India reported over 44 million confirmed cases of the coronavirus (COVID-19) as of October 20, 2023. The number of people infected with the virus was declining across the south Asian country.
What is the coronavirus?
COVID-19 is part of a large family of coronaviruses (CoV) that are transmitted from animals to people. The name COVID-19 is derived from the words corona, virus, and disease, while the number 19 represents the year that it emerged. Symptoms of COVID-19 resemble that of the common cold, with fever, coughing, and shortness of breath. However, serious infections can lead to pneumonia, multi-organ failure, severe acute respiratory syndrome, and even death, if appropriate medical help is not provided.
COVID-19 in India
India reported its first case of this coronavirus in late January 2020 in the southern state of Kerala. That led to a nation-wide lockdown between March and June that year to curb numbers from rising. After marginal success, the economy opened up leading to some recovery for the rest of 2020. In March 2021, however, the second wave hit the country causing record-breaking numbers of infections and deaths, crushing the healthcare system. The central government has been criticized for not taking action this time around, with "#ResignModi" trending on social media platforms in late April. The government's response was to block this line of content on the basis of fighting misinformation and reducing panic across the country.
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This Dataset contains day-wise cumulative total positive cases, active cases, recoveries and death statistics due to COVID-19 in India up to 10 June 2024
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India recorded 531794 Coronavirus Deaths since the epidemic began, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In addition, India reported 44983152 Coronavirus Cases. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for India Coronavirus Deaths.
India reported almost 45 million cases of the coronavirus (COVID-19) as of October 20, 2023, with more than 44 million recoveries and about 532 thousand fatalities. The number of cases in the country had a decreasing trend in the past months.
Burden on the healthcare system
With the world's second largest population in addition to an even worse second wave of the coronavirus pandemic seems to be crushing an already inadequate healthcare system. Despite vast numbers being vaccinated, a new variant seemed to be affecting younger age groups this time around. The lack of ICU beds, black market sales of oxygen cylinders and drugs needed to treat COVID-19, as well as overworked crematoriums resorting to mass burials added to the woes of the country. Foreign aid was promised from various countries including the United States, France, Germany and the United Kingdom. Additionally, funding from the central government was expected to boost vaccine production.
Situation overview
Even though days in April 2021 saw record-breaking numbers compared to any other country worldwide, a nation-wide lockdown has not been implemented. The largest religious gathering - the Kumbh Mela, sacred to the Hindus, along with election rallies in certain states continue to be held. Some states and union territories including Maharashtra, Delhi, and Karnataka had issued curfews and lockdowns to try to curb the spread of infections.
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Coronavirus is a family of viruses that can cause illness, which can vary from common cold and cough to sometimes more severe disease. SARS-CoV-2 (n-coronavirus) is the new virus of the coronavirus family, which first discovered in 2019, which has not been identified in humans before. It is a contiguous virus which started from Wuhan in December 2019. Which later declared as Pandemic by WHO due to high rate spreads throughout the world. Currently (on date 27 March 2020), this leads to a total of 24K+ Deaths across the globe, including 16K+ deaths alone in Europe.Pandemic is spreading all over the world; it becomes more important to understand about this spread.
The number of new cases are increasing day by day around the world. This dataset has information from the states and union territories of India at daily level.
State Wise data fetched from Ministry of Health & Family Welfare ICMR Testing Data comes from Indian Council of Medical Research
COVID-19 cases at daily level is present in covid_19_india.csv file
COVID-19 State and Union Territory data with latitude and longitude is present in state_wise_data.csv
COVID-19 cases at daily level is present in data_wise_data.csv and perday_new_cases.csv file
Number of COVID-19 tests and positive cases at daily level in ICMR_Testing_Data.csv file
Thanks to Ministry of Health & Family Welfare for making the data available to general public.
This work is highly inspired from few other kaggle kernels , github sources and other data science resources. Any traces of replications, which may appear , is purely co-incidental. Due respect & credit to all my fellow kagglers.
Together we can do this. Help the world to make a better place and with this fight against COVID-19.
Case data from 03-10-2020 to 08-16-2020, this data repository stores COVID-19 virus case data for India, including the daily case, summary data, and base map. Each zip file contains weekly case data from Monday to Sunday.
An effective policy response to the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic requires an enormous range of data to inform the design and response of programs. Public health measures require data on the spread of the disease, beliefs in the population, and capacity of the health system. Relief efforts depend on an understanding of hardships being faced by various segments of the population. Food policy requires measurement of agricultural production and hunger. In such a rapidly evolving pandemic, these data must be collected at a high frequency. Given the unexpected nature of the shock and urgency with which a response was required, Indian policymakers needed to formulate policies affecting India’s 1.4 billion people, without the detailed evidence required to construct effective programs. To help overcome this evidence gap, the World Bank, IDinsight, and the Development Data Lab sought to produce rigorous and responsive data for policymakers across six states in India: Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, and Madhya Pradesh.
Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh
Household
Sample survey data [ssd]
This dataset includes observations covering six states (Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh) and three survey rounds. The survey did not have a single, unified frame from which to sample phone numbers. The final sample was assembled from several different sample frames, and the choice of frame sample frames varied across states and survey rounds.
These frames comprise four prior IDinsight projects and from an impact evaluation of the National Rural Livelihoods project conducted by the Ministry of Rural Development. Each of these surveys sought to represent distinct populations, and employed idiosyncratic sample designs and weighting schemes.
A detailed note covering key features of each sample frame is available for download.
Computer Assisted Telephone Interview [cati]
The survey questionnaires covered the following subjects:
Agriculture: COVID-19-related changes in price realisation, acreage decisions, input expenditure, access to credit, access to fertilisers, etc.
Income and consumption: Changes in wage rates, employment duration, consumption expenditure, prices of essential commodities, status of food security etc.
Migration: Rates of in-migration, migrant income and employment status, return migration plans etc.
Access to relief: Access to in-kind, cash and workfare relief, quantities of relief received, and constraints on the access to relief.
Health: Access to health facilities and rates of foregone healthcare, knowledge of COVID-19 related symptoms and protective behaviours.
While a number of indicators were consistent across all three rounds, questions were added and removed as and when necessary to account for seasonal changes (i.e: in the agricultural cycle).
Round 1: ~55% Round 2: ~46% Round 3: ~55%
An effective policy response to the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic requires an enormous range of data to inform the design and response of programs. Public health measures require data on the spread of the disease, beliefs in the population, and capacity of the health system. Relief efforts depend on an understanding of hardships being faced by various segments of the population. Food policy requires measurement of agricultural production and hunger. In such a rapidly evolving pandemic, these data must be collected at a high frequency. Given the unexpected nature of the shock and urgency with which a response was required, Indian policymakers needed to formulate policies affecting India's 1.4 billion people, without the detailed evidence required to construct effective programs. To help overcome this evidence gap, the World Bank, IDinsight, and the Development Data Lab sought to produce rigorous and responsive data for policymakers across six states in India: Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, and Madhya Pradesh.
Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, and Madhya Pradesh
Household
Sample survey data [ssd]
The samples for these surveys were drawn from surveys and impact evaluations previously conducted by the World Bank, the Ministry of Rural Development, India and IDInsight. A detailed note on the sampling frames is available for download.
Details will be made available after all rounds of data collection and analysis is complete.
Computer Assisted Telephone Interview [cati]
The survey questionnaire consists of the following modules: - Module 0: Introduction - Module 1: Migration - Module 2: Labor and Income - Module 3: Consumption - Module 4: Agriculture - Module 5: Access to Relief - Module 6: Health
~55%
A majority of the coronavirus (COVID-19) cases in India affected people between ages 31 and 40 years as of October 18, 2021. Of these, the highest share of deaths during the measured time period was observed in people under the age of 50 years.
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India COVID-19: As on Date: Total Number of Active Cases data was reported at 35.000 Case in 05 May 2025. This records an increase from the previous number of 29.000 Case for 28 Apr 2025. India COVID-19: As on Date: Total Number of Active Cases data is updated daily, averaging 44,029.000 Case from Mar 2020 (Median) to 05 May 2025, with 1587 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 3,745,237.000 Case in 10 May 2021 and a record low of 1.000 Case in 24 Feb 2025. India COVID-19: As on Date: Total Number of Active Cases data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. The data is categorized under High Frequency Database’s Disease Outbreaks – Table IN.HLF006: Disease Outbreaks: Coronavirus 2019: MOHFW.
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In past 24 hours, India, Asia had 68 new cases, N/A deaths and N/A recoveries.
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Analysis of ‘Latest Covid-19 india statewise data’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://www.kaggle.com/swatikhedekar/latest-covid19-india-statewise-data on 12 November 2021.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
This dataset contains latest covid-19 data of India state-wise as on September 30, 2021.This dataset can be used for data analysis of covid-19 in India. This dataset is also used for Exploratory data analysis and Data visualization.
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
India tested over 935 million samples for the coronavirus (COVID-19) as of October 20, 2023. The number of people infected with the virus was coming down across the south Asian country. The country was hit with a second wave in March 2021, leading to a collapse of the healthcare system.
The Indian state of Punjab reported the highest number of active coronavirus (COVID-19) cases of over one thousand cases as of October 20, 2023. Kerala and Karnataka followed, with relatively lower casualties. That day, there were a total of over 44 million confirmed infections across India.
City-wise confirmed Covid-19 cases within India and specifically within KeralaFor discussions, please visit and follow the Facebook profile: https://www.facebook.com/viswaprabhaTo see the underlying live data, please visit this Google Sheet
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This dataset contains latest Covid-19 India state-wise data as on August 03, 2021. This dataset can be used to analyze covid condition in India. This dataset is great for Exploratory Data Analysis
Source Link : https://www.mygov.in/covid-19
If you find this dataset useful, please consider upvotting ❤️
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To control the spread of COVID-19 in India and to aid the efforts of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MOHFW), the Population Council and other non-governmental organizations are conducting research to assess residents’ ability to follow sanitation and social distancing precautions under a countrywide lockdown. The Population Council COVID-19 study team is implementing rapid phone-based surveys to collect information on knowledge, attitudes and practices, as well as needs, among 2,041 young people (ages 19–23 years) and/or an adult household member, sampled from an existing prospective cohort study with a total sample size of 20,594 in Bihar (n=10,433) and Uttar Pradesh (n=10,161). Baseline was conducted from April 3–22; subsequent iterations of the survey are planned to be conducted on a monthly basis. Baseline findings on awareness of COVID-19 symptoms, perceived risk, awareness of and ability to carry out preventive behaviors, misconceptions, and fears will inform the development of government and other stakeholders’ interventions and/or strategies. We are committed to openly sharing the latest versions of the study description, questionnaires, de-identified or aggregated datasets, and preliminary results. Data and findings can also be shared with partners working on the COVID-19 response.
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please visit the primary dataset page.Announcements:
Uttar Pradesh had the highest testing for the coronavirus (COVID-19) across India as of October 17, 2021, at over 81 million tests. Sikkim ranked lowest at only 255 thousand samples tested during the same time period.
India reported over 44 million confirmed cases of the coronavirus (COVID-19) as of October 20, 2023. The number of people infected with the virus was declining across the south Asian country.
What is the coronavirus?
COVID-19 is part of a large family of coronaviruses (CoV) that are transmitted from animals to people. The name COVID-19 is derived from the words corona, virus, and disease, while the number 19 represents the year that it emerged. Symptoms of COVID-19 resemble that of the common cold, with fever, coughing, and shortness of breath. However, serious infections can lead to pneumonia, multi-organ failure, severe acute respiratory syndrome, and even death, if appropriate medical help is not provided.
COVID-19 in India
India reported its first case of this coronavirus in late January 2020 in the southern state of Kerala. That led to a nation-wide lockdown between March and June that year to curb numbers from rising. After marginal success, the economy opened up leading to some recovery for the rest of 2020. In March 2021, however, the second wave hit the country causing record-breaking numbers of infections and deaths, crushing the healthcare system. The central government has been criticized for not taking action this time around, with "#ResignModi" trending on social media platforms in late April. The government's response was to block this line of content on the basis of fighting misinformation and reducing panic across the country.