The cumulative number of COVID-19 cases in Spain amounted to nearly 14 million as of July 28, 2024. Since Spain confirmed its first case, the authorities have reported approximately 122,000 deaths as a result of complications stemming from the disease, most of them in Madrid. COVID-19: background information COVID-19 is a disease caused by a novel coronavirus that had not previously been identified in humans. The first case was detected in the Hubei province of China at the end of December 2019. Multiple cases have been reported each day. At the beginning of the pandemic, few was known regarding the virus. Though some aspects still remain unclear, more information has been collected since the outbreak started, allowing a better understanding of the disease and its prevention and treatment, including the production of new vaccines. Immunization in Spain As of May 24, 2023, around 87 percent of the population in Spain had received at least one dose of a vaccine against COVID-19. Moreover, approximately 86 percent were already fully vaccinated. As of August 5, 2022, the number of pre-ordered doses of COVID-19 vaccines in the country amounted to 283.3 million, more than half of which were produced by Pfizer/BioNTech. Find the most up-to-date information about the coronavirus pandemic in the world under Statista’s COVID-19 facts and figures site.
The number of COVID-19 cases in Spain amounted to around 13.9 million as of June 28, 2023. As of that date, the Spanish authorities had confirmed approximately 121,760 deaths as a result of complications stemming from the disease, most of them reported in Madrid and Catalonia, with 21,361 deaths and 21,241 casualties related to COVID-19, respectively.
Find the most up-to-date information about the coronavirus pandemic in the world under Statista’s COVID-19 facts and figures site.
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This dataset is very vast and contains Spanish tweets related to COVID-19. There are 18958 unique tweet-ids in the whole dataset that ranges from December 2019 till May 2020 . The keywords that have been used to crawl the tweets are 'corona', , 'covid ' , 'sarscov2 ', 'covid19', 'coronavirus '. For getting the other 33 fields of data drop a mail at "avishekgarain@gmail.com". Code snippet is given in Documentation file. Sharing Twitter data other than Tweet ids publicly violates Twitter regulation policies.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This dataset presents a large-scale collection of millions of Twitter posts related to the coronavirus pandemic in Spanish language. The collection was built by monitoring public posts written in Spanish containing a diverse set of hashtags related to the COVID-19, as well as tweets shared by the official Argentinian government offices, such as ministries and secretaries at different levels. Data was collected between March and October 2020 using the Twitter API, and will be periodically updated.
In addition to tweets IDs, the dataset includes information about mentions, retweets, media, URLs, hashtags, replies, users and content-based user relations, allowing the observation of the dynamics of the shared information. Data is presented in different tables that can be analysed separately or combined.
The dataset aims at serving as source for studying several coronavirus effects in people through social media, including the impact of public policies, the perception of risk and related disease consequences, the adoption of guidelines, the emergence, dynamics and propagation of disinformation and rumours, the formation of communities and other social phenomena, the evolution of health related indicators (such as fear, stress, sleep disorders, or children behaviour changes), among other possibilities. In this sense, the dataset can be useful for multi-disciplinary researchers related to the different fields of data science, social network analysis, social computing, medical informatics, social sciences, among others.
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In past 24 hours, Spain, Europe had N/A new cases, N/A deaths and N/A recoveries.
The coronavirus that originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan and spread to all Spanish regions had a higher mortality rate among those aged over 80 years old, according to the most recent data. In this age group, 21 percent of those that contracted the COVID-19 died from the complications caused by this virus. As of November 24, the disease mostly affected those aged 70-79 yearswith about 23 percent of coronavirus hospitalizations found in that age range. As of November 24, the number of people affected by this coronavirus in Spain was about over 343 thousand. Madrid, the Spanish capital and the region with the highest number of cases, had a transmission rate of 5,129 cases every 100 thousand people as of the same date.
Spain: one of the epicentres of the outbreak Since Spain confirmed its first case, the authorities have confirmed 28.7 deaths as a result of complications from coronavirus, most of them in the Community of Madrid. As of the same date, the number of recoveries Spain registered was significantly higher than that of deaths, with over 150 thousand patients that were able to regain their health. In Spain, the first confirmed case was a German tourist spending some days in La Gomera, Canary Islands, at the end of January 2020.
COVID-19: background information COVID-19 is a novel coronavirus that had not previously been identified in humans. The first case was detected in the Hubei province of China at the end of December 2019. Thousands of new cases are being reported each day, and because the illness has only recently been detected, it is not known exactly how the virus is spreading from person to person. However, the outbreak of the SARS coronavirus, which began in 2002, is thought to have spread via cough and sneeze droplets.
Find the most up-to-date information about the coronavirus pandemic in the world under Statista’s COVID-19 facts and figures site.
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Spain recorded 120964 Coronavirus Deaths since the epidemic began, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In addition, Spain reported 13845825 Coronavirus Cases. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for Spain Coronavirus Deaths.
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The number of COVID-19 vaccination doses administered in Spain rose to 105799888 as of Oct 27 2023. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for Spain Coronavirus Vaccination Total.
According to the Bank of Spain's forecasts on the impact of the coronavirus (SARS-Cov-2) on the national gross domestic product (GDP), the Spanish economy will experience an outstanding recovery in the mid-term. In the best-case scenario, GDP could grow 8.6 and 4.8 percent in 2021 and 2022, respectively. Hence, the central bank's forecast closely match the one presented by the Government itself in May 2020, when the latter estimated that GDP would grow up to a 6.8 percent in 2021. Despite such remarkable recovery, the impact of the pandemic on the Spanish GDP in 2020 (which fell between 10.7 and 11.6 percent points depending on the scenario) will hinder the country's economy in the years to come.
The coronavirus that originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan and spread to all Spanish regions mostly affected those aged 70-79 years, according to the most recent data. Some 23 percent of people hospitalized due to coronavirus coronavirus in Spain were aged in that age range. About 21 percent of those that contracted the COVID-19 aged 90 or over died from the complications caused by this virus during the same period. As of April 29, the number of people affected by this coronavirus in Spain was over 212 thousand. Madrid, the Spanish capital and the region with the highest number of cases, had a transmission rate of 912 cases every 100 thousand people as of the same date.
COVID-19: background information COVID-19 is a novel coronavirus that had not previously been identified in humans. The first case was detected in the Hubei province of China at the end of December 2019. Thousands of new cases are being reported each day, and because the illness has only recently been detected, it is not known exactly how the virus is spreading from person to person. However, the outbreak of the SARS coronavirus, which began in 2002, is thought to have spread via cough and sneeze droplets.
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The Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) outbreak, dubbed COVID-19, is first and foremost a human tragedy, affecting millions of people globally. The contagious Coronavirus, which broke out at the close of 2019, has led to a medical emergency across the world, with the World Health Organization officially declaring the novel Coronavirus a pandemic on March 11, 2020. Read More
COVID-19 Alabama and US with pop-ups in Spanish for use in Spanish apps and dashboards on the Spanish COVID-19 hub page.
This statistic presents the most challenging aspects Spanish companies are faced with during the coronavirus pandemic as of June 2020. On the top of the list of challenges that Spanish companies are faced with is the economic repercussions derived from the health crisis caused by COVID-19, with approximately 60 percent of companies stating this is their number one obstacle.
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Discovering topics in Twitter about the COVID-19 outbreak in Spain --- In this work, we apply topic modeling to study what users have been discussing in Twitter during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. More particularly, we explore the period of time that includes three differentiated phases of the COVID-19 crisis in Spain: the pre-crisis time, the outbreak, and the beginning of the lockdown. To do so, we first collect a large corpus of Spanish tweets and clean them. Then, we cluster the tweets into topics using a Latent Dirichlet Allocation model, and define generative and discriminative routes to later extract the most relevant keywords and sentences for each topic. Finally, we provide an exhaustive qualitative analysis about how such topics correspond to the situation in Spain at different stages of the crisis.
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In this work, we release two expert curated, manually annotated datasets of COVID-19 self-reported symptoms. The first dataset contains tweets in English and the second contains tweets in Spanish, both containing around 36,500 tweets in total. These datasets were used for the Sixth and Seventh Workshop on Social Media Mining For Health (2021 and 2022)
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ClinSpEn
This repository contains the sample, test and background data for the ClinSpEn track.
ClinSpEn is part of the Biomedical WMT 2022 shared task, having the aim to promote the development and evaluation of machine translation systems adapted to the medical domain with three highly relevant sub-tracks: clinical cases, medical controlled vocabularies/ontologies, and clinical terms and entities extracted from medical content.
Data Description
ClinSpEn proposes three different sub-tracks, each based on a different type of clinical data:
- Clinical Cases:
Parallel EN-EN COVID-19 clinical cases. The direction of this sub-track is EN>ES.
The dataset’s case reports were carefully selected to cover a wide range of aspects related to the disease: different types of patients (children, adults, elderly and pregnant people, babies), different comorbidities (cancer, mental health issues, immunosuppressed patients) and symptomatology (mild and severe presentations, dermatologic, immunologic and psychiatric manifestations, thrombosis, …). The reports were translated from English to Spanish by a professional medical translator on a first step and revised by a clinical expert on a second step.
The sample set files is made up of parallel txt files, with the Spanish version having a “.es” extension and the English files having a “.en” extension. Each report has been parallelized so that every sentence’s line number corresponds to the same sentence’s line number in both languages.
The test and background data is made up of a TSV file with three columns: document number, line number and English line. The clinical cases themselves include COVID-19 case reports as well as diverse content extracted from PubMed.
- Clinical Terminology:
Parallel EN-ES clinical terms extracted from medical literature and clinical records, with particular focus on diseases, symptoms, findings, procedures and professions and translated and revised by professional medical translators. The direction of this sub-track is ES>EN.
The sample set contains 7 000 terms as a tab-separated file (TSV), with the first column corresponding to English terms and the second column to Spanish terms.
The test and background data is made up of a TSV file with two columns: term number and Spanish term.
- Ontology Concepts:
Parallel EN-ES concepts extracted from various open biomedical ontologies and taxonomies and then manually translated by a professional medical translator. The direction of this sub-track is EN>ES.
The sample data includes 400 concepts. The terms are presented as tab-separated file (TSV), with the first column corresponding to English terms and the second column to Spanish terms. The third column includes the term’s origin ontology and its correspondent ID, while the fourth one includes a link to the concept in OBO Library.
The test and background data is made up of a TSV file with two columns: concept number and English concept.
Related Links:
- Sub-track website with more information: https://temu.bsc.es/clinspen/
- WMT website: https://www.statmt.org/wmt22/
- CodaLab: https://codalab.lisn.upsaclay.fr/competitions/6696/
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We are releasing a Twitter dataset connected to our project Digital Narratives of Covid-19 (DHCOVID) that -among other goals- aims to explore during one year (May 2020-2021) the narratives behind data about the coronavirus pandemic.In this first version, we deliver a Twitter dataset organized as follows:
Each folder corresponds to daily data (one folder for each day): YEAR-MONTH-DAYIn every folder there are 9 different plain text files named with ""dhcovid"", followed by date (YEAR-MONTH-DAY), language (""en"" for English, and ""es"" for Spanish), and region abbreviation (""fl"", ""ar"", ""mx"", ""co"", ""pe"", ""ec"", ""es""):dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_es_fl.txt: Dataset containing tweets geolocalized in South Florida. The geo-localization is tracked by tweet coordinates, by place, or by user information.dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_en_fl.txt: We are gathering only tweets in English that refer to the area of Miami and South Florida. The reason behind this choice is that there are multiple projects harvesting English data, and, our project is particularly interested in this area because of our home institution (University of Miami) and because we aim to study public conversations from a bilingual (EN/ES) point of view.dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_es_ar.txt: Dataset containing tweets from Argentina.dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_es_mx.txt: Dataset containing tweets from Mexico.dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_es_co.txt: Dataset containing tweets from Colombia.dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_es_pe.txt: Dataset containing tweets from Perú.dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_es_ec.txt: Dataset containing tweets from Ecuador.dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_es_es.txt: Dataset containing tweets from Spain.dhcovid_YEAR-MONTH-DAY_es.txt: This dataset contains all tweets in Spanish, regardless of its geolocation.
For English, we collect all tweets with the following keywords and hashtags: covid, coronavirus, pandemic, quarantine, stayathome, outbreak, lockdown, socialdistancing. For Spanish, we search for: covid, coronavirus, pandemia, quarentena, confinamiento, quedateencasa, desescalada, distanciamiento social.The corpus of tweets consists of a list of Tweet Ids; to obtain the original tweets, you can use ""Twitter hydratator"" which takes the id and download for you all metadata in a csv file.We started collecting this Twitter dataset on April 24th, 2020 and we are adding daily data to our GitHub repository. There is a detected problem with file 2020-04-24/dhcovid_2020-04-24_es.txt, which we couldn't gather the data due to technical reasons.For more information about our project visit https://covid.dh.miami.edu/ For more updated datasets and detailed criteria, check our GitHub Repository: https://github.com/dh-miami/narratives_covid19/
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Spain MSCBS: COVID-19: Number of Cases: To Date: CC: Castile La Mancha data was reported at 19,286.000 Person in 26 Apr 2020. This records an increase from the previous number of 18,995.000 Person for 25 Apr 2020. Spain MSCBS: COVID-19: Number of Cases: To Date: CC: Castile La Mancha data is updated daily, averaging 10,839.500 Person from Mar 2020 (Median) to 26 Apr 2020, with 42 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 19,286.000 Person in 26 Apr 2020 and a record low of 567.000 Person in 16 Mar 2020. Spain MSCBS: COVID-19: Number of Cases: To Date: CC: Castile La Mancha data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Ministry of Health, Consumer Affairs and Social Welfare. The data is categorized under High Frequency Database’s Disease Outbreaks – Table ES.D001: Ministry of Health, Consumer Affairs and Social Welfare: Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-2019) (Discontinued). Ministry of Health, Consumer Affairs and Social Welfare of Spain has changed its criteria for reporting the total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases. Until 26 April 2020 the total number of cases and its derivatives by areas include those with positive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test results and with positive tests for antibodies (TestAc+). As of this date the replacement series and its derivatives by areas include only cases confirmed by PCR test results. 2. Replacement series ID: 449481427
This statistic presents the share of companies that were led to layoffs due to the coronavirus crisis as of June 2020, by number of employees. Approximately sixty percent of companies with over five thousand employees experienced some layoffs under the time of consideration.
Deaths involving coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) reported to NCHS by week, sex, and race and Hispanic origin. Deaths occurred in the United States.
The cumulative number of COVID-19 cases in Spain amounted to nearly 14 million as of July 28, 2024. Since Spain confirmed its first case, the authorities have reported approximately 122,000 deaths as a result of complications stemming from the disease, most of them in Madrid. COVID-19: background information COVID-19 is a disease caused by a novel coronavirus that had not previously been identified in humans. The first case was detected in the Hubei province of China at the end of December 2019. Multiple cases have been reported each day. At the beginning of the pandemic, few was known regarding the virus. Though some aspects still remain unclear, more information has been collected since the outbreak started, allowing a better understanding of the disease and its prevention and treatment, including the production of new vaccines. Immunization in Spain As of May 24, 2023, around 87 percent of the population in Spain had received at least one dose of a vaccine against COVID-19. Moreover, approximately 86 percent were already fully vaccinated. As of August 5, 2022, the number of pre-ordered doses of COVID-19 vaccines in the country amounted to 283.3 million, more than half of which were produced by Pfizer/BioNTech. Find the most up-to-date information about the coronavirus pandemic in the world under Statista’s COVID-19 facts and figures site.