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On Topic Discussion 2019 Coronavirus (COVID-19/SARS-CoV-2)

Another NYPD officer died of coronavirus today, bring the total number of police officers killed by the epidemic to 29. By comparison, NYPD lost 23 officers on 9/11.

New York City police department has lost 29 members to Covid-19 [CNN]
The New York Police Department said it has lost another member to Covid-19, bringing the total number of virus-related NYPD deaths to 29...

More than 4,000 members of the NYPD have tested positive for the virus, the NYPD said in its daily report. As of Saturday, 5,324 uniformed members of the NYPD -- about 14.7% of the uniformed work force -- were out sick.

At one point, almost 20% of the force was out sick, the department said, and more than 2,000 have returned to work after recovering.

Of those out sick, about 1,855 uniformed members and 375 civilian members have been diagnosed with coronavirus.
 
The US hit another landmark today - 40,000 deaths. That's almost double the number of deaths in Spain and over double the number of deaths in France- two of the nations with the highest number of deaths in March.

Very, very sad. I think it will climb to 60,000. If we reopen too soon, or without proper restrictions, it will be more.
 
Australia did the best if they didn't let the cruise ship passengers walking around spreading
considering they already quarantined people from Wuhan in Christmas Island for 14 days before that.
 
^I dislike the lack of context this "landmark" provides.

The sheer number of the dead is terrible.

But I would rather have a sense of the rate of death different geographical units are enduring.

Is there a good reason why that isn't the standard?
 
^I dislike the lack of context this "landmark" provides.

The sheer number of the dead is terrible.

But I would rather have a sense of the rate of death different geographical units are enduring.

Is there a good reason why that isn't the standard?

It is why I look at cases and deaths per million.

Belgium is currently the highest at 490 deaths per million followed by Spain at 437, Italy at 391 and France at 302 as of today. A gauge of the effectiveness of testing, tracing and treating as well as containment is to look at what is happening in neighbouring countries. For instance, Germany has only 54 deaths per million

The US rate has been increasing steadily and is currently at 121, with Canada at 40 deaths per million.

The US is currently showing 2280 cases per million while Canada has 900 cases per million. This puts the US at about the same rate as France and a little lower than Italy. Spain today has 4191 cases per million.

This requires the context of testing. The US has a testing rate of 11,492 per million versus Canada at 14,302, whereas Italy, Spain and Germany are in the 20,000 to 22,000 tests per million range. France lags at 7,103, which could mean significant under-reporting of active cases.

For even more perspective, South Korea, which reported its first active cases the same day as the US, has, as a result of swift containment and testing, kept its cases per million at 208 asof today, with a death rate of 5 per million with 10,905 tests per million.
 
20-Apr-2020:

Global COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity
- Cases reported: 2,417,977 (up from 2,347,875 / 3.0%) - *‬*70,102 new cases yesterday
- Deaths: 166,205 (up from 162,013) - **4,192‬ people died yesterday

US COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity
- Cases reported in the US - 759,786 cases (up from 735,287 / 3.3% yesterday, ‬**24,499 new cases)
- Deaths reported in the US - 40,683 deaths, **1,588 new deaths yesterday, 38% of the world's new deaths were in the US
- Testing: - 3,882,002 tests (up from 3,723,634 yesterday, +158,368‬ tests) - 1.1% of the US population has been tested
Note: the US has begun implementing the new CDC policy that a positive SARS-CoV-2 test is not required to count the death as COVID-related. This will cause death counts to be unusually high until the counts are adjusted for past deaths that had not been counted previously.


NY state and NYC COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity (as of 11AM yesterday)
- Cases reported in NY state - 248,417 (up from 242,570 / +5,847)
- Persons tested in NY state - 617,555 (596,532 tested prior day, 21,023 new tests) 41% positive
- Cases reported in NYC - 129,788 (up from 126,368 / +3,420‬[sup]a‬[/sup]), hospitalized 34,602
- Deaths reported in NYC - *13,240‬‬[SUP]a[/SUP] (up from 12,712 / +528), confirmed 8,811, suspected 4,429
- Deaths reported in NYC by ethnicity: - Black 33%, Hispanic 30%, White 28%, Asian 7%
Note: [sup]a[/sup]NY started implementation of the CDC policy on Tuesday. Death numbers will be skewed until corrections from the past 6 weeks are reflected in totals.

Coronavirus cases/deaths in active countries (preference to countries with JUB members):
  • Spain - 200,210 (up from 195,944 / 2.2%) - 20,852 deaths
  • Italy - 178,972 cases (up 175,925 / 1.7%) - 23,660 deaths
  • France - 154,098 cases (up from 152,978 / 0.7%) - 19,744 deaths
  • UK - 121,174 cases (up from 115,317 / 5.1%) - 16,095 deaths
  • Turkey - 86,306 cases (up from 82,329 / 4.8%) - 2,017 deaths
  • Russia - 47,121 (up from 42,853 cases / 10.0%) - 405 deaths
  • Brazil - 39,144 (up from 36,925 cases / 6.0%) - 2,484 deaths
  • Canada - 36,039 cases (up from 34,386 / 4.8%) - 1,625 deaths
  • Netherlands - 33,588 cases (up from 32,834 / 2.3%) - 3,764 deaths
  • India - 17,615 (up from 16,365 / 7.6%) - 559 deaths
  • Ireland - 15,251 (up from 14,758 / 3.3%) - 610 deaths
  • Japan - 10,797 (up from 10,296 / 4.9%) - 236 deaths
  • Mexico - 8,261 (up from 7,497 / 10.2%) - 686 deaths
Coronavirus cases/deaths in recovering countries:
  • Germany - 145,743 cases (up from 143,779 / 1.4%) - 4,642 deaths / 91,500 recovered
  • China - 83,817 (up from 83,805) - 4,636 deaths / 77,745 recovered
  • Iran - 83,505 cases (up from 82,211 / 1.6%) - 5,209 deaths / 59,273 recovered
  • Switzerland - 27,944 cases (up from 27,740 / 0.7%) - 1,406 deaths / 17,800 recovered
  • South Korea - 10,674 cases (up from 10,661 / 0.1%) - 236 deaths / 8,114 recovered
  • Australia - 6,547 cases (unchanged from 6,547) - 67 deaths / 4,124 recovered (not updated?)
  • New Zealand - 1,440 (up from 1,431 / 0.6%) - 12 deaths / 974 recovered
Individual States with high case counts:
  • New York - 248,417 (up from 242,570 / 2.4%) - 18,298 deaths
  • New Jersey - 85,301 (up from 81,599 / 4.5%) - 4,362 deaths
  • Massachusetts - 38,077 (up from 36,372 / 4.7%) - 1,706 deaths
  • Michigan - 31,424 (up from 30,791 / 2.1%) - 2,391 deaths
  • Pennsylvania - 32,902 (up from 31,795 / 3.5%) - 1,276 deaths
  • California - 31,531 (up from 30,812 / 2.3%) - 1,180 deaths
  • Illinois - 30,357 (up from 29,161 / 4.1%) - 1,290 deaths
  • Florida - 26,314 (up from 25,492 / 3.2%) - 774 deaths
  • Louisiana - 23,928 cases (up from 23,580 / 1.5%) - 1,296 deaths
  • Texas - 19,410 (up from 18,905 / 2.7%) - 500 deaths
  • Georgia - 18,301 (up from 17,841 / 2.6%) - 687 deaths
  • Connecticut - 17,962 (up from 17,550 / 2.3%) - 1,127 deaths
  • Maryland - 12,847 (up from 12,326 / 4.2%) - 461 deaths
  • Washington - 11,948 (down from 12,064 / -1.0%) - 634 deaths
  • Colorado - 9,730 (up from 9,440 / 3.1%) - 420 deaths
  • Tennessee - 7,070 (up from 6,762 / 4.6%) - 148 deaths
  • Mississippi - 4,274 (up from 3,974 / 7.5%) - 159 deaths
  • South Dakota - 1,635 (up from 1,542 / 6.0%) - 7 deaths
Canadian Province Stats:
  • Alberta - 2,803 (up from 2,562 / 9.4%) - 55 deaths
  • British Columbia - 1,647 (no change from 1,647) - 81 deaths (BC doesn't update on Sundays)
  • Manitoba - 253 (unchanged from 253 / %) - 5 deaths
  • New Brunswick - 118 (unchanged from 118) - 0 deaths
  • Newfoundland/Labrador - 257 (unchanged from 257 / %) - 3 deaths
  • Northwest Territories - 5 (unchanged from 5) - 0 deaths
  • Nova Scotia - 675 (up from 649 / 4.0%) - 9 deaths
  • Ontario - 11,561 (up from 11,013/ 5.0%) - 591 deaths
  • Quebec - 18,357 (up from 17,521 / 4.8%) - 877 deaths
  • Prince Edward Island - 26 (unchanged from 26) - 0 deaths
  • Saskatchewan - 315 (up from 313 / 0.6%) - 4 deaths
  • Yukon - 9 (unchanged from 9) - 0 deaths
There were also 13 Canadians on the Grand Princess, one of whom died.
 
...Belgium is currently the highest at 490 deaths per million followed by Spain at 437, Italy at 391 and France at 302 as of today. A gauge of the effectiveness of testing, tracing and treating as well as containment is to look at what is happening in neighbouring countries. For instance, Germany has only 54 deaths per million

The US rate has been increasing steadily and is currently at 121, with Canada at 40 deaths per million.

It's also a good way to measure whether infection control measures are working:
  • Finland implemented very strict control measures on 16-Mar. Saturday they reported 3,681 cases (669 cases/million) and 90 deaths (16 deaths/million)
  • Sweden has not put in social distancing and is only has high risk people in quarantine. Saturday, they had 14,276 cases (1,400 cases/million) and 1,541 deaths (151 deaths/million).

Sweden made a decision to try to build "herd immunity" by allowing their population to become infected. They've continued social gatherings and have left bars and restaurants open. They have paid the price with a case rate that is double Finland and a death rate that is 10 times the rate in Finland.
 
^ Couldn't quite understand Sweden's approach, except ... Ingmar Bergman.

the-seventh-seal-.jpg
 
^ Couldn't quite understand Sweden's approach, except ... Ingmar Bergman.

the-seventh-seal-.jpg

In terms of population density, Sweden is closer enough to places like Finland, than to any "real", heavily (USA) or densely (Singapore, UK) or both (India, China) populated countries, as well as in social dynamics (higher rate of people living alone) to dare betting on a bold approach like "herd immunity".
The scattering of the population in Greece has been said to have helped them too... at least, so far, not counting what may or may not happen with the refugee population.
As of today, with about the same population, compare the experiences of Greece, Portugal, Sweden and Belgium in this crisis.
 
21-Apr-2020:

Global COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity
- Cases reported: 2,494,915 (up from 2,417,977 / 3.2%) - *‬*76,938 new cases yesterday
- Deaths: 171,249 (up from 166,205) - **4,192‬ people died yesterday

US COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity
- Cases reported in the US - 787,960 cases (up from 759,786 / 3.7% yesterday, ‬**28,174 new cases)
- Deaths reported in the US - 42,364 deaths, **1,681 new deaths yesterday, 40% of the world's new deaths were in the US
- Testing: - 4,026,572 tests (up from 3,882,002 yesterday, +144,570‬ tests) - 1.2% of the US population has been tested


NY state and NYC COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity (as of 11AM yesterday)
- Cases reported in NY state - 253,311 (up from 248,417 / +4,894‬)
- Persons tested in NY state - 633,861 (617,555 tested prior day, 16,306 new tests) 40% positive
- Cases reported in NYC - 132,467 (up from 129,788 / +2,679‬‬), hospitalized 34,729
- Deaths reported in NYC - 13,683‬‬‬ (up from 13,240 / +443), confirmed 9,101, suspected 4,582
- Deaths reported in NYC by ethnicity: - Black 33%, Hispanic 30%, White 28%, Asian 7%

Coronavirus cases/deaths in active countries (preference to countries with JUB members):
  • Spain - 204,178 (up from 200,210 / 2.0%) - 21,282 deaths
  • Italy - 181,228 cases (up 178,972 / 1.3%) - 24,114 deaths
  • France - 156,493 cases (up from 154,098 / 1.6%) - 20,294 deaths
  • UK - 125,856 cases (up from 121,174 / 3.9%) - 16,550 deaths
  • Turkey - 90,980 cases (up from 86,306 / 5.4%) - 2,140 deaths
  • Russia - 52,763 (up from 47,121 cases / 12.0%) - 456 deaths
  • Brazil - 40,814 (up from 39,144 cases / 4.3%) - 2,588 deaths
  • Canada - 37,933 cases (up from 36,039 / 5.3%) - 1,753 deaths
  • Netherlands - 33,588 cases (up from 33,588 / 0.0%) - 3,764 deaths
  • India - 18,658 (up from 17,615 / 5.9%) - 592 deaths
  • Ireland - 15,652 (up from 15,251 / 2.6%) - 687 deaths
  • Sweden - 15,322 (up from 14,777 / 3.7%) - 1,756 deaths
  • Japan - 11,135 (up from 10,797 / 3.1%) - 263 deaths
  • Mexico - 8,772 (up from 8,261 / 6.2%) - 712 deaths
Coronavirus cases/deaths in recovering countries:
  • Germany - 147,065 cases (up from 145,743 / 0.9%) - 4,862 deaths / 95,200 recovered
  • China - 83,849 (up from 83,817) - 4,636 deaths / 77,775 recovered
  • Iran - 84,802 cases (up from 83,505 / 1.6%) - 5,297 deaths / 60,965 recovered
  • Switzerland - 27,944 cases (up from 27,944 / %) - 1,436 deaths / 18,600 recovered
  • South Korea - 10,683 cases (up from 10,674 / 0.1%) - 237 deaths / 8,213 recovered
  • Australia - 6,547 cases (unchanged from 6,547) - 67 deaths / 4,124 recovered (not updated?)
  • New Zealand - 1,445 (up from 1,440 / 0.3%) - 13 deaths / 1,006 recovered
Individual States with high case counts:
  • New York - 253,311 (up from 248,417 / 2.0%) - 18,653 deaths
  • New Jersey - 88,806 (up from 85,301 / 4.1%) - 4,520 deaths
  • Massachusetts - 39,643 (up from 38,077 / 4.1%) - 1,809 deaths
  • Michigan - 32,000 (up from 31,424 / 1.8%) - 2,468 deaths
  • Pennsylvania - 34,005 (up from 32,902 / 3.4%) - 1,357 deaths
  • California - 33,866 (up from 31,531 / 7.4%) - 1,229 deaths
  • Illinois - 31,508 (up from 30,357 / 3.8%) - 1,349 deaths
  • Florida - 27,058 (up from 26,314 / 2.8%) - 823 deaths
  • Louisiana - 24,523 cases (up from 23,928 / 2.5%) - 1,328 deaths
  • Texas - 20,087 (up from 19,410 / 3.5%) - 520 deaths
  • Georgia - 19,398 (up from 18,301 / 6.0%) - 774 deaths
  • Connecticut - 19,815 (up from 17,962 / 10.3%) - 1,331 deaths
  • Maryland - 13,684 (up from 12,847 / 6.5%) - 582 deaths
  • Washington - 12,486 (down from 11,948 / 4.5%) - 658 deaths
  • Colorado - 10,112 (up from 9,730 / 3.9%) - 447 deaths
  • Tennessee - 7,238 (up from 7,070 / 2.4%) - 152 deaths
  • Mississippi - 4,512 (up from 4,274 / 5.6%) - 169 deaths
  • South Dakota - 1,685 (up from 1,635 / 3.1%) - 7 deaths
Canadian Province Stats:
  • Alberta - 2,908 (up from 2,803 / 3.7%) - 59 deaths
  • British Columbia - 1,699 (up from 1,647 / 3.2%) - 86 deaths
  • Manitoba - 254 (up from 253 / 0.4%) - 6 deaths
  • New Brunswick - 118 (unchanged from 118) - 0 deaths
  • Newfoundland/Labrador - 257 (unchanged from 257) - 3 deaths
  • Northwest Territories - 5 (unchanged from 5) - 0 deaths
  • Nova Scotia - 721 (up from 675 / 6.8%) - 9 deaths
  • Ontario - 12,286 (up from 11,561/ 6.3%) - 647 deaths
  • Quebec - 19,319 (up from 18,357 / 5.2%) - 939 deaths
  • Prince Edward Island - 26 (unchanged from 26) - 0 deaths
  • Saskatchewan - 316 (up from 315 / 0.3%) - 4 deaths
  • Yukon - 11 (up from 9) - 0 deaths
There were also 13 Canadians on the Grand Princess, one of whom died.
 
...Sweden made a decision to try to build "herd immunity" by allowing their population to become infected...

But doesn't that work only when the other people gain immunity? Like with vaccination. Getting this infection doesn't appear to confer immunity.
 
But doesn't that work only when the other people gain immunity? Like with vaccination. Getting this infection doesn't appear to confer immunity.

It's early but the virus is similar to SARS and there was humoral immunity conferred from post-exposure sampling of antibodies (i.e. IgG) from patients who had recovered from SARS. One study of recovered SARS patients found that the IgG levels remained fairly constant for 24 months post exposure. The high levels of IgG would mean that there was a persistence of antibodies that would likely provide resistance to reinfection.

In addition, after the SARS epidemic, there were successful trials going on for a SARS vaccine (the was abandoned when the epidemic subsided and the vaccine was deemed no longer needed).

There's also been some success with COVID-19 patients receiving convalescent plasma from recovered patients which hints that there is immune globulin in the plasma that is effective against the virus.

This gives reasons to be optimistic that COVID-19 does confer immunity to reinfection and it gives reason to be optimistic that there may be a vaccine available within a year to 18 months.

Sweden - 15,322 (up from 14,777 / 3.7%) - 1,756 deaths
The UK was, at first, trying to pursue a strategy similar to Sweden. After a few weeks of escalating cases with high mortality, the deaths of NHS workers and the near-death of the Prime Minister, the UK has switched to social distancing and their new cases have started to decline but they are now in 5th place in the number of cases and deaths worldwide.
 
someone forwarded me a video on my phone showing covid19 bodies washed up on the beaches.
It doesn't say what country but looks like African country, anyone know ??
 
Without seeing the video and its origins...I couldn't even begin to hazard a guess. I see no reason why bodies of people with COVID would be washing up on a beach though. Doesn't make any sense at all.
 
NYC Transit workers have also been hit hard by COVID-19. So far, 68 of them have died.

'I don't want this job to kill me': why have 68 New York transit workers died during the pandemic? [The Guardian]
...for the 50,000-plus people employed by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), just turning up for work has become a matter of life or death.

So far about 2,400 transit workers have tested positive for the coronavirus while 4,000 are quarantined. Sixty-eight workers have died...

Some are angry that the MTA did not move more quickly to protect them. On 4 March, according to documents seen by the Guardian, a note from an MTA official to transit staff instructed them not to wear masks because “since a mask is not part of the authorized uniform and not medically recommended at this time they may not be worn by uniformed MTA employees”.
 
Ohio put in a stay-at-home order early- on 23-Mar - one of the earliest States with a Republican governor to put in aggressive measures.

Within two weeks of the stay-at-home order, Ohio's cases dropped from a 25% increase on 24-Mar to 4.4% on 15-Apr. Since 15-Apr, Ohio's cases have been increasing steadily back to the 12-14% range in daily increases.

This is why:

Marion prison becomes nation’s leading coronavirus hotspot as advocates demand action [Columbus Dispatch]
As coronavirus spreads rapidly through the Marion Correctional Institution, making the central Ohio prison apparently the nation’s top hot spot for COVID-19, advocates for both corrections officers and inmates say the state is not doing enough to protect either...

Through Monday, 1,950 of about 2,500 prisoners at the Marion prison have tested positive for COVID-19, along with 154 staff members, about a third of the prison’s workforce. One guard, John Dawson of Mansfield, has died, as has one inmate. Another 34 prisoners have been hospitalized.

The Marion prison is now by far the nation’s top hot spot for the coronavirus, a compilation by The New York Times shows. Because of the prison spike, Marion County’s overall infection rate of 3,172 cases per 100,000 residents also is the highest in the country.


Arkansas, which has no stay-at-home order in place, also has the same problem:

38 percent of Arkansas COVID-19 cases concentrated in state prison [The Hill]
Thirty-eight percent of Arkansas’ coronavirus cases are concentrated in a maximum-security prison, Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) said in a Tuesday briefing.

Hutchinson said that the state’s total cases stand at 2,227, which includes 850 inmates at Cummins Prison who are infected with the virus.

The state saw an increase of 304 cases between Monday and Tuesday, with 260 of the new positive tests coming from the prison....

The facility holds about 1,200 inmates, meaning the majority are now infected, along with 10 staffers. “We’re trying to curtail it, we’re trying to know exactly where we stand in that prison environment,” Hutchinson said.
 
Is there any credence for the article I recently read regarding an earlier wave (Late Dec - Mid Jan) that may have hit San Francisco and LA? I ask this because all of my coworkers and I got sick with a very nasty flu/cold during that time frame. For me, it lasted just over 2 weeks.

...In December and January, I also heard stories from colleagues in emergency rooms and hospital ICUs in the US that there were some respiratory viruses circulating that were making people unusually sick. Several mentioned younger people who were sick with pneumonia for weeks. While these may not have been COVID-19, it was an atypical virus since the respiratory smears that tested for influenza, SARS, MERS, RSV and other common respiratory viruses were coming back negative.

Follow-up to this discussion... reports are beginning to come out that there were cases of COVID-19 much earlier than the Washington state outbreak in March:

Two Californians died of coronavirus weeks before previously known 1st US death [CNN]
New autopsy results show coronavirus killed two Californians in early and mid-February -- up to three weeks before the previously known first US death from the virus.

These deaths now stand as the country's first two attributed to the novel coronavirus, a development that may change the understanding of how early the virus was spreading in the country, health experts told CNN Wednesday.

Two deaths in Northern California's Santa Clara County happened February 6 and February 17, the county said in a news release Tuesday...

Dr. Sara Cody, the county's chief medical officer, told The New York Times that the two had no known travel histories to China or anywhere else that would have exposed them to the virus. They are presumed to have caught the virus through community spread, she told the Times.

What does this tell us?
  • In March, when the Washington outbreak occurred, there was also a cluster of 32 cases reported in Santa Clara county. This autopsy finding in February moves the timeline in Santa Clara county back into January.
  • Neither of these deaths were in people who have traveled to China. This means they contracted the virus in the United States from another person.
  • Based upon what we know about the 4-14 day incubation period for the virus, the 6-February death means that this person contracted the virus in late January.
  • Based upon what we know about the mortality of the virus, 1 in 20-25 persons will die of the virus. These two deaths are a hint that there was a sizeable group of infected people in California in January.
 
22-Apr-2020:

Global COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity
- Cases reported: 2,580,729 (up from 2,494,915 / 3.2%) - *‬*76,938 new cases yesterday
- Deaths: 178,481 (up from 171,249) - **7,232‬ people died yesterday

US COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity
- Cases reported in the US - 825,306 cases (up from 787,960 / 3.7% yesterday, ‬**28,174 new cases)
- Deaths reported in the US - 45,075 deaths, **2,711 new deaths yesterday, 37% of the world's new deaths were in the US
- Testing: - 4,163,464 tests (up from 4,026,572 yesterday, +136,892‬ tests) - 1.2% of the US population has been tested


NY state and NYC COVID-19 Mortality/Morbidity (as of 11AM yesterday)
- Cases reported in NY state - 258,589 (up from 253,311 / +‬5,278)
- Persons tested in NY state - 649,325 (633,861 tested prior day, new tests 15,464) 39% positive
- Cases reported in NYC - 134,874 (up from 132,467 / +), hospitalized 35,746
- Deaths reported in NYC - *14,427‬ (up from 13,683‬‬‬ / +), confirmed 9,562, suspected 4,865
- Deaths reported in NYC by ethnicity: - Black 33%, Hispanic 30%, White 28%, Asian 7%

Coronavirus cases/deaths in active countries (preference to countries with JUB members):
  • Spain - 208,389 (up from 204,178 / 2.0%) - 21,717 deaths
  • Italy - 183,957 cases (up 181,228 / 1.3%) - 24,648 deaths
  • France - 159,300 cases (up from 156,493 / 1.6%) - 20,829 deaths
  • UK - 130,184 cases (up from 125,856 / 3.9%) - 17,378 deaths
  • Turkey - 95,591 cases (up from 90,980 / 5.4%) - 2,259 deaths
  • Russia - 57,999 (up from 52,763 cases / 12.0%) - 513 deaths
  • Brazil - 43,368 (up from 40,814 cases / 4.3%) - 2,761 deaths
  • Canada - 39,405 cases (up from 37,933 / 5.3%) - 1,915 deaths
  • Netherlands - 34,318 cases (up from 33,588 / 0%) - 3,929 deaths
  • India - 20,178 (up from 18,658 / 5.9%) - 645 deaths
  • Ireland - 16,040 (up from 15,652 / 2.6%) - 730 deaths
  • Sweden - 16,004 (up from 15,322 / 3.7%) - 1,937 deaths
  • Japan - 11,512 (up from 11,135 / 3.1%) - 281 deaths
  • Mexico - 9,501 (up from 8,772 / 6.2%) - 857 deaths
Coronavirus cases/deaths in recovering countries:
  • Germany - 148,453 cases (up from 147,065 / %) - 5,100 deaths / 99,400 recovered
  • China - 83,864 (up from 83,849) - 4,636 deaths / 77,859 recovered
  • Iran - 85,996 cases (up from 84,802 / %) - 5,391 deaths / recovered
  • Switzerland - 28,063 cases (up from 27,944) - 1,478 deaths / 19,400 recovered
  • South Korea - 10,694 cases (up from 10,683 / 0.1%) - 238 deaths / 8,277 recovered
  • Australia - 6,547 cases (unchanged from 6,547) - 67 deaths / 4,124 recovered (not updated?)
  • New Zealand - 1,451 (up from 1,445 / %) - 14 deaths / 1,036 recovered
Individual States with high case counts:
  • New York - 258,589 (up from 253,311 / 2.1%) - 19,118 deaths
  • New Jersey - 92,387 (up from 88,806 / 4.0%) - 4,753 deaths
  • Massachusetts - 41,199 (up from 39,643 / 3.9%) - 1,961 deaths
  • Pennsylvania - 35,339 (up from 34,005 / 3.9%) - 1,614 deaths
  • California - 35,845 (up from 33,866 / 5.8%) - 1,326 deaths
  • Illinois - 33,059 (up from 31,508 / 4.9%) - 1,468 deaths
  • Michigan - 32,967 (up from 32,000 / 3.0%) - 2,700 deaths
  • Florida - 27,869 (up from 27,058 / 3.0%) - 867 deaths
  • Louisiana - 24,854 cases (up from 24,523 / 1.3%) - 1,405 deaths
  • Texas - 20,975 (up from 20,087 / 4.4%) - 545 deaths
  • Connecticut - 20,360 (up from 19,815 / 2.8%) - 1,423 deaths
  • Georgia - 20,166 (up from 19,398 / 4.0%) - 818 deaths
  • Maryland - 14,193 (up from 13,684 / 3.7%) - 652 deaths
  • Washington - 11,997 (down from 12,486 / -3.9%) - 644 deaths
  • Colorado - 10,460 (up from 10,112 / 3.4%) - 484 deaths
  • Tennessee - 7,394 (up from 7,238 / 2.2%) - 157 deaths
  • Iowa - 3,641 (up from 3,159 / 15.3%) - 83 deaths
  • Arkansas - 2,262 (up from 1,971 / 14.8%) - 43 deaths
  • South Dakota - 1,755 (up from 1,685 / 4.2%) - 8 deaths
Canadian Province Stats:
  • Alberta - 3,095 (up from 2,908 / 6.4%) - 61 deaths
  • British Columbia - 1,724 (up from 1,699 / 1.5%) - 87 deaths
  • Manitoba - 255 (up from 254 / 0.4%) - 6 deaths
  • New Brunswick - 118 (unchanged from 118) - 0 deaths
  • Newfoundland/Labrador - 257 (unchanged from 257) - 3 deaths
  • Northwest Territories - 5 (unchanged from 5) - 0 deaths
  • Nova Scotia - 737 (up from 721 / 2.2%) - 10 deaths
  • Ontario - 12,718 (up from 12,286 / 3.5%) - 700 deaths
  • Quebec - 20,126 (up from 19,319 / 4.2%) - 1044 deaths
  • Prince Edward Island - 26 (unchanged from 26) - 0 deaths
  • Saskatchewan - 320 (up from 316 / 1.3%) - 4 deaths
  • Yukon - 11 (unchanged from 11) - 0 deaths
There were also 13 Canadians on the Grand Princess, one of whom died.
 
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