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Statistics of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States

The CDC publishes official numbers of COVID-19 cases in the United States. The CDC estimates that, between February 2020 and September 2021, only 1 in 1.3 COVID-19 deaths were attributed to COVID-19.[2] The true COVID-19 death toll in the United States would therefore be higher than official reports, as modeled by a paper published in The Lancet Regional Health – Americas.[3] One way to estimate COVID-19 deaths that includes unconfirmed cases is to use the excess mortality, which is the overall number of deaths that exceed what would normally be expected.[4] From March 1, 2020, through the end of 2020, there were 522,368 excess deaths in the United States, or 22.9% more deaths than would have been expected in that time period.[5]

Weekly confirmed COVID-19 deaths
Map of cumulative COVID-19 death rates by US state.[1]

In February 2020, at the beginning of the pandemic, a shortage of tests made it impossible to confirm all possible COVID-19 cases[6] and resulting deaths, so the early numbers were likely undercounts.[7][8][9][10]

The following numbers are based on CDC data, which is incomplete.

Measuring case and mortality rates edit

 
Deceased persons in a 53-foot "mobile morgue" outside a hospital in Hackensack, New Jersey on April 27, 2020
COVID-19 pandemic in the United States by state and territory
Location[i] Cases[ii] Deaths Recoveries[iii] Hospital[iv] Ref.
56 / 56 104,382,217 1,130,215
  Alabama 1,659,936 22,390 275,245 45,250 [11]
  Alaska 301,513 1,485 7,165 1,260 [12]
  American Samoa 8,326 34 3 [13]
  Arizona 2,508,168 33,749 57,072 [14]
  Arkansas 1,015,153 13,246 306,382 14,617 [15]
  California 12,205,573 101,436 [16]
  Colorado 1,776,109 14,305 23,293 [17]
  Connecticut 980,519 12,303 12,257 [18][19]
  Delaware 333,452 3,371 18,371 [20]
  District of Columbia 178,596 1,434 28,532 [21]
  Florida[v] 7,542,869 87,141 78,472 [22]
  Georgia 3,080,346 42,687 55,167 [23]
  Guam 61,237 415 7,377 [24]
  Hawaii 371,120 1,833 11,385 2,196 [25]
  Idaho 524,643 5,466 92,573 7,007 [26][27]
  Illinois 4,122,123 41,805 [28]
  Indiana 2,065,880 26,328 1,749,284 152,177 [29][30]
  Iowa 908,936 10,797 286,309 [31]
  Kansas 943,653 10,167 9,103 [32]
  Kentucky 1,733,247 18,404 47,067 18,768 [33][34]
  Louisiana 1,592,423 18,896 396,834 [35]
  Maine 321,730 2,989 12,772 1,511 [36]
  Maryland 1,374,454 16,677 34,577 [37]
  Massachusetts 2,236,803 24,573 477,796 19,176 [38][39]
  Michigan 3,094,023 42,613 2,747,446 [40]
  Minnesota 1,790,445 14,660 1,447,550 63,295 [41]
  Mississippi 996,607 13,429 273,437 9,012 [42]
  Missouri 1,783,250 22,795 [43]
  Montana 332,890 3,705 260,525 11,589 [44]
  Nebraska 573,360 5,034 142,336 6,048 [45]
  Nevada 895,701 11,976 [46]
  New Hampshire 380,713 3,029 70,040 1,095 [47]
  New Jersey 3,066,880 36,096 63,190 [48]
  New Mexico 677,232 9,155 135,608 12,989 [49]
  New York 6,821,990 77,390 150,100 89,995 [50][51]
  North Carolina 3,491,972 28,945 2,640,452 [52][53]
  North Dakota 289,881 2,501 97,286 3,859 [54]
  Northern Mariana Islands 13,806 43 29 4 [55]
  Ohio 3,426,822 42,021 2,640,920 115,481 [56]
  Oklahoma 1,300,317 15,991 401,945 23,700 [57]
  Oregon 971,436 9,528 8,457 [58]
  Pennsylvania 3,551,440 50,860 816,884 [59]
  Puerto Rico 1,111,019 5,872 [60]
  Rhode Island 440,490 3,894 8,835 [61]
  South Carolina 1,846,142 19,791 [62]
  South Dakota 281,795 3,214 107,745 6,548 [63]
  Tennessee 2,532,510 29,441 738,731 18,311 [64]
  Texas 8,477,410 93,549 4,260,877[vi] [65]
  US Virgin Islands 24,898 130 2,483 [66]
  Utah 1,095,158 5,334 346,157 14,520 [67]
  Vermont 153,806 947 34,184 [68]
  Virginia 2,304,806 23,720 41,373 [69][70]
  Washington 1,949,678 16,013 19,110 [71]
  West Virginia 648,849 8,083 119,337 [72]
  Wisconsin 2,023,781 16,502 545,562 25,838 [73]
  Wyoming 186,281 2,023 52,688 1,373 [74]
Updated: September 19, 2023 · 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.
  3. ^ "–" denotes that no data or only partial data currently available for that state, not that the value is zero.
  4. ^ 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.
  5. ^ Case and death figures in this chart for Florida include residents and non-residents.
  6. ^ This figure is an estimate from the Texas Department of State Health Services.

In early 2020, deaths from all causes exceeded the seasonal average,[75] and data from early 2020 suggest additional deaths that were not counted in official reported coronavirus mortality statistics.[76] Until February 28, 2020, CDC testing protocols allowed tests only for people who had traveled to China.[77] In most U.S. locations, testing for some time was performed only on symptomatic people with a history of travel to Wuhan or with close contact to such people.[78][79][80] The numbers were reported every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday and were split into categories: individual travelers, people who contracted the disease from other people within the U.S., and repatriated citizens who returned to the U.S. from crisis locations, such as Wuhan, where the disease originated, and the cruise ship Diamond Princess.[81]

By March 26, 2020, the United States, with the world's third-largest population, surpassed China and Italy as the country with the world's highest number of confirmed cases.[82] By April 25, the U.S. had more than 905,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and nearly 52,000 deaths, giving it a mortality rate around 5.7 percent. (In comparison, Spain's mortality rate was 10.2 percent and Italy's was 13.5 percent.)[83][84]

In April 2020, more than 10,000 American deaths had occurred in nursing homes. Most nursing homes did not have easy access to testing, making the actual number unknown.[85] President Trump established a Coronavirus Commission for Safety and Quality in Nursing Homes.[86][87] Subsequently, a number of states including Maryland[88] and New Jersey[89] reported their own estimates of deaths at nursing homes, ranging from twenty to fifty percent of the states' total deaths. A PNAS report in September 2020 confirmed that the virus is much more dangerous for the elderly than the young, noting that about 70% of all U.S. COVID-19 deaths had occurred to those over the age of 70.[90]

As of early August 2020, among the 45 countries that had over 50,000 cases, the U.S. had the eighth highest number of deaths per-capita. Its case fatality ratio, however, was significantly better where it ranked 24th in the world, with 3.3% of its cases resulting in death.[91] Several studies suggested that the number of infections was far higher than officially reported, and thus that the infection fatality rate was far lower than the case fatality rate.[92][93]

The CDC estimates that 40% of people infected never show symptoms (i.e. are asymptomatic),[94] although there is a 75% chance they can still spread the disease. And while children have a lower risk of becoming ill or dying, the CDC warns that they can still function as asymptomatic carriers and transmit the virus to adults.[94] The American Academy of Pediatrics's weekly report[95] from when states started reporting to September 17, 2020, tracked 587,948 child COVID-19 cases, 5,016 child hospitalizations, and 109 child deaths.[96]

Epidemiologists depend on accurate reporting of cases and deaths to advise government response,[97] and some have questioned the reliability of the numbers of confirmed cases.[98] Rates differ among U.S. states, and there are also racial and economic disparities.[99][100][101] After a group of epidemiologists requested revisions in how the CDC counts cases and deaths, the CDC in mid-April 2020 updated its guidance for counting COVID-19 cases and deaths to recommend that U.S. states report both confirmed and probable ones, though the decision is left to each state.[102]

On September 25, 2020, The Lancet published the largest study at the time to measure COVID-19 antibody levels in the US population, finding that less than ten percent of the U.S. population had been exposed.[103][104][105] The study was published at a time when, according to Newsweek, "some U.S. officials have floated the concept of herd immunity as a possible strategy to manage the national outbreak,"[106] and according to the lead author of the study, Stanford Center for Tubulointerstitial Kidney Disease director Shuchi Anand, "this study does not support that there is herd immunity."[107] The research also uncovered racial and economic disparities in populations with COVID-19 antibodies[108][99] and highlighted the need for public health intervention to address the disparities.[100][101] At the time of the publication of the study, Anand announced that researchers would monitor the study participants for months to help determine the effectiveness of COVID-19 mitigation tactics.[106][108][104]

As of May 2021, the Centers for Disease Control estimated that there had been approximately 120 million infections in the United States.[109]

According to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University as of 19:21 Eastern Standard Time (EST) on 7 August 2021, the total COVID-19 cases in the US has crossed the 35.73 million mark, with the death toll reaching 616,712.[110]


Progression charts edit

New daily cases edit

Number of new daily cases, with a 21-day centered moving average:[111]

Deaths per day edit

Number of new daily deaths attributed to COVID-19, with a 21-day centered moving average:[111]

Weekly all-cause deaths edit

Weekly predicted deaths, non-COVID excess, and COVID-related excess deaths in the U.S. based on CDC data as of April 10, 2023 which is "Predicted (weighted)" (rather than tabulated) and commonly takes 60 days to fully collate.[112] As such, the data are split and the fields indicated by (*) are not confirmed, including both the 60-day window and any data from the CDC that had numerical inconsistencies (e.g. predicted + excess ≠ observed.) Also, key actions and milestones in the progression of the outbreak are annotated, selectively drawn from COVID-19 pandemic in the United States: Timeline.

Hospitalizations edit

Daily hospital and ICU occupancy numbers, as of January 3, 2023:[113]


Deaths by age edit

Number of COVID-19 deaths by age as of April 11, 2023:[114][115]

Provisional COVID-19 deaths in the United States by age as of April 11, 2023
Age group Death count % of deaths
All ages 1,125,044 100%
Under 1y 471 <0.1%
1-4y 258 <0.1%
5-14y 479 <0.1%
15-24y 2,970 0.3%
25-34y 12,210 1%
35-44y 29,787 3%
45-54y 70,753 7%
55-64y 157,966 15%
65-74y 252,945 23%
75-84y 293,622 26%
85y and over 303,583 26%

Deaths by sex edit

Number of COVID-19 deaths by sex and age as of April 12, 2023:[116]

Deaths by state edit

COVID-19 deaths per million of the populations of each state, along with the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico,[117] as of February 9, 2023:

When the data was adjusted to take into account age and co-morbidities, Arizona had the highest rate of Covid-related deaths in the country (581 deaths per 100,000 people). Washington, D.C. (526 per 100,000) and New Mexico (521 per 100,000) were the second and third worst states. Hawaii, on the other hand, had the lowest adjusted Covid death rate at 147 deaths per 100,000 people. It was followed by New Hampshire (215 per 100,000) and Maine (281 per 100,000).[118]

Vaccine distribution edit

Vaccinations in the U.S. per day:[113]

Cumulative vaccine doses administered in the U.S.[113]

Number of U.S. positive test individuals by state over time edit

Data for all state charts sourced from the NY Times COVID Data, as of January 3, 2023.[111] (This reference tends to include confirmed and suspected cases. This leads to some disparity with other sources).

> 6,000,000 positive test individuals edit

2,000,000–6,000,000 positive test individuals edit

1,000,000–2,000,000 positive test individuals edit

400,000–1,000,000 positive test individuals edit

<400,000 positive test individuals edit

Death projections edit

On March 31, 2020, the CDC projected that eventually 100,000–240,000 Americans would die of coronavirus.[119] The lower end of the estimate was reached within two months after the CDC made its projection,[120] and the upper end was surpassed in November 2020.[121] It is hard to say if the projections were accurate as some of the time they were, while others were very much off, however it was hard to predict the amount of deaths when new variants like the Omicron variant and the Delta variant were rising.

The CDC uses an ensemble forecast, meaning it receives predictions from multiple sources and aggregates them to make its own forecast. As of December 2020, the CDC included 37 modeling groups in its ensemble forecast and was predicting the death toll 4 weeks in advance.[122]

Examples:

  • At the end of May 2020, the CDC correctly projected the death toll would surpass 115,000 by June 20.[123][124]
  • At the end of July 2020, the CDC correctly projected the death toll would surpass 168,000 by August 22.[125]
  • In mid-October 2020, the CDC correctly projected the death toll would reach 230,000–250,000 by mid-November.[125]

In mid-February 2021, when the death toll had already reached 470,000,[126] the IHME projected that the death toll would reach 600,000 by June 1.[127] However, the death rate dropped during this time period and the total death toll on June 1 was not as high as expected, having reached only about 592,000.[128] The total of 600,000 was reached two weeks later.[129]

In mid-September 2021, when the death toll had already reached 670,000, the IHME projected that the death toll would reach 775,000 by the end of the year.[130] That number was reached by the end of November 2021.[131]

On January 12, 2022, when the death toll had already reached 842,000, a CDC ensemble forecast predicted that 62,000 people would die over the next four weeks.[132]

At the start of January 2023, when the US death toll had accumulated to over 1,120,000, the IHME projected that the death toll would reach 1,130,000 by April 1.[133]

Comparisons edit

Epidemics of similar size (the number is the U.S. death toll):

Other large epidemics:

References edit

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statistics, covid, pandemic, united, states, main, article, covid, pandemic, united, states, parts, this, article, those, related, charts, need, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, 2021, publish. Main article COVID 19 pandemic in the United States Parts of this article those related to charts need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2021 The CDC publishes official numbers of COVID 19 cases in the United States The CDC estimates that between February 2020 and September 2021 only 1 in 1 3 COVID 19 deaths were attributed to COVID 19 2 The true COVID 19 death toll in the United States would therefore be higher than official reports as modeled by a paper published in The Lancet Regional Health Americas 3 One way to estimate COVID 19 deaths that includes unconfirmed cases is to use the excess mortality which is the overall number of deaths that exceed what would normally be expected 4 From March 1 2020 through the end of 2020 there were 522 368 excess deaths in the United States or 22 9 more deaths than would have been expected in that time period 5 Weekly confirmed COVID 19 deathsMap of cumulative COVID 19 death rates by US state 1 In February 2020 at the beginning of the pandemic a shortage of tests made it impossible to confirm all possible COVID 19 cases 6 and resulting deaths so the early numbers were likely undercounts 7 8 9 10 The following numbers are based on CDC data which is incomplete Contents 1 Measuring case and mortality rates 2 Progression charts 2 1 New daily cases 2 2 Deaths per day 2 3 Weekly all cause deaths 2 4 Hospitalizations 3 Deaths by age 4 Deaths by sex 5 Deaths by state 6 Vaccine distribution 7 Number of U S positive test individuals by state over time 7 1 gt 6 000 000 positive test individuals 7 2 2 000 000 6 000 000 positive test individuals 7 3 1 000 000 2 000 000 positive test individuals 7 4 400 000 1 000 000 positive test individuals 7 5 lt 400 000 positive test individuals 8 Death projections 9 Comparisons 10 References 11 External linksMeasuring case and mortality rates edit nbsp Deceased persons in a 53 foot mobile morgue outside a hospital in Hackensack New Jersey on April 27 2020vte expand collapse COVID 19 pandemic in the United States by state and territory Location i Cases ii Deaths Recoveries iii Hospital iv Ref 56 56 104 382 217 1 130 215 nbsp Alabama 1 659 936 22 390 275 245 45 250 11 nbsp Alaska 301 513 1 485 7 165 1 260 12 nbsp American Samoa 8 326 34 3 13 nbsp Arizona 2 508 168 33 749 57 072 14 nbsp Arkansas 1 015 153 13 246 306 382 14 617 15 nbsp California 12 205 573 101 436 16 nbsp Colorado 1 776 109 14 305 23 293 17 nbsp Connecticut 980 519 12 303 12 257 18 19 nbsp Delaware 333 452 3 371 18 371 20 nbsp District of Columbia 178 596 1 434 28 532 21 nbsp Florida v 7 542 869 87 141 78 472 22 nbsp Georgia 3 080 346 42 687 55 167 23 nbsp Guam 61 237 415 7 377 24 nbsp Hawaii 371 120 1 833 11 385 2 196 25 nbsp Idaho 524 643 5 466 92 573 7 007 26 27 nbsp Illinois 4 122 123 41 805 28 nbsp Indiana 2 065 880 26 328 1 749 284 152 177 29 30 nbsp Iowa 908 936 10 797 286 309 31 nbsp Kansas 943 653 10 167 9 103 32 nbsp Kentucky 1 733 247 18 404 47 067 18 768 33 34 nbsp Louisiana 1 592 423 18 896 396 834 35 nbsp Maine 321 730 2 989 12 772 1 511 36 nbsp Maryland 1 374 454 16 677 34 577 37 nbsp Massachusetts 2 236 803 24 573 477 796 19 176 38 39 nbsp Michigan 3 094 023 42 613 2 747 446 40 nbsp Minnesota 1 790 445 14 660 1 447 550 63 295 41 nbsp Mississippi 996 607 13 429 273 437 9 012 42 nbsp Missouri 1 783 250 22 795 43 nbsp Montana 332 890 3 705 260 525 11 589 44 nbsp Nebraska 573 360 5 034 142 336 6 048 45 nbsp Nevada 895 701 11 976 46 nbsp New Hampshire 380 713 3 029 70 040 1 095 47 nbsp New Jersey 3 066 880 36 096 63 190 48 nbsp New Mexico 677 232 9 155 135 608 12 989 49 nbsp New York 6 821 990 77 390 150 100 89 995 50 51 nbsp North Carolina 3 491 972 28 945 2 640 452 52 53 nbsp North Dakota 289 881 2 501 97 286 3 859 54 nbsp Northern Mariana Islands 13 806 43 29 4 55 nbsp Ohio 3 426 822 42 021 2 640 920 115 481 56 nbsp Oklahoma 1 300 317 15 991 401 945 23 700 57 nbsp Oregon 971 436 9 528 8 457 58 nbsp Pennsylvania 3 551 440 50 860 816 884 59 nbsp Puerto Rico 1 111 019 5 872 60 nbsp Rhode Island 440 490 3 894 8 835 61 nbsp South Carolina 1 846 142 19 791 62 nbsp South Dakota 281 795 3 214 107 745 6 548 63 nbsp Tennessee 2 532 510 29 441 738 731 18 311 64 nbsp Texas 8 477 410 93 549 4 260 877 vi 65 nbsp US Virgin Islands 24 898 130 2 483 66 nbsp Utah 1 095 158 5 334 346 157 14 520 67 nbsp Vermont 153 806 947 34 184 68 nbsp Virginia 2 304 806 23 720 41 373 69 70 nbsp Washington 1 949 678 16 013 19 110 71 nbsp West Virginia 648 849 8 083 119 337 72 nbsp Wisconsin 2 023 781 16 502 545 562 25 838 73 nbsp Wyoming 186 281 2 023 52 688 1 373 74 Updated September 19 2023 History of cases United States Nationality and location of original infection may vary Reported confirmed and probable cases Actual case numbers are probably higher denotes that no data or only partial data currently available for that state not that the value is zero 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 Case and death figures in this chart for Florida include residents and non residents This figure is an estimate from the Texas Department of State Health Services In early 2020 deaths from all causes exceeded the seasonal average 75 and data from early 2020 suggest additional deaths that were not counted in official reported coronavirus mortality statistics 76 Until February 28 2020 CDC testing protocols allowed tests only for people who had traveled to China 77 In most U S locations testing for some time was performed only on symptomatic people with a history of travel to Wuhan or with close contact to such people 78 79 80 The numbers were reported every Monday Wednesday and Friday and were split into categories individual travelers people who contracted the disease from other people within the U S and repatriated citizens who returned to the U S from crisis locations such as Wuhan where the disease originated and the cruise ship Diamond Princess 81 By March 26 2020 the United States with the world s third largest population surpassed China and Italy as the country with the world s highest number of confirmed cases 82 By April 25 the U S had more than 905 000 confirmed coronavirus cases and nearly 52 000 deaths giving it a mortality rate around 5 7 percent In comparison Spain s mortality rate was 10 2 percent and Italy s was 13 5 percent 83 84 In April 2020 more than 10 000 American deaths had occurred in nursing homes Most nursing homes did not have easy access to testing making the actual number unknown 85 President Trump established a Coronavirus Commission for Safety and Quality in Nursing Homes 86 87 Subsequently a number of states including Maryland 88 and New Jersey 89 reported their own estimates of deaths at nursing homes ranging from twenty to fifty percent of the states total deaths A PNAS report in September 2020 confirmed that the virus is much more dangerous for the elderly than the young noting that about 70 of all U S COVID 19 deaths had occurred to those over the age of 70 90 As of early August 2020 among the 45 countries that had over 50 000 cases the U S had the eighth highest number of deaths per capita Its case fatality ratio however was significantly better where it ranked 24th in the world with 3 3 of its cases resulting in death 91 Several studies suggested that the number of infections was far higher than officially reported and thus that the infection fatality rate was far lower than the case fatality rate 92 93 The CDC estimates that 40 of people infected never show symptoms i e are asymptomatic 94 although there is a 75 chance they can still spread the disease And while children have a lower risk of becoming ill or dying the CDC warns that they can still function as asymptomatic carriers and transmit the virus to adults 94 The American Academy of Pediatrics s weekly report 95 from when states started reporting to September 17 2020 tracked 587 948 child COVID 19 cases 5 016 child hospitalizations and 109 child deaths 96 Epidemiologists depend on accurate reporting of cases and deaths to advise government response 97 and some have questioned the reliability of the numbers of confirmed cases 98 Rates differ among U S states and there are also racial and economic disparities 99 100 101 After a group of epidemiologists requested revisions in how the CDC counts cases and deaths the CDC in mid April 2020 updated its guidance for counting COVID 19 cases and deaths to recommend that U S states report both confirmed and probable ones though the decision is left to each state 102 On September 25 2020 The Lancet published the largest study at the time to measure COVID 19 antibody levels in the US population finding that less than ten percent of the U S population had been exposed 103 104 105 The study was published at a time when according to Newsweek some U S officials have floated the concept of herd immunity as a possible strategy to manage the national outbreak 106 and according to the lead author of the study Stanford Center for Tubulointerstitial Kidney Disease director Shuchi Anand this study does not support that there is herd immunity 107 The research also uncovered racial and economic disparities in populations with COVID 19 antibodies 108 99 and highlighted the need for public health intervention to address the disparities 100 101 At the time of the publication of the study Anand announced that researchers would monitor the study participants for months to help determine the effectiveness of COVID 19 mitigation tactics 106 108 104 As of May 2021 update the Centers for Disease Control estimated that there had been approximately 120 million infections in the United States 109 According to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering CSSE at Johns Hopkins University as of 19 21 Eastern Standard Time EST on 7 August 2021 the total COVID 19 cases in the US has crossed the 35 73 million mark with the death toll reaching 616 712 110 Progression charts editNew daily cases edit Number of new daily cases with a 21 day centered moving average 111 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Deaths per day edit Number of new daily deaths attributed to COVID 19 with a 21 day centered moving average 111 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Weekly all cause deaths edit Weekly predicted deaths non COVID excess and COVID related excess deaths in the U S based on CDC data as of April 10 2023 update which is Predicted weighted rather than tabulated and commonly takes 60 days to fully collate 112 As such the data are split and the fields indicated by are not confirmed including both the 60 day window and any data from the CDC that had numerical inconsistencies e g predicted excess observed Also key actions and milestones in the progression of the outbreak are annotated selectively drawn from COVID 19 pandemic in the United States Timeline Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Hospitalizations edit Daily hospital and ICU occupancy numbers as of January 3 2023 update 113 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Deaths by age editNumber of COVID 19 deaths by age as of April 11 2023 114 115 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Provisional COVID 19 deaths in the United States by age as of April 11 2023 Age group Death count of deathsAll ages 1 125 044 100 Under 1y 471 lt 0 1 1 4y 258 lt 0 1 5 14y 479 lt 0 1 15 24y 2 970 0 3 25 34y 12 210 1 35 44y 29 787 3 45 54y 70 753 7 55 64y 157 966 15 65 74y 252 945 23 75 84y 293 622 26 85y and over 303 583 26 Deaths by sex editNumber of COVID 19 deaths by sex and age as of April 12 2023 116 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Deaths by state editCOVID 19 deaths per million of the populations of each state along with the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico 117 as of February 9 2023 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues When the data was adjusted to take into account age and co morbidities Arizona had the highest rate of Covid related deaths in the country 581 deaths per 100 000 people Washington D C 526 per 100 000 and New Mexico 521 per 100 000 were the second and third worst states Hawaii on the other hand had the lowest adjusted Covid death rate at 147 deaths per 100 000 people It was followed by New Hampshire 215 per 100 000 and Maine 281 per 100 000 118 Vaccine distribution editVaccinations in the U S per day 113 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Cumulative vaccine doses administered in the U S 113 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Number of U S positive test individuals by state over time editMain page COVID 19 pandemic data United States medical positive test individuals Data for all state charts sourced from the NY Times COVID Data as of January 3 2023 update 111 This reference tends to include confirmed and suspected cases This leads to some disparity with other sources gt 6 000 000 positive test individuals edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues 2 000 000 6 000 000 positive test individuals edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues 1 000 000 2 000 000 positive test individuals edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues 400 000 1 000 000 positive test individuals edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues lt 400 000 positive test individuals edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Death projections editOn March 31 2020 the CDC projected that eventually 100 000 240 000 Americans would die of coronavirus 119 The lower end of the estimate was reached within two months after the CDC made its projection 120 and the upper end was surpassed in November 2020 121 It is hard to say if the projections were accurate as some of the time they were while others were very much off however it was hard to predict the amount of deaths when new variants like the Omicron variant and the Delta variant were rising The CDC uses an ensemble forecast meaning it receives predictions from multiple sources and aggregates them to make its own forecast As of December 2020 the CDC included 37 modeling groups in its ensemble forecast and was predicting the death toll 4 weeks in advance 122 Examples At the end of May 2020 the CDC correctly projected the death toll would surpass 115 000 by June 20 123 124 At the end of July 2020 the CDC correctly projected the death toll would surpass 168 000 by August 22 125 In mid October 2020 the CDC correctly projected the death toll would reach 230 000 250 000 by mid November 125 In mid February 2021 when the death toll had already reached 470 000 126 the IHME projected that the death toll would reach 600 000 by June 1 127 However the death rate dropped during this time period and the total death toll on June 1 was not as high as expected having reached only about 592 000 128 The total of 600 000 was reached two weeks later 129 In mid September 2021 when the death toll had already reached 670 000 the IHME projected that the death toll would reach 775 000 by the end of the year 130 That number was reached by the end of November 2021 131 On January 12 2022 when the death toll had already reached 842 000 a CDC ensemble forecast predicted that 62 000 people would die over the next four weeks 132 At the start of January 2023 when the US death toll had accumulated to over 1 120 000 the IHME projected that the death toll would reach 1 130 000 by April 1 133 Comparisons editEpidemics of similar size the number is the U S death toll HIV AIDS in the United States 700 000 as of 2018 update 134 1918 Spanish Flu 675 000 135 Other large epidemics 1957 1958 influenza pandemic 116 000 135 1968 Hong Kong flu 100 000 135 References edit COVID 19 Deaths per 100K U S News amp World Report Run your cursor over the map to see the dates and data for each state The data on this page is courtesy of USAFacts a nonprofit nonpartisan civic initiative and includes information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state and local health departments See a detailed methodology at the USAFacts website Cases Data and Surveillance Centers for Disease Control and Prevention February 11 2020 Retrieved December 19 2021 Iuliano A Danielle Chang Howard H Patel Neha N Threlkel Ryan Kniss Krista Reich Jeremy Steele Molly Hall Aron J Fry Alicia M Reed Carrie July 13 2021 Estimating Under recognized COVID 19 Deaths United States March 2020 May 2021 using an Excess Mortality Modelling Approach The Lancet Regional Health Americas 1 100019 doi 10 1016 j lana 2021 100019 ISSN 2667 193X PMC 8275579 PMID 34386789 Excess Deaths Associated with COVID 19 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Health Statistics Retrieved July 21 2020 Woolf Steven H Chapman Derek A Sabo Roy T April 2 2021 Excess Deaths From COVID 19 and Other Causes in the US March 1 2020 to January 2 2021 JAMA 325 17 1786 1789 doi 10 1001 jama 2021 5199 PMC 8019132 PMID 33797550 S2CID 232763669 Multiple sources Eastwood Joel Overberg Paul Barry Rob April 4 2020 Why We Don t Know How Many Americans Are Infected With Coronavirus and Might Never Know The Wall Street Journal Lack of testing clouds virus picture on the North Coast Coronavirus The Astorian April 8 2020 Retrieved April 27 2020 Bosman Julie April 11 2020 Official Counts Understate the U S Coronavirus Death Toll The New York Times The New York Times Retrieved April 27 2020 US coronavirus map Tracking the United States outbreak USA Today January 28 2020 Retrieved April 27 2020 Roberts Jeff J April 3 2020 Can the private sector provide better coronavirus data Experts are skeptical Fortune Retrieved April 10 2020 Confirmed coronavirus cases in the U S crossed 200 000 on Thursday but experts agree the actual number of infected people is much higher The lack of reliable data a persistent problem since the pandemic began has made it impossible to determine the actual size of the outbreak hampering the U S response Myer Robinson Madrigal Alexis April 16 2020 A New Statistic Reveals Why America s COVID 19 Numbers Are Flat The Atlantic Retrieved April 19 2020 Kliff Sarah Bosman Julie April 5 2020 Official Counts Understate the U S Coronavirus Death Toll The New York Times Retrieved April 5 2020 Abdelmalek Mark Margolin Josh Katersky Aaron David Eden April 7 2020 Coronavirus death toll in US likely worse than numbers say ABC News Retrieved April 10 2020 Brown Emma Reinhard Beth Davis Aaron C April 5 2020 Coronavirus death toll Americans are almost certainly dying of covid 19 but being left out of the official count The Washington Post Retrieved April 10 2020 Swan Jonathan Baker Sam May 6 2020 Trump and some top aides question the accuracy of virus death toll Axios Alabama s COVID 19 Data and Surveillance Dashboard Alabama Department of Public Health Retrieved February 23 2021 COVID 19 Case Counts Alaska Department of Health and Social Services December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Covid 19 coronavirus Samoan officials on alert after three sailors test positive The New Zealand Herald November 9 2020 Archived from the original on November 9 2020 Retrieved December 1 2020 ADHS Data Dashboard Arizona Department of Health Services February 13 2021 Retrieved February 13 2021 COVID 19 Arkansas Department of Health December 12 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 California COVID Worldometers December 21 2021 Retrieved November 21 2022 Case data Colorado COVID 19 Updates January 28 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Connecticut COVID 19 Response State of Connecticut December 12 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Daily Data Report for Connecticut PDF State of Connecticut December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Coronavirus Disease COVID 19 Delaware Division of Public Health State of Delaware s Latest Status December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Coronavirus Data coronavirus dc gov December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Florida COVID 19 Data experience arcgis com Retrieved December 21 2021 Georgia COVID 19 Overview Johns Hopkins Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center Retrieved December 21 2021 COVID 19 dphss guam gov December 12 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Current Situation in Hawaii health hawaii gov Retrieved February 2 2021 Idaho Official Resources for the Novel Coronavirus COVID 19 Idaho Official Government Website Retrieved February 2 2021 COVID 19 in Idaho public tableau com Retrieved February 2 2021 Coronavirus Disease 2019 COVID 19 Illinois Test Results Illinois Department of Public Health Retrieved December 21 2021 ISDH Novel Coronavirus Novel Coronavirus COVID 19 Retrieved February 13 2021 COVID 19 Dashboard Regenstrief Institute February 25 2021 Retrieved February 25 2021 Novel Coronavirus COVID 19 Reporting idph iowa gov May 1 2021 Retrieved May 1 2021 COVID 19 Cases in Kansas KDHE COVID 19 coronavirus kdheks gov December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 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December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 COVID 19 Outbreak Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services January 28 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Montana Response COVID 19 Coronavirus Global National and State Information Resources Retrieved February 23 2020 Coronavirus COVID 19 Nebraska Cases by the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services DHHS nebraska maps arcgis com December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 COVID 19 Coronavirus State of Nevada Department of Health and Human Services Office of Analytics December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Novel Coronavirus 2019 COVID 19 New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 New Jersey COVID 19 Information Hub February 13 2021 Retrieved February 13 2021 NMDOH COVID 19 Public Dashboard Retrieved February 19 2021 New York Coronavirus Map and Case Count The New York Times April 1 2020 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 21 2021 The COVID Tracking Project February 23 2021 Retrieved February 25 2021 NC DHHS COVID 19 Cases February 12 2021 Retrieved February 13 2021 COVID 19 Recovery Report North Carolina PDF February 8 2021 Retrieved February 13 2021 North Dakota Coronavirus Cases North Dakota Department of Health December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Information about COVID 19 February 1 2021 Retrieved February 2 2021 Ohio Department of Health coronavirus ohio gov February 13 2021 Retrieved February 13 2020 COVID 19 Oklahoma State Department of Health coronavirus health ok gov January 28 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Oregon Health Authority Emerging Respiratory Infections COVID 19 Diseases A to Z State of Oregon oregon gov December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Cases health pa gov Pennsylvania Department of Health Retrieved February 13 2021 Departamento De Salud in Spanish December 12 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Rhode Island COVID 19 Response Data RI Department of Health December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Testing amp SC Data COVID 19 SCDHEC scdhec gov January 28 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Novel Coronavirus COVID 19 Updates and Information South Dakota Department of Health December 12 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Coronavirus Disease COVID 19 Tennessee Department of Health February 13 2021 Retrieved February 13 2021 COVID 19 in Texas Dashboard txdshs maps arcgis com Texas DSHS Retrieved December 20 2021 Coronavirus Disease 2019 COVID 19 January 11 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Latest Information December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Case Dashboard Vermont Department of Health Vermont Department of Health January 8 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Coronavirus Virginia Department of Health January 28 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Virginia Hospital COVID 19 Dashboard www vhha com Virginia Hospital amp Healthcare Association January 28 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 2019 Novel Coronavirus Outbreak COVID 19 Washington Department of Health December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Coronavirus Disease 2019 COVID 19 West Virginia Department of Health amp Human Resources December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 2019 Novel Coronavirus Outbreak COVID 19 Wisconsin Department of Health Services February 13 2021 Retrieved February 13 2021 COVID 19 Map and Statistics Wyoming Department of Health December 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2020 Wu J McCann A Katz J Peltier E April 21 2020 28 000 Missing Deaths Tracking the True Toll of the Coronavirus Crisis The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 22 2020 Katz Josh Lu Denise Sanger Katz Margot April 28 2020 U S Coronavirus Death Toll Is Far Higher Than Reported C D C Data Suggests The New York Times Retrieved April 29 2020 Moon Sarah Yan Holly Christensen Jen Maxouris Christina The CDC has changed its criteria for testing patients for coronavirus after the first case of unknown origin was confirmed CNN Retrieved March 12 2020 Madrigal Robinson Meyer Alexis C March 6 2020 Exclusive The Strongest Evidence Yet That America Is Botching Coronavirus Testing The Atlantic Retrieved July 23 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Persons Evaluated for 2019 Novel Coronavirus US Jan 2020 Medscape Retrieved March 12 2020 McFall Johnsen Morgan A New York City man wasn t tested for the coronavirus even though he had symptoms and had gone to Japan It highlights the troublingly limited scope of US testing Business Insider Retrieved March 12 2020 International Locations with Confirmed COVID 19 Cases Centers for Disease Control and Prevention February 11 2020 Archived from the original on February 22 2020 Retrieved February 18 2020 Nicole Chavez Holly Yan Madeline Holcombe US has more known cases of coronavirus than any other country CNN Retrieved June 14 2020 U S Has One of the Lowest Coronavirus Mortality Rates Worldwide but Highest Number of Deaths Newsweek April 21 2020 Coronavirus COVID 19 deaths worldwide per one million population as of November 20 2020 by country Statista November 20 2020 Retrieved November 20 2020 10 000 deaths Ravaged nursing homes plead for more testing KMGH Associated Press April 23 2020 Archived from the original on April 25 2020 President Donald J Trump Remains Committed to Caring for Our Nation s Seniors During the Coronavirus Pandemic and Beyond whitehouse gov April 30 2020 via National Archives President Trump delivers remarks on senior citizens and COVID 19 USA Today April 30 2020 Nursing homes account for more than half of Maryland s coronavirus deaths Some want the state to do more The Baltimore Sun April 28 2020 Coronavirus deaths in nursing homes grow as N J still tries to sort out the grim toll in each facility NJ com April 27 2020 Demographic perspectives on the mortality of COVID 19 and other epidemics Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Sept 8 2020 Charts How The U S Ranks On COVID 19 Deaths Per Capita And By Case Count NPR August 5 2020 Donnelly Claire July 2 2020 Wake Forest COVID Study Death Rate Severity Of Symptoms Is Lower Than First Thought WUNC Retrieved August 1 2020 Sheyner Gennady Los Angeles study backs Stanford researchers conclusion about high prevalence of COVID 19 Palo Alto Online Retrieved August 1 2020 a b 40 of people infected with COVID 19 are asymptomatic a new CDC estimate says Business Insider July 13 2020 Children and COVID 19 State Level Data Report American Academy of Pediatrics Retrieved September 22 2020 American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children s Hospital Association September 17 2020 Children and COVID 19 State Data Report PDF Report American Academy of Pediatrics pp 9 11 Retrieved September 22 2020 WHO says China revised coronavirus infection data to leave no case undocumented CNBC April 17 2020 Rothwell Jonathan Desai Sonal December 20 2020 How misinformation is distorting COVID policies and behaviors The Brookings Institution Retrieved March 10 2021 a b Foster Robin Mundell E J September 29 2020 Global Death Toll From COVID 19 Passes One Million U S News amp World Report Retrieved March 10 2021 a b Ghosh Abantika September 26 2020 Stanford study estimates fewer than 10 US adults had Covid antibodies in July The Print Retrieved March 10 2021 a b Van Beusekom Mary Less than 10 of US population has COVID 19 antibodies data show Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy University of Minnesota Retrieved March 10 2021 How Accurate Are Coronavirus Death Counts WebMD April 17 2020 White Tracie September 28 2020 Fewer than 1 in 10 Americans have antibodies to coronavirus study finds Stanford University News Center Retrieved March 9 2021 a b Weintraub Karen September 28 2020 About 9 of Americans exposed to COVID 19 by midsummer That s a long way from herd immunity USA Today Retrieved March 10 2021 Cortez Michelle Fay September 25 2020 Covid Immunity Remains Low With Under 10 of U S Adults Exposed Bloomberg News Retrieved March 9 2021 a b Czachor Emily September 27 2020 National Coronavirus Antibody Study Suggests Herd Immunity Remains Out of Reach in the U S Newsweek Retrieved March 9 2021 Feuer Will September 26 2020 Fewer than 10 of Americans show signs of past coronavirus infection study finds CNBC Retrieved March 13 2021 a b Cortez Michelle Fay September 28 2020 Covid Insights Come From Dialysis Patients Bloomberg Retrieved March 10 2021 Estimated COVID 19 Burden Centers for Disease Control and Prevention July 27 2021 Retrieved October 18 2021 US cumulative Covid cases reach 36mn mark toll at 6 16 712 Connectedtoindia August 9 2021 Retrieved August 9 2021 a b c NY Times COVID 19 Dataset The New York Times Retrieved March 19 2021 Excess Deaths Associated with COVID 19 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention April 10 2023 a b c owid covid19 data public data GitHub Provisional COVID 19 Death Counts by Sex Age and Week Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Retrieved August 22 2021 COVID 19 Provisional Counts Weekly Updates by Select Demographic and Geographic Characteristics Centers for Disease Control and Prevention February 17 2021 Retrieved February 17 2021 COVID 19 Provisional Counts Weekly Updates by Select Demographic and Geographic Characteristics Centers for Disease Control and Prevention August 18 2021 Retrieved August 22 2021 Coronavirus COVID 19 U S Deaths RealClearPolitics Retrieved February 10 2022 Reed Tina March 24 2023 Why America was uniquely vulnerable to COVID Axios Shear Michael D Crowley Michael Glanz James March 31 2020 Coronavirus May Kill 100 000 to 240 000 in U S Despite Actions Officials Say The New York Times Retrieved April 1 2020 Coronavirus Live Updates Four Months After First Case U S Death Toll Passes 100 000 The New York Times May 28 2020 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 28 2020 US COVID 19 Deaths Reach 240K as Daily Cases Set Another Record NBC Connecticut November 9 2020 Retrieved December 17 2020 Coronavirus Disease 2019 COVID 19 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention February 11 2020 Retrieved December 17 2020 Holcombe Madeline May 29 2020 With the coronavirus pandemic entering a new phase in the US world health experts shift focus to new hot spots CNN Retrieved September 5 2020 Coronavirus Disease 2019 COVID 19 in the U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention March 28 2020 Retrieved June 21 2020 a b Forecasts of COVID 19 Deaths Centers for Disease Control and Prevention July 31 2020 COVID Data Tracker Centers for Disease Control and Prevention March 28 2020 Retrieved February 14 2021 Marsh Jenni February 14 2021 More than 600 000 Americans will have died of coronavirus by June 1 model forecasts CNN Retrieved February 14 2021 COVID Data Tracker Centers for Disease Control and Prevention March 28 2020 Retrieved June 4 2021 Ang Katerina Berger Miriam Bellware Kim June 16 2021 United States surpasses 600 000 coronavirus deaths The Washington Post Retrieved June 16 2021 IHME COVID 19 Projections Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation Retrieved September 21 2021 COVID Data Tracker Centers for Disease Control and Prevention March 28 2020 Retrieved November 29 2021 Guy Jack Strange Hannah Mogul Rhea Renton Adam January 12 2022 CDC forecast predicts more than 62 000 Covid 19 deaths in the US in the next four weeks CNN Retrieved January 12 2022 IHME COVID 19 Projections Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation Retrieved January 10 2023 The HIV AIDS Epidemic in the United States The Basics Kaiser Family Foundation Retrieved April 26 2020 a b c Past Pandemics June 11 2019 Archived from the original on July 3 2020 Retrieved June 22 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Statistics of the COVID 19 pandemic in the United States nbsp Scholia has a topic profile for Statistics of the COVID 19 pandemic in the United States nbsp Media related to COVID 19 pandemic in the United States at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Statistics of the COVID 19 pandemic in the United States amp oldid 1172048874, 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