1 Attala 28 Benton 5 Bolivar 74 5 4 Calhoun 30 2 1 Carroll 9 1 Chickasaw 37 2 1 Choctaw 11 1 Claiborne 8 Clarke 20 1 2 Clay 21 Coahoma 45 1 Copiah 39 1 Covington 19 Desoto 211 3 1 Forrest 134 2 2 Franklin 14 George 8 Greene 3 Grenada 14 1 Hancock 50 5 2 Harrison 134 5 2 Hinds 301 4 5 Holmes 53 3 Humphreys 12 3 1 Itawamba 13 1 Jackson 189 5 2 Jasper 19 Jefferson 4 1 Jefferson Davis 7 1 Jones 48 3 Kemper 16 Lafayette 39 2 Lamar 56 1 Lauderdale 174 12 6 Lawrence 10 Leake 50 1 Lee 48 4 Leflore 62 6 1 Lincoln 86 6 2 Lowndes 30 1 Madison 116 3 3 Marion 35 1 Marshall 37 2 Monroe 54 3 2 Montgomery 15 1 Neshoba 39 1 Newton 16 1 Noxubee 18 Oktibbeha 42 1 2 Panola 27 2 Pearl River 112 8 2 Perry 20 1 Pike 82 2 2 Pontotoc 16 2 Prentiss 15 1 Quitman 13 Rankin 122 2 1 Scott 100 1 Sharkey 3 Simpson 13 1 Smith 37 1 1 Stone 16 Sunflower 43 2 Tallahatchie 7 Tate 27 Tippah 45 6 1 Tishomingo 2 Tunica 26 1 1 Union 9 1 1 Walthall 22 Warren 16 1 Washington 67 2 2 Wayne 10 Webster 15 1 Wilkinson 53 3 1 Winston 24 Yalobusha 14 Yazoo 72 1 Total 3,624 129 65 The numbers in this table are provisional. County case numbers and deaths may change as investigation finds new or additional information about residence. Trends and Summary Data The charts below are based on available data at the time of publication. Charts do not include cases where insufficient details of the case are known. Note: Values up to two weeks in the past on the Date of Event chart below can change as we update it with new information from disease investigation. U.S. and World Cases Coronavirus COVID-19 cases in the United States (CDC) COVID-19 Global Case Map (Johns Hopkins University) COVID-19 Testing Statewide Testing Summary COVID-19 testing providers around the state include commercial laboratories and the University of Mississippi Medical Center (UMMC). Combined with testing done by the MSDH Public Health Laboratory, the figures provide a complete picture of all Mississippi testing. We will update these figures as data becomes available. Combined testing totals (MSDH, UMMC and commercial testing providers) as of April 12, 2020. Total individuals tested by the MSDH Public Health Laboratory 9,412 Total individuals tested by other providers 28,321 Total individuals tested for COVID-19 statewide 37,733 MSDH Testing Summary MSDH Public Health Laboratory (MPHL) testing totals as of 6 p.m., April 15, 2020. These totals are for tests performed at the MPHL only. Total individuals tested by the MPHL: 10,068 Total positive individuals from MPHL tests: 1,127
  12. Outbreaks in long-term care facilities (LTCs) Long-term care (LTC) facilities like nursing homes are considered high risk locations because their residents are older or in poor health. Even one case of COVID-19 in these facilities among residents or employees is considered an outbreak. We investigate residents, staff and close contacts of infected individuals for possible exposure. The number of LTC facilities with outbreaks are shown for each county in the table below. County Cases Deaths LTCs with Outbreaks Adams 70 4 2 Alcorn 7 Amite 16 1 Attala 28 Benton 5 Bolivar 74 5 4 Calhoun 30 2 1 Carroll 9 1 Chickasaw 37 2 1 Choctaw 11 1 Claiborne 8 Clarke 20 1 2 Clay 21 Coahoma 45 1 Copiah 39 1 Covington 19 Desoto 211 3 1 Forrest 134 2 2 Franklin 14 George 8 Greene 3 Grenada 14 1 Hancock 50 5 2 Harrison 134 5 2 Hinds 301 4 5 Holmes 53 3 Humphreys 12 3 1 Itawamba 13 1 Jackson 189 5 2 Jasper 19 Jefferson 4 1 Jefferson Davis 7 1 Jones 48 3 Kemper 16 Lafayette 39 2 Lamar 56 1 Lauderdale 174 12 6 Lawrence 10 Leake 50 1 Lee 48 4 Leflore 62 6 1 Lincoln 86 6 2 Lowndes 30 1 Madison 116 3 3 Marion 35 1 Marshall 37 2 Monroe 54 3 2 Montgomery 15 1 Neshoba 39 1 Newton 16 1 Noxubee 18 Oktibbeha 42 1 2 Panola 27 2 Pearl River 112 8 2 Perry 20 1 Pike 82 2 2 Pontotoc 16 2 Prentiss 15 1 Quitman 13 Rankin 122 2 1 Scott 100 1 Sharkey 3 Simpson 13 1 Smith 37 1 1 Stone 16 Sunflower 43 2 Tallahatchie 7 Tate 27 Tippah 45 6 1 Tishomingo 2 Tunica 26 1 1 Union 9 1 1 Walthall 22 Warren 16 1 Washington 67 2 2 Wayne 10 Webster 15 1 Wilkinson 53 3 1 Winston 24 Yalobusha 14 Yazoo 72 1 Total 3,624 129 65 The numbers in this table are provisional. County case numbers and deaths may change as investigation finds new or additional information about residence. Trends and Summary Data The charts below are based on available data at the time of publication. Charts do not include cases where insufficient details of the case are known. Note: Values up to two weeks in the past on the Date of Event chart below can change as we update it with new information from disease investigation. U.S. and World Cases Coronavirus COVID-19 cases in the United States (CDC) COVID-19 Global Case Map (Johns Hopkins University) COVID-19 Testing Statewide Testing Summary COVID-19 testing providers around the state include commercial laboratories and the University of Mississippi Medical Center (UMMC). Combined with testing done by the MSDH Public Health Laboratory, the figures provide a complete picture of all Mississippi testing. We will update these figures as data becomes available. Combined testing totals (MSDH, UMMC and commercial testing providers) as of April 12, 2020. https://msdh.ms.gov/msdhsite/_static/14,0,420.html#caseTable Total individuals tested by the MSDH Public Health Laboratory 9,412 Total individuals tested by other providers 28,321 Total individuals tested for COVID-19 statewide 37,733 MSDH Testing Summary MSDH Public Health Laboratory (MPHL) testing totals as of 6 p.m., April 15, 2020. These totals are for tests performed at the MPHL only. Total individuals tested by the MPHL: 10,068 Total positive individuals from MPHL tests: 1,127
  13. Updated: April 16, 2020 at 11:45 AM Confirmed Cases1 Recovered Hospitalizations Deaths 796 333 130 27 1Confirmed Cases: This number represents individuals with tests that come back positive from any approved lab. 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 15, 202014,076 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 View a Map of Cumulative Confirmed COVID‑19 Cases by County View a Table of Cumulative COVID‑19 Cases by County Cumulative COVID‑19 Case Counts by County County1 Confirmed Recovered Hospitalizations Deaths Androscoggin 32 13 11 1 Aroostook 3 1 Cumberland 343 171 55 14 Franklin 9 3 1 Hancock 5 1 1 Kennebec 94 15 14 3 Knox 12 5 1 Lincoln 12 7 Oxford 13 8 1 Penobscot 37 25 6 Piscataquis Sagadahoc 15 7 5 Somerset 14 3 Waldo 39 2 1 3 Washington 2 2 York 164 70 34 6 Unknown 2 1County listings are by residence of patient, not location of the hospital.
  14. There are 4,992 confirmed COVID-19 patients in Missouri, including 166 deaths. https://www.kshb.com/news/coronavirus/covid-19-case-tracker-where-we-stand-in-mo-ks-nationwide COUNTY COVID-19 Cases COVID-19 Deaths Adair County 12 0 Andrew County 1 0 Atchison County 2 0 Audrain County 0 0 Barry County 2 0 Barton County 0 0 Bates County 6 1 Benton County 3 0 Bollinger County 3 0 Boone County 90 1 Buchanan County 26 1 Butler County 17 0 Caldwell County 2 0 Callaway County 20 1 Camden County 28 1 Cape Girardeau County 31 1 Carroll County 0 0 Carter County 3 1 Cass County 48 4 Cedar County 5 0 Chariton County 4 0 Christian County 18 0 Clark County 1 0 Clay County 52 1 Clinton County 11 0 Cole County 41 1 Cooper County 4 0 Crawford County 5 0 Dade County 0 0 Dallas County 2 0 Daviess County 1 0 DeKalb County 3 0 Dent County 0 0 Douglas County 0 0 Dunklin County 18 0 Franklin County 87 5 Gasconade County 2 0 Gentry County 1 0 Greene County 81 8 Grundy County 0 0 Harrison County 6 0 Henry County 5 1 Hickory County 0 0 Holt County 1 0 Howard County 2 0 Howell County 4 0 Iron County 1 0 Jackson County 243 10 Jasper County 21 0 Jefferson County 147 3 Johnson County 45 0 Knox County 0 0 Laclede County 0 0 Lafayette County 29 1 Lawrence County 0 0 Lewis County 0 0 Lincoln County 40 1 Linn County 5 1 Livingston County 2 0 McDonald County 4 0 Macon County 2 0 Madison County 1 0 Maries County 2 0 Marion County 0 0 Mercer County 0 0 Miller County 1 0 Mississippi County 0 0 Moniteau County 6 0 Monroe County 0 0 Montgomery County 6 0 Morgan County 1 0 New Madrid County 8 0 Newton County 9 0 Nodaway County 3 0 Oregon County 1 0 Osage County 4 0 Ozark County 0 0 Pemiscot County 11 0 Perry County 38 0 Pettis County 4 0 Phelps County 1 0 Pike County 6 0 Platte County 26 0 Polk County 1 0 Pulaski County 18 1 Putnam County 0 0 Ralls County 1 0 Randolph County 8 0 Ray County 7 0 Reynolds County 2 0 Ripley County 3 0 St. Charles County 416 17 St. Clair County 2 0 Ste. Genevieve County 7 1 St. Francois County 22 1 St. Louis County 1,938 63 Saline County 44 0 Schuyler County 0 0 Scotland County 3 0 Scott County 28 0 Shannon County 0 0 Shelby County 1 0 Stoddard County 13 0 Stone County 3 0 Sullivan County 0 0 Taney County 8 1 Texas County 0 0 Vernon County 3 0 Warren County 17 0 Washington County 2 0 Wayne County 0 0 Webster County 5 0 Worth County 1 0 Wright County 9 0 St. Louis city 743 27 Other 1 0 Kansas City 371 12
  15. https://idph.iowa.gov/Emerging-Health-Issues/Novel-Coronavirus?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery
  16. Colorado Case Summary (Updated 4/15/20 at 4:00 p.m.) Note: This summary only includes data through 4/14 and does not reflect cases since then. 8,280 cases* 1,636 hospitalized 56 counties 40,533 people tested** 357 deaths 83 outbreaks *The number of cases includes people who have had a test that indicated they were positive for COVID-19. The number of cases also includes epidemiologically-linked cases -- or cases where public health epidemiologists have determined that infection is highly likely because a person exhibited symptoms and had close contact with someone who tested positive. The number of epidemiologically-linked cases represents a very small portion of the reported cases. https://covid19.colorado.gov/case-data
  17. DC COVID-19 Data for April 15, 2020 Total Tested Overall: 12,150 Total Positives: 2,350 Total Lives Lost: 81 Total Recovered: 552 Download copy of DC COVID-19 data Other Data Public Safety Agency Data Human Services Agency Data Hospital Status Data https://coronavirus.dc.gov/page/coronavirus-data
  18. New Positive Cases 611 between 04/13/2020 and 04/15/2020 New Deaths 41 between 04/02/2020 and 04/15/2020 New Tests 2,735 between 03/17/2020 and 04/15/2020 Total Positive Cases 9,542 Total Deaths 477 Total Tested 51,115 County Distributions Positive CasesDeathsTested 176893,320136114411214297446151761010455283215142052016475378467631920275112712324377143397835821362441410152241222216160191214361116227714381025610871046146148615125612825418530615COVID-19 Confirmed Cases16101521336199143329+ Download comprehensive county data here. ICU Beds Usage 44.6% Available ICU Beds 23.8% ICU Beds in Use - COVID 31.6% ICU Beds in Use - Non-COVID 2,926Total Capacity44.6%23.8%31.6% Ventilator Usage 75.6% Available Ventilators 14.4% Ventilators in Use - COVID 10% Ventilators in Use - Non-COVID 2,961Total Capacity75.6%14.4%10% Demographic Distributions Why do I see "Unknowns"? CasesDeaths Statewide Demographics for Positive Cases* 0%5%10%15%20%0-1920-2930-3940-4950-5960-6970-7980+UnknownAge1.8%10.6%13.8%16.9%20%16.5%10.6%9.7%0.1% 0%15%30%45%60%FMUnknownGender54.3%44.5%1.2% Race* Race Type % of Cases % of Indiana population White 49.9% 85.1% Black Or African American 17.5% 9.8% Other 12.7% 2.6% Asian 0.8% 2.5% Unknown 19.1% 0% Ethnicity* Ethnicity Type % of Cases % of Indiana population Not Hispanic or Latino 38.9% 92.9% Hispanic or Latino 3.8% 7.1% Unknown 57.3% 0% * Indiana population percentages provided by 2019 U.S. Census Bureau; Population Estimate Program. Metrics by Day CasesDeathsTested Positive Cases by Day Showing: All 02-2903-0603-1103-1603-2103-2603-3104-0504-1004-15Date of Case0200400600800 Cases by Day Newly Reported Cases https://www.coronavirus.in.gov/ 02-2903-0603-1103-1603-2103-2603-3104-0504-1004-15
  19. COVID-19 Statistics in Maryland Number of Confirmed Cases: 10,784 Number of negative test results: 48,059 Number of Deaths: 392 Number of Probable Deaths: 67 Hospitalizations: 2,451 ever hospitalized Released From Isolation: 736 Cases and Deaths Data Breakdown Note: Parenthesis = Number of confirmed deaths Asterisk = Number of probable deaths NH = Non-Hispanic By County County Cases Deaths Allegany 20 (1) Anne Arundel 896 (29) 6* Baltimore City 1,160 (31) 4* Baltimore County 1,516 (31) 6* Calvert 103 (1) Caroline 23 Carroll 283 (21) 2* Cecil 101 (2) Charles 327 (13) Dorchester 18 (1) Frederick 497 (22) 7* Garrett 4 Harford 161 4* Howard 451 (10) 1* Kent 11 (1) Montgomery 2,133 (56) 14* Prince George's 2,722 (70) 10* Queen Anne's 19 (1) St. Mary's 98 (1) Somerset 6 Talbot 14 (1) Washington 109 (1) Wicomico 87 (1) Worcester 25 Data Not Available (98) 13* By Age Range and Gender Age/Gender Cases Deaths 0-9 86 10-19 231 20-29 1,162 (2) 30-39 1,784 (6) 40-49 1,951 (6) 50-59 2,138 (23) 3* 60-69 1,602 (61) 9* 70-79 1,065 (77) 12* 80+ 765 (123) 30* Data Not Available (94) 13* Female: 5,817 (187) 33* Male: 4,967 (205) 34* By Race and Ethnicity Race/Ethnicity Cases Deaths African-American (NH) 3,978 (153) 13* Asian (NH) 239 (11) 1* White (NH) 2,535 (126) 39* Hispanic 1,180 (15) Other (NH) 376 (8) 1* Data Not Available 2,476 (79) 13* https://coronavirus.maryland.gov/
  20. 22,532 Cases Reported* 1,156 Deaths Reported Reported COVID-19 Patients in Hospitals 1,914 396 of those on ventilators Tests Completed 5,968 by State Lab Commercial Tests Completed 120,618 and Reported to State** 64 of 64 Parishes with Reported Cases
  21. Total 15669 (100%) Hospitalized 3108 (19.84%) Deaths 587 (3.75%) COVID-19 Confirmed Cases By County: No. Cases No. Deaths Fulton 1929 63 Dougherty 1338 83 Dekalb 1247 18 Cobb 990 47 Gwinnett 896 32 Clayton 468 13 Hall 411 5 Henry 330 5 Sumter 277 14 Lee 265 15 Carroll 243 7 Cherokee 242 8 Bartow 237 21 Douglas 202 6 Muscogee 192 4 Richmond 189 8 Mitchell 183 20 Forsyth 162 5 Chatham 161 5 Houston 154 9 Early 146 6 Coweta 140 3 Upson 139 5 Terrell 137 12 Randolph 134 7 Fayette 124 5 Floyd 121 6 Paulding 121 5 Bibb 118 1 Newton 115 3 Thomas 112 10 https://dph.georgia.gov/covid-19-daily-status-report
  22. COVID-19 Cases by County Data is provisional and subject to revision. Bergen County: 11,409 Positive Test Results 668 Deaths Hudson County: 9,165 Positive Test Results 365 Deaths Essex County: 9,084 Positive Test Results 642 Deaths Union County: 7,904 Positive Test Results 301 Deaths Passaic County: 7,317 Positive Test Results 211 Deaths Middlesex County: 6,994 Positive Test Results 278 Deaths Monmouth County: 4,299 Positive Test Results 190 Deaths Ocean County: 4,272 Positive Test Results 185 Deaths Morris County: 3,701 Positive Test Results 216 Deaths Somerset County: 2,103 Positive Test Results 121 Deaths Mercer County: 2,037 Positive Test Results 87 Deaths Camden County: 1,734 Positive Test Results 60 Deaths Burlington County: 1,326 Positive Test Results 52 Deaths Gloucester County: 624 Positive Test Results 18 Deaths Sussex County: 578 Positive Test Results 43 Deaths Warren County: 501 Positive Test Results 33 Deaths Hunterdon County: 373 Positive Test Results 15 Deaths Atlantic County: 344 Positive Test Results 13 Deaths Cumberland County: 223 Positive Test Results 3 Deaths Cape May County: 186 Positive Test Results 10 Deaths Salem County: 95 Positive Test Results 4 Deaths https://www.nj.gov/health/cd/topics/covid2019_dashboard.shtml
  23. COVID-19 Data for Pennsylvania* Negative Positive Deaths 113,735 27,735 707 * Map, tables and case counts last updated at 12:00 p.m. on 4/16/2020 View hospital dataOpens In A New Window (desktop version) View hospital dataOpens In A New Window (mobile version) 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 40% 50-64 29% 65+ 23% * Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding Hospitalizations by Age Range to Date Age Range Percent of Cases 0-4 < 1% 5-12 < 1% 13-18 < 1% 19-24 1% 25-49 19% 50-64 29% 65+ 51% * Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding County Case Counts to Date County Number of Cases Deaths Adams 67 1 Allegheny 925 38 Armstrong 32 1 Beaver 168 14 Bedford 11 1 Berks 1419 31 Blair 13 Bradford 19 Bucks 1407 56 Butler 154 5 Cambria 14 1 Cameron 1 Carbon 113 6 Centre 73 Chester 699 28 Clarion 17 Clearfield 9 Clinton 8 Columbia 146 3 Crawford 16 Cumberland 137 4 Dauphin 287 7 Delaware 1999 69 Elk 2 Erie 46 Fayette 60 3 Forest 7 Franklin 80 Fulton 2 Greene 24 Huntingdon 12 Indiana 44 2 Jefferson 2 Juniata 56 Lackawanna 559 28 Lancaster 970 33 Lawrence 55 5 Lebanon 380 2 Lehigh 1999 28 Luzerne 1611 28 Lycoming 30 McKean 4 Mercer 50 Mifflin 15 Monroe 898 29 Montgomery 2544 89 Montour 48 Northampton 1296 25 Northumberland 60 Perry 17 1 Philadelphia 7684 134 Pike 276 7 Potter 4 Schuylkill 236 4 Snyder 24 1 Somerset 14 Sullivan 1 Susquehanna 49 1 Tioga 13 1 Union 25 Venango 6 Warren 1 Washington 73 1 Wayne 77 2 Westmoreland 240 13 Wyoming 14 1 York 393 4 View as a clickable county mapOpens In A New Window COVID-19 Cases Associated with Nursing Homes and Personal Care Homes to Date Facility County Number of Facilities Number of Cases Among Residents Number of Cases Among Employees Number of Deaths Adams 1 2 0 1 Allegheny 18 121 34 26 Beaver 2 61 9 10 Berks 13 188 41 14 Bucks 31 186 35 29 Butler 3 9 8 2 Carbon 2 11 1 5 Chester 15 111 14 19 Clarion 1 1 0 0 Clearfield 1 1 0 0 Columbia 1 12 2 0 Cumberland 3 30 3 2 Dauphin 3 35 2 1 Delaware 34 299 34 49 Erie 1 1 0 0 Fayette 1 3 0 1 Indiana 2 11 0 2 Lackawanna 9 172 17 13 Lancaster 17 210 48 23 Lebanon 1 4 1 0 Lehigh 10 112 25 10 Luzerne 11 127 11 22 Lycoming 1 0 1 0 Mercer 1 1 0 0 Monroe 6 59 18 13 Montgomery 55 584 18 64 Northampton 10 175 44 9 Philadelphia 43 666 3 35 Pike 1 17 1 1 Susquehanna 3 30 3 1 Washington 1 0 1 0 Westmoreland 4 51 19 13 York 1 0 1 0 Pennsylvania 306 3290 394 365 https://www.health.pa.gov/topics/disease/coronavirus/Pages/Cases.aspx
  24. Apr 15 http://mediaarchives.gsradio.net/rense/special/rense_041520_hr3.mp3
×
×
  • Create New...