niman Posted June 25, 2020 Report Share Posted June 25, 2020 By Los Angeles Times Staff Updated June 24, 10:36 p.m. Pacific 196,044 confirmed cases +4,629 on Wednesday 5,725 deaths +98 on Wednesday The coronavirus pandemic has spread rapidly across California. Experts say the true number of people infected is unknown and likely much higher than official tallies. To better understand the spread of the virus, The Times is conducting an independent, continual survey of dozens of local health agencies across the state. What we know Tallies have never been higher. Records have been shattered in recent days. Over the past week, the state has averaged 4,649 new cases and 63.4 new deaths per day. SoCal remains a hot spot. Los Angeles County has recorded 41% of new cases in the last two weeks, while home to only a quarter of the state's population. Hospitalizations are creeping up. Counts have started climbing in some areas, threatening a goal of the stay-at-home policies. Testing has increased. The state is now above its goal of 60,000 tests per day. The highest toll is among seniors. Roughly 78% of the dead were 65 or older. At least 2,847 were living at a nursing home. The state is gradually reopening. Most counties continue to ease restrictions. California's totals still sit far below New York, where more than 31,200 people have died. California counties Alameda Contra Costa Fresno Imperial Kern Kings Los Angeles Marin Monterey Orange Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Sonoma Stanislaus Tulare Ventura Other trackers Beach closures Housing homeless people Reopenings by county The lives lost Unemployment and the economic fallout More coverage Symptoms How it spreads Get our newsletter Jump to a section Trends Maps Hospitals Tests Demographics Nursing homes Reopenings State rankings The latest trends The number of cases in California is now on pace to double every 25.7 days, a number used to measure how quickly the virus is spreading. Coronavirus can infect people so rapidly that government officials have issued shutdown orders aimed at slowing the growth of new cases and flattening this line. CasesDeaths Cumulative cases Feb.MarchAprilMayJune050,000100,000150,000200,000 Times survey of county and local health departments Local governments announce new cases and deaths each day, though bottlenecks in testing and reporting lags can introduce delays. For instance, some agencies do not report new totals on weekends, leading to lower numbers on those days. New cases by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJune02,0004,0006,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage Deaths by day Feb.MarchAprilMayJune0501007-dayaverage7-dayaverage The lines above are seven-day averages. They offer a more stable view of the trend than daily totals. That's why experts wait for lines like these to flatten before they say conditions are improving. The rate varies from county to county, but most areas are still reporting new cases every day. The chart below is adjusted to show how quickly new cases are being confirmed in each county. A good sign is when a line flattens, which indicates that transmission is slowing in that area. Cumulative cases by county Current doubling time5 days7142130 15 dayssince 10th case30456075901020501002005001,0002,0005,00010,00020,00040,00060,000Doublingevery dayDoublingevery dayEvery3 daysEvery3 daysEvery weekEvery weekEverymonthEverymonthLassenLassenColusaColusaTehamaTehamaGlennGlennMarinMarinAmadorAmadorShastaShastaMendocinoMendocinoMercedMercedSan JoaquinSan JoaquinMaderaMaderaSiskiyouSiskiyouSacramentoSacramentoLakeLakeSan BenitoSan BenitoSan BernardinoSan BernardinoSan Luis ObispoSan Luis ObispoYubaYubaImperialImperialSonomaSonomaLos AngelesLos AngelesCalaverasCalaverasMariposaMariposaSanta ClaraSanta ClaraKingsKingsInyoInyoHumboldtHumboldtMonoMono This chart tracks cumulative cases after each county confirmed its 10th case. Case counts are plotted on a logarithmic scale, which makes it easier to see when cases level off. Doubling rate is the estimate of how long it would take the county to double its number of cases, given the trend in the last week. Compare the slope of a county's curve to the slope of the guide lines to estimate its doubling rate at any point. How COVID-19 crushed California’s workforce The coronavirus outbreak decimated California's economy. The Times is tracking the fallout as businesses begin to reopen. Cases by county and city While initial outbreaks were centered in the San Francisco Bay Area, most new cases and deaths are now concentrated in Southern California. Officials are watching the latest figures as they weigh when and how to reopen. One metric is whether counties have kept new cases over the last 14 days to less than 25 per 100,000 residents. Currently, 18 of 58 counties pass the test. Metric CasesDeaths Time frame Last 14 daysCumulative Confirmed cases03301,0502,1303,1204,84022,550 Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingRedding In the last 14 days Cases Per 100k Status Wednesday Deaths Per 100k Wednesday Los Angeles » 22,555 223.4 Failing +1,121 462 4.6 +35 Riverside » 4,841 203.1 Failing +474 66 2.8 +1 San Bernardino » 3,593 168.3 Failing +397 13 0.6 +11 Orange » 3,123 98.7 Failing +279 88 2.8 +26 San Diego » 2,565 77.7 Failing +332 40 1.2 +6 Imperial » 2,137 1,185.8 Failing +279 30 16.6 +2 Fresno » 1,386 141.7 Failing +220 22 2.2 +1 San Joaquin » 1,330 181.6 Failing +182 9 1.2 +1 Kern » 1,179 133.5 Failing +59 13 1.5 +3 Alameda » 1,155 70.3 Failing +135 18 1.1 +2 Tulare » 1,053 228.7 Failing +99 22 4.8 +2 Ventura » 780 92 Failing +99 8 0.9 +1 Sacramento » 750 49.7 Failing +66 5 0.3 – Stanislaus » 723 134.1 Failing +75 4 0.7 +1 Marin » 714 274.3 Failing +121 1 0.4 – Santa Clara » 710 36.9 Failing +105 8 0.4 – Contra Costa » 680 60 Failing +69 19 1.7 +5 Santa Barbara » 662 149.2 Failing +81 12 2.7 – Monterey » 578 133.4 Failing +56 1 0.2 – Kings » 549 365.8 Failing +48 14 9.3 – San Mateo » 464 60.6 Failing +60 11 1.4 – San Francisco » 426 49 Failing +30 4 0.5 – Solano 410 93.5 Failing +44 – – – Merced 338 125.6 Failing +31 2 0.7 +1 Sonoma » 285 56.9 Failing – 1 0.2 – Placer 230 60.5 Failing +22 1 0.3 – Madera 185 119.3 Failing +11 2 1.3 – San Luis Obispo 151 53.6 Failing +20 – – – Yolo 140 65.1 Failing +20 – – – Napa 88 62.6 Failing +6 1 0.7 – Santa Cruz 88 32.1 Failing +8 – – – San Benito 76 127.9 Failing +6 – – – Sutter 59 61.5 Failing +2 1 1 – Butte 48 21.1 Passing +8 – – – Glenn 45 161.3 Failing +8 – – – Tehama 44 69.4 Failing +4 – – – Nevada 41 41.4 Failing – – – – Shasta 41 22.9 Passing +4 – – – El Dorado 39 20.9 Passing +3 – – – Mendocino 36 41.2 Failing – – – – Siskiyou 12 27.6 Failing – – – – Lake 11 17.1 Passing – – – – Yuba 11 14.6 Passing +6 – – – Calaveras 8 17.7 Passing – – – – Humboldt 8 5.9 Passing +9 – – – Tuolumne 7 13 Passing +1 – – – Amador 6 15.9 Passing +3 – – – Lassen 6 19.2 Passing +22 – – – Inyo 5 27.6 Failing – – – – Mariposa 5 28.5 Failing – – – – Colusa 4 18.6 Passing +3 – – – Mono 3 21.2 Passing – – – – Del Norte 2 7.3 Passing – – – – Plumas 2 10.7 Passing +1 – – – Alpine – – Passing – – – – Modoc – – Passing – – – – Sierra – – Passing – – – – Trinity – – Passing – – – – Show less Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 932 places as released by county health departments. Confirmed cases 10 100 500 1,000 2,000 Counties that do not report cases by locality © Mapbox © OpenStreetMap Improve this map The following counties currently do not report cases by locality: Alpine, Colusa, Del Norte, Glenn, Inyo, Lake, Lassen, Madera, Mariposa, Modoc, San Benito, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Tuolumne and Yuba Filter by countyAlameda Amador Butte Calaveras Contra Costa El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Imperial Kern Kings Los Angeles Marin Mendocino Merced Mono Monterey Napa Nevada Orange Placer Plumas Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Luis Obispo San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Santa Cruz Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Tulare Ventura Yolo City/community Confirmed cases East Los Angeles 2,144 Castaic 1,734 Boyle Heights 1,494 South Gate 1,444 Downey 1,332 Glendale 1,312 El Monte 1,282 Westlake 1,250 Compton 1,219 Pasadena 1,196 Pomona 1,186 Pacoima 1,173 Vernon Central 1,171 Panorama City 1,163 Lynwood 1,161 Sylmar 1,160 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone 1,156 Palmdale 1,126 Van Nuys 1,114 San Pedro 1,111 North Hollywood 1,075 Wholesale District 1,058 Huntington Park 1,006 Santa Clarita 1,005 Lancaster 947 Norwalk 937 Inglewood 906 Pico-Union 867 Reseda 866 Central 861 West Vernon 830 Pico Rivera 829 Florence-Firestone 796 Melrose 785 Montebello 769 South Park 760 West Covina 744 Baldwin Park 726 Bellflower 722 Canoga Park 718 Paramount 706 North Hills 700 Vermont Vista 680 90805: Long Beach 649 Hawthorne 639 Watts 607 Carson 600 Bell Gardens 592 Bell 589 Whittier 567 Maywood 553 Harvard Park 528 Northridge 526 Burbank 524 90813: Long Beach 522 Torrance 521 Century Palms/Cove 517 Wilmington 502 Temple-Beaudry 501 Granada Hills 496 Willowbrook 478 Sun Valley 465 Gardena 445 Koreatown 438 Lincoln Heights 435 Arleta 427 Winnetka 427 Exposition Park 420 Cudahy 410 Athens-Westmont 409 Wilshire Center 409 Hollywood 405 Highland Park 402 90806: Long Beach 386 El Sereno 381 Santa Monica 370 Alhambra 369 West Adams 367 Lakewood 366 South Whittier 365 Azusa 362 La Puente 350 Covina 333 Sherman Oaks 331 University Park 320 Tarzana 319 Green Meadows 311 West Whittier/Los Nietos 307 Vermont Knolls 303 90804: Long Beach 302 East Hollywood 299 Lake Balboa 294 90810: Long Beach 290 Eagle Rock 285 La Mirada 283 Monterey Park 283 90802: Long Beach 282 Valley Village 282 Hacienda Heights 277 Glassell Park 273 San Fernando 266 Chatsworth 265 Glendora 262 Harbor Gateway 261 90807: Long Beach 258 Silver Lake 258 Palms 255 Woodland Hills 253 Monrovia 249 Baldwin Hills 248 Walnut Park 247 Downtown 240 South El Monte 240 Little Armenia 237 Mission Hills 237 Hyde Park 233 West Hollywood 232 Rowland Heights 230 Little Bangladesh 216 90815: Long Beach 213 Bassett 211 Temple City 211 Altadena 209 Valinda 209 Lakeview Terrace 207 San Gabriel 206 Rosemead 205 Sunland 205 Beverly Hills 203 Historic Filipinotown 203 Harvard Heights 202 West Hills 202 Valley Glen 199 Cerritos 196 Culver City 191 Lawndale 184 Redondo Beach 182 Encino 175 Harbor City 173 Lennox 173 Commerce 170 Duarte 170 San Jose Hills 167 Tujunga 167 West Los Angeles 161 Hawaiian Gardens 154 90803: Long Beach 150 Mt. Washington 150 East Rancho Dominguez 149 Mid-city 148 South Pasadena 148 Westchester 147 West Carson 145 Vermont Square 142 Arcadia 141 Country Club Park 140 Alsace 135 Porter Ranch 132 Unincorporated - Azusa 130 Rancho Palos Verdes 125 San Dimas 123 Santa Fe Springs 123 Cloverdale/Cochran 121 Diamond Bar 115 90808: Long Beach 114 Westwood 112 Crenshaw District 110 Calabasas 109 Hancock Park 109 Mar Vista 109 Crestview 107 Del Rey 107 Manhattan Beach 105 Hollywood Hills 104 Unincorporated - Covina 104 Brentwood 102 Carthay 102 Elysian Valley 102 Gramercy Place 100 West Puente Valley 98 Studio City 97 Adams-Normandie 92 Figueroa Park Square 90 Northeast San Gabriel 90 Claremont 88 La Verne 88 Leimert Park 88 Artesia 86 Venice 86 Jefferson Park 83 Covina (Charter Oak) 81 Victoria Park 80 Walnut 79 Echo Park 77 South San Gabriel 76 90814: Long Beach 72 Los Feliz 72 Signal Hill 72 Lomita 71 La Canada Flintridge 70 Atwater Village 69 El Camino Village 68 Avocado Heights 63 Hermosa Beach 62 Pacific Palisades 62 Miracle Mile 57 St Elmo Village 56 View Park/Windsor Hills 56 Athens Village 55 Quartz Hill 54 Beverlywood 53 La Rambla 53 Beverly Crest 52 Stevenson Ranch 51 Thai Town 51 Century City 50 Agoura Hills 49 Lake Los Angeles 48 Malibu 48 Palos Verdes Estates 48 North Whittier 46 South Carthay 45 Cadillac-Corning 44 El Segundo 44 Manchester Square 44 Bel Air 43 La Crescenta-Montrose 42 Playa Vista 41 Canyon Country 40 Longwood 40 Wellington Square 40 Sun Village 39 Santa Monica Mountains 38 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez 35 Little Tokyo 34 Reseda Ranch 33 Wiseburn 33 Chinatown 32 Littlerock/Pearblossom 32 Park La Brea 31 Unincorporated - Duarte 31 Cheviot Hills 30 Unincorporated - Monrovia 30 East La Mirada 29 Lafayette Square 29 Sierra Madre 28 Ladera Heights 27 Rancho Dominguez 26 Toluca Lake 26 San Marino 25 Val Verde 25 Unincorporated - West LA 24 Angelino Heights 23 Del Aire 23 Elysian Park 23 Rancho Park 23 East Whittier 22 Littlerock 22 Rolling Hills Estates 21 Acton 20 Marina del Rey 20 Exposition 19 Marina Peninsula 19 Reynier Village 19 Unincorporated - Arcadia 19 University Hills 18 Unincorporated - Whittier 17 White Fence Farms 17 Shadow Hills 16 View Heights 14 Industry 13 La Habra Heights 13 Regent Square 13 Unincorporated - Hawthorne 12 Valencia 12 Agua Dulce 11 Irwindale 11 Sunrise Village 11 Unincorporated - South El Monte 11 Faircrest Heights 10 West Rancho Dominguez 10 Harbor Pines 9 Palisades Highlands 9 Kagel/Lopez Canyons 8 Rosewood 8 Toluca Terrace 8 Vernon 8 Desert View Highlands 7 North Lancaster 7 Pearblossom/Llano 7 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain 7 Unincorporated - La Verne 7 Westlake Village 7 Bradbury 6 Unincorporated - Palmdale 6 Unincorporated - Pomona 6 Lake Manor 5 Playa Del Rey 5 Saugus 5 Anaverde 4 East Pasadena 4 Elizabeth Lake 4 Hidden Hills 4 Leona Valley 4 Del Sur 3 Mandeville Canyon 3 Newhall 3 Pellissier Village 3 San Pasqual 3 Santa Catalina Island 3 Toluca Woods 3 West Antelope Valley 3 Westhills 3 Angeles National Forest 2 Littlerock/Juniper Hills 2 Rolling Hills 2 Rosewood/East Gardena 2 Southeast Antelope Valley 2 Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest 2 Unincorporated - Bradbury 2 Unincorporated - Glendora 2 Avalon 1 Bouquet Canyon 1 Brookside 1 Hi Vista 1 Lake Hughes 1 Llano 1 Roosevelt 1 South Antelope Valley 1 Sycamore Square 1 Unincorporated - Del Rey 1 Unincorporated - El Monte 1 Westfield/Academy Hills 1 Show less Learn more about your county Explore the latest data by visiting our dedicated pages for Los Angeles, Alameda, Contra Costa, Fresno, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Marin, Monterey, Orange, Riverside, Sacramento, San Diego, San Bernardino, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Sonoma, Stanislaus, Tulare and Ventura counties. Hospitals and patients One goal of the state's stay-at-home mandate is to slow the virus in hope of preventing hospitals from being overrun. To keep tabs on capacity, the state health department tracks hospitalizations of confirmed and suspected COVID-19 patients. All casesConfirmedSuspected Intensive care and other hospitalized patients AprilMayJune01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,000 California Department of Public Health In order to reopen, counties must show that hospitalizations have stabilized. The governor's benchmarks require daily increases averaging less 5% over a seven-day period. Counties can also pass by never recording more than 20 hospitalizations on any single day over a 14-day period. Currently, 50 of the state's 58 counties pass the test. County ICU Other Total hospitalizations Los Angeles » 516 1,743 2,259 Stable Orange » 174 311 485 Stable San Bernardino » 133 308 441 Climbing Riverside » 115 319 434 Stable San Diego » 157 213 370 Stable Fresno » 22 117 139 Stable Kern » 44 89 133 Stable Alameda » 44 84 128 Declining San Joaquin » 26 83 109 Climbing Stanislaus » 29 69 98 Climbing Ventura » 23 71 94 Stable Imperial » 18 75 93 Stable Santa Clara » 31 41 72 Climbing Sacramento » 18 47 65 Stable Tulare » 11 50 61 Stable Santa Barbara » 24 37 61 Stable San Francisco » 18 35 53 Climbing Contra Costa » 10 42 52 Climbing Kings » 9 42 51 Stable San Mateo » 10 17 27 Stable Solano 7 19 26 Stable Monterey » 7 16 23 Stable Marin » 4 10 14 Low Sonoma » 10 4 14 Climbing Napa 1 13 14 Low Placer 2 11 13 Declining Merced 3 9 12 Low Santa Cruz 1 8 9 Low Madera 1 6 7 Low San Luis Obispo 3 4 7 Declining Butte 4 3 7 Climbing Yuba 1 6 7 Low Nevada 2 3 5 Low Shasta 1 2 3 Low El Dorado 3 0 3 Low Humboldt 1 1 2 Declining Yolo 1 0 1 Low Siskiyou 1 0 1 Low Lake 1 0 1 Low Calaveras 0 1 1 Low Tuolumne 0 1 1 Low Colusa 0 1 1 Low Del Norte 1 0 1 Low Trinity 0 1 1 Low San Benito 0 0 0 Low Sutter 0 0 0 Low Glenn 0 0 0 Low Tehama 0 0 0 Low Mendocino 0 0 0 Low Amador 0 0 0 Low Lassen 0 0 0 Low Inyo 0 0 0 Low Mariposa 0 0 0 Low Mono 0 0 0 Low Plumas 0 0 0 Low Alpine 0 0 0 Low Modoc 0 0 0 Low Sierra 0 0 0 Low Show less Healthcare workers have been hit hard by the virus. Statewide, 13,737 have tested positive as of Wednesday, accounting for 7% of total infections. A total of 85 healthcare workers have died, about 1.5% of the state’s deaths. Testing After a fitful start, Gov. Newsom has promised to dramatically increase coronavirus testing in the state. The governor’s goal is to reach at least 60,000 tests per day. Over the last week, an average of 84,987 tests have been conducted each day. New tests by day May 2May 8May 14May 20May 26June 1June 7June 13June 19020,00040,00060,00080,000100,000Governor's daily goal California Department of Public Health As tests have become more widely available, a smaller share are coming back positive. That’s because more people without symptoms have been able to get tested, skewing the trend downward. In the last seven days, about 5.6% of the 594,911 tests conducted have returned a positive result. Positive test rate, seven-day average May 2May 9May 16May 23May 30June 6June 13June 200%2%4%6%8% California Department of Public Health Demographics While Californians of all ages have tested positive for COVID-19, deaths attributed to the virus have tilted heavily toward the elderly. Percentage of cases by age 0-1718-3435-4950-6465-7980+0%10%20%30%40%50% Percentage of deaths by age 0-1718-3435-4950-6465-7980+0%10%20%30%40%50% California Department of Public Health Among most age groups, and especially younger people, Blacks and Latinos are dying more often than other races relative to their share of the population. Percentage of population vs. deaths Age: All 18+ 0-17 18-34 35-49 50-64 65-79 80+ CasesDeaths 0%20%40%60%80%OtherBlackAsianWhiteLatino Race Deaths Deaths Pct. Population Pct. Latino 2,224 41.0% 36.3% White 1,783 32.8% 38.8% Asian 807 14.9% 16.5% Black 511 9.4% 6.1% Other 105 1.9% 2.2% Nursing homes Nursing homes are a tragic focal point of the coronavirus outbreak. At least 2,847 residents have died from COVID-19, 51% of the statewide total. CasesDeaths Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere May 2May 9May 16May 23May 30June 6June 13June 2001,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,000 California Department of Public Health California's Department of Public Health is currently listing 809 skilled nursing and 114 assisted-living facilities across the state with COVID-19 outbreaks. Filter by countyAlameda Butte Contra Costa El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Imperial Kern Kings Los Angeles Madera Marin Merced Monterey Napa Nevada Orange Placer Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Luis Obispo San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Santa Cruz Shasta Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Tulare Tuolumne Ventura Yolo Residents Staff Facility Cases Deaths Cases Deaths AFFINITY HEALTHCARE CENTER 32 14 33 - ALAMEDA CARE CENTER 51 21 37 10 or fewer ALAMITOS BELMONT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL - - 10 or fewer - ALCOTT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL - - - 10 or fewer ALDEN TERRACE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL 106 23 36 - ALEXANDRIA CARE CENTER 47 24 33 - ALHAMBRA HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTRE, LP 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ALHAMBRA HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF - - 10 or fewer - ANGELS NURSING HEALTH CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - ANTELOPE VALLEY CARE CENTER 10 or fewer - 10 or fewer - Show all The state last updated the list on June 24. Officials have withheld the precise number where there are 10 or fewer cases. The totals are cumulative counts. Lives lost to COVID-19 Learn more about those we've lost by reading Times obituaries of Californians who have died from coronavirus. Reopening the state California is moving into the third stage of Gov. Gavin Newsom's four-phase plan to gradually reopen the state amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Newsom's roadmap for reopening Stage 1 March 19 - May 7 Strictest restrictions in place. Stage 2 Began May 8 Lower-risk businesses can reopen with social distancing guidelines. Advanced Stage 2: Retail and dine-in restaurants are reopened with social distancing guidelines Stage 3 Began June 12 Higher-risk businesses and venues (such as movie theaters and gyms) can reopen with social distancing guidelines. Stage 4 No date set Concerts, conventions and sports with a live crowd can reopen. All of California's 58 counties have moved into Stage 2, including Los Angeles County. No restrictions lifted All restrictions lifted Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingRedding What's open in every county We're tracking what's open, closed and restricted throughout the state in ten different categories, including parks, retail, restaurants and more. Find out what's open where you live. Our state in context The coronavirus has hit most of the U.S., with the largest concentrations in and around New York City. California, America's most populous state, has one of the highest totals. It ranks much lower after adjusting for population. The chart below is adjusted to show how quickly new cases are being confirmed in each state. A good sign is when a line flattens, which indicates that transmission is slowing in that area. Cumulative cases by state Current doubling time5 days7142130 15 dayssince 100th case30456075905001,0002,0005,00010,00050,000100,000200,000500,000Doublingevery dayDoublingevery dayEvery3 daysEvery3 daysEvery weekEvery weekEverymonthEverymonthArizonaArizonaSouth CarolinaSouth CarolinaFloridaFloridaOklahomaOklahomaArkansasArkansasIdahoIdahoMontanaMontanaCaliforniaCaliforniaTennesseeTennesseeOregonOregonWyomingWyomingWest VirginiaWest VirginiaWashingtonWashingtonSouth DakotaSouth DakotaNebraskaNebraskaNew YorkNew York This chart tracks cumulative cases after each state confirmed its 100th 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 state to double its number of cases, given the trend in the last week. Compare the slope of a state's curve to the slope of the guide lines to estimate its doubling rate at any point. State Cases Per 100k New cases FewerMore New York 389,085 1,983.3 Mar 1Jun 23 California 191,415 488.9 New Jersey 169,734 1,911 Illinois 137,825 1,075 Texas 122,932 440.9 Massachusetts 107,439 1,573 Florida 103,503 502.5 Pennsylvania 87,208 681.8 Michigan 68,197 684.9 Georgia 67,810 658.5 Maryland 65,007 1,082.8 Virginia 58,994 701.2 Arizona 58,378 840.4 North Carolina 54,639 538 Louisiana 51,595 1,106.3 Ohio 46,127 396.2 Connecticut 45,899 1,281.6 Indiana 42,871 645.9 Tennessee 36,303 545.8 Minnesota 33,469 605.5 Alabama 31,097 639.2 Colorado 30,877 558.2 Washington 29,386 402.9 South Carolina 26,572 536.2 Iowa 26,469 845 Wisconsin 25,331 438.4 Mississippi 22,898 766.1 Missouri 19,005 312.1 Utah 18,300 600.9 Nebraska 18,099 950.2 Arkansas 16,678 557.7 Rhode Island 16,533 1,564.7 Kentucky 14,141 318.5 Nevada 13,528 462.8 Kansas 12,537 431 Oklahoma 11,031 281.5 Delaware 10,847 1,142.4 New Mexico 10,838 518 District of Columbia 10,094 1,474.7 Oregon 7,274 178.2 Puerto Rico 6,685 197.4 South Dakota 6,353 735.1 New Hampshire 5,571 414.6 Idaho 4,254 252 North Dakota 3,320 441.4 Maine 2,996 224.8 West Virginia 2,593 141.8 Wyoming 1,254 215.5 Vermont 1,164 186.2 Hawaii 819 57.6 Alaska 760 102.9 Montana 743 71.3 Show less No state has had more deaths than New York, though its pace has declined in recent weeks. State Deaths Per 100k New deaths FewerMore New York 31,232 159.2 Mar 1Jun 23 New Jersey 13,025 146.6 Massachusetts 7,889 115.5 Illinois 6,707 52.3 Pennsylvania 6,464 50.5 Michigan 6,109 61.4 California 5,627 14.4 Connecticut 4,277 119.4 Florida 3,238 15.7 Louisiana 3,134 67.2 Maryland 3,092 51.5 Ohio 2,735 23.5 Georgia 2,695 26.2 Indiana 2,569 38.7 Texas 2,236 8.0 Colorado 1,665 30.1 Virginia 1,645 19.6 Minnesota 1,425 25.8 Arizona 1,396 20.1 North Carolina 1,296 12.8 Washington 1,284 17.6 Mississippi 989 33.1 Missouri 976 16.0 Rhode Island 906 85.7 Alabama 864 17.8 Wisconsin 750 13.0 Iowa 689 22.0 South Carolina 673 13.6 Tennessee 542 8.1 Kentucky 537 12.1 District of Columbia 537 78.5 Delaware 504 53.1 Nevada 489 16.7 New Mexico 476 22.7 Oklahoma 371 9.5 New Hampshire 343 25.5 Kansas 260 8.9 Nebraska 256 13.4 Arkansas 237 7.9 Oregon 192 4.7 Utah 163 5.4 Puerto Rico 149 4.4 Maine 102 7.7 West Virginia 92 5.0 Idaho 89 5.3 South Dakota 83 9.6 North Dakota 78 10.4 Vermont 56 9.0 Montana 21 2.0 Wyoming 20 3.4 Hawaii 17 1.2 Alaska 12 1.6 Show less Tracking the coronavirus California counties Alameda Contra Costa Fresno Imperial Kern Kings Los Angeles Marin Monterey Orange Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Sonoma Stanislaus Tulare Ventura Other trackers Beach closures Housing homeless people Reopenings by county The lives lost Unemployment and the economic fallout More coverage Symptoms How it spreads Get our newsletter Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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