Coronavirus Tracking in the United States: Find Out How Your State Is Doing

This page is current on Mondays.

More than 97 million people in the United States have shown coronavirus infections and more than one million have died from COVID-19. In the boxes below, explore trends in your state.

View state-by-state knowledge graphs (immediately below), a heat map showing state threat levels, a four-week new infection trends graph, and a map of cases and death totals.

The graphs above show the average of new instances consistent with 100,000 citizens per state over the past year. At peak instances, 3 waves are visual on those graphs: last summer’s delta wave, the first omicron wave of winter, and the existing existing wave fed through micron subvariants.

The map above shows the threat of infection in the state based on daily new cases reported according to the capital. Actual cases can be significantly higher, as many of those who test positive with internal controls do not report their cases. These degrees of threat evolved through a consortium of researchers and public adequacy councils.

Explore the map above to see consistent totals and capita figures across the country for new COVID-19 deaths shown and reported.

Click here to see a map of instances and deaths shown.

To show trends, the following table shows the evolution of the average of new instances consistent with the day in the state, week after week during the last 28 days. States marked with the sun in red have expanding epidemics; Those that are in shades of sun sun green, are decreasing.

Methodology

The graphics on this page come from knowledge compiled through the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering from various sources, adding the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; the World Health Organization; national, state and government fitness services; 1 point 3 acres; and media reports.

The JHU team automates their knowledge downloads and checks them for anomalies. This can lead to occasional knowledge discrepancies on this page, as the JHU team resolves anomalies and updates their sources. State-by-state recovery knowledge is not available at this time There may be discrepancies between what you see here and what you see on the local fitness department’s website. The figures shown do not come with cases on cruise ships.

Fluctuations in numbers may occur as the government reviews suitability beyond instances and/or updates methodologies. The JHU team maintains a list of those changes.

This short story was originally published on March 16, 2020. Elena Renken co-author of this version.

Sean McMinn and Audrey Carlsen contributed to this story. Carmel Wroth edited this story.

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