53 datasets found
  1. C

    Death Profiles by County

    • data.chhs.ca.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +3more
    csv, zip
    Updated May 28, 2025
    + more versions
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    California Department of Public Health (2025). Death Profiles by County [Dataset]. https://data.chhs.ca.gov/dataset/death-profiles-by-county
    Explore at:
    csv(28125832), csv(60517511), csv(75015194), csv(60201673), csv(60676655), csv(74351424), csv(52019564), csv(60023260), csv(74689382), csv(51592721), csv(73906266), csv(15127221), csv(1128641), csv(5095), csv(11738570), zip, csv(74043128), csv(24235858), csv(74497014), csv(21575405)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 28, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Public Health
    Description

    This dataset contains counts of deaths for California counties based on information entered on death certificates. Final counts are derived from static data and include out-of-state deaths to California residents, whereas provisional counts are derived from incomplete and dynamic data. Provisional counts are based on the records available when the data was retrieved and may not represent all deaths that occurred during the time period. Deaths involving injuries from external or environmental forces, such as accidents, homicide and suicide, often require additional investigation that tends to delay certification of the cause and manner of death. This can result in significant under-reporting of these deaths in provisional data.

    The final data tables include both deaths that occurred in each California county regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence) and deaths to residents of each California county (by residence), whereas the provisional data table only includes deaths that occurred in each county regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence). The data are reported as totals, as well as stratified by age, gender, race-ethnicity, and death place type. Deaths due to all causes (ALL) and selected underlying cause of death categories are provided. See temporal coverage for more information on which combinations are available for which years.

    The cause of death categories are based solely on the underlying cause of death as coded by the International Classification of Diseases. The underlying cause of death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." It is a single value assigned to each death based on the details as entered on the death certificate. When more than one cause is listed, the order in which they are listed can affect which cause is coded as the underlying cause. This means that similar events could be coded with different underlying causes of death depending on variations in how they were entered. Consequently, while underlying cause of death provides a convenient comparison between cause of death categories, it may not capture the full impact of each cause of death as it does not always take into account all conditions contributing to the death.

  2. Worldwide COVID-19 Data from WHO (2025 Edition)

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Jul 3, 2025
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    Adil Shamim (2025). Worldwide COVID-19 Data from WHO (2025 Edition) [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/adilshamim8/worldwide-covid-19-data-from-who
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jul 3, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Kaggle
    Authors
    Adil Shamim
    Description

    Dataset Overview

    This dataset contains global COVID-19 case and death data by country, collected directly from the official World Health Organization (WHO) COVID-19 Dashboard. It provides a comprehensive view of the pandemic’s impact worldwide, covering the period up to 2025. The dataset is intended for researchers, analysts, and anyone interested in understanding the progression and global effects of COVID-19 through reliable, up-to-date information.

    Source Information

    • Website: WHO COVID-19 Dashboard
    • Organization: World Health Organization (WHO)
    • Data Coverage: Global (by country/territory)
    • Time Period: Up to 2025

    The World Health Organization is the United Nations agency responsible for international public health. The WHO COVID-19 Dashboard is a trusted source that aggregates official reports from countries and territories around the world, providing daily updates on cases, deaths, and other key metrics related to COVID-19.

    Dataset Contents

    • Country/Region: The name of the country or territory.
    • Date: Reporting date.
    • New Cases: Number of new confirmed COVID-19 cases.
    • Cumulative Cases: Total confirmed COVID-19 cases to date.
    • New Deaths: Number of new confirmed deaths due to COVID-19.
    • Cumulative Deaths: Total deaths reported to date.
    • Additional fields may include population, rates per 100,000, and more (see data files for details).

    How to Use

    This dataset can be used for: - Tracking the spread and trends of COVID-19 globally and by country - Modeling and forecasting pandemic progression - Comparative analysis of the pandemic’s impact across countries and regions - Visualization and reporting

    Data Reliability

    The data is sourced from the WHO, widely regarded as the most authoritative source for global health statistics. However, reporting practices and data completeness may vary by country and may be subject to revision as new information becomes available.

    Acknowledgements

    Special thanks to the WHO for making this data publicly available and to all those working to collect, verify, and report COVID-19 statistics.

  3. Statewide Death Profiles

    • data.chhs.ca.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +3more
    csv, zip
    Updated Jun 26, 2025
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    California Department of Public Health (2025). Statewide Death Profiles [Dataset]. https://data.chhs.ca.gov/dataset/statewide-death-profiles
    Explore at:
    csv(5401561), csv(2026589), csv(463460), csv(5034), csv(16301), csv(200270), csv(164006), csv(419332), csv(4689434), csv(364098), zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 26, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Public Healthhttps://www.cdph.ca.gov/
    Description

    This dataset contains counts of deaths for California as a whole based on information entered on death certificates. Final counts are derived from static data and include out-of-state deaths to California residents, whereas provisional counts are derived from incomplete and dynamic data. Provisional counts are based on the records available when the data was retrieved and may not represent all deaths that occurred during the time period. Deaths involving injuries from external or environmental forces, such as accidents, homicide and suicide, often require additional investigation that tends to delay certification of the cause and manner of death. This can result in significant under-reporting of these deaths in provisional data.

    The final data tables include both deaths that occurred in California regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence) and deaths to California residents (by residence), whereas the provisional data table only includes deaths that occurred in California regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence). The data are reported as totals, as well as stratified by age, gender, race-ethnicity, and death place type. Deaths due to all causes (ALL) and selected underlying cause of death categories are provided. See temporal coverage for more information on which combinations are available for which years.

    The cause of death categories are based solely on the underlying cause of death as coded by the International Classification of Diseases. The underlying cause of death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." It is a single value assigned to each death based on the details as entered on the death certificate. When more than one cause is listed, the order in which they are listed can affect which cause is coded as the underlying cause. This means that similar events could be coded with different underlying causes of death depending on variations in how they were entered. Consequently, while underlying cause of death provides a convenient comparison between cause of death categories, it may not capture the full impact of each cause of death as it does not always take into account all conditions contributing to the death.

  4. Provisional COVID-19 death counts, rates, and percent of total deaths, by...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • healthdata.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Jul 11, 2025
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    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2025). Provisional COVID-19 death counts, rates, and percent of total deaths, by jurisdiction of residence [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/provisional-covid-19-death-counts-rates-and-percent-of-total-deaths-by-jurisdiction-of-res
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 11, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Disease Control and Preventionhttp://www.cdc.gov/
    Description

    This file contains COVID-19 death counts, death rates, and percent of total deaths by jurisdiction of residence. The data is grouped by different time periods including 3-month period, weekly, and total (cumulative since January 1, 2020). United States death counts and rates include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and New York City. New York state estimates exclude New York City. Puerto Rico is included in HHS Region 2 estimates. Deaths with confirmed or presumed COVID-19, coded to ICD–10 code U07.1. Number of deaths reported in this file are the total number of COVID-19 deaths received and coded as of the date of analysis and may not represent all deaths that occurred in that period. Counts of deaths occurring before or after the reporting period are not included in the file. Data during recent periods are incomplete because of the lag in time between when the death occurred and when the death certificate is completed, submitted to NCHS and processed for reporting purposes. This delay can range from 1 week to 8 weeks or more, depending on the jurisdiction and cause of death. Death counts should not be compared across states. Data timeliness varies by state. Some states report deaths on a daily basis, while other states report deaths weekly or monthly. The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York, New York City, Puerto Rico; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington. Rates were calculated using the population estimates for 2021, which are estimated as of July 1, 2021 based on the Blended Base produced by the US Census Bureau in lieu of the April 1, 2020 decennial population count. The Blended Base consists of the blend of Vintage 2020 postcensal population estimates, 2020 Demographic Analysis Estimates, and 2020 Census PL 94-171 Redistricting File (see https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/popest/technical-documentation/methodology/2020-2021/methods-statement-v2021.pdf). Rates are based on deaths occurring in the specified week/month and are age-adjusted to the 2000 standard population using the direct method (see https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr70/nvsr70-08-508.pdf). These rates differ from annual age-adjusted rates, typically presented in NCHS publications based on a full year of data and annualized weekly/monthly age-adjusted rates which have been adjusted to allow comparison with annual rates. Annualization rates presents deaths per year per 100,000 population that would be expected in a year if the observed period specific (weekly/monthly) rate prevailed for a full year. Sub-national death counts between 1-9 are suppressed in accordance with NCHS data confidentiality standards. Rates based on death counts less than 20 are suppressed in accordance with NCHS standards of reliability as specified in NCHS Data Presentation Standards for Proportions (available from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_02/sr02_175.pdf.).

  5. M

    World Death Rate (1950-2025)

    • macrotrends.net
    csv
    Updated Jun 30, 2025
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    MACROTRENDS (2025). World Death Rate (1950-2025) [Dataset]. https://www.macrotrends.net/global-metrics/countries/wld/world/death-rate
    Explore at:
    csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 30, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    MACROTRENDS
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 1950 - Dec 31, 2025
    Area covered
    World, World
    Description

    Historical chart and dataset showing World death rate by year from 1950 to 2025.

  6. Data from: COVID-19 Deaths Dataset

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jan 9, 2022
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    Dhruvil Dave (2022). COVID-19 Deaths Dataset [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/dhruvildave/covid19-deaths-dataset
    Explore at:
    zip(28230945 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 9, 2022
    Authors
    Dhruvil Dave
    License

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

    Description

    This is a daily updated dataset of COVID-19 deaths around the world. The dataset contains data of 45 countries. This data was collected from

    us-counties.csv contains data of the daily number of new cases and deaths, the seven-day rolling average and the seven-day rolling average per 100,000 residents of US at county level. The average reported is the seven day trailing average i.e. average of the day reported and six days prior.

    all_weekly_excess_deaths.csv collates detailed weekly breakdowns from official sources around the world.

    Image credits: Unsplash - schluditsch

    Let's pray for the ones who lost their lives fighting the battle and for the ones who risk their lives against this virus 🙏

  7. d

    Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Case Tracker

    • data.world
    csv, zip
    Updated Jul 12, 2025
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    The Associated Press (2025). Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Case Tracker [Dataset]. https://data.world/associatedpress/johns-hopkins-coronavirus-case-tracker
    Explore at:
    zip, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 12, 2025
    Authors
    The Associated Press
    Time period covered
    Jan 22, 2020 - Mar 9, 2023
    Area covered
    Description

    Updates

    • Notice of data discontinuation: Since the start of the pandemic, AP has reported case and death counts from data provided by Johns Hopkins University. Johns Hopkins University has announced that they will stop their daily data collection efforts after March 10. As Johns Hopkins stops providing data, the AP will also stop collecting daily numbers for COVID cases and deaths. The HHS and CDC now collect and visualize key metrics for the pandemic. AP advises using those resources when reporting on the pandemic going forward.

    • April 9, 2020

      • The population estimate data for New York County, NY has been updated to include all five New York City counties (Kings County, Queens County, Bronx County, Richmond County and New York County). This has been done to match the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 data, which aggregates counts for the five New York City counties to New York County.
    • April 20, 2020

      • Johns Hopkins death totals in the US now include confirmed and probable deaths in accordance with CDC guidelines as of April 14. One significant result of this change was an increase of more than 3,700 deaths in the New York City count. This change will likely result in increases for death counts elsewhere as well. The AP does not alter the Johns Hopkins source data, so probable deaths are included in this dataset as well.
    • April 29, 2020

      • The AP is now providing timeseries data for counts of COVID-19 cases and deaths. The raw counts are provided here unaltered, along with a population column with Census ACS-5 estimates and calculated daily case and death rates per 100,000 people. Please read the updated caveats section for more information.
    • September 1st, 2020

      • Johns Hopkins is now providing counts for the five New York City counties individually.
    • February 12, 2021

      • The Ohio Department of Health recently announced that as many as 4,000 COVID-19 deaths may have been underreported through the state’s reporting system, and that the "daily reported death counts will be high for a two to three-day period."
      • Because deaths data will be anomalous for consecutive days, we have chosen to freeze Ohio's rolling average for daily deaths at the last valid measure until Johns Hopkins is able to back-distribute the data. The raw daily death counts, as reported by Johns Hopkins and including the backlogged death data, will still be present in the new_deaths column.
    • February 16, 2021

      - Johns Hopkins has reconciled Ohio's historical deaths data with the state.

      Overview

    The AP is using data collected by the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering as our source for outbreak caseloads and death counts for the United States and globally.

    The Hopkins data is available at the county level in the United States. The AP has paired this data with population figures and county rural/urban designations, and has calculated caseload and death rates per 100,000 people. Be aware that caseloads may reflect the availability of tests -- and the ability to turn around test results quickly -- rather than actual disease spread or true infection rates.

    This data is from the Hopkins dashboard that is updated regularly throughout the day. Like all organizations dealing with data, Hopkins is constantly refining and cleaning up their feed, so there may be brief moments where data does not appear correctly. At this link, you’ll find the Hopkins daily data reports, and a clean version of their feed.

    The AP is updating this dataset hourly at 45 minutes past the hour.

    To learn more about AP's data journalism capabilities for publishers, corporations and financial institutions, go here or email kromano@ap.org.

    Queries

    Use AP's queries to filter the data or to join to other datasets we've made available to help cover the coronavirus pandemic

    Interactive

    The AP has designed an interactive map to track COVID-19 cases reported by Johns Hopkins.

    @(https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/nRyaf/15/)

    Interactive Embed Code

    <iframe title="USA counties (2018) choropleth map Mapping COVID-19 cases by county" aria-describedby="" id="datawrapper-chart-nRyaf" src="https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/nRyaf/10/" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" style="width: 0; min-width: 100% !important;" height="400"></iframe><script type="text/javascript">(function() {'use strict';window.addEventListener('message', function(event) {if (typeof event.data['datawrapper-height'] !== 'undefined') {for (var chartId in event.data['datawrapper-height']) {var iframe = document.getElementById('datawrapper-chart-' + chartId) || document.querySelector("iframe[src*='" + chartId + "']");if (!iframe) {continue;}iframe.style.height = event.data['datawrapper-height'][chartId] + 'px';}}});})();</script>
    

    Caveats

    • This data represents the number of cases and deaths reported by each state and has been collected by Johns Hopkins from a number of sources cited on their website.
    • In some cases, deaths or cases of people who've crossed state lines -- either to receive treatment or because they became sick and couldn't return home while traveling -- are reported in a state they aren't currently in, because of state reporting rules.
    • In some states, there are a number of cases not assigned to a specific county -- for those cases, the county name is "unassigned to a single county"
    • This data should be credited to Johns Hopkins University's COVID-19 tracking project. The AP is simply making it available here for ease of use for reporters and members.
    • Caseloads may reflect the availability of tests -- and the ability to turn around test results quickly -- rather than actual disease spread or true infection rates.
    • Population estimates at the county level are drawn from 2014-18 5-year estimates from the American Community Survey.
    • The Urban/Rural classification scheme is from the Center for Disease Control and Preventions's National Center for Health Statistics. It puts each county into one of six categories -- from Large Central Metro to Non-Core -- according to population and other characteristics. More details about the classifications can be found here.

    Johns Hopkins timeseries data - Johns Hopkins pulls data regularly to update their dashboard. Once a day, around 8pm EDT, Johns Hopkins adds the counts for all areas they cover to the timeseries file. These counts are snapshots of the latest cumulative counts provided by the source on that day. This can lead to inconsistencies if a source updates their historical data for accuracy, either increasing or decreasing the latest cumulative count. - Johns Hopkins periodically edits their historical timeseries data for accuracy. They provide a file documenting all errors in their timeseries files that they have identified and fixed here

    Attribution

    This data should be credited to Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 tracking project

  8. m

    Data for: COVID-19 Dataset: Worldwide Spread Log Including Countries First...

    • data.mendeley.com
    Updated Jul 20, 2020
    + more versions
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    Hasmot Ali (2020). Data for: COVID-19 Dataset: Worldwide Spread Log Including Countries First Case And First Death [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17632/vw427wzzkk.5
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 20, 2020
    Authors
    Hasmot Ali
    License

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

    Description

    Contain informative data related to COVID-19 pandemic. Specially, figure out about the First Case and First Death information for every single country. The datasets mainly focus on two major fields first one is First Case which consists of information of Date of First Case(s), Number of confirm Case(s) at First Day, Age of the patient(s) of First Case, Last Visited Country and the other one First Death information consist of Date of First Death and Age of the Patient who died first for every Country mentioning corresponding Continent. The datasets also contain the Binary Matrix of spread chain among different country and region.

    *This is not a country. This is a ship. The name of the Cruise Ship was not given from the government.
    "N+": the age is not specified but greater than N
    “No Trace”: some data was not found
    “Unspecified”: not available from the authority
    “N/A”: for “Last Visited Country(s) of Confirmed Case(s)” column, “N/A” indicates that the confirmed case(s) of those countries do not have any travel history in recent past; in “Age of First Death(s)” column “N/A” indicates that those countries do not have may death case till May 16, 2020.

  9. covid19 WHO data Day to Day for every Country

    • kaggle.com
    Updated May 2, 2020
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    BL (2020). covid19 WHO data Day to Day for every Country [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/baptistelef/covid19-who-data-day-to-day-for-every-country/metadata
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    May 2, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Kagglehttp://kaggle.com/
    Authors
    BL
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    COVID19 Dataset, extracted from the World Health Organization daily reports. The reports can be found here : https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-2019/situation-reports/

    Every csv file contains the data of a specific WHO Report about the covid19 with 3 columns : Country name in english, Total number of cases, Total number of deaths. It was automaticaly extracted with Python.

    The files cover 60 days : from Report43 (March 3rd) to Report102 (Today May 2nd).

    The License is CC0 of course. The data is given by the countries to WHO, I only adapt it from pdf to csv.

    Your data will be in front of the world's largest data science community. What questions do you want to see answered?

    If you find any mistake (reportXX.csv != WHO Report XX) make me know please :) !

    I hope this can be useful !

  10. o

    Deaths Involving COVID-19 by Vaccination Status

    • data.ontario.ca
    • gimi9.com
    • +3more
    csv, docx, xlsx
    Updated Dec 13, 2024
    + more versions
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    Health (2024). Deaths Involving COVID-19 by Vaccination Status [Dataset]. https://data.ontario.ca/dataset/deaths-involving-covid-19-by-vaccination-status
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    docx(26086), docx(29332), xlsx(10972), csv(321473), xlsx(11053)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 13, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Health
    License

    https://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontariohttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontario

    Time period covered
    Nov 14, 2024
    Area covered
    Ontario
    Description

    This dataset reports the daily reported number of the 7-day moving average rates of Deaths involving COVID-19 by vaccination status and by age group.

    Learn how the Government of Ontario is helping to keep Ontarians safe during the 2019 Novel Coronavirus outbreak.

    Effective November 14, 2024 this page will no longer be updated. Information about COVID-19 and other respiratory viruses is available on Public Health Ontario’s interactive respiratory virus tool: https://www.publichealthontario.ca/en/Data-and-Analysis/Infectious-Disease/Respiratory-Virus-Tool

    Data includes:

    • Date on which the death occurred
    • Age group
    • 7-day moving average of the last seven days of the death rate per 100,000 for those not fully vaccinated
    • 7-day moving average of the last seven days of the death rate per 100,000 for those fully vaccinated
    • 7-day moving average of the last seven days of the death rate per 100,000 for those vaccinated with at least one booster

    Additional notes

    As of June 16, all COVID-19 datasets will be updated weekly on Thursdays by 2pm.

    As of January 12, 2024, data from the date of January 1, 2024 onwards reflect updated population estimates. This update specifically impacts data for the 'not fully vaccinated' category.

    On November 30, 2023 the count of COVID-19 deaths was updated to include missing historical deaths from January 15, 2020 to March 31, 2023.

    CCM is a dynamic disease reporting system which allows ongoing update to data previously entered. As a result, data extracted from CCM represents a snapshot at the time of extraction and may differ from previous or subsequent results. Public Health Units continually clean up COVID-19 data, correcting for missing or overcounted cases and deaths. These corrections can result in data spikes and current totals being different from previously reported cases and deaths. Observed trends over time should be interpreted with caution for the most recent period due to reporting and/or data entry lags.

    The data does not include vaccination data for people who did not provide consent for vaccination records to be entered into the provincial COVaxON system. This includes individual records as well as records from some Indigenous communities where those communities have not consented to including vaccination information in COVaxON.

    “Not fully vaccinated” category includes people with no vaccine and one dose of double-dose vaccine. “People with one dose of double-dose vaccine” category has a small and constantly changing number. The combination will stabilize the results.

    Spikes, negative numbers and other data anomalies: Due to ongoing data entry and data quality assurance activities in Case and Contact Management system (CCM) file, Public Health Units continually clean up COVID-19, correcting for missing or overcounted cases and deaths. These corrections can result in data spikes, negative numbers and current totals being different from previously reported case and death counts.

    Public Health Units report cause of death in the CCM based on information available to them at the time of reporting and in accordance with definitions provided by Public Health Ontario. The medical certificate of death is the official record and the cause of death could be different.

    Deaths are defined per the outcome field in CCM marked as “Fatal”. Deaths in COVID-19 cases identified as unrelated to COVID-19 are not included in the Deaths involving COVID-19 reported.

    Rates for the most recent days are subject to reporting lags

    All data reflects totals from 8 p.m. the previous day.

    This dataset is subject to change.

  11. d

    Mass Killings in America, 2006 - present

    • data.world
    csv, zip
    Updated Jul 12, 2025
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    The Associated Press (2025). Mass Killings in America, 2006 - present [Dataset]. https://data.world/associatedpress/mass-killings-public
    Explore at:
    zip, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 12, 2025
    Authors
    The Associated Press
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2006 - Jul 4, 2025
    Area covered
    Description

    THIS DATASET WAS LAST UPDATED AT 2:11 AM EASTERN ON JULY 12

    OVERVIEW

    2019 had the most mass killings since at least the 1970s, according to the Associated Press/USA TODAY/Northeastern University Mass Killings Database.

    In all, there were 45 mass killings, defined as when four or more people are killed excluding the perpetrator. Of those, 33 were mass shootings . This summer was especially violent, with three high-profile public mass shootings occurring in the span of just four weeks, leaving 38 killed and 66 injured.

    A total of 229 people died in mass killings in 2019.

    The AP's analysis found that more than 50% of the incidents were family annihilations, which is similar to prior years. Although they are far less common, the 9 public mass shootings during the year were the most deadly type of mass murder, resulting in 73 people's deaths, not including the assailants.

    One-third of the offenders died at the scene of the killing or soon after, half from suicides.

    About this Dataset

    The Associated Press/USA TODAY/Northeastern University Mass Killings database tracks all U.S. homicides since 2006 involving four or more people killed (not including the offender) over a short period of time (24 hours) regardless of weapon, location, victim-offender relationship or motive. The database includes information on these and other characteristics concerning the incidents, offenders, and victims.

    The AP/USA TODAY/Northeastern database represents the most complete tracking of mass murders by the above definition currently available. Other efforts, such as the Gun Violence Archive or Everytown for Gun Safety may include events that do not meet our criteria, but a review of these sites and others indicates that this database contains every event that matches the definition, including some not tracked by other organizations.

    This data will be updated periodically and can be used as an ongoing resource to help cover these events.

    Using this Dataset

    To get basic counts of incidents of mass killings and mass shootings by year nationwide, use these queries:

    Mass killings by year

    Mass shootings by year

    To get these counts just for your state:

    Filter killings by state

    Definition of "mass murder"

    Mass murder is defined as the intentional killing of four or more victims by any means within a 24-hour period, excluding the deaths of unborn children and the offender(s). The standard of four or more dead was initially set by the FBI.

    This definition does not exclude cases based on method (e.g., shootings only), type or motivation (e.g., public only), victim-offender relationship (e.g., strangers only), or number of locations (e.g., one). The time frame of 24 hours was chosen to eliminate conflation with spree killers, who kill multiple victims in quick succession in different locations or incidents, and to satisfy the traditional requirement of occurring in a “single incident.”

    Offenders who commit mass murder during a spree (before or after committing additional homicides) are included in the database, and all victims within seven days of the mass murder are included in the victim count. Negligent homicides related to driving under the influence or accidental fires are excluded due to the lack of offender intent. Only incidents occurring within the 50 states and Washington D.C. are considered.

    Methodology

    Project researchers first identified potential incidents using the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Supplementary Homicide Reports (SHR). Homicide incidents in the SHR were flagged as potential mass murder cases if four or more victims were reported on the same record, and the type of death was murder or non-negligent manslaughter.

    Cases were subsequently verified utilizing media accounts, court documents, academic journal articles, books, and local law enforcement records obtained through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. Each data point was corroborated by multiple sources, which were compiled into a single document to assess the quality of information.

    In case(s) of contradiction among sources, official law enforcement or court records were used, when available, followed by the most recent media or academic source.

    Case information was subsequently compared with every other known mass murder database to ensure reliability and validity. Incidents listed in the SHR that could not be independently verified were excluded from the database.

    Project researchers also conducted extensive searches for incidents not reported in the SHR during the time period, utilizing internet search engines, Lexis-Nexis, and Newspapers.com. Search terms include: [number] dead, [number] killed, [number] slain, [number] murdered, [number] homicide, mass murder, mass shooting, massacre, rampage, family killing, familicide, and arson murder. Offender, victim, and location names were also directly searched when available.

    This project started at USA TODAY in 2012.

    Contacts

    Contact AP Data Editor Justin Myers with questions, suggestions or comments about this dataset at jmyers@ap.org. The Northeastern University researcher working with AP and USA TODAY is Professor James Alan Fox, who can be reached at j.fox@northeastern.edu or 617-416-4400.

  12. COVID-19 Worldwide Daily Data

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Aug 28, 2020
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    Altadata (2020). COVID-19 Worldwide Daily Data [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/altadata/covid19/code
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Kagglehttp://kaggle.com/
    Authors
    Altadata
    Description

    https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F5505749%2F2b83271d61e47e2523e10dc9c28e545c%2F600x200.jpg?generation=1599042483103679&alt=media" alt="">

    ALTADATA is a curated data marketplace where our subscribers and our data partners can easily exchange ready-to-analyze datasets and create insights with EPO, our visual data analytics platform.

    COVID-19 Worldwide Daily Data

    Daily global COVID-19 data for all countries, provided by Johns Hopkins University (JHU) Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE). If you want to use the update version of the data, you can use our daily updated data with the help of api key by entering it via Altadata.

    Overview

    In this data product, you may find the latest and historical global daily data on the COVID-19 pandemic for all countries.

    The COVID‑19 pandemic, also known as the coronavirus pandemic, is an ongoing global pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‑19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‑CoV‑2). The outbreak was first identified in December 2019 in Wuhan, China. The World Health Organization declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern on 30 January 2020 and a pandemic on 11 March. As of 12 August 2020, more than 20.2 million cases of COVID‑19 have been reported in more than 188 countries and territories, resulting in more than 741,000 deaths; more than 12.5 million people have recovered.

    The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center is a continuously updated source of COVID-19 data and expert guidance. They aggregate and analyze the best data available on COVID-19 - including cases, as well as testing, contact tracing and vaccine efforts - to help the public, policymakers and healthcare professionals worldwide respond to the pandemic.

    Methodology

    • Cases and Death counts include confirmed and probable (where reported)
    • Recovered cases are estimates based on local media reports, and state and local reporting when available, and therefore may be substantially lower than the true number. US state-level recovered cases are from COVID Tracking Project.
    • Active cases = total cases - total recovered - total deaths
    • Incidence Rate = cases per 100,000 persons
    • Case-Fatality Ratio (%) = Number recorded deaths / Number cases
    • Country Population represents 2019 projections by UN Population Division, integrated to the JHU CSSE's COVID-19 data by ALTADATA

    Data Source

    Related Data Products

    Suggested Blog Posts

    Data Dictionary

    • Reported Date (reported_date) : Covid-19 Report Date
    • Country_Region (country_region) : Country, region or sovereignty name
    • Population (population) : Country populations as per United Nations Population Division
    • Confirmed Case (confirmed) : Confirmed cases include presumptive positive cases and probable cases
    • Active cases (active) : Active cases = total confirmed - total recovered - total deaths
    • Deaths (deaths) : Death cases counts
    • Recovered (recovered) : Recovered cases counts
    • Mortality Rate (mortality_rate) : Number of recorded deaths * 100 / Number of confirmed cases
    • Incident Rate (incident_rate) : Confirmed cases per 100,000 persons
  13. H

    Annual District Death Daily (ADDD)

    • find.data.gov.scot
    • dtechtive.com
    • +1more
    Updated Aug 17, 2023
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    SAIL (2023). Annual District Death Daily (ADDD) [Dataset]. https://find.data.gov.scot/datasets/25734
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 17, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    SAIL
    Area covered
    Wales, United Kingdom
    Description

    Daily version of Annual District Death Dataset.

  14. Deaths from malnutrition

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Jun 8, 2024
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    willian oliveira gibin (2024). Deaths from malnutrition [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.34740/kaggle/dsv/8642249
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jun 8, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Kaggle
    Authors
    willian oliveira gibin
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    this graph was created in R:

    https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F16731800%2F99ddcc7060665597ad9b1c263aa8174d%2Fgraph1.gif?generation=1717872782993200&alt=media" alt="">

    https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F16731800%2Ff7af5fc372d601a18645c41c37411157%2Fgraph2.gif?generation=1717872788516258&alt=media" alt="">

    https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F16731800%2Fc85d9de1d5b88949298afa0bab1d9406%2Fgraph3.gif?generation=1717872793749722&alt=media" alt="">

    Having enough to eat is one of the fundamental basic human needs. Hunger – or, more formally, undernourishment – is defined as eating less than the energy required to maintain an active and healthy life.

    The share of undernourished people is the leading indicator for food security and nutrition used by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

    The fight against hunger focuses on a sufficient energy intake – enough calories per person per day. But it is not the only factor that matters for a healthy diet. Sufficient protein, fats, and micronutrients are also essential, and we cover this in our topic page on micronutrient deficiencies.

    Undernourishment in mothers and children is a leading risk factor for death and other poor health outcomes.

    The UN has set a global target as part of the Sustainable Development Goals to “end hunger by 2030“. While the world has progressed in past decades, we are far from reaching this target.

    On this page, you can find our data, visualizations, and writing on hunger and undernourishment. It looks at how many people are undernourished, where they are, and other metrics used to track food security.

    Hunger – also known as undernourishment – is defined as not consuming enough calories to maintain a normal, active, healthy life.

    The world has made much progress in reducing global hunger in recent decades — we will see this in the following key insight. But we are still far away from an end to hunger. Tragically, nearly one-in-ten people still do not get enough food to eat.

    The share of the undernourished population is shown globally and by region in the chart.

    You can see that rates of hunger are highest in Sub-Saharan Africa. South Asia has much higher rates than the Americas and East Asia. Rates in North America and Europe are below 2.5%. However, the FAO shows this as “2.5%” rather than the specific point estimate.

  15. Leading causes of death, total population, by age group

    • www150.statcan.gc.ca
    • ouvert.canada.ca
    • +1more
    Updated Feb 19, 2025
    + more versions
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    Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2025). Leading causes of death, total population, by age group [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.25318/1310039401-eng
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 19, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics Canadahttps://statcan.gc.ca/en
    Area covered
    Canada
    Description

    Rank, number of deaths, percentage of deaths, and age-specific mortality rates for the leading causes of death, by age group and sex, 2000 to most recent year.

  16. n

    Data from: COVID-19 Datasets for predicting the number of new cases of...

    • narcis.nl
    • data.mendeley.com
    Updated Jul 28, 2020
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    Tüfekci, P (via Mendeley Data) (2020). COVID-19 Datasets for predicting the number of new cases of COVID-19 ahead of 1 day, 3 days, and 10 days [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17632/499vtcykvw.1
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 28, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
    Authors
    Tüfekci, P (via Mendeley Data)
    Description

    Four datasets are presented here. The original dataset is a collection of the COVID-19 data maintained by Our World in Data. It includes data on confirmed cases, and deaths, as well as other variables of potential interest for ten countries such as Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Denmark, France, Israel, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The original dataset includes the data from the date of 31st December in 2019 to 31st May in 2020 with a total of 1.530 instances and 19 features. This dataset is collected from a variety of sources (the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, United Nations, World Bank, Global Burden of Disease, Blavatnik School of Government, etc.). After the original dataset is pre-processed by cleaning and removing some data including unnecessary and blank. Then, all strings are converted numeric values, and some new features such as continent, hemisphere, year, month, and day are added by extracting the original features. After that, the processed original dataset is organized for prediction of the number of new cases of COVID-19 for 1 day, 3 days, and 10 days ago and three datasets (Dataset-1, 2, 3) are created for that.

  17. d

    Coronavirus daily data

    • data.world
    csv, zip
    Updated Mar 10, 2025
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    Mark Di Marco (2025). Coronavirus daily data [Dataset]. https://data.world/markmarkoh/coronavirus-data
    Explore at:
    csv, zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 10, 2025
    Authors
    Mark Di Marco
    Time period covered
    Jan 22, 2020 - Mar 9, 2023
    Description

    Originally sourced from https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-source-data

    Synced daily

    Update 12/04/2020

    The data sources have been updated to use JHU data:

    From OWID:

    ​> On 30 November 2020, we changed our source for confirmed cases and deaths to the COVID-19 Data Repository by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University. Our previous source for confirmed cases and deaths, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), had announced in November 2020 that it would switch from a daily to a weekly reporting schedule from December. Our World in Data therefore had to transition away from the ECDC as a source to continue to provide daily updates of confirmed cases and deaths. The data last sourced from the ECDC remains available as an archive in the ecdc folder. The format (variable names and types) of our complete COVID-19 dataset remains the same.

  18. T

    United States Coronavirus COVID-19 Deaths

    • tradingeconomics.com
    csv, excel, json, xml
    + more versions
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    TRADING ECONOMICS, United States Coronavirus COVID-19 Deaths [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/coronavirus-deaths
    Explore at:
    json, xml, csv, excelAvailable download formats
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Jan 22, 2020 - May 17, 2023
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    United States recorded 1127152 Coronavirus Deaths since the epidemic began, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In addition, United States reported 103436829 Coronavirus Cases. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for the United States Coronavirus Deaths.

  19. Coronavirus Worldwide Dataset

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Aug 11, 2020
    + more versions
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    Saurabh Raj (2020). Coronavirus Worldwide Dataset [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/saurabhraj19/coronavirus-worldwide-dataset/discussion
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Aug 11, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Kagglehttp://kaggle.com/
    Authors
    Saurabh Raj
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Context

    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 CDC publishes daily statistics on the COVID-19 pandemic. Not just for Europe, but for the entire world. We rely on the ECDC as they collect and harmonize data from around the world which allows us to compare what is happening in different countries.

    Content

    This dataset has daily level information on the number of affected cases, deaths and recovery etc. from coronavirus. It also contains various other parameters like average life expectancy, population density, smocking population etc. which users can find useful in further prediction that they need to make.

    The data is available from 31 Dec,2019.

    Inspiration

    Give people weekly data so that they can use it to make accurate predictions.

  20. z

    Counts of Pertussis reported in UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: 1888-2017

    • zenodo.org
    json, xml, zip
    Updated Jun 3, 2024
    + more versions
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    Willem Van Panhuis; Willem Van Panhuis; Anne Cross; Anne Cross; Donald Burke; Donald Burke (2024). Counts of Pertussis reported in UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: 1888-2017 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.25337/t7/ptycho.v2.0/us.27836007
    Explore at:
    json, zip, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 3, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Project Tycho
    Authors
    Willem Van Panhuis; Willem Van Panhuis; Anne Cross; Anne Cross; Donald Burke; Donald Burke
    License

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

    Time period covered
    Jul 8, 1888 - Dec 30, 2017
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Project Tycho datasets contain case counts for reported disease conditions for countries around the world. The Project Tycho data curation team extracts these case counts from various reputable sources, typically from national or international health authorities, such as the US Centers for Disease Control or the World Health Organization. These original data sources include both open- and restricted-access sources. For restricted-access sources, the Project Tycho team has obtained permission for redistribution from data contributors. All datasets contain case count data that are identical to counts published in the original source and no counts have been modified in any way by the Project Tycho team. The Project Tycho team has pre-processed datasets by adding new variables, such as standard disease and location identifiers, that improve data interpretabilty. We also formatted the data into a standard data format.

    Each Project Tycho dataset contains case counts for a specific condition (e.g. measles) and for a specific country (e.g. The United States). Case counts are reported per time interval. In addition to case counts, datsets include information about these counts (attributes), such as the location, age group, subpopulation, diagnostic certainty, place of aquisition, and the source from which we extracted case counts. One dataset can include many series of case count time intervals, such as "US measles cases as reported by CDC", or "US measles cases reported by WHO", or "US measles cases that originated abroad", etc.

    Depending on the intended use of a dataset, we recommend a few data processing steps before analysis:

    • Analyze missing data: Project Tycho datasets do not inlcude time intervals for which no case count was reported (for many datasets, time series of case counts are incomplete, due to incompleteness of source documents) and users will need to add time intervals for which no count value is available. Project Tycho datasets do include time intervals for which a case count value of zero was reported.
    • Separate cumulative from non-cumulative time interval series. Case count time series in Project Tycho datasets can be "cumulative" or "fixed-intervals". Cumulative case count time series consist of overlapping case count intervals starting on the same date, but ending on different dates. For example, each interval in a cumulative count time series can start on January 1st, but end on January 7th, 14th, 21st, etc. It is common practice among public health agencies to report cases for cumulative time intervals. Case count series with fixed time intervals consist of mutually exxclusive time intervals that all start and end on different dates and all have identical length (day, week, month, year). Given the different nature of these two types of case count data, we indicated this with an attribute for each count value, named "PartOfCumulativeCountSeries".

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California Department of Public Health (2025). Death Profiles by County [Dataset]. https://data.chhs.ca.gov/dataset/death-profiles-by-county

Death Profiles by County

Explore at:
2 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
csv(28125832), csv(60517511), csv(75015194), csv(60201673), csv(60676655), csv(74351424), csv(52019564), csv(60023260), csv(74689382), csv(51592721), csv(73906266), csv(15127221), csv(1128641), csv(5095), csv(11738570), zip, csv(74043128), csv(24235858), csv(74497014), csv(21575405)Available download formats
Dataset updated
May 28, 2025
Dataset authored and provided by
California Department of Public Health
Description

This dataset contains counts of deaths for California counties based on information entered on death certificates. Final counts are derived from static data and include out-of-state deaths to California residents, whereas provisional counts are derived from incomplete and dynamic data. Provisional counts are based on the records available when the data was retrieved and may not represent all deaths that occurred during the time period. Deaths involving injuries from external or environmental forces, such as accidents, homicide and suicide, often require additional investigation that tends to delay certification of the cause and manner of death. This can result in significant under-reporting of these deaths in provisional data.

The final data tables include both deaths that occurred in each California county regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence) and deaths to residents of each California county (by residence), whereas the provisional data table only includes deaths that occurred in each county regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence). The data are reported as totals, as well as stratified by age, gender, race-ethnicity, and death place type. Deaths due to all causes (ALL) and selected underlying cause of death categories are provided. See temporal coverage for more information on which combinations are available for which years.

The cause of death categories are based solely on the underlying cause of death as coded by the International Classification of Diseases. The underlying cause of death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." It is a single value assigned to each death based on the details as entered on the death certificate. When more than one cause is listed, the order in which they are listed can affect which cause is coded as the underlying cause. This means that similar events could be coded with different underlying causes of death depending on variations in how they were entered. Consequently, while underlying cause of death provides a convenient comparison between cause of death categories, it may not capture the full impact of each cause of death as it does not always take into account all conditions contributing to the death.

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