User:Love of Corey/sandbox/COVID-19 pandemic in the United States by state

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COVID-19 pandemic in the United States by state and territory
Location[i] Cases[ii] Deaths[iii] Recoveries[iv] Hospital[v] Ref.
56 / 56 110,803,588 1,150,376
Alabama 1,659,966[vi] 21,138 [vi] 509,800[vi] 50,767 [vi] [1]
Alaska 304,887 1,485[vi] 7,165[vi] 4,208[vi] [2]
American Samoa 8,326 34 3 [3]
Arizona 2,573,627 34,545 152,685 [4]
Arkansas 1,039,712 13,406 992,651[vi] 37,576[vi] [5]
California 14,220,452 105,808 638,815 [6]
Colorado 1,859,741 15,769 105,984 [7][8]
Connecticut 983,652[vii] 12,354[vii] 12,257[vii] [9]
Delaware 345,998 3,544 18,371[vi] 34,820 [10]
District of Columbia 180,682 1,434[vii] 34,985[vi] [11]
Florida[viii] 7,937,619 93,063 78,472[vi] [12]
Georgia 3,223,054 43,590 149,236[vi] [13]
Guam 63,480 419 62,966 [14]
Hawaii 411,971 2,107 11,958[vi] 14,887[vi] [15]
Idaho 526,118[vi] 5,661 92,573[vi] 19,729[vi] [16][17]
Illinois 4,139,537[vi] 42,033[vi] 239,809 [18][19]
Indiana 2,177,727 27,480 1,864,365 186,861 [20][21]
Iowa 908,936 [vii] 10,797 [vii] 286,309 [vi] [22]
Kansas 946,564 [vi] 10,229 [vi] 20,081 [vi] [23]
Kentucky 1,808,735[vii] 19,385 53,643[vi] 74,109 [24]
Louisiana 1,683,744[vi] 19,366 429,935[vi] [25]
Maine 340,339 3,251 12,975[vi] 8,655 [26]
Maryland 1,431,528 17,505 52,646[vi] [27]
Massachusetts 2,337,612 25,409 644,061[vi] 118,948 [28][29]
Michigan 3,258,216 43,902 1,421,905 [vi] [30]
Minnesota 1,877,015 15,571 1,529,440[vi] 93,540 [31]
Mississippi 1,000,415[vi] 15,072 774,429[vi] 14,042[vi] [32][33]
Missouri 1,790,525[vi] 22,931[vi] [34]
Montana 333,758[vi] 3,712[vi] 329,725[vi] 14,414[vi] [35]
Nebraska 599,773 5,034 [vi] 142,336[vi] 6,411[vi] [36]
Nevada 916,245 12,319 [37]
New Hampshire 382,242[vi] 3,240 378,906[vi] 9,441[vi] [38]
New Jersey 3,237,287 36,593 175,740 [39]
New Mexico 717,266 9,236[vi] 660,313[vi] 39,956 [40]
New York 7,811,066 64,684 456,336 451,482 [41][42][43]
North Carolina 3,501,404 [vi] 29,059 [vi] 3,371,565[vi] 189,084 [44][45][46]
North Dakota 305,776 2,233[vii] 236,878[vi] 7,831[vi] [47]
Northern Mariana Islands 13,981[vi] 46[vi] 13,124[vi] 311[vi] [48]
Ohio 3,673,537 43,280 3,584,275 148,456 [49]
Oklahoma 1,306,350[vi] 16,157[vi] 1,288,527[vi] 45,990[vi] [50]
Oregon 975,856[vii] 10,095 41,388[vi] [51][52]
Pennsylvania 3,565,644[vi] 52,706 1,843,620[vi] [53]
Puerto Rico 1,421,787 7,100 442,126[vi] [54]
Rhode Island 462,555 4,279 22,966 [55]
South Carolina 1,859,979[vi] 20,353[vi] 559,814[vi] [56]
South Dakota 299,326 3,333 275,931[vi] 13,756 [57]
Tennessee 2,674,390 30,321 1,996,027[vi] 55,874 [58]
Texas 9,009,160 93,786 4,445,607[vi][ix] [59]
US Virgin Islands 25,952 133 25,808 [60]
Utah 1,127,934 5,527 1,103,895[vi] 42,433 [61][62]
Vermont 153,806[vii] 1,094 149,941[vi] [63]
Virginia 2,467,859 24,957 65,891 [64]
Washington 2,030,019 16,713 91,912 [65]
West Virginia 662,339[vii] 8,247[vii] 629,631[vi] [66]
Wisconsin 2,043,839[vi] 16,758[vi] 596,339[vi] 38,288[vi] [67]
Wyoming 194,280 2,093 154,312 1,395[vi] [68]
Updated:January 15, 2024 · History of cases: United States
  1. ^ Nationality and location of original infection may vary.
  2. ^ Reported confirmed and probable cases. Actual case numbers are probably higher. Currently, 35 jurisdictions regularly update this metric
  3. ^ Currently 36 jurisdictions regularly update this metric
  4. ^ "–" denotes that no data or only partial data currently available for that state, not that the value is zero.
  5. ^ Cumulative hospitalizations from positive cases reported from the state or the primary source. If a state only reports total cases from suspect COVID-19 cases, then cumulative hospitalizations from suspect cases are used. Data may be partial.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb no longer reported
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l No longer reported explicitly: maintains weekly update on the metric and it remains possible to calculate the cumulative, but due to either the lack of data for a long period of time or the change in reporting methods, such calculated count becomes arbitrary. Hence, the data recorded in the chart is no longer updated
  8. ^ Case and death figures in this chart for Florida include residents and non-residents.
  9. ^ This figure is an estimate from the Texas Department of State Health Services.

In January 2020, the United States experienced the beginning of a pandemic of a novel strain of coronavirus, which causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The first two cases were reported in Washington and Illinois in late January, both of them U.S. citizens who returned to the country after visiting Wuhan, China, the strain's location of origin.[69][70][71] The first reported case of local transmission in the U.S. occurred days after the second case, involving the patient's husband.[72]

Seven known COVID-19 cases were reported at the start of February,[73] but that number increased to over a thousand by mid-March.[74] As the pandemic worsened across the rest of the world, the number of confirmed cases in the U.S. exceeded a million by the end of April.[75][76][77] By early August, that number surpassed five million;[78] and by early November, it surpassed ten million.[79] The earliest confirmed death from COVID-19 in the U.S. occurred on February 6 in California, but the death had not been confirmed until months later.[80][81] By mid-April, the death toll from the pandemic in the U.S. exceeded 20,000, the highest in the world.[82] By the end of May, the death toll exceeded 100,000;[83] by late September, it exceeded 200,000;[84] and by mid-December, it exceeded 300,000.[85]

U.S. states[edit]

Alabama[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Alabama by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Alabama in March 2020. As of July 15, the Alabama Department of Public Health (ADHP) reported 58,225 confirmed cases and 1,183 confirmed deaths.[86]

Alaska[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Alaska by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Alaska in March 2020. As of July 30, the state reported 661 confirmed cases and 17 confirmed deaths.[87]

Arizona[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Arizona by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Arizona in January 2020. As of July 30, state public health authorities reported 174,010 confirmed cases and 3,694 confirmed deaths.[88]

Arkansas[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Arkansas by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Arkansas in March 2020. As of August 3, the Arkansas Department of Health reported 43,810 confirmed cases and 464 confirmed deaths.[89]

California[edit]

Map of the outbreak in California by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached California in January 2020. As of July 24, the California Department of Public Health reported 445,440 confirmed cases and 8,337 confirmed deaths.[90] As of July 22, California has the most COVID-19 cases in the U.S.[91] However, California has a smaller per capita ratio of people infected than in New York.[92]

Colorado[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Colorado by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Colorado in March 2020. As of August 2, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment reported 47,727 confirmed cases and 1,844 confirmed deaths.[93]

Connecticut[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Connecticut by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Connecticut in March 2020. As of July 20, the state reported 48,096 confirmed cases and 4,406 confirmed deaths.[94]

Delaware[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Delaware by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Delaware in March 2020. As of June 20, the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services reported 10,681 confirmed cases and 434 confirmed deaths.[95]

Florida[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Florida by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

The first cases of COVID-19 were reported in Florida in March 2020, but it is believed the disease reached the state much earlier than that.[96] As of August 3, the state reported 491,884 confirmed cases and 7,157 confirmed deaths.[97]

Georgia[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Georgia by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Georgia in March 2020. As of August 4, the state reported 197,948 confirmed cases and 3,921 confirmed deaths.[99]

Hawaii[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Hawaii by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Hawaii in March 2020. As of August 1, the state reported 2,197 confirmed cases and 26 confirmed deaths.[100]

Idaho[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Idaho by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Idaho in March 2020. As of June 14, the state reported 3,399 confirmed cases and 87 confirmed deaths.[102]

Illinois[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Illinois by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Illinois in January 2020.[103] As of August 7, the Illinois Department of Public Health reported 163,703 confirmed cases and 7,324 confirmed deaths.[104]

Indiana[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Indiana by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Indiana in March 2020. As of August 7, the Indiana State Department of Health reported 72,254 confirmed cases and 2,821 confirmed deaths.[105]

Iowa[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Iowa by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Iowa in March 2020. As of August 8, the state reported 42,929 confirmed cases and 839 confirmed deaths.[106]

Kansas[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Kansas by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Kansas in March 2020. As of August 9, the state reported 29,717 confirmed cases and 371 confirmed deaths.[107]

Kentucky[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Kentucky by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Kentucky in March 2020. As of August 2, the state reported 31,185 confirmed cases and 742 confirmed deaths.[108]

Louisiana[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Louisiana by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Louisiana in March 2020. As of June 14, the state reported 46,619 confirmed cases and 2,901 confirmed deaths.[109]

Maine[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Maine by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Maine in March 2020. As of August 20, the state reported 3,812 confirmed cases and 128 confirmed deaths.[110][111]

Maryland[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Maryland by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Maryland in March 2020. As of August 24, the Maryland Department of Health reported 104,669 confirmed cases and 3,554 confirmed deaths.[112]

Massachusetts[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Massachusetts by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Massachusetts in February 2020. As of September 25, the state reported 129,481 confirmed cases and 9,373 confirmed deaths.[113]

Michigan[edit]

Map of the outbreak in Michigan by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data

COVID-19 was confirmed to have reached Michigan in March 2020. As of October 12, the state reported 136,465 confirmed cases and 6,898 confirmed deaths.[114]

U.S. territories[edit]

Other areas[edit]

References[edit]

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External links[edit]

coronavirus pandemic Category:Disasters in the United States Category:Health in the United States