As of September 21, 2023, Bogotá was the Colombian city with the largest number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus (COVID-19) disease, caused by the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). Up until that day, the capital city of Colombia had registered more than 1.88 million infected patients. Antioquia followed with around 953,600 confirmed cases.
For further information about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
As of July 28, 2024, Colombia reached 6.39 million cases of COVID-19, and approximately 143,000 deaths caused by the disease. Within Latin America, Colombia is the fourth most affected country by number of cases, after Brazil, Argentina, and Mexico. The first positive case of COVID-19 in Colombia was registered on March 8, 2020, and the first reported deaths were confirmed on March 23, 2020.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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Coronavirus (COVID-19) made its outbreak in Colombia with the first confirmed in the country on march 6th, since then, number of confirmed cases has been increasing and deaths related to the virus are starting to have the first confirmed cases.
This data set contains complete information about confirmed cases, deaths and number of recovered patients according to the daily reports by the colombian health department (Ministerio de Salud)
I'll try to keep this dataset fully updated daily as soon as the official reports are published.
Version 5: Data encoding problem solved by omitting accents and 'ñ' in the states' names Version 6: Departments (states) file added with name and coordinates Version 9: File with each detailed case including sex, age and type of case
In 2023, Colombia reported a total of 116 cases of Zika virus disease, down from 138 infections reported a year earlier. During the period analyzed, 2016 was the year with the most Zika infections in the South American country, with over 91,000 cases. In the last year depicted, Brazil was the country with the highest number of Zika cases in Latin America and the Caribbean.
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Colombia recorded 6365994 Coronavirus Cases since the epidemic began, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In addition, Colombia reported 142727 Coronavirus Deaths. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for Colombia Coronavirus Cases.
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Statistics illustrates the import volume of Clock cases and similar cases for other goods of chapter 91; other than watch cases in Colombia from 2007 to 2024 by trade partner.
Project Tycho datasets contain case counts for reported disease conditions for countries around the world. The Project Tycho data curation team extracts these case counts from various reputable sources, typically from national or international health authorities, such as the US Centers for Disease Control or the World Health Organization. These original data sources include both open- and restricted-access sources. For restricted-access sources, the Project Tycho team has obtained permission for redistribution from data contributors. All datasets contain case count data that are identical to counts published in the original source and no counts have been modified in any way by the Project Tycho team. The Project Tycho team has pre-processed datasets by adding new variables, such as standard disease and location identifiers, that improve data interpretability. We also formatted the data into a standard data format.
Each Project Tycho dataset contains case counts for a specific condition (e.g. measles) and for a specific country (e.g. The United States). Case counts are reported per time interval. In addition to case counts, datasets include information about these counts (attributes), such as the location, age group, subpopulation, diagnostic certainty, place of acquisition, and the source from which we extracted case counts. One dataset can include many series of case count time intervals, such as "US measles cases as reported by CDC", or "US measles cases reported by WHO", or "US measles cases that originated abroad", etc.
Depending on the intended use of a dataset, we recommend a few data processing steps before analysis: - Analyze missing data: Project Tycho datasets do not include time intervals for which no case count was reported (for many datasets, time series of case counts are incomplete, due to incompleteness of source documents) and users will need to add time intervals for which no count value is available. Project Tycho datasets do include time intervals for which a case count value of zero was reported. - Separate cumulative from non-cumulative time interval series. Case count time series in Project Tycho datasets can be "cumulative" or "fixed-intervals". Cumulative case count time series consist of overlapping case count intervals starting on the same date, but ending on different dates. For example, each interval in a cumulative count time series can start on January 1st, but end on January 7th, 14th, 21st, etc. It is common practice among public health agencies to report cases for cumulative time intervals. Case count series with fixed time intervals consist of mutually exclusive time intervals that all start and end on different dates and all have identical length (day, week, month, year). Given the different nature of these two types of case count data, we indicated this with an attribute for each count value, named "PartOfCumulativeCountSeries".
The number of malaria cases reported in Colombia amounted to around 73,600 in 2022, slightly down from nearly 74,000 infections registered a year earlier. Compared to 2010, the number of malaria cases in the country dropped by 37 percent. In 2022, Colombia accounted for 18 percent of malaria cases diagnosed in Latin America.
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Colombia Exports of clock cases and cases of a similar type for other goods of this chapter to Ecuador was US$951 during 2017, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade.
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Statistics illustrates consumption, production, prices, and trade of Cases and containers; trunks, suit-cases, vanity-cases, executive-cases, brief-cases, school satchels and similar containers, with outer surface of leather, of composition leather or of patent leather in Colombia from 2007 to 2024.
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Colombia Exports of travel goods, handbags, brief-cases, spectacle cases, similar containers to Yemen was US$20 during 2019, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade. Colombia Exports of travel goods, handbags, brief-cases, spectacle cases, similar containers to Yemen - data, historical chart and statistics - was last updated on March of 2025.
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Colombia Exports of cartons, boxes, cases, other packing containers, of paper, paperboard to Turkey was US$10 during 2016, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade. Colombia Exports of cartons, boxes, cases, other packing containers, of paper, paperboard to Turkey - data, historical chart and statistics - was last updated on March of 2025.
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Statistics illustrates market overview of clock cases and similar cases for other goods of chapter 91; other than watch cases in Colombia from 2007 to 2024.
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Statistics illustrates market overview of clock cases and cases of a similar type for other goods of this chapter and parts thereof in Colombia from 2007 to 2024.
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Colombia INS: COVID-19: Confirmed Cases: New data was reported at 0.000 Person in 09 May 2023. This stayed constant from the previous number of 0.000 Person for 08 May 2023. Colombia INS: COVID-19: Confirmed Cases: New data is updated daily, averaging 1,854.500 Person from Mar 2020 (Median) to 09 May 2023, with 1160 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 35,575.000 Person in 15 Jan 2022 and a record low of 0.000 Person in 09 May 2023. Colombia INS: COVID-19: Confirmed Cases: New data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Institute of Health. The data is categorized under High Frequency Database’s Disease Outbreaks – Table CO.D001: National Institute of Health: Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-2019). Current day data is released daily between 4PM and 6PM Colombia Time. Weekend data are updated following Monday morning, Hong Kong Time.
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Statistics illustrates monthly exports of clock cases and similar cases for other goods of chapter 91; other than watch cases in Colombia from January 2019 to February 2025.
The number of cases of chikungunya in Colombia have continuously decreased during the last years. In 2023, the country reported 52 chikungunya infections, down from 94 cases registered a year earlier. In comparison, there were approximately 276,000 cases in the country in 2015. A similar decreasing trend can also be observed for Venezuela during the period analyzed.
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This repository of data and codes is for the paper "Refugee Entrepreneurship: The Case of Venezuelans in Colombia", by Bahar, Cowgill and Guzman (AEA P&P 2023). It contains a dataset with the full registry of businesses from Colombia that include by year of creation all firms registered in their respective chambers of commerce, with information on whether the owner is a Colombian citizen or a foreigner.
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Colombia INS: COVID-19: Confirmed Cases: To Date: Recovered data was reported at 6,206,755.000 Person in 26 Dec 2023. This records an increase from the previous number of 6,206,196.000 Person for 13 Dec 2023. Colombia INS: COVID-19: Confirmed Cases: To Date: Recovered data is updated daily, averaging 4,824,573.000 Person from Mar 2020 (Median) to 26 Dec 2023, with 1180 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 6,206,755.000 Person in 26 Dec 2023 and a record low of 0.000 Person in 12 Mar 2020. Colombia INS: COVID-19: Confirmed Cases: To Date: Recovered data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Institute of Health. The data is categorized under High Frequency Database’s Disease Outbreaks – Table CO.D001: National Institute of Health: Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-2019). Current day data is released daily between 4PM and 6PM Colombia Time. Weekend data are updated following Monday morning, Hong Kong Time.
From January to April 2024, the number of dengue cases reported in Colombia amounted to close to 120,507, nearly as high as the number of cases reported for the whole previous year. This follows a regional outbreak of dengue cases. Colombia is one of the countries with the highest number of dengue cases in Latin America.
As of September 21, 2023, Bogotá was the Colombian city with the largest number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus (COVID-19) disease, caused by the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). Up until that day, the capital city of Colombia had registered more than 1.88 million infected patients. Antioquia followed with around 953,600 confirmed cases.
For further information about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.