8 datasets found
  1. O

    COVID-19 cases by zip code of residence

    • data.sccgov.org
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Dec 14, 2024
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    County of Santa Clara Public Health Department (2024). COVID-19 cases by zip code of residence [Dataset]. https://data.sccgov.org/COVID-19/COVID-19-cases-by-zip-code-of-residence/j2gj-bg6c
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    application/rssxml, xml, tsv, application/rdfxml, csv, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 14, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Santa Clara Public Health Department
    Description

    *** The County of Santa Clara Public Health Department discontinued updates to the COVID-19 data tables effective June 30, 2025. The COVID-19 data tables will be removed from the Open Data Portal on December 30, 2025. For current information on COVID-19 in Santa Clara County, please visit the Respiratory Virus Dashboard [sccphd.org/respiratoryvirusdata]. For any questions, please contact phinternet@phd.sccgov.org ***

    The datset summarizes counts and rates of cumulative COVID-19 cases by zip codes in Santa Clara County. Source: California Reportable Disease Information Exchange.

    This dataset is updated every Thursday.

  2. d

    ARCHIVED: COVID-19 Cases and Deaths Summarized by Geography

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Mar 29, 2025
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    data.sfgov.org (2025). ARCHIVED: COVID-19 Cases and Deaths Summarized by Geography [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-cases-and-deaths-summarized-by-geography
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.sfgov.org
    Description

    A. SUMMARY Medical provider confirmed COVID-19 cases and confirmed COVID-19 related deaths in San Francisco, CA aggregated by several different geographic areas and normalized by 2016-2020 American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates for population data to calculate rate per 10,000 residents. On September 12, 2021, a new case definition of COVID-19 was introduced that includes criteria for enumerating new infections after previous probable or confirmed infections (also known as reinfections). A reinfection is defined as a confirmed positive PCR lab test more than 90 days after a positive PCR or antigen test. The first reinfection case was identified on December 7, 2021. Cases and deaths are both mapped to the residence of the individual, not to where they were infected or died. For example, if one was infected in San Francisco at work but lives in the East Bay, those are not counted as SF Cases or if one dies in Zuckerberg San Francisco General but is from another county, that is also not counted in this dataset. Dataset is cumulative and covers cases going back to 3/2/2020 when testing began. Geographic areas summarized are: 1. Analysis Neighborhoods 2. Census Tracts 3. Census Zip Code Tabulation Areas B. HOW THE DATASET IS CREATED Addresses from medical data are geocoded by the San Francisco Department of Public Health (SFDPH). Those addresses are spatially joined to the geographic areas. Counts are generated based on the number of address points that match each geographic area. The 2016-2020 American Community Survey (ACS) population estimates provided by the Census are used to create a rate which is equal to ([count] / [acs_population]) * 10000) representing the number of cases per 10,000 residents. C. UPDATE PROCESS Geographic analysis is scripted by SFDPH staff and synced to this dataset daily at 7:30 Pacific Time. D. HOW TO USE THIS DATASET San Francisco population estimates for geographic regions can be found in a view based on the San Francisco Population and Demographic Census dataset. These population estimates are from the 2016-2020 5-year American Community Survey (ACS). Privacy rules in effect To protect privacy, certain rules are in effect: 1. Case counts greater than 0 and less than 10 are dropped - these will be null (blank) values 2. Death counts greater than 0 and less than 10 are dropped - these will be null (blank) values 3. Cases and deaths dropped altogether for areas where acs_population < 1000 Rate suppression in effect where counts lower than 20 Rates are not calculated unless the case count is greater than or equal to 20. Rates are generally unstable at small numbers, so we avoid calculating them directly. We advise you to apply the same approach as this is best practice in epidemiology. A note on Census ZIP Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs) ZIP Code Tabulation Areas are special boundaries created by the U.S. Census based on ZIP Codes developed by the USPS. They are not, however, the same thing. ZCTAs are areal representations of routes. Read how the Census develops ZCTAs on their website. Row included for Citywide case counts, incidence rate, and deaths A single row is included that has the Citywide case counts and incidence rate. This can be used for comparisons. Citywide will capture all cases regardless of address quality. While some cases cannot be mapped to sub-areas like Census Tracts, ongo

  3. ARCHIVED: COVID-19 Cases by Vaccination Status Over Time

    • healthdata.gov
    • data.sfgov.org
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Apr 8, 2025
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    data.sfgov.org (2025). ARCHIVED: COVID-19 Cases by Vaccination Status Over Time [Dataset]. https://healthdata.gov/dataset/ARCHIVED-COVID-19-Cases-by-Vaccination-Status-Over/evps-wwsc
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    application/rssxml, csv, json, application/rdfxml, tsv, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 8, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.sfgov.org
    Description

    On 6/28/2023, data on cases by vaccination status will be archived and will no longer update.

    A. SUMMARY This dataset represents San Francisco COVID-19 positive confirmed cases by vaccination status over time, starting January 1, 2021. Cases are included on the date the positive test was collected (the specimen collection date). Cases are counted in three categories: (1) all cases; (2) unvaccinated cases; and (3) completed primary series cases.

    1. All cases: Includes cases among all San Francisco residents regardless of vaccination status.

    2. Unvaccinated cases: Cases are considered unvaccinated if their positive COVID-19 test was before receiving any vaccine. Cases that are not matched to a COVID-19 vaccination record are considered unvaccinated.

    3. Completed primary series cases: Cases are considered completed primary series if their positive COVID-19 test was 14 days or more after they received their 2nd dose in a 2-dose COVID-19 series or the single dose of a 1-dose vaccine. These are also called “breakthrough cases.”

    On September 12, 2021, a new case definition of COVID-19 was introduced that includes criteria for enumerating new infections after previous probable or confirmed infections (also known as reinfections). A reinfection is defined as a confirmed positive PCR lab test more than 90 days after a positive PCR or antigen test. The first reinfection case was identified on December 7, 2021.

    Data is lagged by eight days, meaning the most recent specimen collection date included is eight days prior to today. All data updates daily as more information becomes available.

    B. HOW THE DATASET IS CREATED Case information is based on confirmed positive laboratory tests reported to the City. The City then completes quality assurance and other data verification processes. Vaccination data comes from the California Immunization Registry (CAIR2). The California Department of Public Health runs CAIR2. Individual-level case and vaccination data are matched to identify cases by vaccination status in this dataset. Case records are matched to vaccine records using first name, last name, date of birth, phone number, and email address.

    We include vaccination records from all nine Bay Area counties in order to improve matching rates. This allows us to identify breakthrough cases among people who moved to the City from other Bay Area counties after completing their vaccine series. Only cases among San Francisco residents are included.

    C. UPDATE PROCESS Updates automatically at 08:00 AM Pacific Time each day.

    D. HOW TO USE THIS DATASET Total San Francisco population estimates can be found in a view based on the San Francisco Population and Demographic Census dataset. These population estimates are from the 2016-2020 5-year American Community Survey (ACS). To identify total San Francisco population estimates, filter the view on “demographic_category_label” = “all ages”.

    Population estimates by vaccination status are derived from our publicly reported vaccination counts, which can be found at COVID-19 Vaccinations Given to SF Residents Over Time.

    The dataset includes new cases, 7-day average new cases, new case rates, 7-day average new case rates, percent of total cases, and 7-day average percent of total cases for each vaccination category.

    New cases are the count of cases where the positive tests were collected on that specific specimen collection date. The 7-day rolling average shows the trend in new cases. The rolling average is calculated by averaging the new cases for a particular day with the prior 6 days.

    New case rates are the count of new cases per 100,000 residents in each vaccination status group. The 7-day rolling average shows the trend in case rates. The rolling average is calculated by averaging the case rate for a part

  4. A

    ‘COVID-19 Cases and Deaths Summarized by Geography’ analyzed by Analyst-2

    • analyst-2.ai
    Updated Feb 11, 2022
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    Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai) / Inspirient GmbH (inspirient.com) (2022). ‘COVID-19 Cases and Deaths Summarized by Geography’ analyzed by Analyst-2 [Dataset]. https://analyst-2.ai/analysis/data-gov-covid-19-cases-and-deaths-summarized-by-geography-ff0e/58000fd0/?iid=001-767&v=presentation
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 11, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai) / Inspirient GmbH (inspirient.com)
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Analysis of ‘COVID-19 Cases and Deaths Summarized by Geography’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/d2e381bb-f395-4b40-979e-920a79a3db88 on 11 February 2022.

    --- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---

    Note: On January 22, 2022, system updates to improve the timeliness and accuracy of San Francisco COVID-19 cases and deaths data were implemented. You might see some fluctuations in historic data as a result of this change. Due to the changes, starting on January 22, 2022, the number of new cases reported daily will be higher than under the old system as cases that would have taken longer to process will be reported earlier.

    Note: As of April 16, 2021, this dataset will update daily with a five-day data lag.

    A. SUMMARY Medical provider confirmed COVID-19 cases and confirmed COVID-19 related deaths in San Francisco, CA aggregated by several different geographic areas and normalized by 2019 American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates for population data to calculate rate per 10,000 residents.

    Cases and deaths are both mapped to the residence of the individual, not to where they were infected or died. For example, if one was infected in San Francisco at work but lives in the East Bay, those are not counted as SF Cases or if one dies in Zuckerberg San Francisco General but is from another county, that is also not counted in this dataset.

    Dataset is cumulative and covers cases going back to March 2nd, 2020 when testing began.

    Geographic areas summarized are: 1. Analysis Neighborhoods 2. Census Tracts 3. Census Zip Code Tabulation Areas

    B. HOW THE DATASET IS CREATED Addresses from medical data are geocoded by the San Francisco Department of Public Health (SFDPH). Those addresses are spatially joined to the geographic areas. Counts are generated based on the number of address points that match each geographic area. The 2019 ACS estimates for population provided by the Census are used to create a rate which is equal to ([count] / [acs_population]) * 10000) representing the number of cases per 10,000 residents.

    C. UPDATE PROCESS Geographic analysis is scripted by SFDPH staff and synced to this dataset daily at 7:30 Pacific Time.

    D. HOW TO USE THIS DATASET Privacy rules in effect To protect privacy, certain rules are in effect: 1. Case counts greater than 0 and less than 10 are dropped - these will be null (blank) values 2. Death counts greater than 0 and less than 10 are dropped - these will be null (blank) values 3. Cases and deaths dropped altogether for areas where acs_population < 1000

    Rate suppression in effect where counts lower than 20 Rates are not calculated unless the case count is greater than or equal to 20. Rates are generally unstable at small numbers, so we avoid calculating them directly. We advise you to apply the same approach as this is best practice in epidemiology.

    A note on Census ZIP Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs) ZIP Code Tabulation Areas are special boundaries created by the U.S. Census based on ZIP Codes developed by the USPS. They are not, however, the same thing. ZCTAs are areal representations of routes. Read how the Census develops ZCTAs on their website.

    Row included for Citywide case counts, incidence rate, and deaths A single row is included that has the Citywide case counts and incidence rate. This can be used for comparisons. Citywide will capture all cases regardless of address quality. While some cases cannot be mapped to sub-areas like Census Tracts, ongoing data quality efforts result in improved mapping on a rolling bases.

    --- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---

  5. Weekly United States COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by County - ARCHIVED

    • data.cdc.gov
    • data.virginia.gov
    • +1more
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Jul 10, 2023
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    CDC COVID-19 Response (2023). Weekly United States COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by County - ARCHIVED [Dataset]. https://data.cdc.gov/dataset/Weekly-United-States-COVID-19-Cases-and-Deaths-by-/yviw-z6j5
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    json, tsv, csv, application/rssxml, xml, application/rdfxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 10, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Disease Control and Preventionhttp://www.cdc.gov/
    Authors
    CDC COVID-19 Response
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Note: The cumulative case count for some counties (with small population) is higher than expected due to the inclusion of non-permanent residents in COVID-19 case counts.

    Reporting of Aggregate Case and Death Count data was discontinued on May 11, 2023, with the expiration of the COVID-19 public health emergency declaration. Although these data will continue to be publicly available, this dataset will no longer be updated.

    Aggregate Data Collection Process Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, data were reported through a robust process with the following steps:

    • Aggregate county-level counts were obtained indirectly, via automated overnight web collection, or directly, via a data submission process.
    • If more than one official county data source existed, CDC used a comprehensive data selection process comparing each official county data source to retrieve the highest case and death counts, unless otherwise specified by the state.
    • A CDC data team reviewed counts for congruency prior to integration. CDC routinely compiled these data and post the finalized information on COVID Data Tracker.
    • Cases and deaths are based on date of report and not on the date of symptom onset. CDC calculates rates in this data by using population estimates provided by the US Census Bureau Population Estimates Program (2019 Vintage).
    • COVID-19 aggregate case and death data were organized in a time series that includes cumulative number of cases and deaths as reported by a jurisdiction on a given date. New case and death counts were calculated as the week-to-week change in reported cumulative cases and deaths (i.e., newly reported cases and deaths = cumulative number of cases/deaths reported this week minus the cumulative total reported the week before.

    This process was collaborative, with CDC and jurisdictions working together to ensure the accuracy of COVID-19 case and death numbers. County counts provided the most up-to-date numbers on cases and deaths by report date. Throughout data collection, CDC retrospectively updated counts to correct known data quality issues. CDC also worked with jurisdictions after the end of the public health emergency declaration to finalize county data.

    • Source: The weekly archived dataset is based on county-level aggregate count data
    • Confirmed/Probable Cases/Death breakdown: Cumulative cases and deaths for each county are included. Total reported cases include probable and confirmed cases.
    • Time Series Frequency: The weekly archived dataset contains weekly time series data (i.e., one record per week per county)

    Important note: The counts reflected during a given time period in this dataset may not match the counts reflected for the same time period in the daily archived dataset noted above. Discrepancies may exist due to differences between county and state COVID-19 case surveillance and reconciliation efforts.

    The surveillance case definition for COVID-19, a nationally notifiable disease, was first described in a position statement from the Council for State and Territorial Epidemiologists, which was later revised. However, there is some variation in how jurisdictions implement these case classifications. More information on how CDC collects COVID-19 case surveillance data can be found at FAQ: COVID-19 Data and Surveillance.

    Confirmed and Probable Counts In this dataset, counts by jurisdiction are not displayed by confirmed or probable status. Instead, counts of confirmed and probable cases and deaths are included in the Total Cases and Total Deaths columns, when available. Not all jurisdictions reported probable cases and deaths to CDC. Confirmed and probable case definition criteria are described here: "https://ndc.services.cdc.gov/case-definitions/coronavirus-disease-2019-covid-19/">Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) 2023 Case Definition | CDC Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (ymaws.com).

    Deaths COVID-19 deaths were reported to CDC from several sources since the beginning of the pandemic including aggregate death data and NCHS Provisional Death Counts. Historic information presented on the COVID Data Tracker pages were based on the same source (Aggregate Data) as the present dataset until the expiration of the public health emergency declaration on May 11, 2023; however, the NCHS Death Counts are based on death certificate data that use information reported by physicians, medical examiners, or coroners in the cause-of-death section of each certificate. Counts from previous weeks were continually revised as more records were received and processed.

    Number of Jurisdictions Reporting There were 60 public health jurisdictions that reported cases and deaths of COVID-19. This included the 50 states, the District of Columbia, New York City, the U.S. territories of American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S Virgin Islands as well as three independent countries in compacts of free association with the United States, Federated States of Micronesia, Republic of the Marshall Islands, and Republic of Palau. In total there were 3,222 counties for which counts were tracked within the 60 public health jurisdictions.

    Additional COVID-19 public use datasets, include line-level (patient-level) data, are available at: https://data.cdc.gov/browse?tags=covid-19.

    Note: In early 2020, Alaska enacted changes to their counties/boroughs due to low populations in certain areas:

    Case and death counts for Yakutat City and Borough, Alaska, are shown as 0 by default. Case and death counts for Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska, represent total cases and deaths in residents of Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska, and Yakutat City and Borough, Alaska. Case and death counts for Bristol Bay Borough, Alaska, are shown as 0 by default. Case and death counts for Lake and Peninsula Borough, Alaska, represent total cases and deaths in residents of Lake and Peninsula Borough, Alaska, and Bristol Bay Borough, Alaska.

    Historical cases and deaths are not tracked separately in the county level datasets, and differences in weekly new cases and deaths could exist when county-level data are aggregated to the state-level (i.e., when compared to this dataset: https://data.cdc.gov/Case-Surveillance/United-States-COVID-19-Cases-and-Deaths-by-State-o/9mfq-cb36).

  6. s

    Unrestricted Data and Code for Hwang, J. and B. Shrimali. 2022. "Shared and...

    • purl.stanford.edu
    Updated Nov 3, 2022
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    Jackelyn Hwang; Bina Shrimali (2022). Unrestricted Data and Code for Hwang, J. and B. Shrimali. 2022. "Shared and Crowded Housing in the Bay Area: Where Gentrification and the Housing Crisis Meet COVID-19" [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.25740/cw226nt8831
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 3, 2022
    Authors
    Jackelyn Hwang; Bina Shrimali
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    San Francisco Bay Area
    Description

    Replication material for Jackelyn Hwang & Bina Patel Shrimali (2022) Shared and Crowded Housing in the Bay Area: Where Gentrification and the Housing Crisis Meet COVID-19, Housing Policy Debate, DOI: 10.1080/10511482.2022.2099934

    Paper Abstract: Amid the growing affordable housing crisis and widespread gentrification over the last decade, people have been moving less than before and increasingly live in shared and often crowded households across the U.S. Crowded housing has various negative health implications, including stress, sleep disorders, and infectious diseases. Difference-in- difference analysis of a unique, large-scale longitudinal consumer credit database of over 450,000 San Francisco Bay Area residents from 2002 to 2020 shows gentrification affects the probability of residents shifting to crowded households across the socioeconomic spectrum but in different ways than expected. Gentrification is negatively associated with low- socioeconomic status (SES) residents’ probability of entering crowded households, and this is largely explained by increased shifts to crowded households in neighborhoods outside of major cities showing early signs of gentrification. Conversely, gentrification is associated with increases in the probability that middle-SES residents enter crowded households, primarily in Silicon Valley. Lastly, crowding is positively associated with COVID-19 case rates, beyond density and socioeconomic and racial composition in neighborhoods, although the role of gentrification remains unclear. Housing policies that mitigate crowding can serve as early interventions in displacement prevention and reducing health inequities.

  7. BART Ridership

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Mar 29, 2024
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    Victor Geislinger (2024). BART Ridership [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.34740/kaggle/dsv/7970467
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    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Kagglehttp://kaggle.com/
    Authors
    Victor Geislinger
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Context

    Bay Area Rapid Transit or BART is a public rail system that connects much of California's San Francisco Bay Area. The transport system "connects the San Francisco Peninsula with Berkeley, Oakland, Fremont, Walnut Creek, Dublin/Pleasanton and other cities in the East Bay".

    Content

    This dataset is the most detailed information of trip information for BART and was provided by BART directly. Specifically, this data was pulled from the provided source http://64.111.127.166/origin-destination/. The data are automatically updated on the site and BART says they "are usually available by the 5th of the next month".

    Acknowledgements

    This obviously wouldn't be available without BART collecting and providing the data. It's great that the data is publicly available to this essential transportation to those living in the Bay Area!

    Inspiration

    This data was originally pulled in July 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. As counties in the Bay Area begin relaxing quarantine/lockdown restrictions yet an increase of COVID-19 cases continues, it could be important to see how public transportation has changed. It's possible to see the travel habits of different areas in the Bay.

    A quick note

    This is the maintained iteration from the first Kaggle dataset (which is no longer mainted): https://www.kaggle.com/mrgeislinger/bart-ridership

  8. s

    Wastewater data for "Divergence of wastewater SARS-CoV-2 and reported...

    • purl.stanford.edu
    Updated Jul 7, 2025
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    Alexandria Boehm; Marlene Wolfe; Bradley White; Bridgette Hughes; Dorothea Duong (2025). Wastewater data for "Divergence of wastewater SARS-CoV-2 and reported laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 incident case data coincident with wide-spread availability of at-home COVID-19 antigen tests" [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.25740/xy132dg9314
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 7, 2025
    Authors
    Alexandria Boehm; Marlene Wolfe; Bradley White; Bridgette Hughes; Dorothea Duong
    License

    Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 (CC BY-NC 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Data used for analysis in paper. Includes concentrations of SARS-CoV-2 N and PMMoV genes in wastewater solids in three wastewater treatment plants in the greater Bay Area of California, USA

  9. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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County of Santa Clara Public Health Department (2024). COVID-19 cases by zip code of residence [Dataset]. https://data.sccgov.org/COVID-19/COVID-19-cases-by-zip-code-of-residence/j2gj-bg6c

COVID-19 cases by zip code of residence

Explore at:
application/rssxml, xml, tsv, application/rdfxml, csv, jsonAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Dec 14, 2024
Dataset authored and provided by
County of Santa Clara Public Health Department
Description

*** The County of Santa Clara Public Health Department discontinued updates to the COVID-19 data tables effective June 30, 2025. The COVID-19 data tables will be removed from the Open Data Portal on December 30, 2025. For current information on COVID-19 in Santa Clara County, please visit the Respiratory Virus Dashboard [sccphd.org/respiratoryvirusdata]. For any questions, please contact phinternet@phd.sccgov.org ***

The datset summarizes counts and rates of cumulative COVID-19 cases by zip codes in Santa Clara County. Source: California Reportable Disease Information Exchange.

This dataset is updated every Thursday.

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