

11 because many states and local jurisdictions did not announce new data on Veterans Day. The daily count is artificially low on Nov. 25 because many states and local jurisdictions did not announce new data on Thanksgiving. 25 because many states and local jurisdictions did not announce new data on Christmas. The daily count is artificially low on Dec. 17 because many states and local jurisdictions did not announce new data on the Martin Luther King Jr. The daily count is artificially low on Jan. The cumulative number of deaths decreased because Massachusetts removed many previously reported deaths. More about reporting anomalies or changes The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data. Select a table header to sort by another metric. Charts show change in daily averages and are each on their own scale. This table is sorted by places with the most cases per 100,000 residents in the last seven days. case and death total in order to account for irregularly timed case and death reports at the state level. This average may not match the average when calculated from the U.S. national case and death count averages, the average is the sum of the average number of cases and deaths in all states and territories each day. Certain days with anomalous total case or death reports are excluded from the average or have a portion of their cases and deaths which correspond to data backlogs removed from the average calculation. When calculating rolling averages, these days representing multiple day's worth of data are always included together, which means that in instances of irregularly timed reporting, the seven-day average may be an average over more than seven days. Data from days following non-reporting days is averaged over that day and the non-reporting days that precede it. For case and death seven-day averages, if there are days within that range with no data reported, the period is extended to older days until at least seven days of data are included. Cases and deaths data are assigned to dates based on when figures are publicly reported. Department of Health and Human Services and are subject to historical revisions. Hospitalizations and test positivity are reported based on dates assigned by the U.S. viral test specimens tested by laboratories and state health departments and reported to the federal government by the 50 states, Washington D.C. Hospitalization numbers early in the pandemic are undercounts due to incomplete reporting by hospitals to the federal government. Dips and spikes could be due to inconsistent reporting by hospitals. Figures for Covid patients in hospitals and I.C.U.s are the most recent number of patients with Covid-19 who are hospitalized or in an intensive care unit on that day. The seven-day average is the average of the most recent seven days of data. Department of Health and Human Services (test positivity, hospitalizations, I.C.U. After two months when daily death numbers rarely rose above 400, the average has recently grown to more than 420 people dying of Covid in this country each day.Ĥ44 About this data Sources: State and local health agencies (cases, deaths) U.S.
CORONAVIRUS CALIFORNIA SERIES
Death data remains volatile following a series of reporting delays related to summer holidays, but deaths are increasing.More than 41,000 people are currently hospitalized with the coronavirus across the country, an increase of 19 percent over the past two weeks.

Hospitalizations are also steadily increasing nationally.The impacts of this surge can be felt across the country, from California, where known cases are higher than they have been in almost six months, to New York, where more people with Covid are hospitalized today than at the height of last year's Delta wave.The official case numbers are seen as a significant undercount because many people have chosen to use home tests or are forgoing tests altogether. The number of new cases announced each day has hovered near 130,000 for several days, and all but a few states have seen steady increases over the past two weeks.Cases, hospitalizations and deaths are all higher than they have been at nearly any point this summer as the BA.5 variant continues to spread across the United States.30 that booster doses are sometimes misclassified as first doses, which may overestimate first dose coverage among adults.

About this data Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, state governments, U.S.
