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Oklahoma recently topped 20,000 COVID-19 deaths with the second-highest death rate in the country. But in which states is the disease most prevalent?
Here’s everything we know.
According to the latest data from The New York Times, these are the states with COVID-19 hospitalization rates equivalent to 100,000 citizens over the last seven days.
Delaware: 7.4
Missouri: 4.8
North Carolina: 4
Virginia: 3. 7
Pennsylvania: 3. 6
Washington, D.C.: 3.2
Arizona: 3
Maine: 2. 9
New Jersey: 2.9
Maryland: 2. 7
Oklahoma ranks 11th on this list with 2. 5 COVID-19 hospitalizations compared to an additional 100,000 people over the past seven days.
Here are the states with the highest number of COVID-19 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
California: 111,530
Texas: 103,948
New York: 83,258
Florida: 81,883
Pennsylvania: 54,380
Ohio: 51,125
Illinois: 41,490
Michigan: 38,881
Georgia: 36,900
New Jersey: 36,184
Oklahoma is on that list with 20,055 COVID-19 deaths.
These states have the highest all-time COVID-19 death rates per 100,000 people, according to the NYT.
Mississippi: 511
Oklahoma: 507
West Virginia: 499
Alabama: 466
Kentucky: 465
New Mexico: 456
Ohio: 436
Tennessee: 432
New York: 429
Pennsylvania: 426
These have the highest percentage of people who have completed the first series of the COVID-19 vaccine, or the initial two doses, according to the NYT.
Washington, DC: 91%
Rhode Island: 88%
Vermont: 86%
Massachusetts: 85%
Maine: 84%
Connecticut: 83%
Hawaii: 82%
New York: 81%
Maryland: 80%
New Jersey: 79%
Oklahoma ranks 36th on this list with 61% of people who’ve received the primary series of the COVID-19 vaccine.
These states have the percentage of other people who have received the bivalent COVID-19 vaccine.
Vermont: 34%
Washington, DC: 32%
Maine: 31%
Massachusetts: 31%
Minnesota: 27%
Washington: 26%
Rhode Island: 26%
Connecticut: 26%
Maryland: 24%
New Hampshire: 24%
Oklahoma is ranked 39th on this list with 12% of people who’ve received their bivalent COVID-19 vaccine.
CDC introduced the National Wastewater Surveillance System in September 2020 to track SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, in wastewater samples collected across the country.
The CDC also uses various datasets and sources to track COVID-19 hospitalizations across the country, each with varying strengths and weaknesses.
For death data, CDC presents initial COVID-19 deaths reported to the National Center for Health Statistics. National monitoring of important statistics.
This article gave Oklahoman the impression: These states have the highest rates of COVID deaths and hospitalizations
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