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TwitterAs 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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The dataset contains a weekly situation update on COVID-19, the epidemiological curve and the global geographical distribution (EU/EEA and the UK, worldwide).
Since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, ECDC’s Epidemic Intelligence team has collected the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths, based on reports from health authorities worldwide. This comprehensive and systematic process was carried out on a daily basis until 14/12/2020. See the discontinued daily dataset: COVID-19 Coronavirus data - daily. ECDC’s decision to discontinue daily data collection is based on the fact that the daily number of cases reported or published by countries is frequently subject to retrospective corrections, delays in reporting and/or clustered reporting of data for several days. Therefore, the daily number of cases may not reflect the true number of cases at EU/EEA level at a given day of reporting. Consequently, day to day variations in the number of cases does not constitute a valid basis for policy decisions.
ECDC continues to monitor the situation. Every week between Monday and Wednesday, a team of epidemiologists screen up to 500 relevant sources to collect the latest figures for publication on Thursday. The data screening is followed by ECDC’s standard epidemic intelligence process for which every single data entry is validated and documented in an ECDC database. An extract of this database, complete with up-to-date figures and data visualisations, is then shared on the ECDC website, ensuring a maximum level of transparency.
ECDC receives regular updates from EU/EEA countries through the Early Warning and Response System (EWRS), The European Surveillance System (TESSy), the World Health Organization (WHO) and email exchanges with other international stakeholders. This information is complemented by screening up to 500 sources every day to collect COVID-19 figures from 196 countries. This includes websites of ministries of health (43% of the total number of sources), websites of public health institutes (9%), websites from other national authorities (ministries of social services and welfare, governments, prime minister cabinets, cabinets of ministries, websites on health statistics and official response teams) (6%), WHO websites and WHO situation reports (2%), and official dashboards and interactive maps from national and international institutions (10%). In addition, ECDC screens social media accounts maintained by national authorities on for example Twitter, Facebook, YouTube or Telegram accounts run by ministries of health (28%) and other official sources (e.g. official media outlets) (2%). Several media and social media sources are screened to gather additional information which can be validated with the official sources previously mentioned. Only cases and deaths reported by the national and regional competent authorities from the countries and territories listed are aggregated in our database.
Disclaimer: National updates are published at different times and in different time zones. This, and the time ECDC needs to process these data, might lead to discrepancies between the national numbers and the numbers published by ECDC. Users are advised to use all data with caution and awareness of their limitations. Data are subject to retrospective corrections; corrected datasets are released as soon as processing of updated national data has been completed.
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TwitterAs 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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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The dataset contains the number of new cases and deaths reported per day and per Country in the EU/EEA.
It is based on data originally downloaded by the site https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/covid-19.
Raw data from ECDC, harmonization and homogenization of data from UNIPV - Laboratory of Geomatics
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This repository contains COVID-19 data for Spain, including daily cases at the level of autonomous communities as well as provinces, and higher spatial resolution for several autonomous communities (eight out of the nineteen autonomous communities publish reports with local daily COVID-19 cases at the level of municipalities or Basic Health Areas). Each record has an identifier, the associated date, the corresponding identifier of the layer and code of the region and a set of COVID-19 related fields, which include the number of new cases (daily incidence) and total cases. Autonomous Communities: ES.covid_cca Provinces: ES.covid_cpro Higher spatial resolution: Principado de Asturias: 03.covid_cumun Cantabria: 06.covid_cumun Castilla y Leon: 07.covid_abs Cataluña/Catalunya: 09.covid_abs Comunitat Valenciana: 10.covid_cumun Comunidad de Madrid: 13.covid_abs Comunidad Foral de Navarra: 15.covid_abs País Vasco/Euskadi: 16.covid_abs For information about data sources, visit: https://flowmaps.life.bsc.es/flowboard/data
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Covid-19 Data Europe provides coronavirus data of European countries , taken from worldometers and coronavirusgraphs . It includes number of total case, daily test, total test, daily case, daily death, total death, daily recovered, total recovered, population, elder rate, the day first case seen and lockdown/state of emergency for all countries in Europe. Dataset includes test data of all European countries except Andorra, Georgia, Liechtenstein, Monaco, San Marino and Vatican City.
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TwitterThis information is complemented by screening up to 500 sources every day to collect COVID-19 figures from 196 countries. This includes websites of ministries of health (43% of the total number of sources), websites of public health institutes (9%), websites from other national authorities (ministries of social services and welfare, governments, prime minister cabinets, cabinets of ministries, websites on health statistics and official response teams) (6%), WHO websites and WHO situation reports (2%), and official dashboards and interactive maps from national and international institutions (10%). In addition, ECDC screens social media accounts maintained by national authorities, for example Twitter, Facebook, YouTube or Telegram accounts run by ministries of health (28%) and other official sources (e.g. official media outlets) (2%). Several media and social media sources are screened to gather additional information which can be validated with the official sources previously mentioned.
The data set contains the latest available public data on COVID-19 including a daily situation update, the epidemiological curve and the global geographical distribution (EU/EEA and the UK, worldwide).
On 12 February 2020, the novel corona virus was named severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) while the disease associated with it is now referred to as COVID-19. Since the beginning of the corona virus pandemic, ECDC’s Epidemic Intelligence team has been collecting on daily basis the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths, based on reports from health authorities worldwide. To insure the accuracy and reliability of the data, this process is being constantly refined. This helps to monitor and interpret the dynamics of the COVID-19 pandemic not only in the European Union (EU), the European Economic Area (EEA), but also worldwide
file in this dataset is covid19_countrywise_Data.csv , the detailed descriptions are below.
covid19_countrywise_Data.csv
European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control collected the data .This helps to monitor and interpret the dynamics of the COVID-19 pandemic not only in the European Union (EU), the European Economic Area (EEA), but also worldwide.
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TwitterThe dataset contains the latest available public data on COVID-19 including a daily situation update, the epidemiological curve and the global geographical distribution (EU/EEA and the UK, worldwide).
Source: https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The dataset contains information on the 14-day notification rate of newly reported COVID-19 cases per 100 000 population and the 14-day notification rate of reported deaths per million population by week and Country.
It is based on data originally downloaded by the site https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/covid-19.
Raw data from ECDC, harmonization and homogenization of data from UNIPV - Laboratory of Geomatics
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From December 2019 was discovered in Wuhan City, Hubei Province of China an unknown virus, subsequently declared pandemic by the WHO. All data scientists are called to give a contribute to discover patterns useful to this illness.
Data set is provided by the European Union with daily updating at this link: https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/publications-data/download-todays-data-geographic-distribution-covid-19-cases-worldwide
Each row/entry contains the number of new cases reported per day and per country
European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC): https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/geographical-distribution-2019-ncov-cases
Discover differences between countries belonging at the same continent and why. Understand why in some countries with large confirmed cases there are less deaths than other countries.
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This is the real-time JSON version of the COVID-19 Coronavirus Dataset Worldwide dataset, furthermore, the collection methodology can be read through: https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/covid-19/data-collection
The worldwide situation about the COVID-19 (by 2019-03-23), data provided by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and published on the EU Open Data Portal.
The dataset contains the latest available public data on COVID-19 including a daily situation update, the epidemiological curve and the global geographical distribution (EU/EEA and the UK, worldwide). On 12 February 2020, the novel coronavirus was named severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) while the disease associated with it is now referred to as COVID-19. ECDC is closely monitoring this outbreak and providing risk assessments to guide EU Member States and the EU Commission in their response activities.
Official link: https://data.europa.eu/euodp/en/data/dataset/covid-19-coronavirus-data
What applications can we develop to understand COVID-19 current and prospective behavior better?
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The data files contain information on the 14-day notification rate of newly reported COVID-19 cases per 100 000 population by week and subnational region. Each row contains the corresponding data for a certain week and subnational region.
Please note that daily data on cases per subnational region are also available for selected countries at the page 'Download data on the daily subnational 14-day notification rate of new COVID-19 cases'. There may be differences between the rates shown in these two datasets since they are based on different sources of data.
The file is updated weekly every Wednesday.
If you reuse or enrich this dataset, please share it with us.
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TwitterData is collected from mentioned Sources, and further processed and available here in usable format. This Data is used for Exploratory data analysis ( EDA ), and for various visualizations.
Johns Hopkins University : Fetched from GitHub Source - https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19/blob/master/csse_covid_19_data/
European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC): https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/publications-data/download-todays-data-geographic-distribution-covid-19-cases-worldwide
Insights like following - 1. Changes in number of Confirmed cases over time. 2. Changes in number of Death cases over time. 3. Changes in number of Recovered cases over time.
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TwitterAs 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.
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TwitterThe visualization shows the daily reported Covid-19 cases in Austria per district along a timeline of different events since 22 March 2020.
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TwitterAs of March 13, Austria had the highest rate of coronavirus (COVID-19) cases reported in the previous seven days in Europe at 224 cases per 100,000. Luxembourg and Slovenia have recorded 122 and 108 cases per 100,000 people respectively in the past week. Furthermore, San Marino had a rate of 97 cases in the last seven days.
Since the pandemic outbreak, France has been the worst affected country in Europe with over 38.3 million cases as of January 13. The overall incidence of cases in every European country can be found here.
For further information about the coronavirus pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The data files contain information on the 14-day notification rate of newly reported COVID-19 cases per 100 000 population and the 14-day notification rate of reported deaths per million population by week and country. Each row contains the corresponding data for a certain day and per country. The file is updated weekly.
Disclaimer: The figures in the files may differ slightly from those displayed in the latest ECDC Weekly country overviews in the event of retrospective corrections of the data after the country overview has been published.
If you reuse or enrich this dataset, please share it with us.
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From World Health Organization - On 31 December 2019, WHO was alerted to several cases of pneumonia in Wuhan City, Hubei Province of China. The virus did not match any other known virus. This raised concern because when a virus is new, we do not know how it affects people.
So daily level information on the affected people can give some interesting insights when it is made available to the broader data science community.
The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control released historical data (to 14 December 2020) on the daily number of new reported COVID-19 cases and deaths worldwide.
The attributes of the dataset are the following: 1) dateRep: Date of the report
2) year_week: Week of the year
3) cases_weekly: Number of cases during the week
4) deaths_weekly: Number of deaths during the week
5) countriesAndTerritories: Country/Territory where the data was reported
6) geoId: Country/Territory id
7) countryterritoryCode: Country/Territory code
8) popData2019: Population data of the Country/Territory in 2019
9) continentExp: Continent of the Country/Territory
10) notification_rate_per_100000_population_14-days: 14-day cumulative number of reported COVID-19 cases per 100 000 population
Disclaimer: Population data in the database is taken from Eurostat for Europe and the World Bank for the rest of the world. Disclaimer: Countries that are not listed in these databases have reported no cases to WHO and no cases were identified in the public domain. The formula to calculate the 14-day cumulative number of reported COVID-19 cases per 100 000 population is (New cases over 14 day period)/Population)*100 000.
Data obtained from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, an agency of the European Union
#these libraries need to be loaded
library(utils)
#read the Dataset sheet into “R”. The dataset will be called "data".
data <- read.csv("data.csv", na.strings = "", fileEncoding = "UTF-8-BOM")
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The downloadable data file contains information on the 14-day notification rate of newly reported COVID-19 cases per 100 000 population by age group, week and country. Each row contains the corresponding data for a certain week and country. The file is updated weekly.
If you reuse or enrich this dataset, please share it with us.
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TwitterAs 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.