As of September 21, 2023, São Paulo was the Brazilian state where the majority of fatal COVID-19 cases occurred, with approximately 180,887 deaths recorded as of that day. Rio de Janeiro trailed in second, registering around 77,344 fatal cases due to the disease. As of August 2, 2023, the number of deaths from COVID-19 in Brazil reached around 704,659 people. For further information about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
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Brazil recorded 37511921 Coronavirus Cases since the epidemic began, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In addition, Brazil reported 702116 Coronavirus Deaths. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for Brazil Coronavirus Cases.
COVID-19 was first detected in Brazil on March 1, 2020, making it the first Latin American country to report a case of the novel coronavirus. Since then, the number of infections has risen drastically, reaching approximately 38 million cases by May 11, 2025. Meanwhile, the first local death due to the disease was reported in March 19, 2020. Four years later, the number of fatal cases had surpassed 700,000. The highest COVID-19 death toll in Latin America With a population of more than 211 million inhabitants as of 2023, Brazil is the most populated country in Latin America. This nation is also among the most affected by COVID-19 in number of deaths, not only within the Latin American region, but also worldwide, just behind the United States. These figures have raised a debate on how the Brazilian government has dealt with the pandemic. In fact, according to a study carried out in May 2021, more than half of Brazilians surveyed disapproved of the way in which former president Jair Bolsonaro had been dealing with the health crisis. In comparison, a third of respondents had a similar opinion about the Ministry of Health. Brazil’s COVID-19 vaccination campaign rollout Brazil’s vaccination campaign started at the beginning of 2021, when a nurse from São Paulo became the first person in the country to get vaccinated against the disease. A few years later, roughly 88 percent of the Brazilian population had received at least one vaccine dose, while around 81 percent had already completed the basic immunization scheme. With more than 485.2 million vaccines administered as of March 2023, Brazil was the fourth country with the most administered doses of the COVID-19 vaccine globally, after China, India, and the United States.Find the most up-to-date information about the coronavirus pandemic in the world under Statista’s COVID-19 facts and figures site.
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In past 24 hours, Brazil, South America had N/A new cases, N/A deaths and N/A recoveries.
https://cidacs.bahia.fiocruz.br/idscovid19/ids-covid-19/;,;https://www.gov.br/saude/enhttps://cidacs.bahia.fiocruz.br/idscovid19/ids-covid-19/;,;https://www.gov.br/saude/en
This dataset comprises new and accumulated cases and death episodes for each Brazilian municipality, by epidemiological week.
Criteria for confirmed cases: * Final classification (variable CLASSI_FIN) = 5 * Antigenic test result (variable AN_SARS2) = 1 * RT-PCR test result (variable AN_SARS2) = 1 For death episodes: * confirmed cases that progressed to death (variable EVOLUCAO = 2) * death from other causes (variable EVOLUCAO = 3) Reference date for cases: * symptom onset date (variable DT_SIN_PRI) Reference date for death episodes: * case evolution date (variable DT_EVOLUCA) * for missing dates, the closest date was used: case closing date, ICU discharge date, ICU entry date, testing date, notification date Age groups follow a five-years interval Phase and peak variables were created based on epidemiological weeks.
This dataset was used as part project - Evaluating Effects of Social Inequalities on the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brazil. Maria Yury Ichihara and colleagues at the Centre for Data and Knowledge Integration for Health (Cidacs) at Fiocruz in Brazil created a social disparities index to measure inequalities relevant to the COVID-19 pandemic, such as unequal access to healthcare, to identify regions that are more vulnerable to infection and to better focus prevention efforts.
In Brazil, markers of inequality are associated with COVID-19 morbidity and mortality. They developed the index with available COVID-19 surveillance data, hosted on the Cidacs platform, and built a public data visualisation dashboard to share the index and patterns of COVID-19 incidence and mortality with the broader community. This enabled health managers and policymakers to monitor the pandemic situation in the most vulnerable populations and target social and health interventions.
Permissions to use this dataset must be obtained from the Ministry of Health Brazil.
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The number of COVID-19 vaccination doses administered in Brazil rose to 486436436 as of Oct 27 2023. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for Brazil Coronavirus Vaccination Total.
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This dataset was generated from raw data obtained at
Data was processed with R package EpiEstim (methodology in the associated preprint). Briefly, instantaneous R was estimated within a 5 day time window. Prior mean and standard deviation values for R were set at 3 and 1. Serial interval was estimated using a parametric distribution with uncertainty (offset gamma). We compared the results at two time points (day 7 and day 21 after the first case was registered at each region) from different brazillian states in order to make inferences about the epidemic dynamics.
This dataset measures the mobility trend in different dimensions (location categories) for Brazil, Federation Units and Municipalities.
https://pamepi.rondonia.fiocruz.br/en/covid_en.html;,;https://opendatasus.saude.gov.br/dataset/srag-2021-e-2022;,;https://opendatasus.saude.gov.br/dataset/srag-2020https://pamepi.rondonia.fiocruz.br/en/covid_en.html;,;https://opendatasus.saude.gov.br/dataset/srag-2021-e-2022;,;https://opendatasus.saude.gov.br/dataset/srag-2020
The data includes demographic, clinical, and socioeconomic variables of hospitalised SRAS-CoV-2 infections in Brazil from February 2020 to November 2021 and was primarily prepared for use in the analysis performed in our titled manuscript "Profile of COVID-19 in Brazil: Risk factors and socioeconomic vulnerability associated with disease outcome", currently available as a preprint. The raw data can be freely downloaded directly at the OpenData SUS website (Link https://opendatasus.saude.gov.br/dataset/srag-2020 and https://opendatasus.saude.gov.br/dataset/srag-2021-e-2022) or through a Python code available at our GitHub directory https://github.com/PAMepi/PAMepi_scripts_datalake.git.
The data process to obtain the specific data described here is available at https://github.com/PAMepi/PAMEpi-Reproducibility-of-published-results.git.
This work can be cited as: 1. Platform For Analytical Models in Epidemiology. (2022). PAMEpi-Reproducibility-of-published-results (v1.0). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6385254. or 2. Pereira, Felipe AC, Arthur R. de Azevedo, Guilherme L. de Oliveira, Renzo Flores-Ortiz, Luis Iván O. Valencia, Moreno Rodrigues, Pablo IP Ramos, Nívea B. da Silva, and Juliane Fonseca Oliveira. "Profile of COVID-19 in Brazil: Risk Factors and Socioeconomic Vulnerability Associated with Disease Outcome." Available at SSRN 4081979.
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Brazil recorded 16779136 Coronavirus Recovered since the epidemic began, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In addition, Brazil reported 617271 Coronavirus Deaths. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for Brazil Coronavirus Recovered.
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COVID-19: No. of Tests: Serious Cases: New: RT-PCR Tests: by State: Southeast: São Paulo: Ignored data was reported at 0.000 Unit in 28 Mar 2025. This stayed constant from the previous number of 0.000 Unit for 27 Mar 2025. COVID-19: No. of Tests: Serious Cases: New: RT-PCR Tests: by State: Southeast: São Paulo: Ignored data is updated daily, averaging 0.000 Unit from Aug 2002 (Median) to 28 Mar 2025, with 8247 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 0.000 Unit in 28 Mar 2025 and a record low of 0.000 Unit in 28 Mar 2025. COVID-19: No. of Tests: Serious Cases: New: RT-PCR Tests: by State: Southeast: São Paulo: Ignored data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Ministry of Health. The data is categorized under Brazil Premium Database’s Health Sector – Table BR.HLA003: Disease Outbreaks: COVID-19: Number of Tests: Serious Cases.
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City level open access data from 26 States and the Federal District and from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) [20], the Department of Informatics of Brazilian Public Health System – DATASUS, Ministry of Health, the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa) and from Brazil.io. Data from all 5,570 cities in Brazil were included in the analysis. COVID-19 data included cases and deaths reported between February 26th, 2020 and February 4th, 2021. The following outcomes were computed: a) days between the first case in Brazil until the first case in the city; b) days between the first case in the city until the day when 1,000 cases were reported; and c) days between the first death in city until the day when 50 deaths inhabitants were reported. Descriptive analyses were performed on the following: proportion of cities reaching 1,000 cases; number of cases at three, six, nine and 12 months after first case; cities reporting at least one COVID-19 related death; number of COVID-19 related deaths at three, six, nine and 12 months after first death in the country. All incidence data is adjusted for 100,000 inhabitants.The following covariates were included: a) geographic region where the city is located (Midwest, North, Northeast, Southeast and South), metropolitan city (no/yes) and urban or rural; b) social and environmental city characteristics [total area (Km2), urban area (Km2), population size (inhabitants), population living within urban area (inhabitants), population older than 60 years (%), indigenous population (%), black population (%), illiterate older than 25 years (%) and city in extreme poverty (no/yes)]; c) housing conditions [household with density >2 per dormitory (%), household with garbage collection (%), household connected to the water supply system (%) and household connected to the sewer system (%)]; d) job characteristics [commerce (%) and informal workers (%)]; e) socioeconomic and inequalities characteristics [GINI index; income per capita; poor or extremely poor (%) and households in informal urban settlements (%)]; f) health services access and coverage [number of National Public Health System (SUS) physicians per inhabitants (100,000 inhabitants), number of SUS nurses per inhabitants (100,000 inhabitants), number of intensive care units or ICU per inhabitants (100,000 inhabitants). All health services access and coverage variables were standardized using z-scores, combined into one single variable categorized into tertiles.
In April 2021, Brazil reached a new record of deaths due to COVID-19 in a day, with more than 4,200 thousand fatalities reported within 24 hours. That same month, the country's gross domestic product (GDP) was expected to increase by 3.17 percent during the year, down from a growth of nearly 3.5 percent forecast two months earlier. Since then, expectations have improved, with a forecast growth of 5.27 percent as of the third week of July.By December 2020, Brazil's GDP was forecast to decrease by 4.4 percent during 2020, an improvement in comparison to the 6.5 percent decrease forecast by the beginning of July. This figure, which had remained stable at a 2.3 percent forecast growth during the first months of the year, decreased for five consecutive months amidst the outbreak of COVID-19 in Brazil. For further information about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
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This dataset was created by Luiz Fernando
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Brazil Person w/ COVID-19 Symptom: Nausea: North data was reported at 101,838.902 Person in 22 Aug 2020. This records a decrease from the previous number of 146,384.327 Person for 15 Aug 2020. Brazil Person w/ COVID-19 Symptom: Nausea: North data is updated daily, averaging 224,994.900 Person from May 2020 (Median) to 22 Aug 2020, with 15 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 659,800.078 Person in 23 May 2020 and a record low of 101,838.902 Person in 22 Aug 2020. Brazil Person w/ COVID-19 Symptom: Nausea: North data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics. The data is categorized under Brazil Premium Database’s Socio and Demographic – Table BR.GAG004: Continuous National Household Sample Survey: PNAD COVID-19.
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The Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) outbreak, dubbed COVID-19, is first and foremost a human tragedy, affecting millions of people globally. The contagious Coronavirus, which broke out at the close of 2019, has led to a medical emergency across the world, with the World Health Organization officially declaring the novel Coronavirus a pandemic on March 11, 2020. Read More
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ABSTRACT: Objective: Estimating the potential number of COVID-19 deaths in Brazil for the coming months. Methods: The study included all confirmed cases of COVID-19 deaths, from the first confirmed death on March 17th to May 15th, 2020. These data were collected from an official Brazilian website of the Ministry of Health. The Boltzmann function was applied to a data simulation for each set of data regarding all states of the country. Results: The model data were well-fitted, with R2 values close to 0.999. Up to May 15th, 14,817 COVID-19 deaths have been confirmed in the country. Amazonas has the highest rate of accumulated cases per 1,000,000 inhabitants (321.14), followed by Ceará (161.63). Rio de Janeiro, Roraima, Amazonas, Pará, and Pernambuco are estimated to experience a substantial increase in the rate of cumulative cases until July 15th. Mato Grosso do Sul, Paraná, Minas Gerais, Rio Grande do Sul, and Santa Catarina will show lower rates per 1,000,000 inhabitants. Conclusion: We estimate a substantial increase in the rate of cumulative cases in Brazil over the next months. The Boltzmann function proved to be a simple tool for epidemiological forecasting that can assist in the planning of measures to contain COVID-19.
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COVID-19 Vaccination: by State: Central West: DIstrito Federal: 1st Dose: Male data was reported at 0.000 Dose in 08 Dec 2024. This records a decrease from the previous number of 10.000 Dose for 07 Dec 2024. COVID-19 Vaccination: by State: Central West: DIstrito Federal: 1st Dose: Male data is updated daily, averaging 49.000 Dose from Jan 2020 (Median) to 08 Dec 2024, with 1798 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 46,795.000 Dose in 12 Aug 2021 and a record low of 0.000 Dose in 08 Dec 2024. COVID-19 Vaccination: by State: Central West: DIstrito Federal: 1st Dose: Male data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Ministry of Health. The data is categorized under Brazil Premium Database’s Health Sector – Table BR.HLA007: Disease Outbreaks: COVID-19: Vaccination: by Region.
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New Covid cases per month in Brazil, March, 2023 The most recent value is 234246 new Covid cases as of March 2023, an increase compared to the previous value of 230156 new Covid cases. Historically, the average for Brazil from February 2020 to March 2023 is 981087 new Covid cases. The minimum of 1 new Covid cases was recorded in February 2020, while the maximum of 3529428 new Covid cases was reached in February 2022. | TheGlobalEconomy.com
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reference: https://www.seade.gov.br/coronavirus/
Understand the progression of the virus in the state of Sao Paulo - Brazil
As of September 21, 2023, São Paulo was the Brazilian state where the majority of fatal COVID-19 cases occurred, with approximately 180,887 deaths recorded as of that day. Rio de Janeiro trailed in second, registering around 77,344 fatal cases due to the disease. As of August 2, 2023, the number of deaths from COVID-19 in Brazil reached around 704,659 people. For further information about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.