As of November 24, 2024 there were over 274 million confirmed cases of coronavirus (COVID-19) across the whole of Europe since the first confirmed cases in France in January 2020. France has been the worst affected country in Europe with 39,028,437 confirmed cases, followed by Germany with 38,437,756 cases. Italy and the UK have approximately 26.8 million and 25 million cases respectively. For further information about the coronavirus pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
As of January 13, 2023, there had been over 270 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 across the whole of Europe since the first confirmed case in January, 2020. Cyprus has the highest incidence of COVID-19 cases among its population in Europe at 71,853 per 100,000 people, followed by a rate of 64,449 in Austria. Slovenia has recorded the third highest rate of cases in Europe at 62,834 cases per 100,000. With almost 38.3 million confirmed cases, France has been the worst affected country in Europe, which translates into a rate of 58,945 cases per 100,000 population.
Current infection rate in Europe San Marino had the highest rate of cases per 100,000 in the past week at 336, as of January 16, 2023. Cyprus and Slovenia had seven day rates of infections at 278 and 181 respectively.
Coronavirus deaths in Europe There have been 2,169,191 recorded COVID-19 deaths in Europe since the beginning of the pandemic. Russia has the highest number of deaths recorded in a European country at over 394 thousand. Bulgaria has the highest death rate from the virus in Europe with approximately 549 deaths per 100,000 as of January 13, followed by Hungary with 496 deaths per 100,000. For further information about the coronavirus pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
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Eurofound's e-survey 'Living, working and COVID-19' captures how the pandemic impacts living and working in Europe. The survey looks at quality of life and well-being, with questions ranging from life satisfaction, happiness and optimism, to health and levels of trust in institutions. Respondents are also asked about their work situation, their work–life balance and level of teleworking during COVID-19. The survey also assesses the impact of the pandemic on people’s living conditions and financial situation.
As of January 13, 2023, there have been 270,744,353 confirmed cases of coronavirus (COVID-19) across the whole of Europe since the first confirmed cases in January 2020. There were approximately 12.1 million new cases reported in the week beginning January 24, 2022, the highest number of daily cases in a single week. There was a significant increase in the number of new cases in Europe in winter 2021/22 as the Omicron variant emerged. France has had the highest amount of confirmed cases in Europe with 38,337,350, followed by Germany with 37,594,526 cases. A full breakdown of the confirmed cases in Europe can be found here.
For further information about the coronavirus pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
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This dataset provides values for CORONAVIRUS CASES reported in several countries. The data includes current values, previous releases, historical highs and record lows, release frequency, reported unit and currency.
Attitudes towards the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
Topics: satisfaction with the national government in general; satisfaction with the measures of the national government to fight the Coronavirus pandemic; preferred statement with regard to the consequences of the restriction measures in the own country: health benefits are greater than economic damage, economic damage is greater than health benefits; satisfaction with solidarity between EU member states in fighting the Coronavirus pandemic; awareness of measures taken by the EU to respond to the Coronavirus pandemic; satisfaction with these measures; EU should have more competences to deal with crises such as the Coronavirus pandemic; preferred EU measures to respond to the Corona crisis; preferred statement: EU should have greater financial means to be able to overcome the consequences of the Coronavirus pandemic, EU has sufficient financial means to be able to overcome the consequences of the Coronavirus pandemic; preferred fields on which to spend most of the EU budget on; preferred statement: fight against the Coronavirus pandemic fully justifies recent limitations to individual freedom, fully opposed to any limitation of individual freedom regardless of the pandemic; attitude towards public authorities using mobile phone applications of citizens to fight the virus’ expansion; current emotional status; personally experienced effects of the Coronavirus pandemic in the own country: loss of income, difficulties paying rent or bills or bank loans, use of personal savings sooner than planned, unemployment, bankruptcy, difficulties having proper and decent-quality meals, asked for financial help to family or friends, other financial issues; use of selected online social networks in the last week; most trustworthy persons or institutions with regard to information about the Coronavirus pandemic; attitude towards the European Union; change in feeling of attachment since the start of the beginning of the pandemic in the own country with regard to: local community, own country, EU; EU image; impact of the pandemic on EU image; participation in the last elections to the European Parliament.
Demography: sex; age; age at end of education; head of household; occupation of main income earner in the household; professional position of main income earner in the household; employment status; marital status; household composition and household size; region.
Additionally coded was: respondent ID; country; date of interview; weighting factor.
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Replaced by http://data.europa.eu/88u/dataset/covid-19-coronavirus-data-daily-up-to-14-december-2020
As of January 13, 2023, Bulgaria had the highest rate of COVID-19 deaths among its population in Europe at 548.6 deaths per 100,000 population. Hungary had recorded 496.4 deaths from COVID-19 per 100,000. Furthermore, Russia had the highest number of confirmed COVID-19 deaths in Europe, at over 394 thousand.
Number of cases in Europe During the same period, across the whole of Europe, there have been over 270 million confirmed cases of COVID-19. France has been Europe's worst affected country with around 38.3 million cases, this translates to an incidence rate of approximately 58,945 cases per 100,000 population. Germany and Italy had approximately 37.6 million and 25.3 million cases respectively.
Current situation In March 2023, the rate of cases in Austria over the last seven days was 224 per 100,000 which was the highest in Europe. Luxembourg and Slovenia both followed with seven day rates of infections at 122 and 108 respectively.
This dataset is maintained by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) and reports on the geographic distribution of COVID-19 cases worldwide. This data includes COVID-19 reported cases and deaths broken out by country. This data can be visualized via ECDC’s Situation Dashboard . More information on ECDC’s response to COVID-19 is available here . This public dataset is hosted in Google BigQuery and is included in BigQuery's 1TB/mo of free tier processing. This means that each user receives 1TB of free BigQuery processing every month, which can be used to run queries on this public dataset. Watch this short video to learn how to get started quickly using BigQuery to access public datasets. What is BigQuery . This dataset is hosted in both the EU and US regions of BigQuery. See the links below for the appropriate dataset copy: US region EU region This dataset has significant public interest in light of the COVID-19 crisis. All bytes processed in queries against this dataset will be zeroed out, making this part of the query free. Data joined with the dataset will be billed at the normal rate to prevent abuse. After September 15, queries over these datasets will revert to the normal billing rate. Users of ECDC public-use data files must comply with data use restrictions to ensure that the information will be used solely for statistical analysis or reporting purposes.
The data used for analysis are provided in the Excel files, in which cells contain formulae for carrying out basic computations. Graphics in the paper are also presented in the Excel files, which point to the source data in each file. Click "don't update" when opening Excel files. Although the SEIR and skew-logistic models cna be run from the Excel files provided, readers can also construct these models from the information given in the Supplementary Materials (included with the manuscript).
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This dataset provides values for CORONAVIRUS DEATHS reported in several countries. The data includes current values, previous releases, historical highs and record lows, release frequency, reported unit and currency.
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This is a new dataset with socio-demographic, economic, public policy, health, pollution and environmental factors for the European Union at the small regions level (NUTS3). The database is freely accessible (CC-BY-4.0 license) at https://github.com/HichemOmr/COVID-19Transmission. This dataset can help to monitor the COVID-19 mortality and infections at the sub-national level and enable analysis that may inform future policymaking.
https://github.com/disease-sh/API/blob/master/LICENSEhttps://github.com/disease-sh/API/blob/master/LICENSE
In past 24 hours, Europe had 165 new cases, 16 deaths and 104 recoveries.
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IntroductionIn relatively wealthy countries, substantial between-country variability in COVID-19 vaccination coverage occurred. We aimed to identify influential national-level determinants of COVID-19 vaccine uptake at different COVID-19 pandemic stages in such countries.MethodsWe considered over 50 macro-level demographic, healthcare resource, disease burden, political, socio-economic, labor, cultural, life-style indicators as explanatory factors and coverage with at least one dose by June 2021, completed initial vaccination protocols by December 2021, and booster doses by June 2022 as outcomes. Overall, we included 61 European or Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. We performed 100 multiple imputations correcting for missing data and partial least squares regression for each imputed dataset. Regression estimates for the original covariates were pooled over the 100 results obtained for each outcome. Specific analyses focusing only on European Union (EU) or OECD countries were also conducted.ResultsHigher stringency of countermeasures, and proportionately more older adults, female and urban area residents, were each strongly and consistently associated with higher vaccination rates. Surprisingly, socio-economic indicators such as gross domestic product (GDP), democracy, and education had limited explanatory power. Overall and in the OECD, greater perceived corruption related strongly to lower vaccine uptake. In the OECD, social media played a noticeable positive role. In the EU, right-wing government ideology exhibited a consistently negative association, while cultural differences had strong overall influence.ConclusionRelationships between country-level factors and COVID-19 vaccination uptake depended on immunization stage and country reference group. Important determinants include stringency, population age, gender and urbanization, corruption, government ideology and cultural context.
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The number of COVID-19 vaccination doses administered in European Union rose to 941314159 as of Oct 27 2023. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for European Union Coronavirus Vaccination Total.
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Analysis of ‘Covid-19 Weekly Trends In Europe - Latest Data’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://www.kaggle.com/anandhuh/covid19-weekly-trends-in-europe-latest-data on 28 January 2022.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
This dataset contains data of weekly trend of Covid-19 in Europe (January 01 - January 07, 2022)
Link : https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/weekly-trends/#weekly_table
Link : https://www.kaggle.com/anandhuh/datasets
Please appreciate the effort with an upvote 👍
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
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Bilingual (EN-SL) corpus acquired from website (https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/) of the EU portal (14th May 2020)
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Multilingual (CEF languages) corpus acquired from website (https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/) of the EU portal (8th July 2020). It contains 23 TMX files (EN-X, where X is a CEF language) with 151895 TUs in total.
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This data is fetched from the ECDC official website: https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/publications-data/download-data-response-measures-covid-19.
The data corresponds to the selected national public response measures presented in the weekly COVID-19 country overview report.
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This dataset contains key characteristics about the data described in the Data Descriptor COVID-19 European regional tracker. Contents:
1. human readable metadata summary table in CSV format
2. machine readable metadata file in JSON format
As of November 24, 2024 there were over 274 million confirmed cases of coronavirus (COVID-19) across the whole of Europe since the first confirmed cases in France in January 2020. France has been the worst affected country in Europe with 39,028,437 confirmed cases, followed by Germany with 38,437,756 cases. Italy and the UK have approximately 26.8 million and 25 million cases respectively. For further information about the coronavirus pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.