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The Coronavirus
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Outbreak ›
|
3.1 million+
50,000 DEATHS
7-day
average
226,614
0 | UPDATE Includes confirmed and
Jan. 22 Apr. 28 probable cases where available
Latest news »
In the tallies for the United States shown on this page, The Times is now including cases and deaths that
have been identified by public health officials as probable coronavirus patients.
1,000 100,000
SLOWER FASTER
Singapore 15,641 14
Belarus 13,181 84
Qatar 12,564 10
U.A.E. 11,929 98
Australia 6,746 90
Luxembourg 3,769 89
Kuwait 3,740 24
Kazakhstan 3,138 25
Thailand 2,947 54
Bahrain 2,921 8
Oman 2,274 10
Croatia 2,062 67
SLOWER FASTER
Iraq 2,003 92
Uzbekistan 2,002 9
Afghanistan 1,939 60
Armenia 1,932 30
Cameroon 1,806 61
Iceland 1,797 10
Azerbaijan 1,766 23
Nigeria 1,728 51
Ghana 1,671 16
Estonia 1,666 50
Cuba 1,467 58
Bulgaria 1,447 64
Slovenia 1,418 89
Slovakia 1,391 22
Lithuania 1,375 45
Guinea 1,351 7
Djibouti 1,077 2
Bolivia 1,053 55
Tunisia 980 40
Senegal 882 9
Latvia 849 15
SLOWER FASTER
Cyprus 843 15
Albania 766 30
Andorra 743 42
Honduras 738 66
Kyrgyzstan 729 8
Lebanon 721 24
Niger 709 31
Uruguay 625 15
Somalia 582 28
Guatemala 557 16
Georgia 517 6
Kosovo 510 12
Mali 482 25
Tanzania 480 16
Malta 463 4
Jordan 451 8
Taiwan 429 6
Jamaica 396 7
Kenya 384 15
El Salvador 377 9
SLOWER FASTER
Sudan 375 28
Mauritius 334 10
Venezuela 329 10
Montenegro 322 7
Maldives 278 1
Vietnam 270 —
Paraguay 239 9
Gabon 238 3
Rwanda 225 —
Myanmar 150 6
Gibraltar 141 —
Liberia 141 16
Brunei 138 1
Ethiopia 130 3
Madagascar 128 —
Cambodia 122 —
Bermuda 111 6
Togo 109 7
Aruba 100 2
Zambia 97 3
Monaco 95 4
Eswatini 91 1
Liechtenstein 82 1
Uganda 81 —
Bahamas 80 11
Barbados 80 7
Haiti 76 6
Mozambique 76 —
Sint Maarten 75 13
Guyana 74 8
Cayman Islands 73 1
Guinea-Bissau 73 1
Benin 64 1
Libya 61 2
Nepal 57 —
Chad 52 2
Macau 45 —
Syria 43 3
Eritrea 39 —
Mongolia 38 —
Malawi 36 3
South Sudan 34 —
Zimbabwe 32 4
Angola 27 2
Timor-Leste 24 —
Botswana 23 1
Grenada 20 —
Laos 19 —
Belize 18 2
Fiji 18 —
Saint Lucia 17 —
Curaçao 16 1
Dominica 16 —
Namibia 16 —
Falkland Islands 13 —
Nicaragua 13 3
Burundi 11 1
Greenland 11 —
Montserrat 11 1
Seychelles 11 —
Gambia 10 1
Suriname 10 1
Vatican City 10 —
Mauritania 8 1
Bhutan 7 —
Western Sahara 6 —
SLOWER FASTER
Yemen 6 —
Anguilla 3 —
Show less
Note: Growth rate shows how frequently the number of cases has doubled over the previous seven days. The fastest rate color
shows when cases are doubling in less than 3 days, while the slowest rate color shows when cases are doubling much more
slowly, once every 30 days or longer. Growth rate not shown for countries with fewer than 100 cases.
7-day
average
|
Jan. 22 Apr. 28
– Show less
7-day
average
|
Jan. 22 Apr. 28
– Show less
7-day
average
|
Jan. 22 Apr. 28
Note: Countries are grouped according to how the seven-day average of new cases has changed from a week ago to today.
Countries with fewer than 100 cases are not shown.
While the outbreak is a serious public health concern, most people who
contract the coronavirus do not become seriously ill, and only a small
percentage require intensive care. Older people and those with existing
health conditions, like heart or lung disease, are at higher risk.
|
100,000 cases
50,000
7-day
average
0 |
Jan. 22 Apr. 28
Note: The seven-day average is the average of a day and the previous six days of data. Case numbers spiked on Feb. 12 after
China changed its diagnostic criteria.
6,000
4,000
2,000
7-day
average
0 |
Jan. 22 Apr. 28
Note: Scale for deaths chart is adjusted from cases chart to display trend.
The New York Times has found that official tallies in the United States and in other countries around the
world have undercounted deaths during the coronavirus outbreak because of limited testing availability.
United States
The number of known coronavirus cases in the United States continues to
grow quickly. As of Wednesday evening, at least 1,045,000 people across
every state, plus Washington, D.C., and four U.S. territories, have tested
positive for the virus, according to a New York Times database, and at
least 60,900 patients with the virus have died.
Wash.
14,300+
Maine
Mont. N.D. 1,000+
451 1,000+
Ore. Minn. Vt.
2,400+ Idaho 4,600+ 862 N.H.
1,900+ N.Y. 2,000+
S.D. Wis. Mich. 305,000+ Mass.
2,300+ 6,500+ 40,300+ 60,200+ R.I.
Wyo. 8,200+
544 Pa.
Iowa Ohio 46,100+ N.J. Conn.
Nev. Neb. 6,800+ 17,300+ 116,200+ 26,700+
4,900+ 3,800+
Utah Ill. Del.
4,400+ Ind. 4,600+
Colo. 50,300+ 17,400+ W.Va.
14,600+ 1,100+ Va.
Calif. Kan. 14,900+ Md.
48,800+ 3,800+ Mo. Ky. 20,900+
7,500+ 4,500+
N.C. D.C.
9,900+ 4,100+
Ariz. Okla. Tenn.
7,200+ N.M. 3,400+ Ark. 10,300+
3,200+ 3,200+ S.C.
5,800+
Miss.
6,500+ Ala.
La. 6,900+ Ga.
Texas 27,600+ 24,100+
27,700+
Alaska
353 Fla.
33,100+
Hawaii
605 P.R.
1,400+
See our page of maps, charts and tables tracking every coronavirus case in the U.S.
The New York Times is engaged in an effort to track the details of every
reported case in the United States, collecting information from federal,
state and local officials around the clock. The numbers in this article are
being updated several times a day based on the latest information our
journalists are gathering from around the country. The Times has made
that data public in hopes of helping researchers and policymakers as they
seek to slow the pandemic and prevent future ones.
Read more about the methodology and download county-level data for coronavirus cases in the United
States from The New York Times on GitHub.
World | Deaths | U.S. cities | Look up your city | State shutdown status
Countries
State by state
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If your community is affected, you can help reduce your risk and do your
part to protect others by following some basic steps:
• Wash your hands! Scrub with soap and water for at least 20 seconds, and
then dry them with a clean towel or let them air dry.
• Keep distance from sick people. Try to stay six feet away from anybody
showing flu- or cold-like symptoms, and don’t go to work if you’re sick.
Hereʼs a complete guide on how you can prepare for the coronavirus outbreak.
Note: Data are based on reports at the time of publication. At times, officials revise reports or offer incomplete
information. Population data from World Bank.
By Sarah Almukhtar, Aliza Aufrichtig, Matthew Bloch, Julia Calderone, Keith Collins, Amy Harmon, Rich Harris, Adeel
Hassan, Jon Huang, Danielle Ivory, K.K. Rebecca Lai, Allison McCann, Richard A. Oppel Jr., Jugal K. Patel, Julie Shaver,
Anjali Singhvi, Charlie Smart, Mitch Smith, Derek Watkins, Timothy Williams, Jin Wu and Karen Yourish. · Reporting
was contributed by Jordan Allen, Jeff Arnold, Mike Baker, Ellen Barry, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs,
Aurelien Breeden, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Christopher Calabrese, Sarah Cahalan, Robert Chiarito, Matt Craig,
Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Matthew Goldstein, Rebecca
Griesbach, Lauryn Higgins, Jake Holland, Jon Huang, Danya Issawi, Anna Joyce, Jacob LaGesse, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse
McKinley, Miles McKinley, Sarah Mervosh, Andrea Michelson, Steven Moity, Thomas Gibbons-Neff, Azi Paybarah, Sean
Plambeck, Elisabetta Povoledo, Scott Reinhard, Thomas Rivas, Alison Saldanha, Alex Schwartz, Libby Seline, Anjali
Singhvi, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully, Lisa Waananen Jones, Amy Schoenfeld Walker and Jeremy White. ·
Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles
Watkins, Josh Williams, Albert Sun, Shelly Seroussi, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,
Rachel Shorey, Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn
Price and Michael Robles.