State of the virus
After more than three years of daily reporting of coronavirus data in the United States, the New York Times is ending its Covid-19 data collection operation. The Times will continue to publish federal virus data on a new set of tracking sites each week, but this site will no longer be updated.
This change was prompted by the decreasing availability of virus data from national and local health authorities. Because few states report more than once a week (and some no longer report data to the public at all), the C.D.C. They have become the most trusted source of information on the spread of the virus.
Daily new hospital admissions by age
This graph shows, for each age group, the number of people per 100,000 who were hospitalized for the first time with Covid-19 each day, based on data reported by hospitals to the US Department of Health and Human Resources. Social services.
State trends
This chart is ranked by places with the most cases per 100,000 people in the past 7 days. Graphs show changes in daily averages and each has its own scale. Select a table header to sort by a different metric.
How cases, hospitalizations and deaths are trending
Each graph shows how these three metrics compare to the corresponding national peak before Omicron became the dominant variant. For example, a state's case line exceeds 100% on the graph if its number of cases per capita exceeds the highest number of U.S. cases per capita reached in January 2021.
Rates for vaccinated and unvaccinated
Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that unvaccinated people are at a much higher risk of dying from Covid-19 than fully vaccinated people. These graphs compare the age-adjusted average daily case and death rates for vaccinated and unvaccinated people in the states and cities that provide this data.
The new tracking pages will be updated weekly and will show, among other things, CDC hospitalizations, deaths and virus status analysis at the county level.
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State of the virus
After more than three years of daily reporting of coronavirus data in the United States, the New York Times is ending its Covid-19 data collection operation. The Times will continue to publish federal virus data on a new set of tracking sites each week, but this site will no longer be updated.
This change was prompted by the decreasing availability of virus data from national and local health authorities. Because few states report more than once a week (and some no longer report data to the public at all), the C.D.C. They have become the most trusted source of information on the spread of the virus.
Daily new hospital admissions by age
This graph shows, for each age group, the number of people per 100,000 who were hospitalized for the first time with Covid-19 each day, based on data reported by hospitals to the US Department of Health and Human Resources. Social services.
State trends
This chart is ranked by places with the most cases per 100,000 people in the past 7 days. Graphs show changes in daily averages and each has its own scale. Select a table header to sort by a different metric.
How cases, hospitalizations and deaths are trending
Each graph shows how these three metrics compare to the corresponding national peak before Omicron became the dominant variant. For example, a state's case line exceeds 100% on the graph if its number of cases per capita exceeds the highest number of U.S. cases per capita reached in January 2021.
Rates for vaccinated and unvaccinated
Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that unvaccinated people are at a much higher risk of dying from Covid-19 than fully vaccinated people. These graphs compare the age-adjusted average daily case and death rates for vaccinated and unvaccinated people in the states and cities that provide this data.
Read Also : Is Elon Musk playing a 'game', replacing the Doge icon with a bird on Twitter?The new tracking pages will be updated weekly and will show, among other things, CDC hospitalizations, deaths and virus status analysis at the county level.