81 datasets found
  1. Z

    COVID-19 Press Briefings Corpus

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • live.european-language-grid.eu
    • +1more
    Updated Jun 2, 2020
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    Chatsiou, Kakia (2020). COVID-19 Press Briefings Corpus [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_3872416
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 2, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    University of Essex
    Authors
    Chatsiou, Kakia
    License

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

    Description

    The Coronavirus (COVID-19) Press Briefings Corpus is a work in progress to collect and present in a machine readable text dataset of the daily briefings from around the world by government authorities. During the peak of the pandemic, most countries around the world informed their citizens of the status of the pandemic (usually involving an update on the number of infection cases, number of deaths) and other policy-oriented decisions about dealing with the health crisis, such as advice about what to do to reduce the spread of the epidemic.

    Usually daily briefings did not occur on a Sunday.

    At the moment the dataset includes:

    UK/England: Daily Press Briefings by UK Government between 12 March 2020 - 01 June 2020 (70 briefings in total)

    Scotland: Daily Press Briefings by Scottish Government between 3 March 2020 - 01 June 2020 (76 briefings in total)

    Wales: Daily Press Briefings by Welsh Government between 23 March 2020 - 01 June 2020 (56 briefings in total)

    Northern Ireland: Daily Press Briefings by N. Ireland Assembly between 23 March 2020 - 01 June 2020 (56 briefings in total)

    World Health Organisation: Press Briefings occuring usually every 2 days between 22 January 2020 - 01 June 2020 (63 briefings in total)

    More countries will be added in due course, and we will be keeping this updated to cover the latest daily briefings available.

    The corpus is compiled to allow for further automated political discourse analysis (classification).

  2. Share of people watching the daily Government briefing in the UK March-June...

    • statista.com
    Updated Jul 9, 2025
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    Statista (2025). Share of people watching the daily Government briefing in the UK March-June 2020 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1111869/government-coronavirus-briefing-audience-uk/
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 9, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    Mar 2020 - Jun 2020
    Area covered
    United Kingdom
    Description

    The UK Government has been holding daily press briefings in order to provide updates on the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and outline any new measures being put in place to deal with the outbreak. Boris Johnson announced that the UK would be going into lockdown in a broadcast on March 23 which was watched live by more than half of the respondents to a daily survey. On June 28, just ** percent of respondents said they had not watched or read about the previous day's briefing. For further information about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.

  3. Coronavirus England briefing, 23 September 2021

    • gov.uk
    • s3.amazonaws.com
    Updated Sep 24, 2021
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    UK Health Security Agency (2021). Coronavirus England briefing, 23 September 2021 [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-england-briefing-23-september-2021
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 24, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
    Authors
    UK Health Security Agency
    Description

    The data includes:

    • case rate per 100,000 population
    • case rate per 100,000 population aged 60 years and over
    • percentage change in case rate per 100,000 from previous week
    • percentage of individuals tested positive
    • number of individuals tested per 100,000

    See the detailed data on the https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/?_ga=2.3556087.692429653.1632134992-1536954384.1620657761">progress of the coronavirus pandemic. This includes the number of people testing positive, case rates and deaths within 28 days of positive test by lower tier local authority.

    Also see guidance on COVID-19 restrictions.

  4. Coronavirus Source Data (COVID-19) Daily reports

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Mar 12, 2020
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    Yassine Hamdaoui (2020). Coronavirus Source Data (COVID-19) Daily reports [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/yassinehamdaoui1/coronavirus-source-data-covid19-daily-reports
    Explore at:
    zip(22189 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 12, 2020
    Authors
    Yassine Hamdaoui
    License

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

    Description

    Context

    On January 30, 2020, the International Health Regulations Emergency Committee of the World Health Organization declared the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC). On January 31, 2020, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex M. Azar II declared a public health emergency (PHE) for the United States to aid the nation’s healthcare community in responding to COVID-19. On March 11, 2020 WHO publicly characterized COVID-19 as a pandemic.

    Content

    The data files present the total confirmed cases, total deaths and daily new cases and deaths by country. This data is sourced from the World Health Organization (WHO) Situation Reports (which you find here). The WHO Situation Reports are published daily [reporting data as of 10am (CET; Geneva time)]. The main section of the Situations Reports are long tables of the latest number of confirmed cases and confirmed deaths by country.

    This dataset has five files : - total_cases.csv : Total confirmed cases - total_deaths.csv : Total deaths - new_cases.csv : New confirmed cases - new_deathes.csv : New deaths - full_data.csv : put it all files together

    Acknowledgements

    This dataset is sourced from WHO and confirmed by OurworldInData Special Thank to Hannah Ritchie that did a great reports explaining those datasets.

    Inspiration

    Insights on - Confirmed cases is what we do know - Confirmed COVID-19 cases by country - How we can make preventive measures - Growth of cases: How long did it take for the number of confirmed cases to double? - Understanding exponential growth - Try to predict the spread of COVID-19 ahead of time .

  5. f

    Descriptive statistics of the WHO COVID-19 press conference corpus.

    • datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov
    • plos.figshare.com
    Updated Mar 13, 2023
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    Feng, Jiaming; Li, Dapeng; He, Sike; Wen, Ju; Liu, Chang-Hai; Xiong, Ying; Liu, Dan (2023). Descriptive statistics of the WHO COVID-19 press conference corpus. [Dataset]. https://datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov/dataset?q=0000946120
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 13, 2023
    Authors
    Feng, Jiaming; Li, Dapeng; He, Sike; Wen, Ju; Liu, Chang-Hai; Xiong, Ying; Liu, Dan
    Description

    Descriptive statistics of the WHO COVID-19 press conference corpus.

  6. COVID-19: socio-economic risk factors briefing - Dataset - data.gov.uk

    • ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Updated Jun 4, 2020
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    ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk (2020). COVID-19: socio-economic risk factors briefing - Dataset - data.gov.uk [Dataset]. https://ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk/dataset/covid-19-socio-economic-risk-factors-briefing
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 4, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    CKANhttps://ckan.org/
    Description

    Coronavirus affects some members of the population more than others. Emerging evidence suggests that older people, men, people with health conditions such as respiratory and pulmonary conditions, and people of a Black, Asian Minority Ethnic (BAME) background are at particular risk. There are also a number of other wider public health risk factors that have been found to increase the likelihood of an individual contracting coronavirus. This briefing presents descriptive evidence on a range of these factors, seeking to understand at a London-wide level the proportion of the population affected by each.

  7. d

    COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Gender - ARCHIVE

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ct.gov
    Updated Aug 12, 2023
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    data.ct.gov (2023). COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Gender - ARCHIVE [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-cases-and-deaths-by-gender
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 12, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Description

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

  8. O

    COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Age Group - ARCHIVE

    • data.ct.gov
    • s.cnmilf.com
    • +1more
    csv, xlsx, xml
    Updated Jun 24, 2022
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    Department of Public Health (2022). COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Age Group - ARCHIVE [Dataset]. https://data.ct.gov/w/ypz6-8qyf/wqz6-rhce?cur=ciIkENxs4z6&from=NyyoxfoD-mR
    Explore at:
    xlsx, xml, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 24, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Department of Public Health
    License

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

    Description

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  9. Covid19 US Lockdown Dates Dataset

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Apr 22, 2020
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    Sloth (2020). Covid19 US Lockdown Dates Dataset [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/lin0li/us-lockdown-dates-dataset
    Explore at:
    zip(1721 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 22, 2020
    Authors
    Sloth
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Context & Content

    Information is from this NYTimes article.

    Date of when is each state / county's stay-at-home order becomes effective as a result of the covid-19 pandemic. This dataset is updated daily as more states & counties issue stay-at-home order.

    Currently there are at least 42 states with orders to stay home. Last updated on Apr 07, 2020.

    See Data in Action

    I have built a covid-19 tracking dashboard using this & other datasets here. This dashboard is updated daily. All feedback is welcome!

    Column Description

    • Country - country
    • State - state
    • County - county is "" if the stay-at-home order is effective state-wide; otherwise county shows the counties/regions in that state with stay at home orders.
    • Date - date of when the stay-at-home order becomes effective
    • Type - type of the stay-at-home order

    Acknowledgements

  10. Coronavirus England briefing, 22 January 2021

    • gov.uk
    • s3.amazonaws.com
    Updated Jan 22, 2021
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    Department of Health and Social Care (2021). Coronavirus England briefing, 22 January 2021 [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-england-briefing-22-january-2021
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 22, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
    Authors
    Department of Health and Social Care
    Area covered
    England
    Description

    The data includes:

    • case rate per 100,000 population

    • case rate per 100,000 population aged 60 years and over

    • percentage change in case rate per 100,000 from previous week

    • number of people tested and weekly positivity

    • NHS pressures by Sustainability and Transformation Partnership (STP)

    More detailed epidemiological charts and graphs are presented for areas in very high and high local COVID alert level areas.

    See the https://www.england.nhs.uk/statistics/statistical-work-areas/covid-19-hospital-activity/">detailed data on hospital activity.

    See the https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/?_ga=2.188337198.720307617.1611233387-1961839927.1610968060">detailed data on the progress of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Published 22 January 2021

  11. Briefing: Demographic impact of Covid-19 - Dataset - data.gov.uk

    • ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Updated May 21, 2020
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    ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk (2020). Briefing: Demographic impact of Covid-19 - Dataset - data.gov.uk [Dataset]. https://ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk/dataset/briefing-demographic-impact-of-covid-19
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    May 21, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    CKANhttps://ckan.org/
    Description

    This briefing brings together a range of data published on the demographic impact of Covid19 to understand how the city has been affected, covering what is known about Covid-19 cases, before looking at mortality. It provides comparisons with other cities and explains some of the issues which affect the accuracy of such comparisons. And it summarises the emerging evidence of unequal impacts for different demographic groups, especially ethnicity and workers in particular occupations.

  12. g

    Briefing: Demographic impact of Covid-19 | gimi9.com

    • gimi9.com
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    Briefing: Demographic impact of Covid-19 | gimi9.com [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/eu_briefing-demographic-impact-of-covid-19/
    Explore at:
    License

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

    Description

    This briefing brings together a range of data published on the demographic impact of Covid19 to understand how the city has been affected, covering what is known about Covid-19 cases, before looking at mortality. It provides comparisons with other cities and explains some of the issues which affect the accuracy of such comparisons. And it summarises the emerging evidence of unequal impacts for different demographic groups, especially ethnicity and workers in particular occupations.

  13. e

    Socio-economic impact of COVID-19

    • data.europa.eu
    unknown
    Updated Aug 5, 2020
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    (2020). Socio-economic impact of COVID-19 [Dataset]. https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/2zpyn?locale=en
    Explore at:
    unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 5, 2020
    Description
    • This briefing presents evidence on the socio-economic impact of COVID-19 on London and Londoners​
    • Topics included in the briefing focus on recent data releases published in the preceding months that tell us how social policy issues are evolving in London since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic

    For more on the health and demographic impacts see the Demographic Impact Briefing and for labour market impacts see Labour Market Analysis. A page linking to all Covid-19 related data and analyses can be found here.

  14. Nepal ICU and Ventilators Occupancy for COVID

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated May 31, 2021
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    Akash Adhikari (2021). Nepal ICU and Ventilators Occupancy for COVID [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/akashsky13/nepal-icu-and-ventilators-occupancy-for-covid
    Explore at:
    zip(3742 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 31, 2021
    Authors
    Akash Adhikari
    Area covered
    Nepal
    Description

    Important Note:

    The Government has stopped providing the data on total ICU and Ventilators after the 6th of May.

    About

    Nepal's total ICU and ventilator capacity in the COVID crisis.
    Data: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1f7SctpDyMjll2AAMkPXlvkJL2MIrSGIJvD33hitEAZ0/edit?usp=sharing

    Content

    Columns: Date, Province, ICU Patients, ICU Total, ICU Occupancy, Ventilators Patients, Ventilators Total, Ventilators Occupancy

    Acknowledgements

    Thanks to the Ministry of Health and Populations' daily COVID briefing.

    Inspiration

    We can analyze our healthcare capacity and predict the potential health crisis beforehand.

  15. G

    Briefing package for a Committee of the Whole on COVID-19 and for the...

    • open.canada.ca
    pdf
    Updated Nov 20, 2024
    + more versions
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    Indigenous Services Canada (2024). Briefing package for a Committee of the Whole on COVID-19 and for the Special Committee on the COVID-19 Pandemic - Minister of Indigenous Services [Dataset]. https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/3341f24b-4e18-4b6e-a8e7-b99d90834a48
    Explore at:
    pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 20, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Indigenous Services Canadahttp://www.sac-isc.gc.ca/
    License

    Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Apr 20, 2020 - Apr 29, 2020
    Description

    The briefing materials below were initially prepared for the Minister of Indigenous Services for Committee of the Whole on April 20, 2020. These materials were subsequently updated for appearances by the Minister at additional Committees of the Whole and meetings of the Special Committee on the COVID-19 Pandemic that were held between April 29 and June 18, 2020. Briefing materials on the Northern portfolio are included when the Minister of Indigenous Services intervened on behalf of the Minister of Northern Affairs. Appearance dates: April 20, 28 (COVI Committee #1, no updates) and 29. May 5 (COVI Committee #3, no updates), 6, 12, 14, 20, 25 (Committee of the Whole, no updates). June 3, 11, 16 and 17.

  16. O

    COVID-19 cases by county last day

    • data.ct.gov
    csv, xlsx, xml
    Updated Jun 24, 2022
    + more versions
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    Department of Public Health (2022). COVID-19 cases by county last day [Dataset]. https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-cases-by-county-last-day/t9fq-t5gh
    Explore at:
    xml, csv, xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 24, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Department of Public Health
    License

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

    Description

    Laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 that have been reported among Connecticut residents. All data in this report are preliminary; data for previous dates will be updated as new reports are received and data errors are corrected. Hospitalization data were collected by the Connecticut Hospital Association. Deaths reported to the either the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) or Department of Public Health (DPH) are included in the daily COVID-19 update.

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

  17. g

    Briefing package for a Committee of the Whole on COVID-19 and for the...

    • gimi9.com
    + more versions
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    Briefing package for a Committee of the Whole on COVID-19 and for the Special Committee on the COVID-19 Pandemic - Minister of Northern Affairs | gimi9.com [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/ca_604a8446-0512-40b1-b2e5-5252118afaa7
    Explore at:
    Description

    The briefing materials prepared for the Minister of Northern Affairs for the Special Committee on the COVID-19 pandemic and Committees of the Whole related to the pandemic included Question Period notes that were published December 13, 2019, and May 26, 2020. These materials were subsequently updated for appearances by the Minister at Committees of the Whole and meetings of the Special Committee on the COVID-19 Pandemic that were held between May 14 and June 18, 2020. Briefing materials on the Indigenous Services or Crown-Indigenous Relations portfolios are included when the Minister of Northern Affairs intervened on behalf of the Minister of Indigenous Services or Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations. Appearance dates: April 29, May 6, 14, 21 (no updates, COVI Committee 11), June 9, 18 (no updates, COVI Committee 25).

  18. Table2_Shortcomings in Public Health Authorities’ Videos on COVID-19:...

    • frontiersin.figshare.com
    • datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov
    docx
    Updated May 30, 2023
    + more versions
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    Marie Therese Shortt; Ionica Smeets; Siri Wiig; Siv Hilde Berg; Daniel Adrian Lungu; Henriette Thune; Jo Røislien (2023). Table2_Shortcomings in Public Health Authorities’ Videos on COVID-19: Limited Reach and a Creative Gap.docx [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2021.764220.s002
    Explore at:
    docxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 30, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Frontiers Mediahttp://www.frontiersin.org/
    Authors
    Marie Therese Shortt; Ionica Smeets; Siri Wiig; Siv Hilde Berg; Daniel Adrian Lungu; Henriette Thune; Jo Røislien
    License

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

    Description

    Video communication has played a key role in relaying important and complex information on the COVID-19 pandemic to the general public. The aim of the present study is to compare Norwegian health authorities’ and WHO’s use of video communication during the COVID-19 pandemic to the most viewed COVID-19 videos on YouTube, in order to identify how videos created by health authorities measure up to contemporary video content, both creatively and in reaching video consumers. Through structured search on YouTube we found that Norwegian health authorities have published 26 videos, and the WHO 29 videos on the platform. Press briefings, live videos, news reports, and videos recreated/translated into other languages than English or Norwegian, were not included. A content analysis comparing the 55 videos by the health authorities to the 27 most viewed videos on COVID-19 on YouTube demonstrates poor reach of health authorities’ videos in terms of views and it elucidates a clear creative gap. While the videos created by various YouTube creators communicate using a wide range of creative presentation means (such as professional presenters, contextual backgrounds, advanced graphic animations, and humour), videos created by the health authorities are significantly more homogenous in style often using field experts or public figures, plain backgrounds or PowerPoint style animations. We suggest that further studies into various creative presentation means and their influence on reach, recall, and on different groups of the population, are carried out in the future to evaluate specific factors of this creative gap.

  19. O

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

    • data.ct.gov
    • catalog.data.gov
    csv, xlsx, xml
    Updated Jun 24, 2022
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    Department of Public Health (2022). COVID-19 Tests, Cases, Hospitalizations, and Deaths (Statewide) - ARCHIVE [Dataset]. https://data.ct.gov/w/rf3k-f8fg/wqz6-rhce?cur=vOuL1lYLRwf
    Explore at:
    csv, xlsx, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 24, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Department of Public Health
    License

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

    Description

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

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

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

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

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

    COVID-19 tests, cases, and associated deaths that have been reported among Connecticut residents. All data in this report are preliminary; data for previous dates will be updated as new reports are received and data errors are corrected. Hospitalization data were collected by the Connecticut Hospital Association and reflect the number of patients currently hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19. Deaths reported to the either the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) or Department of Public Health (DPH) are included in the daily COVID-19 update.

    Data on Connecticut deaths were obtained from the Connecticut Deaths Registry maintained by the DPH Office of Vital Records. Cause of death was determined by a death certifier (e.g., physician, APRN, medical examiner) using their best clinical judgment. Additionally, all COVID-19 deaths, including suspected or related, are required to be reported to OCME. On April 4, 2020, CT DPH and OCME released a joint memo to providers and facilities within Connecticut providing guidelines for certifying deaths due to COVID-19 that were consistent with the CDC’s guidelines and a reminder of the required reporting to OCME.25,26 As of July 1, 2021, OCME had reviewed every case reported and performed additional investigation on about one-third of reported deaths to better ascertain if COVID-19 did or did not cause or contribute to the death. Some of these investigations resulted in the OCME performing postmortem swabs for PCR testing on individuals whose deaths were suspected to be due to COVID-19, but antemortem diagnosis was unable to be made.31 The OCME issued or re-issued about 10% of COVID-19 death certificates and, when appropriate, removed COVID-19 from the death certificate. For standardization and tabulation of mortality statistics, written cause of death statements made by the certifiers on death certificates are sent to the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) at the CDC which assigns cause of death codes according to the International Causes of Disease 10th Revision (ICD-10) classification system.25,26 COVID-19 deaths in this report are defined as those for which the death certificate has an ICD-10 code of U07.1 as either a primary (underlying) or a contributing cause of death. More information on COVID-19 mortality can be found at the following link: https://portal.ct.gov/DPH/Health-Information-Systems--Reporting/Mortality/Mortality-Statistics

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Starting April 4, 2022, negative rapid antigen and rapid PCR test results for SARS-CoV-2 are no longer required to be reported to the Connecticut Department of Public Health as of April 4. Negative test results from laboratory based molecular (PCR/NAAT) results are still required to be reported as are all positive test results from both molecular (PCR/NAAT) and antigen tests.

    On 5/16/2022, 8,622 historical cases were included in the data. The date range for these cases were from August 2021 – April 2022.”

  20. COVID-19 Deaths Mapping Tool - Dataset - data.gov.uk

    • ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Updated Jun 4, 2020
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    ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk (2020). COVID-19 Deaths Mapping Tool - Dataset - data.gov.uk [Dataset]. https://ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk/dataset/covid-19-deaths-mapping-tool
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 4, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    CKANhttps://ckan.org/
    Description

    This mapping tool enables you to see how COVID-19 deaths in your area may relate to factors in the local population, which research has shown are associated with COVID-19 mortality. It maps COVID-19 deaths rates for small areas of London (known as MSOAs) and enables you to compare these to a number of other factors including the Index of Multiple Deprivation, the age and ethnicity of the local population, extent of pre-existing health conditions in the local population, and occupational data. Research has shown that the mortality risk from COVID-19 is higher for people of older age groups, for men, for people with pre-existing health conditions, and for people from BAME backgrounds. London boroughs had some of the highest mortality rates from COVID-19 based on data to April 17th 2020, based on data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Analysis from the ONS has also shown how mortality is also related to socio-economic issues such as occupations classified ‘at risk’ and area deprivation. There is much about COVID-19-related mortality that is still not fully understood, including the intersection between the different factors e.g. relationship between BAME groups and occupation. On their own, none of these individual factors correlate strongly with deaths for these small areas. This is most likely because the most relevant factors will vary from area to area. In some cases it may relate to the age of the population, in others it may relate to the prevalence of underlying health conditions, area deprivation or the proportion of the population working in ‘at risk occupations’, and in some cases a combination of these or none of them. Further descriptive analysis of the factors in this tool can be found here: https://data.london.gov.uk/dataset/covid-19--socio-economic-risk-factors-briefing

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Chatsiou, Kakia (2020). COVID-19 Press Briefings Corpus [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_3872416

COVID-19 Press Briefings Corpus

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Jun 2, 2020
Dataset provided by
University of Essex
Authors
Chatsiou, Kakia
License

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

Description

The Coronavirus (COVID-19) Press Briefings Corpus is a work in progress to collect and present in a machine readable text dataset of the daily briefings from around the world by government authorities. During the peak of the pandemic, most countries around the world informed their citizens of the status of the pandemic (usually involving an update on the number of infection cases, number of deaths) and other policy-oriented decisions about dealing with the health crisis, such as advice about what to do to reduce the spread of the epidemic.

Usually daily briefings did not occur on a Sunday.

At the moment the dataset includes:

UK/England: Daily Press Briefings by UK Government between 12 March 2020 - 01 June 2020 (70 briefings in total)

Scotland: Daily Press Briefings by Scottish Government between 3 March 2020 - 01 June 2020 (76 briefings in total)

Wales: Daily Press Briefings by Welsh Government between 23 March 2020 - 01 June 2020 (56 briefings in total)

Northern Ireland: Daily Press Briefings by N. Ireland Assembly between 23 March 2020 - 01 June 2020 (56 briefings in total)

World Health Organisation: Press Briefings occuring usually every 2 days between 22 January 2020 - 01 June 2020 (63 briefings in total)

More countries will be added in due course, and we will be keeping this updated to cover the latest daily briefings available.

The corpus is compiled to allow for further automated political discourse analysis (classification).

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