Our daily update is published. States reported 1.2 million tests and 131k cases, the highest single-day total since the pandemic started. There are 62k people currently hospitalized with COVID-19. The death toll was 1,347.
Today’s number of currently hospitalized people—62k—is also a record. A total of 17 states have reported single-day record hospitalizations.
Deaths are also rising. Today’s death count is the highest since August 19, pushing the 7-day average up to nearly 1,000.
The increase in hospitalizations and deaths confirms the main pattern we’ve identified in the data—after cases go up, a rise in these figures follows. We explain the relationship between the three metrics in this post. covidtracking.com/blog/deaths-ar…
Today's numbers do not include a complete update from North Dakota and Hawaii.
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Our daily update is published. States reported 1.5 million tests, 151k cases, and 67k people currently hospitalized with COVID-19. The death toll was 1,104. Both case and hospitalization figures hit all-time highs today.
Cases nationwide are trending up more quickly than at any point in the pandemic. Today’s 7-day average—nearly 130k—is 54k more than two weeks ago, a growth of 71%.
Our data shows that one in every 378 US residents has tested positive for COVID-19 this week. The situation is particularly alarming in the Dakotas, where one in less than 100 people have tested positive.
Our weekly data update is live. All major US COVID-19 metrics rose sharply from last week. Cases are up more than 40%, while tests only rose 13%. Currently hospitalized continued to follow cases upward.
Deaths increased nearly 23% from a week ago.
COVID-19 hospitalizations rose in all but 4 states this week, with the most rapid increases centered in the Midwest.
Per capita COVID-19 hospitalization figures in the Midwest are now worse than they were in the South during the summer surge.
Our daily update is published. States reported 1.4M new tests and 144k cases, another all-time high. 65.4k people are hospitalized, 15k more than on election day. The death toll was 1,421, pushing the 7-day average over 1,000.
On a per capita basis, more people are now dying across the Midwest than even at the peak of the summer surge in the South.
Deaths are up substantially in every state in the Midwest region—and we're now seeing more fatalities from the most populous states.
The third wave of COVID-19 deaths in long-term care facilities is here. Since May, we have compiled all the data states provide on cases and deaths within these facilities, where a shocking 40% of the nation’s COVID-19 deaths have originated - that’s 91,596 deaths.
In October, 8.4% of long-term care facility residents diagnosed with COVID-19 died. The rising cases of the past few weeks are resulting in the highest number of deaths in months as states and facilities fail to protect these most vulnerable Americans.
South Dakota’s long-term care data last week painted a dire picture as 73% of deaths that occurred in the state were among long-term care residents. covidtracking.com/data/state/sou…
Our daily update is published. States reported 1.5 million tests, 119k cases, and 59k people currently hospitalized with COVID-19. The death toll was 580.
Today's hospitalization number marks the largest single-day increase since July 10, and the highest total number since July 25.
South Dakota's hospitalization rates are the highest in the country. There are 640 currently hospitalized per million people in the state.
Our daily update is published. States reported 1.1 million tests, 103k cases, and 57k people currently hospitalized with COVID-19. The death toll was 462.
This is the largest number of cases ever reported on a Sunday—more than 25k more than last week—despite California not reporting by the time we published this data.
The 7-day average of deaths reported by states is now up 36% in the last 3 weeks. Here's a chart of deaths since July 1.