80 datasets found
  1. d

    Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Case Tracker

    • data.world
    • kaggle.com
    csv, zip
    Updated Dec 3, 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
    Dec 3, 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

  2. g

    Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases by the Center for Systems Science and...

    • github.com
    • systems.jhu.edu
    • +1more
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    Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering (JHU CSSE), Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University (JHU) [Dataset]. https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19
    Explore at:
    Dataset provided by
    Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering (JHU CSSE)
    Area covered
    Global
    Description

    2019 Novel Coronavirus COVID-19 (2019-nCoV) Visual Dashboard and Map:
    https://www.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/bda7594740fd40299423467b48e9ecf6

    • Confirmed Cases by Country/Region/Sovereignty
    • Confirmed Cases by Province/State/Dependency
    • Deaths
    • Recovered

    Downloadable data:
    https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19

    Additional Information about the Visual Dashboard:
    https://systems.jhu.edu/research/public-health/ncov

  3. COVID-19 US County JHU Data & Demographics

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Mar 1, 2023
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    Heads or Tails (2023). COVID-19 US County JHU Data & Demographics [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/headsortails/covid19-us-county-jhu-data-demographics
    Explore at:
    zip(40873869 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 1, 2023
    Authors
    Heads or Tails
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Context

    The United States have recently become the country with the most reported cases of 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19). This dataset contains daily updated number of reported cases & deaths in the US on the state and county level, as provided by the Johns Hopkins University. In addition, I provide matching demographic information for US counties.

    Content

    The dataset consists of two main csv files: covid_us_county.csv and us_county.csv. See the column descriptions below for more detailed information. In addition, I've added US county shape files for geospatial plots: us_county.shp/dbf/prj/shx.

    • covid_us_county.csv: COVID-19 cases and deaths which will be updated daily. The data is provided by the Johns Hopkins University through their excellent github repo. I combined the separate "confirmed cases" and "deaths" files into a single table, removed a few (I think to be) redundant geo identifier columns, and reshaped the data into long format with a single date column. The earliest recorded cases are from 2020-01-22.

    • us_counties.csv: Demographic information on the US county level based on the (most recent) 2014-18 release of the Amercian Community Survey. Derived via the great tidycensus package.

    Column Description

    COVID-19 dataset covid_us_county.csv:

    • fips: County code in numeric format (i.e. no leading zeros). A small number of cases have NA values here, but can still be used for state-wise aggregation. Currently, this only affect the states of Massachusetts and Missouri.

    • county: Name of the US county. This is NA for the (aggregated counts of the) territories of American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and Virgin Islands.

    • state: Name of US state or territory.

    • state_code: Two letter abbreviation of US state (e.g. "CA" for "California"). This feature has NA values for the territories listed above.

    • lat and long: coordinates of the county or territory.

    • date: Reporting date.

    • cases & deaths: Cumulative numbers for cases & deaths.

    Demographic dataset us_counties.csv:

    • fips, county, state, state_code: same as above. The county names are slightly different, but mostly the difference is that this dataset has the word "County" added. I recommend to join on fips.

    • male & female: Population numbers for male and female.

    • population: Total population for the county. Provided as convenience feature; is always the sum of male + female.

    • female_percentage: Another convenience feature: female / population in percent.

    • median_age: Overall median age for the county.

    Acknowledgements

    Data provided for educational and academic research purposes by the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering (JHU CSSE).

    Licence

    The github repo states that:

    This GitHub repo and its contents herein, including all data, mapping, and analysis, copyright 2020 Johns Hopkins University, all rights reserved, is provided to the public strictly for educational and academic research purposes. The Website relies upon publicly available data from multiple sources, that do not always agree. The Johns Hopkins University hereby disclaims any and all representations and warranties with respect to the Website, including accuracy, fitness for use, and merchantability. Reliance on the Website for medical guidance or use of the Website in commerce is strictly prohibited.
    

    Version history

    • In version 1, a small number of cases had values of `county == "Unassigned". Those have been superseded.
    • Version 5: added US county shape files
  4. o

    COVID-19 Pandemic - USA counties

    • dashboardcovid.trial.opendatasoft.com
    csv, excel, geojson +1
    Updated Apr 3, 2020
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    (2020). COVID-19 Pandemic - USA counties [Dataset]. https://dashboardcovid.trial.opendatasoft.com/explore/dataset/covid-19-pandemic-usa-counties/
    Explore at:
    csv, excel, json, geojsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 3, 2020
    License

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

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    This is the USA counties data extracted from the 2019 Coronavirus data hub operated by the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering (JHU CSSE). Also, Supported by ESRI Living Atlas Team and the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab (JHU APL).Sources:1Point3Arces: https://coronavirus.1point3acres.com/enUS CDC: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/index.html Enrichmentthe official FIPS codes are available and should be used for joins or geojoins needs.Terms of Use:This data set is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) by the Johns Hopkins University on behalf of its Center for Systems Science in Engineering. Copyright Johns Hopkins University 2020.Attribute the data as the "COVID-19 Data Repository by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University" or "JHU CSSE COVID-19 Data" for short, and the url: https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19.For publications that use the data, please cite the following publication: "Dong E, Du H, Gardner L. An interactive web-based dashboard to track COVID-19 in real time. Lancet Inf Dis. 20(5):533-534. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(20)30120-1"

  5. a

    COVID-19 Cases US

    • just-stuff-from-other-orgs-dcdev.hub.arcgis.com
    • prep-response-portal.napsgfoundation.org
    • +9more
    Updated Mar 21, 2020
    + more versions
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    CSSE_covid19 (2020). COVID-19 Cases US [Dataset]. https://just-stuff-from-other-orgs-dcdev.hub.arcgis.com/items/628578697fb24d8ea4c32fa0c5ae1843
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 21, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    CSSE_covid19
    Area covered
    Description

    On March 10, 2023, the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center ceased collecting and reporting of global COVID-19 data. For updated cases, deaths, and vaccine data please visit the following sources:Global: World Health Organization (WHO)U.S.: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)For more information, visit the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.This feature layer contains the most up-to-date COVID-19 cases for the US and Canada. Data sources: WHO, CDC, ECDC, NHC, DXY, 1point3acres, Worldometers.info, BNO, state and national government health departments, and local media reports. This layer is created and maintained by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at the Johns Hopkins University. This feature layer is supported by the Esri Living Atlas team and JHU Data Services. This layer is opened to the public and free to share. Contact Johns Hopkins.IMPORTANT NOTICE: 1. Fields for Active Cases and Recovered Cases are set to 0 in all locations. John Hopkins has not found a reliable source for this information at the county level but will continue to look and carry the fields.2. Fields for Incident Rate and People Tested are placeholders for when this becomes available at the county level.3. In some instances, cases have not been assigned a location at the county scale. those are still assigned a state but are listed as unassigned and given a Lat Long of 0,0.Data Field Descriptions by Alias Name:Province/State: (Text) Country Province or State Name (Level 2 Key)Country/Region: (Text) Country or Region Name (Level 1 Key)Last Update: (Datetime) Last data update Date/Time in UTCLatitude: (Float) Geographic Latitude in Decimal Degrees (WGS1984)Longitude: (Float) Geographic Longitude in Decimal Degrees (WGS1984)Confirmed: (Long) Best collected count of Confirmed Cases reported by geographyRecovered: (Long) Not Currently in Use, JHU is looking for a sourceDeaths: (Long) Best collected count for Case Deaths reported by geographyActive: (Long) Confirmed - Recovered - Deaths (computed) Not Currently in Use due to lack of Recovered dataCounty: (Text) US County Name (Level 3 Key)FIPS: (Text) US State/County CodesCombined Key: (Text) Comma separated concatenation of Key Field values (L3, L2, L1)Incident Rate: (Long) People Tested: (Long) Not Currently in Use Placeholder for additional dataPeople Hospitalized: (Long) Not Currently in Use Placeholder for additional data

  6. M

    COVID-19 Confirmed and Forecasted Case Data

    • catalog.midasnetwork.us
    Updated Sep 27, 2021
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    Los Alamos National Laboratory (2021). COVID-19 Confirmed and Forecasted Case Data [Dataset]. https://catalog.midasnetwork.us/collection/128
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 27, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    MIDAS COORDINATION CENTER
    Authors
    Los Alamos National Laboratory
    License

    Apache License, v2.0https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Jan 25, 2020 - Nov 6, 2021
    Area covered
    State, Country
    Variables measured
    Viruses, disease, COVID-19, modeling, pathogen, forecasting, Homo sapiens, host organism, mortality data, modeling method, and 8 more
    Dataset funded by
    National Institute of General Medical Sciences
    Description

    The model forecasts the number of future confirmed cases and deaths as reported by the John Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center Dashboard (https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html). The model forecasts are probabilitics and are done for any United States of America state that has at least one confirmed COVID-19 case/death and any country with at least 100 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 20 deaths. They updated 2 times a week until 2021-09-27, and the output of the forecasts and incidences are available in visualization on the website and in CSV format at country level and at state level for the US. The code of the model is not publicly available.

  7. Weekly Summary of U.S. COVID-19 Trends

    • beta-search-prod-pre-a-hub.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jul 4, 2020
    + more versions
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    Urban Observatory by Esri (2020). Weekly Summary of U.S. COVID-19 Trends [Dataset]. https://beta-search-prod-pre-a-hub.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/UrbanObservatory::weekly-summary-of-u-s-covid-19-trends-1
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 4, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Urban Observatory by Esri
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    On March 10, 2023, the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center ceased its collecting and reporting of global COVID-19 data. For updated cases, deaths, and vaccine data please visit: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)For more information, visit the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.This map is updated weekly and currently shows data through Mar 5, 2023. Notes: as of 5/25/2021, Nebraska stopped sharing COVID-19 testing and on 9/26/21 began, but with a lump sum for the previous four months. Nebraska's reporting became unconsumable by JHU on July 1, 2022. Maryland stopped reporting results for several weeks on 12/4/2021 due to a website hack.It shows COVID-19 Trend for the most recent Monday with a colored dot for each county. The larger the dot, the longer the county has had this trend.Includes Puerto Rico, Guam, Northern Marianas, U.S. Virgin Islands.The intent of this map is to give more context than just the current day of new data because daily data for COVID-19 cases is volatile and can be unreliable on the day it is first reported. Weekly summaries in the counts of new cases smooth out this volatility.Click or tap on a county to see a history of trend changes and a weekly graph of new cases going back to February 1, 2020.For more information about COVID-19 trends, see the full methodology.Data Source: Johns Hopkins University CSSE US Cases by County dashboard and USAFacts for Utah County level Data.

  8. COVID-19 Trends in Each Country

    • coronavirus-response-israel-systematics.hub.arcgis.com
    • coronavirus-disasterresponse.hub.arcgis.com
    • +2more
    Updated Mar 28, 2020
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    Urban Observatory by Esri (2020). COVID-19 Trends in Each Country [Dataset]. https://coronavirus-response-israel-systematics.hub.arcgis.com/maps/a16bb8b137ba4d8bbe645301b80e5740
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 28, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Urban Observatory by Esri
    Area covered
    Earth
    Description

    On March 10, 2023, the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center ceased its collecting and reporting of global COVID-19 data. For updated cases, deaths, and vaccine data please visit: World Health Organization (WHO)For more information, visit the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.COVID-19 Trends MethodologyOur goal is to analyze and present daily updates in the form of recent trends within countries, states, or counties during the COVID-19 global pandemic. The data we are analyzing is taken directly from the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases Dashboard, though we expect to be one day behind the dashboard’s live feeds to allow for quality assurance of the data.DOI: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.125529863/7/2022 - Adjusted the rate of active cases calculation in the U.S. to reflect the rates of serious and severe cases due nearly completely dominant Omicron variant.6/24/2020 - Expanded Case Rates discussion to include fix on 6/23 for calculating active cases.6/22/2020 - Added Executive Summary and Subsequent Outbreaks sectionsRevisions on 6/10/2020 based on updated CDC reporting. This affects the estimate of active cases by revising the average duration of cases with hospital stays downward from 30 days to 25 days. The result shifted 76 U.S. counties out of Epidemic to Spreading trend and no change for national level trends.Methodology update on 6/2/2020: This sets the length of the tail of new cases to 6 to a maximum of 14 days, rather than 21 days as determined by the last 1/3 of cases. This was done to align trends and criteria for them with U.S. CDC guidance. The impact is areas transition into Controlled trend sooner for not bearing the burden of new case 15-21 days earlier.Correction on 6/1/2020Discussion of our assertion of an abundance of caution in assigning trends in rural counties added 5/7/2020. Revisions added on 4/30/2020 are highlighted.Revisions added on 4/23/2020 are highlighted.Executive SummaryCOVID-19 Trends is a methodology for characterizing the current trend for places during the COVID-19 global pandemic. Each day we assign one of five trends: Emergent, Spreading, Epidemic, Controlled, or End Stage to geographic areas to geographic areas based on the number of new cases, the number of active cases, the total population, and an algorithm (described below) that contextualize the most recent fourteen days with the overall COVID-19 case history. Currently we analyze the countries of the world and the U.S. Counties. The purpose is to give policymakers, citizens, and analysts a fact-based data driven sense for the direction each place is currently going. When a place has the initial cases, they are assigned Emergent, and if that place controls the rate of new cases, they can move directly to Controlled, and even to End Stage in a short time. However, if the reporting or measures to curtail spread are not adequate and significant numbers of new cases continue, they are assigned to Spreading, and in cases where the spread is clearly uncontrolled, Epidemic trend.We analyze the data reported by Johns Hopkins University to produce the trends, and we report the rates of cases, spikes of new cases, the number of days since the last reported case, and number of deaths. We also make adjustments to the assignments based on population so rural areas are not assigned trends based solely on case rates, which can be quite high relative to local populations.Two key factors are not consistently known or available and should be taken into consideration with the assigned trend. First is the amount of resources, e.g., hospital beds, physicians, etc.that are currently available in each area. Second is the number of recoveries, which are often not tested or reported. On the latter, we provide a probable number of active cases based on CDC guidance for the typical duration of mild to severe cases.Reasons for undertaking this work in March of 2020:The popular online maps and dashboards show counts of confirmed cases, deaths, and recoveries by country or administrative sub-region. Comparing the counts of one country to another can only provide a basis for comparison during the initial stages of the outbreak when counts were low and the number of local outbreaks in each country was low. By late March 2020, countries with small populations were being left out of the mainstream news because it was not easy to recognize they had high per capita rates of cases (Switzerland, Luxembourg, Iceland, etc.). Additionally, comparing countries that have had confirmed COVID-19 cases for high numbers of days to countries where the outbreak occurred recently is also a poor basis for comparison.The graphs of confirmed cases and daily increases in cases were fit into a standard size rectangle, though the Y-axis for one country had a maximum value of 50, and for another country 100,000, which potentially misled people interpreting the slope of the curve. Such misleading circumstances affected comparing large population countries to small population counties or countries with low numbers of cases to China which had a large count of cases in the early part of the outbreak. These challenges for interpreting and comparing these graphs represent work each reader must do based on their experience and ability. Thus, we felt it would be a service to attempt to automate the thought process experts would use when visually analyzing these graphs, particularly the most recent tail of the graph, and provide readers with an a resulting synthesis to characterize the state of the pandemic in that country, state, or county.The lack of reliable data for confirmed recoveries and therefore active cases. Merely subtracting deaths from total cases to arrive at this figure progressively loses accuracy after two weeks. The reason is 81% of cases recover after experiencing mild symptoms in 10 to 14 days. Severe cases are 14% and last 15-30 days (based on average days with symptoms of 11 when admitted to hospital plus 12 days median stay, and plus of one week to include a full range of severely affected people who recover). Critical cases are 5% and last 31-56 days. Sources:U.S. CDC. April 3, 2020 Interim Clinical Guidance for Management of Patients with Confirmed Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19). Accessed online. Initial older guidance was also obtained online. Additionally, many people who recover may not be tested, and many who are, may not be tracked due to privacy laws. Thus, the formula used to compute an estimate of active cases is: Active Cases = 100% of new cases in past 14 days + 19% from past 15-25 days + 5% from past 26-49 days - total deaths. On 3/17/2022, the U.S. calculation was adjusted to: Active Cases = 100% of new cases in past 14 days + 6% from past 15-25 days + 3% from past 26-49 days - total deaths. Sources: https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/71/wr/mm7104e4.htm https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#variant-proportions If a new variant arrives and appears to cause higher rates of serious cases, we will roll back this adjustment. We’ve never been inside a pandemic with the ability to learn of new cases as they are confirmed anywhere in the world. After reviewing epidemiological and pandemic scientific literature, three needs arose. We need to specify which portions of the pandemic lifecycle this map cover. The World Health Organization (WHO) specifies six phases. The source data for this map begins just after the beginning of Phase 5: human to human spread and encompasses Phase 6: pandemic phase. Phase six is only characterized in terms of pre- and post-peak. However, these two phases are after-the-fact analyses and cannot ascertained during the event. Instead, we describe (below) a series of five trends for Phase 6 of the COVID-19 pandemic.Choosing terms to describe the five trends was informed by the scientific literature, particularly the use of epidemic, which signifies uncontrolled spread. The five trends are: Emergent, Spreading, Epidemic, Controlled, and End Stage. Not every locale will experience all five, but all will experience at least three: emergent, controlled, and end stage.This layer presents the current trends for the COVID-19 pandemic by country (or appropriate level). There are five trends:Emergent: Early stages of outbreak. Spreading: Early stages and depending on an administrative area’s capacity, this may represent a manageable rate of spread. Epidemic: Uncontrolled spread. Controlled: Very low levels of new casesEnd Stage: No New cases These trends can be applied at several levels of administration: Local: Ex., City, District or County – a.k.a. Admin level 2State: Ex., State or Province – a.k.a. Admin level 1National: Country – a.k.a. Admin level 0Recommend that at least 100,000 persons be represented by a unit; granted this may not be possible, and then the case rate per 100,000 will become more important.Key Concepts and Basis for Methodology: 10 Total Cases minimum threshold: Empirically, there must be enough cases to constitute an outbreak. Ideally, this would be 5.0 per 100,000, but not every area has a population of 100,000 or more. Ten, or fewer, cases are also relatively less difficult to track and trace to sources. 21 Days of Cases minimum threshold: Empirically based on COVID-19 and would need to be adjusted for any other event. 21 days is also the minimum threshold for analyzing the “tail” of the new cases curve, providing seven cases as the basis for a likely trend (note that 21 days in the tail is preferred). This is the minimum needed to encompass the onset and duration of a normal case (5-7 days plus 10-14 days). Specifically, a median of 5.1 days incubation time, and 11.2 days for 97.5% of cases to incubate. This is also driven by pressure to understand trends and could easily be adjusted to 28 days. Source

  9. Global Coronavirus (COVID-19) Data (Johns Hopkins)

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Apr 12, 2020
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    Rahul Loha (2020). Global Coronavirus (COVID-19) Data (Johns Hopkins) [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/rahulloha/covid19
    Explore at:
    zip(16067804 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 12, 2020
    Authors
    Rahul Loha
    Description

    Context

    The data comes from the dataset maintained and updated by the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering. Tableau cleans, reshapes, and makes this data ready for your analysis.

    Content

    The data represent a point-in-time snapshot of to-date totals of confirmed cases and total deaths.

    Here are the fields included:

    Case_type: Confirmed Cases and total deaths Cases: Point in time snapshot of to-date totals (i.e., Mar 22 is inclusive of all prior dates) Date: Jan 23, 2020 - Present Country_region: Provided for all countries Province_state: Provided for Australia, Canada, China, Denmark, France, Netherlands, United Kingdom, United States Admin2: US only - County name FIPS: US only - 5-digit Federal Information Processing Standard Combined_Key: US only - Combination of Admin 2, State_Province, and Country_Region Lat Long Location Table Names: The Table Name is used to delineate the specific Johns Hopkins datasets that were used: JHU Timeseries - Country-level data (non-US) is sourced from the current JHU Global Timeseries dataset, provided to the public once per day JHU Timeseries - US data through Mar 23 (state-level) is sourced from the Mar 22 JHU Global Timeseries dataset JHU Daily - US data from Mar 23 (county-level) is sourced from the JHU Daily datasets (e.g., Mar 23 + Mar 24 + Mar 25, etc.)

  10. COVID-19 Worldwide Daily Data

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Aug 28, 2020
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    Altadata (2020). COVID-19 Worldwide Daily Data [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/altadata/covid19
    Explore at:
    zip(469881 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2020
    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
  11. A

    USCounties time

    • data.amerigeoss.org
    csv, esri rest +2
    Updated Aug 10, 2020
    + more versions
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    ESRI (2020). USCounties time [Dataset]. https://data.amerigeoss.org/da_DK/dataset/uscounties-time
    Explore at:
    esri rest, csv, html, geojsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 10, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    ESRI
    Description

    This feature layer contains the most up-to-date COVID-19 cases for the US. Data is pulled from the Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University, the Red Cross, the Census American Community Survey, and the Bureau of Labor and Statistics, and aggregated at the US county level.


    This web map created and maintained by the Centers for Civic Impact at the Johns Hopkins University, and is supported by the Esri Living Atlas team and JHU Data Services. It is used in the COVID-19 United States Cases by County dashboard.

    For more information on Johns Hopkins University’s response to COVID-19, visit the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center where our experts help to advance understanding of the virus, inform the public, and brief policymakers in order to guide a response, improve care, and save lives.

  12. US County and Territory COVID-19 Trend History

    • hub.scag.ca.gov
    Updated Jun 17, 2020
    + more versions
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    Urban Observatory by Esri (2020). US County and Territory COVID-19 Trend History [Dataset]. https://hub.scag.ca.gov/datasets/UrbanObservatory::us-county-and-territory-covid-19-trend-history
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 17, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Urban Observatory by Esri
    Area covered
    United States,
    Description

    On March 10, 2023, the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center ceased its collecting and reporting of global COVID-19 data. For updated cases, deaths, and vaccine data please visit: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)For more information, visit the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.This map is updated weekly. It shows COVID-19 Trend for the most recent Monday with a colored dot for each county. The larger the dot, the longer the county has had this trend. Includes Puerto Rico, Guam, Northern Marianas, U.S. Virgin Islands.Note: Nebraska Stopped reporting county level-results on 5/25/2021 and re-started on 9/26/21 with a lump-sum representing the previous four months - this impacted the weekly sum of cases fields.The intent of this map is to give more context than just the current day of new data because daily data for COVID-19 cases is volatile and can be unreliable on the day it is first reported. Weekly summaries in the counts of new cases smooth out this volatility.Click or tap on a county to see a history of trend changes and a weekly graph of new cases going back to February 1, 2020.For more information about COVID-19 trends, see the full methodology.Data Source: Johns Hopkins University CSSE US Cases by County dashboard.

  13. y

    US Coronavirus Cases Per Day

    • ycharts.com
    html
    Updated Nov 9, 2025
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    Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering (2025). US Coronavirus Cases Per Day [Dataset]. https://ycharts.com/indicators/us_coronavirus_cases_per_day
    Explore at:
    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 9, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    YCharts
    Authors
    Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering
    License

    https://www.ycharts.com/termshttps://www.ycharts.com/terms

    Time period covered
    Jan 23, 2020 - Mar 9, 2023
    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    US Coronavirus Cases Per Day
    Description

    View daily updates and historical trends for US Coronavirus Cases Per Day. from United States. Source: Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engine…

  14. y

    US Coronavirus Cases

    • ycharts.com
    html
    Updated Mar 10, 2023
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    Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering (2023). US Coronavirus Cases [Dataset]. https://ycharts.com/indicators/us_coronavirus_cases
    Explore at:
    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 10, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    YCharts
    Authors
    Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering
    License

    https://www.ycharts.com/termshttps://www.ycharts.com/terms

    Time period covered
    Jan 22, 2020 - Mar 9, 2023
    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    US Coronavirus Cases
    Description

    View daily updates and historical trends for US Coronavirus Cases. from United States. Source: Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering. T…

  15. D

    COVID-19 Fatalities in United States (Johns Hopkins University)

    • dallasopendata.com
    csv, xlsx, xml
    Updated Jul 22, 2021
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    Johns Hopkins University (2021). COVID-19 Fatalities in United States (Johns Hopkins University) [Dataset]. https://www.dallasopendata.com/Other/COVID-19-Fatalities-in-United-States-Johns-Hopkins/emmz-iq98
    Explore at:
    xlsx, csv, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 22, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Johns Hopkins University
    Area covered
    Johns Hopkins Homewood, United States
    Description

    This dataset contains COVID-19 fatalities by county in the United States and is sourced from Johns Hopkins University. Johns Hopkins is responsible for the regular maintenance and refresh of this data. Johns Hopkins is currently expected to refresh the data daily. The City of Dallas is not responsible for the accuracy of this data.

  16. y

    US Coronavirus Deaths

    • ycharts.com
    html
    Updated Mar 10, 2023
    + more versions
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    Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering (2023). US Coronavirus Deaths [Dataset]. https://ycharts.com/indicators/us_coronavirus_deaths
    Explore at:
    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 10, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    YCharts
    Authors
    Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering
    License

    https://www.ycharts.com/termshttps://www.ycharts.com/terms

    Time period covered
    Jan 22, 2020 - Mar 9, 2023
    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    US Coronavirus Deaths
    Description

    View daily updates and historical trends for US Coronavirus Deaths. from United States. Source: Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering. …

  17. S

    LA County COVID Cases

    • splitgraph.com
    • data.lacity.org
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 15, 2024
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    lacity (2024). LA County COVID Cases [Dataset]. https://www.splitgraph.com/lacity/la-county-covid-cases-jsff-uc6b
    Explore at:
    application/openapi+json, json, application/vnd.splitgraph.imageAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 15, 2024
    Authors
    lacity
    Area covered
    Los Angeles County
    Description

    COVID cases and deaths for LA County and California State. Updated daily.

    Data source: Johns Hopkins University (https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/us-map),

    Johns Hopkins GitHub (https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19/blob/master/cssecovid19data/cssecovid19timeseries/timeseriescovid19confirmed_US.csv).

    Code available: https://github.com/CityOfLosAngeles/covid19-indicators.

    Splitgraph serves as an HTTP API that lets you run SQL queries directly on this data to power Web applications. For example:

    See the Splitgraph documentation for more information.

  18. JHU Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases, by country

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated May 18, 2020
    + more versions
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    Google BigQuery (2020). JHU Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases, by country [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/bigquery/covid19-jhu-csse
    Explore at:
    zip(0 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 18, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    BigQueryhttps://cloud.google.com/bigquery
    Authors
    Google BigQuery
    Description

    Overview

    This is the data repository for the 2019 Novel Coronavirus Visual Dashboard operated by the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering (JHU CSSE). This database was created in response to the Coronavirus public health emergency to track reported cases in real-time. The data include the location and number of confirmed COVID-19 cases, deaths and recoveries for all affected countries, aggregated at the appropriate province or state. It was developed to enable researchers, public health authorities and the general public to track the outbreak as it unfolds. Additional information is available in the blog post, Mapping 2019-nCoV (https://systems.jhu.edu/research/public-health/ncov/), and included data sources are listed here: https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19

    Sample Query 1

    How many confirmed COVID-19 cases were there in the US, by state? This query determines the total number of cases by province in February. A "province_state" can refer to any subset of the US in this particular dataset, including a county or state. SELECT province_state, confirmed AS feb_confirmed_cases, FROM bigquery-public-data.covid19_jhu_csse.summary WHERE country_region = "US" AND date = '2020-02-29' ORDER BY feb_confirmed_cases desc

    Sample Query 2

    Which countries with the highest number of confirmed cases have the most per capita? This query joins the Johns Hopkins dataset with the World Bank's global population data to determine which countries among those with the highest total number of confirmed cases have the most confirmed cases per capita.

    with country_pop AS( SELECT IF(country = "United States","US",IF(country="Iran, Islamic Rep.","Iran",country)) AS country, year_2018 FROM bigquery-public-data.world_bank_global_population.population_by_country)

    SELECT cases.date AS date, cases.country_region AS country_region, SUM(cases.confirmed) AS total_confirmed_cases, SUM(cases.confirmed)/AVG(country_pop.year_2018) * 100000 AS confirmed_cases_per_100000 FROM bigquery-public-data.covid19_jhu_csse.summary cases JOIN country_pop ON cases.country_region LIKE CONCAT('%',country_pop.country,'%') WHERE cases.country_region = "US" AND country_pop.country = "US" AND cases.date = DATE_SUB(current_date(),INTERVAL 1 day) GROUP BY country_region, date

    UNION ALL

    SELECT cases.date AS date, cases.country_region AS country_region, SUM(cases.confirmed) AS total_confirmed_cases, SUM(cases.confirmed)/AVG(country_pop.year_2018) * 100000 AS confirmed_cases_per_100000 FROM bigquery-public-data.covid19_jhu_csse.summary cases JOIN country_pop ON cases.country_region LIKE CONCAT('%',country_pop.country,'%') WHERE cases.country_region = "France" AND country_pop.country = "France" AND cases.date = DATE_SUB(current_date(),INTERVAL 1 day) GROUP BY country_region, date

    UNION ALL

    SELECT cases.date AS date, cases.country_region AS country_region, SUM(cases.confirmed) AS total_confirmed_cases, SUM(cases.confirmed)/AVG(country_pop.year_2018) * 100000 AS confirmed_cases_per_100000 FROM bigquery-public-data.covid19_jhu_csse.summary cases JOIN country_pop ON cases.country_region LIKE CONCAT('%',country_pop.country,'%') WHERE cases.country_region = "China" AND country_pop.country = "China" AND cases.date = DATE_SUB(current_date(),INTERVAL 1 day)

    GROUP BY country_region, date

    UNION ALL

    SELECT cases.date AS date, cases.country_region AS country_region, cases.confirmed AS total_confirmed_cases, cases.confirmed/country_pop.year_2018 * 100000 AS confirmed_cases_per_100000 FROM bigquery-public-data.covid19_jhu_csse.summary cases JOIN country_pop ON cases.country_region LIKE CONCAT('%',country_pop.country,'%') WHERE cases.country_region IN ("Italy", "Spain", "Germany", "Iran") AND cases.date = DATE_SUB(current_date(),INTERVAL 1 day) ORDER BY confirmed_cases_per_100000 desc

    Dataset source

    JHU CSSE

    Update frequency

    Daily

  19. l

    U.S. Counties and Territories for COVID-19 Trends

    • visionzero.geohub.lacity.org
    • disasterpartners.org
    Updated Apr 28, 2020
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    Urban Observatory by Esri (2020). U.S. Counties and Territories for COVID-19 Trends [Dataset]. https://visionzero.geohub.lacity.org/datasets/49c25e0ce50340e08fcfe51fe6f26d1e
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 28, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Urban Observatory by Esri
    Area covered
    Description

    On March 10, 2023, the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center ceased its collecting and reporting of global COVID-19 data. For updated cases, deaths, and vaccine data please visit: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)For more information, visit the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.Trends represent the day-to-day rate of new cases with a focus on the most recent 10 to 14 days. Includes Puerto Rico, Guam, Northern Marianas, and U.S. Virgin Islands. Daily new case counts are volatile for many reasons and sometimes the trends reflect that volatility. Thus, we decided to include longer-term summaries here. County Trends as of 9 Mar 20230 (-0) in Emergent1135 (+51) in Spreading1664 (-63) in Epidemic230 (+10) in Controlled110 (+2) in End StageNotes: Many states now only report once per week, and FL only once every two weeks. On 3/7/2022 we adjusted the formula for active cases to reflect the Omicron Variant which is documented to cause lower rates of serious and severe illness. To produce these trends we analyze daily updates from the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases Dashboard, though we expect to be one day behind the dashboard’s live feeds to allow for quality assurance of the data.For more information about COVID-19 trends, see our country level trends story map and the full methodology.Data Source: Johns Hopkins University CSSE US Cases by County dashboard and USAFacts for Utah County level Data.Feature layer generated from running the Join Features solution that is the basis for daily updates for the U.S. County COVID-19 Tends Story Map.

  20. John Hopkins Covid 19 Case Tracker Dataset

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jan 11, 2021
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    CodeBreaker619 (2021). John Hopkins Covid 19 Case Tracker Dataset [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/codebreaker619/john-hopkins-covid-19-case-tracker-dataset
    Explore at:
    zip(14625123 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 11, 2021
    Authors
    CodeBreaker619
    Description

    Content

    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.

    Acknowledgements

    John Hopkins University The Associated Press

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The Associated Press (2025). Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Case Tracker [Dataset]. https://data.world/associatedpress/johns-hopkins-coronavirus-case-tracker

Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Case Tracker

Johns Hopkins' county-level COVID-19 case and death data, paired with population and rates per 100,000

Explore at:
10 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
zip, csvAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Dec 3, 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

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