100+ datasets found
  1. d

    COVID-19 Tests, Cases, Hospitalizations, and Deaths (Statewide) - ARCHIVE

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ct.gov
    Updated Aug 12, 2023
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    data.ct.gov (2023). COVID-19 Tests, Cases, Hospitalizations, and Deaths (Statewide) - ARCHIVE [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-tests-cases-hospitalizations-and-deaths-statewide
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 12, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Description

    Note: DPH is updating and streamlining the COVID-19 cases, deaths, and testing data. As of 6/27/2022, the data will be published in four tables instead of twelve. The COVID-19 Cases, Deaths, and Tests by Day dataset contains cases and test data by date of sample submission. The death data are by date of death. This dataset is updated daily and contains information back to the beginning of the pandemic. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Cases-Deaths-and-Tests-by-Day/g9vi-2ahj. The COVID-19 State Metrics dataset contains over 93 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 21, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-State-Level-Data/qmgw-5kp6 . The COVID-19 County Metrics dataset contains 25 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 16, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-County-Level-Data/ujiq-dy22 . The COVID-19 Town Metrics dataset contains 16 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 16, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Town-Level-Data/icxw-cada . To protect confidentiality, if a town has fewer than 5 cases or positive NAAT tests over the past 7 days, those data will be suppressed. COVID-19 tests, cases, and associated deaths that have been reported among Connecticut residents. All data in this report are preliminary; data for previous dates will be updated as new reports are received and data errors are corrected. Hospitalization data were collected by the Connecticut Hospital Association and reflect the number of patients currently hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19. Deaths reported to the either the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) or Department of Public Health (DPH) are included in the daily COVID-19 update. Data on Connecticut deaths were obtained from the Connecticut Deaths Registry maintained by the DPH Office of Vital Records. Cause of death was determined by a death certifier (e.g., physician, APRN, medical examiner) using their best clinical judgment. Additionally, all COVID-19 deaths, including suspected or related, are required to be reported to OCME. On April 4, 2020, CT DPH and OCME released a joint memo to providers and facilities within Connecticut providing guidelines for certifying deaths due to COVID-19 that were consistent with the CDC’s guidelines and a reminder of the required reporting to OCME.25,26 As of July 1, 2021, OCME had reviewed every case reported and performed additional investigation on about one-third of reported deaths to better ascertain if COVID-19 did or did not cause or contribute to the death. Some of these investigations resulted in the OCME performing postmortem swabs for PCR testing on individuals whose deaths were suspected to be due to COVID-19, but antemortem diagnosis was unable to be made.31 The OCME issued or re-issued about 10% of COVID-19 death certificates and, when appropriate, removed COVID-19 from the death certificate. For standardization and tabulation of mortality statistics, written cause of death statements made by the certifiers on death certificates are sent to the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) at the CDC which assigns cause of death codes according to the International Causes of Disease 10th Revision (ICD-10) classification system.25,26 COVID-19 deaths in this report are defined as those for which the death certificate has an ICD-10 code of U07.1 as either a primary (underlying) or a contributing cause of death. More information on COVID-19 mortality can be found at the following link: https://portal.ct.gov/DPH/Health-Information-Systems--Reporting/Mortality/Mortality-Statistics Data are reported daily, with

  2. d

    Connecticut COVID-19 Community Levels by County as Originally Posted -...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ct.gov
    Updated Jun 21, 2025
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    data.ct.gov (2025). Connecticut COVID-19 Community Levels by County as Originally Posted - Archive [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/connecticut-covid-19-community-levels-by-county-as-originally-posted
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 21, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Area covered
    Connecticut
    Description

    This public use dataset has 11 data elements reflecting COVID-19 community levels for all available counties. This dataset contains the same values used to display information available at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels-county-map.html. CDC looks at the combination of three metrics — new COVID-19 admissions per 100,000 population in the past 7 days, the percent of staffed inpatient beds occupied by COVID-19 patients, and total new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 population in the past 7 days — to determine the COVID-19 community level. The COVID-19 community level is determined by the higher of the new admissions and inpatient beds metrics, based on the current level of new cases per 100,000 population in the past 7 days. New COVID-19 admissions and the percent of staffed inpatient beds occupied represent the current potential for strain on the health system. Data on new cases acts as an early warning indicator of potential increases in health system strain in the event of a COVID-19 surge. Using these data, the COVID-19 community level is classified as low, medium , or high. COVID-19 Community Levels can help communities and individuals make decisions based on their local context and their unique needs. Community vaccination coverage and other local information, like early alerts from surveillance, such as through wastewater or the number of emergency department visits for COVID-19, when available, can also inform decision making for health officials and individuals. See https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/community-levels.html for more information. Visit CDC’s COVID Data Tracker County View* to learn more about the individual metrics used for CDC’s COVID-19 community level in your county. Please note that county-level data are not available for territories. Go to https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#county-view.

  3. Z

    COVID-19 CT Lung and Infection Segmentation Dataset

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • explore.openaire.eu
    • +1more
    Updated Apr 20, 2020
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    Li Chen (2020). COVID-19 CT Lung and Infection Segmentation Dataset [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_3757475
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 20, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Wei Hao
    Mei Sen
    Dong Guoqiang
    Yu Ziqi
    Li Chen
    Gao Jiantao
    Zhu Yuntao
    Zhu Qiongjie
    Tian Lu
    Yang Xiaoyu
    Ge Cheng
    An Xingle
    Zhang Minqing
    Liu Xin
    Deng Xueyuan
    Ma Jun
    Nie Ziwei
    Wang Yixin
    He Jian
    Cao Shucheng
    License

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

    Description

    This dataset contains 20 labeled COVID-19 CT scans. Left lung, right lung, and infections are labeled by two radiologists and verified by an experienced radiologist. To promote the studies of annotation-efficient deep learning methods, we set up three segmentation benchmark tasks based on this dataset https://gitee.com/junma11/COVID-19-CT-Seg-Benchmark.

    In particular, we focus on learning to segment left lung, right lung, and infections using

    pure but limited COVID-19 CT scans;

    existing labeled lung CT dataset from other non-COVID-19 lung diseases;

    heterogeneous datasets include both COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 CT scans.

  4. O

    COVID-19 case rate per 100,000 population and percent test positivity in the...

    • data.ct.gov
    • catalog.data.gov
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Jun 23, 2022
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    Department of Public Health (2022). COVID-19 case rate per 100,000 population and percent test positivity in the last 14 days by town - ARCHIVE [Dataset]. https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-case-rate-per-100-000-population-and-perc/hree-nys2
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    application/rssxml, xml, csv, json, tsv, application/rdfxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 23, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Department of Public Health
    License

    U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Note: DPH is updating and streamlining the COVID-19 cases, deaths, and testing data. As of 6/27/2022, the data will be published in four tables instead of twelve.

    The COVID-19 Cases, Deaths, and Tests by Day dataset contains cases and test data by date of sample submission. The death data are by date of death. This dataset is updated daily and contains information back to the beginning of the pandemic. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Cases-Deaths-and-Tests-by-Day/g9vi-2ahj.

    The COVID-19 State Metrics dataset contains over 93 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 21, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-State-Level-Data/qmgw-5kp6 .

    The COVID-19 County Metrics dataset contains 25 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 16, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-County-Level-Data/ujiq-dy22 .

    The COVID-19 Town Metrics dataset contains 16 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 16, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Town-Level-Data/icxw-cada . To protect confidentiality, if a town has fewer than 5 cases or positive NAAT tests over the past 7 days, those data will be suppressed.

    This dataset includes a count and rate per 100,000 population for COVID-19 cases, a count of COVID-19 molecular diagnostic tests, and a percent positivity rate for tests among people living in community settings for the previous two-week period. Dates are based on date of specimen collection (cases and positivity).

    A person is considered a new case only upon their first COVID-19 testing result because a case is defined as an instance or bout of illness. If they are tested again subsequently and are still positive, it still counts toward the test positivity metric but they are not considered another case.

    Percent positivity is calculated as the number of positive tests among community residents conducted during the 14 days divided by the total number of positive and negative tests among community residents during the same period. If someone was tested more than once during that 14 day period, then those multiple test results (regardless of whether they were positive or negative) are included in the calculation.

    These case and test counts do not include cases or tests among people residing in congregate settings, such as nursing homes, assisted living facilities, or correctional facilities.

    These data are updated weekly and reflect the previous two full Sunday-Saturday (MMWR) weeks (https://wwwn.cdc.gov/nndss/document/MMWR_week_overview.pdf).

    DPH note about change from 7-day to 14-day metrics: Prior to 10/15/2020, these metrics were calculated using a 7-day average rather than a 14-day average. The 7-day metrics are no longer being updated as of 10/15/2020 but the archived dataset can be accessed here: https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-case-rate-per-100-000-population-and-perc/s22x-83rd

    As you know, we are learning more about COVID-19 all the time, including the best ways to measure COVID-19 activity in our communities. CT DPH has decided to shift to 14-day rates because these are more stable, particularly at the town level, as compared to 7-day rates. In addition, since the school indicators were initially published by DPH last summer, CDC has recommended 14-day rates and other states (e.g., Massachusetts) have started to implement 14-day metrics for monitoring COVID transmission as well.

    With respect to geography, we also have learned that many people are looking at the town-level data to inform decision making, despite emphasis on the county-level metrics in the published addenda. This is understandable as there has been variation within counties in COVID-19 activity (for example, rates that are higher in one town than in most other towns in the county).

    Additional notes: As of 11/5/2020, CT DPH has added antigen testing for SARS-CoV-2 to reported test counts in this dataset. The tests included in this dataset include both molecular and antigen datasets. Molecular tests reported include polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and nucleic acid amplicfication (NAAT) tests.

    The population data used to calculate rates is based on the CT DPH population statistics for 2019, which is available online here: https://portal.ct.gov/DPH/Health-Information-Systems--Reporting/Population/Population-Statistics. Prior to 5/10/2021, the population estimates from 2018 were used.

    Data suppression is applied when the rate is <5 cases per 100,000 or if there are <5 cases within the town. Information on why data suppression rules are applied can be found online here: https://www.cdc.gov/cancer/uscs/technical_notes/stat_methods/suppression.htm

  5. i

    COVID-19 Low-Dose and Ultra-Low-Dose CT Scans

    • ieee-dataport.org
    Updated Jun 1, 2021
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    Shahin Heidarian (2021). COVID-19 Low-Dose and Ultra-Low-Dose CT Scans [Dataset]. https://ieee-dataport.org/open-access/covid-19-low-dose-and-ultra-low-dose-ct-scans
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 1, 2021
    Authors
    Shahin Heidarian
    License

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

    Description

    however

  6. d

    COVID-19 in Correctional Facilities

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ct.gov
    Updated Sep 8, 2023
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    data.ct.gov (2023). COVID-19 in Correctional Facilities [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-in-correctional-facilities
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 8, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Description

    June 8, 2023: Daily transmission is no longer available. Summary of COVID-19 statistics for Connecticut correctional facilities including: Total # of Staff Positive for COVID-19 Total # of Inmates Pos. for COVID-19 COVID-19 Pos. Inmates Housed at Northern CI Medical Isolation Unit COVID-19 Pos. Inmates Housed at MacDougall-Walker Medical Isolation Unit COVID-19 Pos. Staff Returned to Work Total # of Inmates Medically Cleared Total # of COVID-19 Pos. Inmate Deaths More information can be found on the DOC website: https://portal.ct.gov/DOC/Common-Elements/Common-Elements/Health-Information-and-Advisories Data will be updated every weekday. Additional notes: The data on 7/15 reflects a decrease in the number of inmates testing positive for COVID-19 and those who have recovered; this decrease was due to an internal data audit that led to the removal of some duplicate information. The data on 6/2/2020 reflects an increase in the number of inmates who had been medically cleared; this increase was the result of 146 asymptomatic positive inmates who had completed a 14-day isolation period.

  7. t

    Data from: COVID-CT-Dataset: a CT scan dataset about COVID-19

    • service.tib.eu
    Updated Dec 16, 2024
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    (2024). COVID-CT-Dataset: a CT scan dataset about COVID-19 [Dataset]. https://service.tib.eu/ldmservice/dataset/covid-ct-dataset--a-ct-scan-dataset-about-covid-19
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 16, 2024
    Description

    A CT scan dataset about COVID-19

  8. COVID 19 XRay and CT Scan Image

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Jan 3, 2021
    + more versions
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    Suman Sarkar (2021). COVID 19 XRay and CT Scan Image [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/ssarkar445/covid-19-xray-and-ct-scan-image-dataset/tasks
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jan 3, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    Kaggle
    Authors
    Suman Sarkar
    Description

    ***This COVID-19 dataset consists of Non-COVID and COVID cases of both X-ray and CT images. The associated dataset is augmented with different augmentation techniques to generate about 17099 X-ray and CT images. The dataset contains two main folders, one for the X-ray images, which includes two separate sub-folders of 5500 Non-COVID images and 4044 COVID images. The other folder contains the CT images. It includes two separate sub-folders of 2628 Non-COVID images and 5427 COVID images.

    Related Links Dataset https://www.kaggle.com/khoongweihao/covid19-xray-dataset-train-test-sets is related to this dataset Dataset https://github.com/ieee8023/covid-chestxray-dataset is related to this dataset Dataset http://dx.doi.org/10.17632/2fxz4px6d8.4 is related to this dataset Dataset https://github.com/UCSD-AI4H/COVID-CT is related to this dataset

  9. O

    COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Age Group - ARCHIVE

    • data.ct.gov
    • catalog.data.gov
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Jun 24, 2022
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    Department of Public Health (2022). COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Age Group - ARCHIVE [Dataset]. https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Cases-and-Deaths-by-Age-Group-ARCHIVE/ypz6-8qyf
    Explore at:
    application/rssxml, csv, xml, application/rdfxml, tsv, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 24, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Department of Public Health
    License

    U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Note: DPH is updating and streamlining the COVID-19 cases, deaths, and testing data. As of 6/27/2022, the data will be published in four tables instead of twelve.

    The COVID-19 Cases, Deaths, and Tests by Day dataset contains cases and test data by date of sample submission. The death data are by date of death. This dataset is updated daily and contains information back to the beginning of the pandemic. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Cases-Deaths-and-Tests-by-Day/g9vi-2ahj.

    The COVID-19 State Metrics dataset contains over 93 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 21, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-State-Level-Data/qmgw-5kp6 .

    The COVID-19 County Metrics dataset contains 25 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 16, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-County-Level-Data/ujiq-dy22 .

    The COVID-19 Town Metrics dataset contains 16 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 16, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Town-Level-Data/icxw-cada . To protect confidentiality, if a town has fewer than 5 cases or positive NAAT tests over the past 7 days, those data will be suppressed.

    COVID-19 cases and associated deaths that have been reported among Connecticut residents, broken out by age group. All data in this report are preliminary; data for previous dates will be updated as new reports are received and data errors are corrected. Deaths reported to the either the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) or Department of Public Health (DPH) are included in the daily COVID-19 update.

    Data are reported daily, with timestamps indicated in the daily briefings posted at: portal.ct.gov/coronavirus. Data are subject to future revision as reporting changes.

    Starting in July 2020, this dataset will be updated every weekday.

    Additional notes: A delay in the data pull schedule occurred on 06/23/2020. Data from 06/22/2020 was processed on 06/23/2020 at 3:30 PM. The normal data cycle resumed with the data for 06/23/2020.

    A network outage on 05/19/2020 resulted in a change in the data pull schedule. Data from 5/19/2020 was processed on 05/20/2020 at 12:00 PM. Data from 5/20/2020 was processed on 5/20/2020 8:30 PM. The normal data cycle resumed on 05/20/2020 with the 8:30 PM data pull. As a result of the network outage, the timestamp on the datasets on the Open Data Portal differ from the timestamp in DPH's daily PDF reports.

    Starting 5/10/2021, the date field will represent the date this data was updated on data.ct.gov. Previously the date the data was pulled by DPH was listed, which typically coincided with the date before the data was published on data.ct.gov. This change was made to standardize the COVID-19 data sets on data.ct.gov.

  10. d

    COVID-19 Cases in CT Schools (State Summary), 2022-2023 School Year -...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ct.gov
    Updated Jun 28, 2025
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    data.ct.gov (2025). COVID-19 Cases in CT Schools (State Summary), 2022-2023 School Year - Archive [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-cases-in-ct-schools-state-summary-2022-2023-school-year
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 28, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Area covered
    Connecticut
    Description

    This dataset provides the number of weekly COVID-19 cases for staff and students in CT PK-12 schools by school during the 2022-2023 school year.

  11. Lung CT COVID-19 batch 5

    • zenodo.org
    zip
    Updated Jun 16, 2023
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    Natalia Alves; Natalia Alves; Luuk Boulogne; Luuk Boulogne (2023). Lung CT COVID-19 batch 5 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8043216
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 16, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Natalia Alves; Natalia Alves; Luuk Boulogne; Luuk Boulogne
    License

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

    Description

    This data set is part of the public development data for the 2023 Automated Universal Classification Challenge (AUC23). The data set concerns COVID-19 RT-PCR outcome prediction and prediction of severe COVID-19, defined as death or intubation after one month, from computed tomography (CT). The data set was previously introduced and described by Revel, M. et al (2021). Data was restructured in compliance with the AUC23 challenge format. The STOIC project collected CT images of 10,735 individuals suspected of being infected with SARS-COV-2 during the first wave of the pandemic in France, from March to April 2020. For each patient in the training set, the dataset contains binary labels for COVID-19 presence based on RT-PCR test results, and COVID-19 severity, defined as intubation or death within one month from the acquisition of the CT scan. This data set contains the training sample of the STOIC dataset as used in the STOIC2021 challenge.

    Images are 3D tensors:

    • 0: 3D CT scan

    Classification labels:

    • COVID-19:
      • 0: Negative RT-PCR
      • 1: Positive RT-PCR
    • Severe COVID-19:
      • 0: Alive and no intubation after one month
      • 1: Death or intubation after one month

    imagesTr (root folder with all patients and studies)
    ├── covid19severity_6_0000.mha (3D CT for study 6)
    ├── covid19severity_17_0000.mha (3D CT for study 17)
    ├── ...

    Please cite the following article if you are using the STOIC2021 training dataset:

    STOIC2021 Training was accessed on DATE from https://registry.opendata.aws/stoic2021-training. STOIC2021 Training was documented in Thoracic CT in COVID-19: The STOIC Project, Revel, Marie-Pierre, et al. Radiology, 2021, https://doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2021210384.

    Due to upload size limits, the data set was split into six batches.

    Batch 1: https://zenodo.org/record/7969800

    Batch 2: https://zenodo.org/record/8042589

    Batch 3: https://zenodo.org/record/8042817

    Batch 4: https://zenodo.org/record/8043089

    Batch 6: https://zenodo.org/record/8043218

  12. COVID-19 Lung CT Scans

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Apr 9, 2020
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    LuisBlanche (2020). COVID-19 Lung CT Scans [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.34740/kaggle/ds/584020
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    zip(89959803 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 9, 2020
    Authors
    LuisBlanche
    Description

    The images are collected from COVID19-related papers from medRxiv, bioRxiv, NEJM, JAMA, Lancet, etc. CTs containing COVID-19 abnormalities are selected by reading the figure captions in the papers. All copyrights of the data belong to the authors and publishers of these papers. For more information about the dataset, find the following article on arxiv and the data&code at GitHub.

    Context

    Abstract from the pre-print of the authors : CT scans are promising in providing accurate, fast, and cheap screening and testing of COVID-19. In this paper, we build a publicly available COVID-CT dataset, containing 275 CT scans that are positive for COVID-19, to foster the research and development of deep learning methods which predict whether a person is affected with COVID-19 by analyzing his/her CTs. We train a deep convolutional neural network on this dataset and achieve an F1 of 0.85 which is a promising performance but yet to be further improved. The data and code are available at https://github.com/UCSD-AI4H/COVID-CT

    Inspiration

    This dataset can be used to perform classification and automatically detect COVID-19 on CT scans

  13. h

    covid-dataset-CT-images

    • huggingface.co
    Updated Sep 10, 2022
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    WALEED ABBAS (2022). covid-dataset-CT-images [Dataset]. https://huggingface.co/datasets/Waleed-bin-Qamar/covid-dataset-CT-images
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 10, 2022
    Authors
    WALEED ABBAS
    Description

    Waleed-bin-Qamar/covid-dataset-CT-images dataset hosted on Hugging Face and contributed by the HF Datasets community

  14. d

    COVID-19 Vaccinations by Town - ARCHIVED

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ct.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Jul 12, 2025
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    data.ct.gov (2025). COVID-19 Vaccinations by Town - ARCHIVED [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-vaccinations-by-town
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 12, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Description

    NOTE: As of 2/16/2023, this table is not being updated. For data on COVID-19 updated (bivalent) booster coverage by town please to go to https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Updated-Bivalent-Booster-Coverage-By-Town/bqd5-4jgh. This table shows the number and percent of residents of each CT town that have initiated COVID-19 vaccination, are fully vaccinated and who have received additional dose 1. All data in this report are preliminary; data for previous dates will be updated as new reports are received and data errors are corrected. In the data shown here, a person who has received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine is considered to have initiated vaccination. A person is considered fully vaccinated if he/she has completed a primary vaccination series by receiving 2 doses of the Pfizer, Novavax or Moderna vaccines or 1 dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. The fully vaccinated are a subset of the people who have received at least one dose. A person who completed a Pfizer, Moderna, Novavax or Johnson & Johnson primary series (as defined above) and then had an additional monovalent dose of COVID-19 vaccine is considered to have had additional dose 1. The additional dose may be Pfizer, Moderna, Novavax or Johnson & Johnson and may be a different type from the primary series. For people who had a primary Pfizer or Moderna series, additional dose 1 was counted starting August 18th, 2021. For people with a Johnson & Johnson primary series additional dose 1 was counted starting October 22nd, 2021. For most people, additional dose 1 is a booster. However, additional dose 1 may represent a supplement to the primary series for a people who is moderately or severely immunosuppressed. Bivalent booster administrations are not included in the additional dose 1 calculations. The percent with at least one dose many be over-estimated, and the percent fully vaccinated and with additional dose 1 may be under-estimated because of vaccine administration records for individuals that cannot be linked because of differences in how names or date of birth are reported. Percentages are calculated using 2019 census data (https://portal.ct.gov/DPH/Health-Information-Systems--Reporting/Population/Annual-Town-and-County-Population-for-Connecticut). Town of residence is verified by geocoding the reported address and then mapping it to a town using municipal boundaries. If an address cannot be geocoded, the reported town is used, if available. People for whom an address is not currently available are shown in this table as “Address pending validation”. Out-of-state residents vaccinated by CT providers are excluded from the table. Town-level coverage estimates have been capped at 100%. Observed coverage may be greater than 100% for multiple reasons, including census denominator data not including all individuals that currently reside in the town (e.g., part time residents, change in population size since the census), errors in address data or other reporting errors. Also, the percent with at least one dose many be over-estimated, and the percent fully vaccinated and with additional dose 1 may be under-estimated when records for an individual cannot be linked because of differences in how names or date of birth are reported. Caution should be used when interpreting coverage estimates for towns with large college/university populations since coverage may be underestimated. In the census, college/university students who live on or just off campus would be counted in the college/university town. However, if a student was vaccinated while studying remotely in his/her hometown, the student may be counted as a vaccine recipient in that town. SVI refers to the CDC's Social Vulnerability Index - a measure that combines 15 demographic variables to identify communities most vulnerable to negative health impacts from disasters and public health crises. Measures of social vulnerability include socioeconomic status, ho

  15. c

    Medical Imaging Data Resource Center (MIDRC) - RSNA International COVID-19...

    • cancerimagingarchive.net
    dicom, n/a, xlsx
    Updated Feb 5, 2021
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    The Cancer Imaging Archive (2021). Medical Imaging Data Resource Center (MIDRC) - RSNA International COVID-19 Open Radiology Database (RICORD) Release 1b - Chest CT Covid- [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7937/31V8-4A40
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    n/a, dicom, xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 5, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The Cancer Imaging Archive
    License

    https://www.cancerimagingarchive.net/data-usage-policies-and-restrictions/https://www.cancerimagingarchive.net/data-usage-policies-and-restrictions/

    Time period covered
    Feb 5, 2021
    Dataset funded by
    National Cancer Institutehttp://www.cancer.gov/
    Description

    Background

    The COVID-19 pandemic is a global healthcare emergency. Prediction models for COVID-19 imaging are rapidly being developed to support medical decision making in imaging. However, inadequate availability of a diverse annotated dataset has limited the performance and generalizability of existing models.

    Purpose

    To create the first multi-institutional, multi-national expert annotated COVID-19 imaging dataset made freely available to the machine learning community as a research and educational resource for COVID-19 chest imaging. The Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) assembled the RSNA International COVID-19 Open Radiology Database (RICORD) collection of COVID-related imaging datasets and expert annotations to support research and education. RICORD data will be incorporated in the Medical Imaging and Data Resource Center (MIDRC), a multi-institutional research data repository funded by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering of the National Institutes of Health.

    Materials and Methods

    This dataset was a collaboration between the RSNA and Society of Thoracic Radiology (STR).

    Results

    The RSNA International COVID-19 Open Annotated Radiology Database (RICORD) release 1b consists of 120 thoracic computed tomography (CT) scans of COVID negative patients from four international sites.

    Patient Selection: Patients at least 18 years in age receiving negative diagnosis for COVID-19.

    Data Abstract

    1. 120 de-identified Thoracic CT scans from COVID negative patients.

    2. Supporting clinical variables: MRN*, Age, Exam Date/Time*, Exam Description, Sex, Study UID*, Image Count, Modality, Symptomatic, Testing Result, Specimen Source (* pseudonymous values).

    Research Benefits

    As this is a public dataset, RICORD is available for non-commercial use (and further enrichment) by the research and education communities which may include development of educational resources for COVID-19, use of RICORD to create AI systems for diagnosis and quantification, benchmarking performance for existing solutions, exploration of distributed/federated learning, further annotation or data augmentation efforts, and evaluation of the examinations for disease entities beyond COVID-19 pneumonia. Deliberate consideration of the detailed annotation schema, demographics, and other included meta-data will be critical when generating cohorts with RICORD, particularly as more public COVID-19 imaging datasets are made available via complementary and parallel efforts. It is important to emphasize that there are limitations to the clinical “ground truth” as the SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR tests have widely documented limitations and are subject to both false-negative and false-positive results which impact the distribution of the included imaging data, and may have led to an unknown epidemiologic distortion of patients based on the inclusion criteria. These limitations notwithstanding, RICORD has achieved the stated objectives for data complexity, heterogeneity, and high-quality expert annotations as a comprehensive COVID-19 thoracic imaging data resource.

  16. f

    Clinical data and radiological severity score (RAD-Covid Score) of chest CT...

    • springernature.figshare.com
    xlsx
    Updated May 31, 2023
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    Tatiana Figueiredo Guimarães Ribeiro; Ricardo Arroyo Rstom; Paula Nicole Vieira Pinto Barbosa; Maria Fernanda Arruda Almeida; Affonso Bruno Binda de Nascimento; Marina Martini Costa; Edivaldo Nery de Oliveira Filho; Andre Santos Barros; Silvio Fontana Velludo; Fabricio Prospero Machado (2023). Clinical data and radiological severity score (RAD-Covid Score) of chest CT scans from COVID-19 patients. [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12675098.v1
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    xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 31, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    figshare
    Authors
    Tatiana Figueiredo Guimarães Ribeiro; Ricardo Arroyo Rstom; Paula Nicole Vieira Pinto Barbosa; Maria Fernanda Arruda Almeida; Affonso Bruno Binda de Nascimento; Marina Martini Costa; Edivaldo Nery de Oliveira Filho; Andre Santos Barros; Silvio Fontana Velludo; Fabricio Prospero Machado
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    NOTE: there is no peer-reviewed publication associated with this data record.This fileset consists of three datasets in .xlsx file format.Dataset CLIN LAB DATA RAD-Covid (1).xlsx contains the patients’ demographic data, comorbidities, and outcome (death or recovery), collected from the institution’s electronic medical records. Additionally, the file contains clinical severity of COVID-19, upon hospital admission. This was classified according to the institution’s treatment protocol for patients with suspected Covid-19: mild (home treatment), moderate (hospitalization), or severe (intensive care unit [ICU] admission).Dataset consensus RADIOLOGISTS CT AVAL. PATTERNS AND DISTRIBUTION OF LESIONS (1).xlsx contains the chest CT imaging findings (i.e the radiological patterns and distribution of lesions).Dataset RAD-COVID SCORE AGREEMENT (1).xlsx contains the radiological severity score (RAD-Covid Score) that was assigned to the CT scan of each patient.The scores were assigned by two radiologists, at independent workstations, and the results are shown in spreadsheets “Radiologist 1” and “Radiologist 2”, respectively. The percentage values next to each RAD-Covid Score represent pulmonary involvement.Study aims and methodology: The severity of pulmonary Covid-19 infection can be assessed by the pattern and extent of parenchymal involvement observed in computed tomography (CT), and it is important to standardize the analysis through objective, practical, and reproducible systems.In this study, the authors propose a method for stratifying the radiological severity of pulmonary disease, the Radiological Severity Score (RAD-Covid Score), in Covid-19 patients by quantifying infiltrate in chest CT, including assessment of its accuracy in predicting disease severity.The study was approved by the institutional research ethics committee, although the consent requirement was waived due to its retrospective nature.Institutional Review Board approval was obtained from Dante Pazzanese Cardiology Institute Ethical Committee CAAE: 32408920.2.0000.5462.A total of 658 patients were included in the study. Only patients (a) whose Covid-19 infection was confirmed by real-time polymerase chain reaction and (b) who underwent chest CT on admission between March 6 and April 6, 2020 were included. Patients (a) whose real-time polymerase chain reaction examinations were performed more than 7 days after chest CT and (b) who were under 18 years of age were excluded.The patients’ demographic data (age, gender), comorbidities, and outcome (death or recovery) were collected from the institution’s electronic medical records. Clinical severity upon hospital admission was classified according to the institution’s treatment protocol for patients with suspected Covid-19: mild (home treatment), moderate (hospitalization), or severe (intensive care unit [ICU] admission).Chest CT scans were obtained through low-radiation-dose on a 160-MDCT (Aquilion Prime CT, Toshiba/Canon), 64-MDCT (Optma 660, GE), 16-MDCT (Somaton Scope,Siemens), 16-MDCT (Alexion, Toshiba/Canon) and 16-MDCT (BrightSpeed, GE Heathcare). Two radiologists, both with 8 years’ experience in chest imaging and blinded to the clinical and laboratory data, performed a standardized review of all chest CT images at independent workstations.For more details on the methodology and statistical analysis, please read the related article.

  17. m

    COVID-19 & Normal CT Segmentation Dataset

    • data.mendeley.com
    Updated Nov 27, 2023
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    Arvin Arian (2023). COVID-19 & Normal CT Segmentation Dataset [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17632/pfmgfpwnmm.2
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 27, 2023
    Authors
    Arvin Arian
    License

    Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 (CC BY-NC 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This dataset includes CT data and segmentation masks from patients diagnosed with COVID-19, as well as data from subjects without the infection.

    This study is approved under the ethical approval codes of IR.TUMS.IKHC.REC.1399.255 and IR.TUMS.VCR.REC.1399.488 at Tehran University of Medical Sciences.

    The code for loading the dataset and running an AI model is available on: https://github.com/SamanSotoudeh/COVID19-segmentation

    Please use the following citations:

    1- Arian, Arvin; Mehrabinejad, Mohammad-Mehdi; Zoorpaikar, Mostafa; Hasanzadeh, Navid; Sotoudeh-Paima, Saman; Kolahi, Shahriar; Gity, Masoumeh; Soltanian-Zadeh, "Accuracy of Artificial Intelligence CT Quantification in Predicting COVID-19 Subjects’ Prognosis" PLoS ONE (2023).

    2- Sotoudeh-Paima, Saman, et al. "A Multi-centric Evaluation of Deep Learning Models for Segmentation of COVID-19 Lung Lesions on Chest CT Scans." Iranian Journal of Radiology 19.4 (2022).

    3- Hasanzadeh, Navid, et al. "Segmentation of COVID-19 Infections on CT: Comparison of four UNet-based networks." 2020 27th National and 5th International Iranian Conference on Biomedical Engineering (ICBME). IEEE, 2020.

  18. i

    Data from: BIMCV COVID-19-: a large annotated dataset of RX and CT images...

    • ieee-dataport.org
    Updated Oct 20, 2023
    + more versions
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    Joaquim Montell Serrano (2023). BIMCV COVID-19-: a large annotated dataset of RX and CT images from COVID-19 patients [Dataset]. https://ieee-dataport.org/open-access/bimcv-covid-19-large-annotated-dataset-rx-and-ct-images-covid-19-patients-0
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 20, 2023
    Authors
    Joaquim Montell Serrano
    License

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

    Description

    pathologies

  19. c

    COVID-19 Contact Tracing: COVID Alert CT Summary by Week - ARCHIVE

    • s.cnmilf.com
    • data.ct.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Jun 28, 2025
    + more versions
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    data.ct.gov (2025). COVID-19 Contact Tracing: COVID Alert CT Summary by Week - ARCHIVE [Dataset]. https://s.cnmilf.com/user74170196/https/catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-contact-tracing-covid-alert-ct-summary-by-week
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 28, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Area covered
    Connecticut
    Description

    Note: This dataset has been archived and is no longer being updated. COVID Alert CT is Connecticut's voluntary, anonymous, exposure-notification smartphone app. If downloaded, the app will alert users if they have come into close contact with somebody who tests positive for COVID-19. This dataset includes the cumulative and weekly activations for COVID Alert CT for iOS and Android smartphones. The _location of app users is not tracked--the app uses Bluetooth technology to detect when another person with the same app comes within 6 feet. The phones exchange a secure code with the each other to record that they were near. The number of codes issued and claimed is also included in this dataset. Data presented are based on a weekly reporting period (Sunday - Saturday). All data are preliminary and are subject to change. Additional information on COVID-19 Contact Tracing can be found here: https://portal.ct.gov/coronavirus/covidalertCT/homepage

  20. Mosmed COVID-19 CT Scans

    • kaggle.com
    Updated May 25, 2020
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    Larxel (2020). Mosmed COVID-19 CT Scans [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/andrewmvd/mosmed-covid19-ct-scans/tasks
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    May 25, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Kaggle
    Authors
    Larxel
    Description

    About this dataset

    This dataset contains anonymised human lung computed tomography (CT) scans with COVID-19 related findings, as well as without such findings. In total, there are 1000 CT scans each from a unique patient.

    A subset of 50 studies has been annotated with binary pixel masks for segmentation depicting regions of interest (ground-glass opacifications and consolidations). CT scans were obtained between 1st of March, 2020 and 25th of April, 2020, and provided by medical hospitals in Moscow, Russia.

    How to use this dataset

    Related COVID-19 CT dataset (different source) For more datasets, click here.

    How to cite this dataset

    If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the authors

    Citation

    Morozov, S., Andreychenko, A., Blokhin, I., Vladzymyrskyy, A., Gelezhe, P., Gombolevskiy, V., Gonchar, A., Ledikhova, N., Pavlov, N., Chernina, V. MosMedData: Chest CT Scans with COVID-19 Related Findings, 2020, v. 1.0, link

    License

    CC BY NC ND 3.0

    Splash banner

    Image by rawpixel, available here.

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data.ct.gov (2023). COVID-19 Tests, Cases, Hospitalizations, and Deaths (Statewide) - ARCHIVE [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-tests-cases-hospitalizations-and-deaths-statewide

COVID-19 Tests, Cases, Hospitalizations, and Deaths (Statewide) - ARCHIVE

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Dataset updated
Aug 12, 2023
Dataset provided by
data.ct.gov
Description

Note: DPH is updating and streamlining the COVID-19 cases, deaths, and testing data. As of 6/27/2022, the data will be published in four tables instead of twelve. The COVID-19 Cases, Deaths, and Tests by Day dataset contains cases and test data by date of sample submission. The death data are by date of death. This dataset is updated daily and contains information back to the beginning of the pandemic. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Cases-Deaths-and-Tests-by-Day/g9vi-2ahj. The COVID-19 State Metrics dataset contains over 93 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 21, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-State-Level-Data/qmgw-5kp6 . The COVID-19 County Metrics dataset contains 25 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 16, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-County-Level-Data/ujiq-dy22 . The COVID-19 Town Metrics dataset contains 16 columns of data. This dataset is updated daily and currently contains information starting June 16, 2022 to the present. The data can be found at https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Town-Level-Data/icxw-cada . To protect confidentiality, if a town has fewer than 5 cases or positive NAAT tests over the past 7 days, those data will be suppressed. COVID-19 tests, cases, and associated deaths that have been reported among Connecticut residents. All data in this report are preliminary; data for previous dates will be updated as new reports are received and data errors are corrected. Hospitalization data were collected by the Connecticut Hospital Association and reflect the number of patients currently hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19. Deaths reported to the either the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) or Department of Public Health (DPH) are included in the daily COVID-19 update. Data on Connecticut deaths were obtained from the Connecticut Deaths Registry maintained by the DPH Office of Vital Records. Cause of death was determined by a death certifier (e.g., physician, APRN, medical examiner) using their best clinical judgment. Additionally, all COVID-19 deaths, including suspected or related, are required to be reported to OCME. On April 4, 2020, CT DPH and OCME released a joint memo to providers and facilities within Connecticut providing guidelines for certifying deaths due to COVID-19 that were consistent with the CDC’s guidelines and a reminder of the required reporting to OCME.25,26 As of July 1, 2021, OCME had reviewed every case reported and performed additional investigation on about one-third of reported deaths to better ascertain if COVID-19 did or did not cause or contribute to the death. Some of these investigations resulted in the OCME performing postmortem swabs for PCR testing on individuals whose deaths were suspected to be due to COVID-19, but antemortem diagnosis was unable to be made.31 The OCME issued or re-issued about 10% of COVID-19 death certificates and, when appropriate, removed COVID-19 from the death certificate. For standardization and tabulation of mortality statistics, written cause of death statements made by the certifiers on death certificates are sent to the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) at the CDC which assigns cause of death codes according to the International Causes of Disease 10th Revision (ICD-10) classification system.25,26 COVID-19 deaths in this report are defined as those for which the death certificate has an ICD-10 code of U07.1 as either a primary (underlying) or a contributing cause of death. More information on COVID-19 mortality can be found at the following link: https://portal.ct.gov/DPH/Health-Information-Systems--Reporting/Mortality/Mortality-Statistics Data are reported daily, with

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