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TwitterThis dataset contains records of publicly reported data on COVID-19 testing in Ontario long-term care homes. It was collected between April 24, 2020 and March 30, 2023. Summary data is aggregated to the provincial level. Reports fewer than 5 are indicated with <5 to maintain the privacy of individuals. ##Data includes: * Long-term care home COVID-19 summary data * Long-term care homes with an active COVID-19 outbreak * Long-term care homes no longer in a COVID-19 outbreak * Long-term care home COVID-19 summary data by Public Health Unit (PHU) * Long-term care home COVID-19 staff vaccination rates An outbreak is defined as two or more lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases in residents, staff or other visitors in a home, with an epidemiological link, within a 14-day period, where at least one case could have reasonably acquired their infection in the long-term care home. Prior to April 7, 2021, the definition required one or more lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases in a resident or staff in the long-term care home. Notes February 21 to March 29, 2023: Data is only available for regular business days (for example, Monday through Friday, except statutory holidays) March 12 – 13, 2022: Due to technical difficulties, data is not available. September 8, 2022: The data dated September 6, 2022 represents data collected during the period of September 3, 4 and 5, 2022. October 6, 2022: The data dated October 5, 2022 represents data collected during the period of October 1, 2, 3 and 4, 2022. October 13, 2022: Due to technical difficulties, data for the date of October 9 is not available. October 20, 2022: Due to technical difficulties, data for the dates of October 15, 16 is not available. November 24, 2022: Due to technical difficulties, data is not available.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Archived as of 3/16/22: Due to changing LTC reporting requirements, this dataset will no longer be updated after 3/16/2022. For data on Indiana's long term case facilities, please visit: https://data.cms.gov/covid-19/covid-19-nursing-home-data Number of verified COVID-19 related cases and deaths from Long-Term Care Facilities for residents and staff members. Historical case data are aggregated at the facility-level and are reported from 3/1/2020 and updated weekly. Facilities that are in non-compliance with historical case data reporting needs are denoted by "Facility has not submitted data" in the "Facility Submission Status" column. Facilities listed as non-compliant will be updated as necessary with any new submissions of their historical cases to the Indiana State Department of Health. Cases and deaths in this file include records reported by Long-Term Care Facilities and have been verified by ISDH through a positive COVID-19 diagnostic lab result. This data file was constructed to aggregate verified cases and deaths for LTC staff and residents at the facility level. Because residents and staff may be moved between facilities, calculating total verified counts from this data file is not advised. Users should refer to the ISDH LTC dashboard for total counts.
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TwitterThe Nursing Home COVID-19 Public File from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, filtered for Connecticut. View the full dataset and detailed metadata here. The Nursing Home COVID-19 Public File includes data reported by nursing homes to the CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) system COVID-19 Long Term Care Facility Module, including Resident Impact, Facility Capacity, Staff & Personnel, and Supplies & Personal Protective Equipment, and Ventilator Capacity and Supplies Data Elements.
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TwitterThis dataset summarizes the number of cases among child care attendees and staff reported to the Department of Public Health (DPH). Each week, licensed child care centers are required to report cases of COVID-19 among attendees and staff to the DPH and the local health department. There are 1,388 licensed child care centers and group child care homes in Connecticut that serve approximately 50,000 children. Beginning the week of January 9th, reporting transitioned from individual case reporting to aggregate reporting of cases among attendees and staff. The form for collecting aggregate data from child care centers can be found here: https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=-nyLEd2juUiwJjH_abtzi-XnLB2c4-RLhUuoE9uLWJJUNURSR09GNlBBWFVIMlFaQ1BGUzcxMFNDUy4u Data are preliminary and, like other passive surveillance systems, under reporting occurs and the true incidence of disease is more than the number of cases reported. Data from previous weeks are updated as new data are received. Several weeks of data from the new reporting system will be needed to determine trends.
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TwitterFrom the project Web site: "To date, the Long-Term Care COVID Tracker is the most comprehensive dataset about COVID-19 in US long-term care facilities. It compiles crucial data about the effects of the pandemic on a population with extraordinary vulnerabilities to the virus due to age, underlying health conditions, or proximity to large outbreaks.
The dataset compiles all currently available information of COVID-19 cases and related deaths in long-term care facilities—nursing homes, skilled nursing facilities, assisted living facilities, and other care homes—and tracks both residents and staff."
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TwitterUpdated weekly on Thursdays Older adults and people with disabilities who live in long term care facilities are at high risk for COVID-19 illness and death. The data below describes the impacts of COVID-19 on the residents and staff of Long Term Care Facilities licensed by the State Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), including Skilled Nursing Facilities (nursing homes); Adult Family Homes and Assisted Living Facilities. Cases and deaths are also occurring in other forms of senior housing not licensed by DSHS, including subsidized housing for people age 50+, Permanent Supportive Housing, and naturally occurring retirement communities (NORCs) and among people with disabilities living in Supportive Living Facilities (also licensed by DSHS).
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TwitterThis dataset includes the cumulative number of healthcare facility-reported fatalities for patients with lab-confirmed COVID-19 disease by reporting date, patient county of residence, and patient fatalities that occurred based on the facility county. This dataset does not include fatalities related to COVID-19 disease that did not occur at a hospital, nursing home, or adult care facility. The primary goal of publishing this dataset is to provide users with information about healthcare facility fatalities among patients with lab-confirmed COVID-19 disease.
The information in this dataset is also updated daily on the NYS COVID-19 Tracker at https://www.ny.gov/covid-19tracker. The data source for this dataset is the daily COVID-19 survey through the New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) Health Electronic Response Data System (HERDS). Hospitals, nursing homes, and adult care facilities are required to complete this survey daily. The information from the survey is used for statewide surveillance, planning, resource allocation, and emergency response activities. Hospitals began reporting for the HERDS COVID-19 survey in March 2020, while Nursing Homes and Adult Care Facilities began reporting in April 2020. It is important to note that fatalities related to COVID-19 disease that occurred prior to the first publication dates are also included.
The county fatality numbers in this dataset are calculated by summing the number of fatalities by patient county of residence and reporting date, and patient fatalities that occurred based on the facility county, respectively. The statewide fatality numbers are calculated by summing the number of fatalities across all patient counties of residence, and across all facilities by county, by reporting date, respectively. The fatality numbers represent the cumulative number of fatalities that have been reported as of each reporting date.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Provisional counts of deaths in care homes caused by coronavirus (COVID-19) by local authority. Published by the Office for National Statistics and Care Quality Commission.
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Twitterhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by a newly discovered coronavirus. Most people infected with COVID-19 virus will experience mild to moderate respiratory illness and recover without requiring special treatment. Older people, and those with underlying medical problems like cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, and cancer are more likely to develop serious illness. During the entire course of the pandemic, one of the main problems that healthcare providers have faced is the shortage of medical resources and a proper plan to efficiently distribute them. In these tough times, being able to predict what kind of resource an individual might require at the time of being tested positive or even before that will be of immense help to the authorities as they would be able to procure and arrange for the resources necessary to save the life of that patient.
The main goal of this project is to build a machine learning model that, given a Covid-19 patient's current symptom, status, and medical history, will predict whether the patient is in high risk or not.
The dataset was provided by the Mexican government (link). This dataset contains an enormous number of anonymized patient-related information including pre-conditions. The raw dataset consists of 21 unique features and 1,048,576 unique patients. In the Boolean features, 1 means "yes" and 2 means "no". values as 97 and 99 are missing data.
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TwitterThe data is from a mixed-methods approach to address address three main questions:1 What were the mortality rates in care homes by country? 2. How does the mortality in care homes compare with previous periods? 3. What explains any excess mortality in care homes?List of Tables available in FigshareTable 1. Excess Deaths Study Characteristics Table 2. Care Homes Excess Deaths Study OutcomesTable 3. Quality Assessment: Care Home Excess Deaths studies: Newcastle Ottawa ScaleTable 4. Care Home intervention/exposure studies characteristics Table 5. Care Home intervention/exposure studies outcomesTable 6. Quality Assessment: Care Home Intervention/Exposure studies: Newcastle Ottawa ScaleFigure 1. Flow chartProtocol available at FigshareAppendix 1 National Mortality Data
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TwitterNote: Data elements were retired from HERDS on 10/6/23 and this dataset was archived.
This dataset includes the cumulative number and percent of healthcare facility-reported fatalities for patients with lab-confirmed COVID-19 disease by reporting date and patient sex. This dataset does not include fatalities related to COVID-19 disease that did not occur at a hospital, nursing home, or adult care facility. The primary goal of publishing this dataset is to provide users with information about healthcare facility fatalities among patients with lab-confirmed COVID-19 disease.
The information in this dataset is also updated daily on the NYS COVID-19 Tracker at https://www.ny.gov/covid-19tracker.
The data source for this dataset is the daily COVID-19 survey through the New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) Health Electronic Response Data System (HERDS). Hospitals, nursing homes, and adult care facilities are required to complete this survey daily. The information from the survey is used for statewide surveillance, planning, resource allocation, and emergency response activities. Hospitals began reporting for the HERDS COVID-19 survey in March 2020, while Nursing Homes and Adult Care Facilities began reporting in April 2020. It is important to note that fatalities related to COVID-19 disease that occurred prior to the first publication dates are also included.
The fatality numbers in this dataset are calculated by summing the patient fatalities by patient sex, as of each reporting date. The statewide total fatality numbers are calculated by summing the number of fatalities across all patient sexes, by reporting date. The fatality percentages are calculated by dividing the number of fatalities in each patient sex by the statewide total number of fatalities, by reporting date. The fatality numbers represent the cumulative number of fatalities that have been reported as of each reporting date.
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TwitterBy US Open Data Portal, data.gov [source]
This U.S. Household Pandemic Impacts dataset assesses the mental health care that households in America have been receiving over the past four weeks during the Covid-19 pandemic. Produced by a collaboration between the U.S. Census Bureau, and five other federal agencies, this survey was designed to measure both social and economic impacts of Covid-19 on American households, such as employment status, consumer spending trends, food security levels and housing disruptions among other important factors. The data collected was based on an internet questionnaire which was conducted through emails and text messages sent to randomly selected housing units from across America linked with email addresses or cell phone numbers from the Census Bureau Master Address File Data; all estimates comply with NCHS Data Presentation Standards for Proportions. Be sure to check out more about how U.S Government Works for further details!
For more datasets, click here.
- 🚨 Your notebook can be here! 🚨!
This dataset can be useful to examine the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on access to and utilization of mental health care by U.S. households in the last 4 weeks.
By studying this dataset, you can gain insight into how people’s mental health has been affected by the pandemic and identify trends based on population subgroups, states, phases of the survey and more.
Instructions for Use: - To get started, open up ‘csv-1’ found in this dataset. This file contains information on access to and utilization of mental health care by U.S households in the last 4 weeks, broken down into 14 different columns (e.g., Indicator, Group, State).
- Familiarize yourself with each column label (e.g., Time Period Start Date), data type (e
- Analyzing the impact of pandemic-induced stress on different demographic groups, such as age and race/ethnicity.
- Comparing the mental health care services received in different states over time.
- Investigating the correlation between socio-economic status and access to mental health care services during Covid-19 pandemic
If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the original authors. Data Source
License: Dataset copyright by authors - You are free to: - Share - copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format for any purpose, even commercially. - Adapt - remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially. - You must: - Give appropriate credit - Provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. - ShareAlike - You must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original. - Keep intact - all notices that refer to this license, including copyright notices.
File: csv-1.csv | Column name | Description | |:---------------------------|:-------------------------------------------------------------------| | Indicator | The type of indicator being measured. (String) | | Group | The group (by age, gender or race) being measured. (String) | | State | The state where the data was collected. (String) | | Subgroup | A narrower level categorization within Group. (String) | | Phase | Phase number reflective of survey iteration. (Integer) | | Time Period | A label indicating duration captured by survey period. (String) | | Time Period Label | A label indicating duration captured by survey period. (String) | | Time Period Start Date | Beginning date for surveyed period. (DateFormat ‘YYYY-MM-DD’) | | Time Period End Date | End date for surveyed period. (DateFormat ‘YYYY-MM-DD’) | | Value | The value of the indicator being measured. (Float) | | LowCI | The lower confidence interval of the value. (Float) | | HighCI | The higher confidence interval of the value. (Float) | | Quartile Range | The quartile range of the value. (String) | | Suppression Flag | A f...
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TwitterNote: This dataset is no longer being maintained and will not be updated going forward.
The weekly and cumulative number of residents with confirmed COVID-19 and with COVID-19 associated deaths is obtained from data self-reported by individual assisted living facilities to the Long Term Care Mutual Aid Plan web-based reporting system (www.mutualaidplan.org/ct). Both confirmed and suspect deaths are included.
Confirmed deaths include those among persons who tested positive for COVID-19. Suspected deaths include those among persons with signs and symptoms suggestive of COVID-19 but who did not have a laboratory positive COVID-19 test. Due to differing data collection and processing methods between LTC-MAP and the death data sources used previously, cumulative death data for residents was re-baselined on July 14, 2020. The resident death data before and after July 14, 2020 should not be added due to the differing definitions of COVID-19 associated deaths used and the possibility of duplication of deaths among prior and current data.
The cumulative number of deaths among assisted living residents is based upon data reported by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. For public health surveillance, COVID-19-associated deaths include persons who tested positive for COVID-19 around the time of death (laboratory-confirmed) and persons whose death certificate lists COVID-19 disease as a cause of death or a significant condition contributing to death (probable). As of 7/15/20 deaths reported by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner are no longer being updated on a weekly basis.
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TwitterThis dataset tracks the updates made on the dataset "New York State Statewide Nursing Home and Adult Care Facility Resident and Staff COVID-19 Infections" as a repository for previous versions of the data and metadata.
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TwitterNote: As of 4/16/25, this dataset is no longer being updated.
This dataset includes the cumulative number of healthcare facility-reported fatalities for patients with lab-confirmed COVID-19 disease by reporting date, patient county of residence, and patient fatalities that occurred based on the facility county. This dataset does not include fatalities related to COVID-19 disease that did not occur at a hospital, nursing home, or adult care facility. The primary goal of publishing this dataset is to provide users with information about healthcare facility fatalities among patients with lab-confirmed COVID-19 disease.
The information in this dataset is also updated daily on the NYS COVID-19 Tracker at https://www.ny.gov/covid-19tracker. The data source for this dataset is the daily COVID-19 survey through the New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) Health Electronic Response Data System (HERDS). Hospitals, nursing homes, and adult care facilities are required to complete this survey daily. The information from the survey is used for statewide surveillance, planning, resource allocation, and emergency response activities. Hospitals began reporting for the HERDS COVID-19 survey in March 2020, while Nursing Homes and Adult Care Facilities began reporting in April 2020. It is important to note that fatalities related to COVID-19 disease that occurred prior to the first publication dates are also included.
The county fatality numbers in this dataset are calculated by summing the number of fatalities by patient county of residence and reporting date, and patient fatalities that occurred based on the facility county, respectively. The statewide fatality numbers are calculated by summing the number of fatalities across all patient counties of residence, and across all facilities by county, by reporting date, respectively. The fatality numbers represent the cumulative number of fatalities that have been reported as of each reporting date.
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TwitterDataset includes README file that describes all datapoints.
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TwitterCOVID-19 causes significant mortality in elderly and vulnerable people and spreads easily in care homes where one in seven individuals aged > 85 years live. However, there is no surveillance for infection in care homes, nor are there systems (or research studies) monitoring the impact of the pandemic on individuals or systems. Usual practices are disrupted during the pandemic, and care home staff are taking on new and unfamiliar roles, such as advanced care planning. Understanding the nature of these changes is critical to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on residents, relatives and staff. 20 care homes staff members were interviewed using semi-structured interviews.
The COVID-19 pandemic poses a substantial risk to elderly and vulnerable care home residents and COVID-19 can spread rapidly in care homes. We have national, daily data on people with COVID-19 and deaths, but there is no similar data for care homes. This makes it difficult to know the scale of the problem, and plan how to keep care home residents safe. We also want to understand the impact of COVID-19 on care home staff and residents. Researchers from University College London (UCL) will measure the number of cases of COVID-19 in care homes, using data from Four Seasons Healthcare, a large care home chain. FSHC remove residents' names and addresses before sending the dataset to UCL, protecting resident's confidentiality. Since we cannot visit care homes during the pandemic, we will hold virtual (online) discussion meetings with care home stakeholders (staff, residents, relatives, General Practice teams) every 6-8 weeks, to learn rapid lessons about managing COVID-19 in care homes and identify pragmatic solutions. Our findings will be shared with FHSC, GPs and Public Health England, patients and the public, and support the national response to COVID-19. Patients and the public will be involved in all stages of the research.
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TwitterThe Federal Pharmacy Partnership for Long-Term Care (LTC) Program was a partnership between CDC and CVS, Walgreens, and Managed Health Care Associates, Inc. The program offered on-site COVID-19 vaccination services for residents of nursing homes and assisted living facilities. The Federal Pharmacy Partnership for LTC Program was in effect after vaccines became available to April 23, 2021. This is the historical archived data related to the LTC Program and represents data that was shown on COVID Data Tracker through September 30, 2021. Twelve variables that provided data on residents and staff vaccinated through the program were removed from the COVID-19 Vaccinations in the United States,Jurisdiction dataset. LTC was removed as an option from the location variable in the following datasets: COVID-19 Vaccinations in the United States,Jurisdiction and COVID-19 Vaccination Trends in the United States,National and Jurisdictional.
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TwitterThis dataset tracks the updates made on the dataset "New York State Statewide COVID-19 Nursing Home and Adult Care Facility Fatalities" as a repository for previous versions of the data and metadata.
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Twitter*** The County of Santa Clara Public Health Department discontinued updates to the COVID-19 data tables effective June 30, 2025. The COVID-19 data tables will be removed from the Open Data Portal on December 30, 2025. For current information on COVID-19 in Santa Clara County, please visit the Respiratory Virus Dashboard [sccphd.org/respiratoryvirusdata]. For any questions, please contact phinternet@phd.sccgov.org ***
The dataset provides information about the COVID-19 deaths by racial/ethnic groups related to the long term care facilities located in Santa Clara County. Source: California Reportable Disease Information Exchange. Data notes: The Other category for the race/ethnicity includes American Indian/Alaska Native and people who identify as multi-racial. Data are not presented when the death count is between 1 to 10.
This dataset is updated every Friday.
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TwitterThis dataset contains records of publicly reported data on COVID-19 testing in Ontario long-term care homes. It was collected between April 24, 2020 and March 30, 2023. Summary data is aggregated to the provincial level. Reports fewer than 5 are indicated with <5 to maintain the privacy of individuals. ##Data includes: * Long-term care home COVID-19 summary data * Long-term care homes with an active COVID-19 outbreak * Long-term care homes no longer in a COVID-19 outbreak * Long-term care home COVID-19 summary data by Public Health Unit (PHU) * Long-term care home COVID-19 staff vaccination rates An outbreak is defined as two or more lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases in residents, staff or other visitors in a home, with an epidemiological link, within a 14-day period, where at least one case could have reasonably acquired their infection in the long-term care home. Prior to April 7, 2021, the definition required one or more lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases in a resident or staff in the long-term care home. Notes February 21 to March 29, 2023: Data is only available for regular business days (for example, Monday through Friday, except statutory holidays) March 12 – 13, 2022: Due to technical difficulties, data is not available. September 8, 2022: The data dated September 6, 2022 represents data collected during the period of September 3, 4 and 5, 2022. October 6, 2022: The data dated October 5, 2022 represents data collected during the period of October 1, 2, 3 and 4, 2022. October 13, 2022: Due to technical difficulties, data for the date of October 9 is not available. October 20, 2022: Due to technical difficulties, data for the dates of October 15, 16 is not available. November 24, 2022: Due to technical difficulties, data is not available.