Ambergris Posted April 12, 2020 Author Share Posted April 12, 2020 (edited) 529,887 US 163,027 Spain 152,271 Italy 130,730 France 125,452 Germany 79,885 United Kingdom 70,029 Iran 52,167 Turkey 28,018 Belgium 25,107 Switzerland 24,571 Netherlands 23,316 Canada 20,962 Brazil 15,987 Portugal 13,806 Austria 13,584 Russia 10,743 Israel 10,512 Korea, South 10,151 Sweden 8,928 Ireland 8,446 India 7,257 Ecuador 6,927 Chile 6,848 Peru 6,748 Japan 6,409 Norway 6,356 Poland 6,303 Australia 6,191 Denmark 5,990 Romania 5,902 Czechia 5,011 Pakistan 4,530 Malaysia 4,428 Philippines 4,219 Mexico 4,033 Saudi Arabia 3,842 Indonesia 3,736 United Arab Emirates 3,380 Serbia 3,270 Luxembourg 3,234 Panama 2,905 Finland 2,759 Dominican Republic 2,728 Qatar 2,709 Colombia 2,518 Thailand 2,511 Ukraine 2,299 Singapore 2,226 Belarus 2,142 Argentina 2,081 Greece 2,028 South Africa 1,939 Egypt 1,825 Algeria 1,689 Iceland 1,560 Moldova 1,545 Morocco 1,534 Croatia 1,330 New Zealand 1,318 Iraq 1,310 Hungary 1,304 Estonia 1,188 Slovenia 1,154 Kuwait 1,058 Azerbaijan 1,040 Bahrain 1,026 Lithuania 967 Armenia 946 Bosnia and Herzegovina 865 Kazakhstan 820 Cameroon 767 Uzbekistan 760 North Macedonia 728 Slovakia 712 Diamond Princess 685 Tunisia 661 Bulgaria 630 Latvia 620 Cuba 619 Lebanon 616 Cyprus 601 Andorra 577 Costa Rica 555 Afghanistan 546 Oman 533 Cote d'Ivoire 494 Uruguay 491 Niger 484 Burkina Faso 482 Bangladesh 433 Albania 408 Ghana 392 Honduras 381 Jordan 370 Malta 356 San Marino 339 Kyrgyzstan 319 Mauritius 318 Nigeria 300 Bolivia 283 Kosovo 278 Senegal 268 West Bank and Gaza 263 Montenegro 258 Vietnam 250 Guinea 242 Georgia 223 Congo (Kinshasa) 199 Sri Lanka 191 Kenya 187 Djibouti 175 Venezuela 153 Guatemala 136 Brunei 134 Paraguay 120 Cambodia 120 Rwanda 118 El Salvador 112 Trinidad and Tobago 102 Madagascar 92 Monaco 87 Mali 79 Liechtenstein 76 Togo 69 Ethiopia 69 Jamaica 68 Barbados 60 Congo (Brazzaville) 53 Uganda 48 Liberia 46 Bahamas 46 Gabon 45 Guyana 40 Zambia 38 Burma 38 Guinea-Bissau 35 Benin 34 Eritrea 33 Haiti 32 Tanzania 25 Libya 25 Syria 21 Antigua and Barbuda 21 Somalia 20 Mozambique 19 Angola 19 Maldives 19 Sudan 18 Equatorial Guinea 18 Laos 16 Dominica 16 Fiji 16 Mongolia 16 Namibia 15 Saint Lucia 14 Grenada 14 Zimbabwe 13 Belize 13 Botswana 12 Eswatini 12 Malawi 12 Saint Kitts and Nevis 12 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 11 Chad 11 Seychelles 10 Sierra Leone 10 Suriname 9 Gambia 9 MS Zaandam 9 Nepal 9 Nicaragua 8 Cabo Verde 8 Central African Republic 8 Holy See 7 Mauritania 6 Western Sahara 5 Bhutan 5 Burundi 4 Sao Tome and Principe 4 South Sudan 2 Papua New Guinea 2 Timor-Leste 1 Yemen 20,608 deaths attributed to coronavirus in the US as of the 10:30 p.m. update on April 11 Edited April 12, 2020 by Ambergris 1 Link to comment
Mt_Rider Posted April 12, 2020 Share Posted April 12, 2020 Sooooo, they don't even bother to post China now? I wish the news would not post headlines like: US has most cases in the world. Well of course we do. China cheats and Russia ..... But beyond that, we have to look at how many per million people! Last we looked, US does not lead in that way of counting. MtRider ....tho NYC is having trouble not putting us up in that lead. 5 Link to comment
Jeepers Posted April 12, 2020 Share Posted April 12, 2020 I agree Mt.Rider. I'd like to see a per capita result once in awhile. 1 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 12, 2020 Author Share Posted April 12, 2020 China posts. The question is what they might be posting. I delete China when I remember. Sometimes I remember; sometimes I don't. https://worldmapper.org/maps/coronavirus-cases-relative/ 1 3 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 12, 2020 Author Share Posted April 12, 2020 https://www.yahoo.com/news/bodies-rotting-street-covid-19-084318759.html Bodies Rotting in the Street: COVID-19 Chaos Grips Ecuador Jeremy Kryt The Daily BeastApril 11, 2020, 4:43 AM EDT World Bodies Rotting in the Street: COVID-19 Chaos Grips Ecuador Jeremy Kryt The Daily BeastApril 11, 2020, 4:43 AM EDT CALI, Colombia—Images coming out of Guayaquil, a port city on Ecuador’s Pacific coast, are as grim as anything the world has seen since the COVID-19 pandemic began. As the death toll has overwhelmed hospitals and morgues, bodies have been abandoned in the streets or left to decay in houses, cargo trailers, and parking lots. The smell of the exposed corpses sticks like bile in the throat, and flocks of vultures wheel above the city waiting their chance to feed on human carrion. Cemeteries are far beyond capacity, so some of the dead are now buried in unmarked graves in outlying fields. Other cadavers are secreted out of the city by loved ones, disguised as sleeping passengers to slip through military checkpoints trying to stop the spread of the contagion. Lacking the advanced technology and robust infrastructure of their First World counterparts, hospitals and health centers in Guayaquil have been swamped by climbing infection rates since late March, often leaving ordinary citizens to deal as best they can with dead and dying family members. Trump Decided a Global Pandemic Was a Good Time to Be a Neighborhood Bully Videos allegedly showing bodies being burned in the streets are now widespread on social media and reproduced by news outlets across Latin America—although the provenance of those public cremation clips remains controversial, and journalists in Guayaquil say they are not what they seem. Fires were lit to draw attention to bodies, not to incinerate them. There is no doubt that on Monday of this week the Ecuadorian government began issuing makeshift cardboard caskets, because traditional, more durable models have run out. And two new cemeteries with an estimated 10,000 graves are under construction, as experts predict the worst is yet to come, with the death toll likely to peak in late April. “We are living in hell,” Blanca Moncada, a journalist with El Diario Expreso in Guayaquil, tells The Daily Beast. Moncada describes local medical facilities as resembling “war hospitals.” Such descriptions have been used in almost every hard-hit region, including New York City, but in Guayaquil the situation is still more grotesque. “There are bodies stacked in freezers, corpses lining the corridors, even piled up outside the hospital,” she says. Reporters covering the crisis in Guayaquil have been particularly hard hit, with at least 14 infections and four deaths, including Moncada’s close friend and mentor at El Diario, who died a few days ago. She says she knows there are many in the city who are much worse off than white-collar workers like herself. “At least we can lock down and work from home,” she says. “Many in the barrios don’t have that choice. For them it’s either go out to work or starve.” Guayaquil, which is Ecuador’s largest city, has become the epicenter for COVID-19 in Latin America. As such, it has been described as a kind of bellwether for how the virus might impact other developing countries in the region—a gruesome harbinger of what’s to come when poverty meets pandemic. As the crisis unfolds, U.S. citizens have been fleeing Guayaquil and surrounding areas, with special charter flights been arranged for them, according to a State Department spokesperson who declined to be named. “Overall, over 3,000 Americans have departed Ecuador since March 19, through 26 flights the Embassy facilitated through commercial airlines and State Department-chartered aircraft.” Because embassy workers are already in quarantine, “only emergency consular services are available” in Guayaquil at this time, the spokesperson said. If conditions continue to worsen: “The consulate has a strong contingency plan for any necessary emergency evacuation.” ‘POOR VIGILANCE’ The original contagion is thought to have been brought by travelers returning from Spain and Italy in late winter. The Guayaquil airport is a major travel hub for surrounding districts, and early screening for the virus was marked by “poor epidemiological vigilance,” says Dr. Esteban Ortiz-Prado, an infectious disease expert at the University of the Americas in Quito. Because passengers were only tested for high temperatures, many asymptomatic carriers slipped through. A lack of self-isolation protocols followed, failures which were in turn compounded by poverty, urban overcrowding, and a high number of senior citizens in vulnerable communities. “When you add up all those factors together—Boom!—you get an explosion of infections,” Ortiz-Prado says. And that explosion eventually led to what he calls the “definitive collapse” of the public health system in the city. Demographics and a lack of preparedness aside, some in Guayaquil feel the national government’s inadequate response has directly contributed to the scale of the outbreak. Critics say President Lenín Moreno is basing policy decisions on infection statistics that are unrealistically low, while also failing to call for a general lockdown, even as the outbreak escalates. Here’s a quick rundown of the numbers: As of Thursday, April 9, the official tally was 4,965 total cases and 272 deaths nationwide. However, government records in Guayaquil show at least 1,350 bodies were collected from streets and private homes in that city between March 23 and April 5, dwarfing the official stats for the entire country. The nation’s public health director also confirmed 150 coronavirus-related deaths in Guayaquil on April 8 alone. Some of the discrepancy in numbers could be attributed to a lack of test kits and diagnostic equipment. But a deliberate willingness to look the other way as the body count rises might also be a way for President Moreno to delay implementing the kind of full quarantine measures that have proven effective—although sometimes politically unpopular—in other countries. “We have a partial quarantine right now,” says epidemiologist Ortiz-Prado, with businesses open and people allowed out on the streets from five in the morning until two in the afternoon each weekday. The lockdown “definitely needs to be stronger in Guayaquil and elsewhere,” he says. “We need to keep people from going out except to buy necessities.” But keeping people under strict quarantine is easier said than done in the many poverty-stricken barrios around Guayaquil, where daily existence remains a hand-to-mouth struggle. Indeed, such precarious living conditions are common throughout Latin America, and will pose grave challenges to public health officials as the pandemic unfolds. To its credit, Moreno’s government has already begun to distribute a stipend of $60 per month to workers in the informal economy, but Moncada says that’s not nearly enough to feed married couples and families. “The people keep going out,” says Guayaquil mayor Cynthia Viteri Jiménez in a recent interview with Univision. “People chase the police with stones and knives [when they try to enforce the curfew]. In some sectors they just don’t want to realize the magnitude of what is happening in Ecuador.” RISK FACTORS One of the lessons other countries might want to learn from Ecuador’s unfortunate example is to prevent “the rapid spread of disinformation,” says Ortiz-Prado. “Countries must control dangerous messages that circulate in social media in relation to the quarantine. Here in Ecuador, for example, there are people with millions of followers on Instagram who say: ‘Nothing is happening, go out into the streets. Nothing will happen to you,’” he says. “This has to be considered a major risk factor.” While some in Guayaquil mislead the public by denying actual dangers, others have erred on the other side of the truth—sensationalizing human suffering by failing to fact check in order to generate click bait. “There have been news outlets everywhere saying they were burning corpses in the street, but this did not happen,” says El Diario’s Moncada. Instead of funeral pyres, she says, the viral videos actually show signal fires. “What they did was burn the furniture, the coffin, or the belongings of the deceased. Those were desperate acts to get the authorities to come quickly to remove the bodies. They left the corpses outside their houses and they burned tires and furniture hoping to get a response. To get help,” she says. Other forms of deception and intimidation indicate just how severe the breakdown of society has become. For example, workers in a Guayaquil morgue are now being investigated for extorting grieving families, demanding bribes in exchange for returning their loved ones’ bodies. Nor has the medical community been spared. At least 10 doctors in the city have died, and an estimated 1,600 more health-care workers have become infected, largely due to the lack of masks, gloves, and gowns. Yet those who speak publicly about shortages say they’re being threatened by superiors who want them silenced. “The doctors I’ve interviewed are desperate due to the lack of supplies,” Moncada says. “But if they complain they know they risk getting fined, or even permanently fired, by the hospitals.” Ortiz-Prado says he also worried about dwindling stockpiles, and he hopes eventually “developed countries like the U.S. could support us by sending resources like test kits, medical experts, and personal protection equipment.” Above all he stresses the need for developing nations in Latin America to adopt a unilateral approach and work together to prevent the outbreak from spreading. “The region is very permeable to the infection and with a high morbidity rate,” he says, by way of advocating for a comprehensive, region-wide strategy. “We can’t just try to control the outbreak in one country and leave people to die in another.” 5 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 13, 2020 Author Share Posted April 13, 2020 555,398 US 166,831 Spain 156,363 Italy 133,670 France 127,854 Germany 85,206 United Kingdom 71,686 Iran 56,956 Turkey 29,647 Belgium 25,746 Netherlands 25,415 Switzerland 24,299 Canada 22,192 Brazil 16,585 Portugal 15,770 Russia 13,945 Austria 11,145 Israel 10,512 Korea, South 10,483 Sweden 9,655 Ireland 9,205 India 7,519 Peru 7,466 Ecuador 7,213 Chile 6,748 Japan 6,674 Poland 6,525 Norway 6,369 Denmark 6,315 Australia 6,300 Romania 5,991 Czechia 5,230 Pakistan 4,683 Malaysia 4,648 Philippines 4,462 Saudi Arabia 4,241 Indonesia 4,219 Mexico 4,123 United Arab Emirates 3,630 Serbia 3,400 Panama 3,281 Luxembourg 2,979 Qatar 2,974 Finland 2,967 Dominican Republic 2,777 Ukraine 2,776 Colombia 2,578 Belarus 2,551 Thailand 2,532 Singapore 2,173 South Africa 2,142 Argentina 2,114 Greece 2,065 Egypt 1,914 Algeria 1,701 Iceland 1,662 Moldova 1,661 Morocco 1,600 Croatia 1,410 Hungary 1,352 Iraq 1,330 New Zealand 1,309 Estonia 1,234 Kuwait 1,205 Slovenia 1,136 Bahrain 1,098 Azerbaijan 1,053 Lithuania 1,013 Armenia 1,009 Bosnia and Herzegovina 951 Kazakhstan 865 Uzbekistan 828 North Macedonia 820 Cameroon 742 Slovakia 712 Diamond Princess 707 Tunisia 675 Bulgaria 669 Cuba 651 Latvia 638 Andorra 633 Cyprus 630 Lebanon 621 Bangladesh 607 Afghanistan 599 Oman 595 Costa Rica 574 Cote d'Ivoire 566 Ghana 529 Niger 512 Uruguay 497 Burkina Faso 446 Albania 393 Honduras 389 Jordan 388 Taiwan* 378 Malta 377 Kyrgyzstan 356 San Marino 324 Mauritius 323 Nigeria 300 Bolivia 290 West Bank and Gaza 283 Kosovo 280 Senegal 272 Montenegro 262 Vietnam 257 Georgia 250 Guinea 234 Congo (Kinshasa) 214 Djibouti 210 Sri Lanka 197 Kenya 181 Venezuela 155 Guatemala 136 Brunei 134 Paraguay 126 Rwanda 125 El Salvador 122 Cambodia 113 Trinidad and Tobago 106 Madagascar 105 Mali 93 Monaco 79 Liechtenstein 76 Togo 71 Barbados 71 Ethiopia 69 Jamaica 60 Congo (Brazzaville) 54 Uganda 50 Liberia 49 Gabon 46 Bahamas 45 Guyana 43 Zambia 41 Burma 38 Guinea-Bissau 35 Benin 34 Eritrea 33 Haiti 32 Tanzania 25 Libya 25 Somalia 25 Syria 21 Antigua and Barbuda 21 Equatorial Guinea 21 Mozambique 20 Maldives 19 Angola 19 Laos 19 Sudan 18 Chad 16 Dominica 16 Fiji 16 Mongolia 16 Namibia 15 Saint Lucia 14 Belize 14 Eswatini 14 Grenada 14 Zimbabwe 13 Botswana 13 Malawi 12 Nepal 12 Saint Kitts and Nevis 12 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 11 Seychelles 10 Sierra Leone 10 Suriname 9 Gambia 9 MS Zaandam 9 Nicaragua 8 Cabo Verde 8 Central African Republic 8 Holy See 7 Mauritania 6 Western Sahara 5 Bhutan 5 Burundi 4 Sao Tome and Principe 4 South Sudan 2 Papua New Guinea 2 Timor-Leste 1 Yemen Total Tested in the US 2,805,892 total positive 555,398 US deaths attributed to corona virus 22,023 Per update of April 12, 8:30 p.m. Eastern 1 Link to comment
Mt_Rider Posted April 13, 2020 Share Posted April 13, 2020 Our Compassion International girl is in Ecuador. Her family is further north than this port but...pray for Arianna and her family in Ecuador. MtRider .....and our 2 former kids in India. India is having a rough time too. 5 Link to comment
Jeepers Posted April 13, 2020 Share Posted April 13, 2020 (edited) The world's largest pork producer (Smithfield) has closed indefinitely due to 230 employees at the South Dakota plant tested positive for the coronavirus. Sorry I can't link it...Kindle. It employs around 3,000 to 4,000 workers. Edited April 13, 2020 by Jeepers Added Info 5 Link to comment
euphrasyne Posted April 13, 2020 Share Posted April 13, 2020 They closed the SD plant. the one in Smithfield, VA is still open but the SD plant is about 5% of the world's pork. 4 Link to comment
TheCG Posted April 13, 2020 Share Posted April 13, 2020 2 hours ago, Jeepers said: The world's largest pork producer (Smithfield) has closed indefinitely due to 230 employees at the South Dakota plant tested positive for the coronavirus. Sorry I can't link it...Kindle. It employs around 3,000 to 4,000 workers. https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2020/04/13/smithfield-foods-close-sioux-falls-plant-indefinetly-amid-covid-19-outbreak/2982640001/ 238 employees tested positive for COVID-19. 3 Link to comment
mommato3boys Posted April 13, 2020 Share Posted April 13, 2020 So the media is at it again.... The US has highest death total COVID-19 cases. So let's look at this sensibly. NO I am not downplaying the deaths, but let's not panic, common sense must prevail. We have one of the largest visitor ratio compared to other countries. At the university I worked at before in my home state 5% of our graduate level enrollment was international students, that does not include post doc fellows. That is just one university in a southern state. Can you imagine what Harvard, Oxford, MIT, or even USC's ratio is? We are 3rd in population behind China and India. HOWEVER, we are the most transient country. Now let's look at where the most deaths occurred - port of entry cities. There are five major US ports of immigration, New York, Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New Orleans. New York is by far the most used port. Four out of five are in the top seven states with the most COVID-19 deaths. Maryland is number 14. We are not even sure how many are US citizens or if they were internationals who were infected when they arrived. Also, as I stated in another post no matter how a person dies if they have COVID-19 antibody in their system their death is counted as a COVID-19 death. So my question is how many COVID-19 death have we really had? We will never know. Now think about this...how many people do you know have had severe respiratory infections in the past year? I know this past fall from November to February in our ER alone, we were swamped with people coming in with the "FLU" however, they tested negative for Flu A&B and negative for strep. We saw 50-75 people a day and for our little town of less than 20,000 that is a lot of people. We know people that died of respiratory failure this past year. The medical staff chalked it to age and underlying issues. Now pull out your tin foil hats.... I do not believe that COVID-19 was caused from eating bats. Nor do I believe HIV was caused by people eating monkeys. I believe both were man made and were sent to no suspecting areas with subpar health care. Why? Well how do think vaccines come about? How do you think chemical warfare agents are developed? All I am say is looking at the big picture...look at what is going on in DC what are they trying to push through? What is so big that they have to distract us with a pandemic? What is happening on the international playing field that they needed a pandemic to distract the sheeple? WE cannot and must not let this distract us from our freedoms and rights as American citizens. 7 Link to comment
Littlesister Posted April 14, 2020 Share Posted April 14, 2020 I think China let this virus out from a lab. Be it by accident or as a means to take out the US and it got away from them. They did say they could take us out without firing a shot. Don't have all the info in front of me right now but I have read several reports about this Lab and that they were working on some viruses. Not sure of why but I heard this virus was lab created. It is sad to hear about Smithfield foods shutting down in SD. My daughter works for the one in Smithfield VA. She does their medical billing. She is now working 2 days from home and 3 days she must go in. Also not long after she took that job. China bought them out. 4 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 14, 2020 Author Share Posted April 14, 2020 Confirmed Cases by Country/Region/Sovereignty 581,918 US 170,099 Spain 159,516 Italy 137,877 France 130,072 Germany 89,571 United Kingdom 83,302 China 73,303 Iran 61,049 Turkey 30,589 Belgium 26,710 Netherlands 25,688 Switzerland 25,680 Canada 23,723 Brazil 18,328 Russia 16,934 Portugal 14,041 Austria 11,586 Israel 10,948 Sweden 10,647 Ireland 10,564 Korea, South 10,453 India 9,784 Peru 7,618 Japan 7,529 Ecuador 7,525 Chile 6,934 Poland 6,633 Romania 6,603 Norway 6,513 Denmark 6,351 Australia 6,059 Czechia 5,496 Pakistan 5,014 Mexico 4,934 Saudi Arabia 4,932 Philippines 4,817 Malaysia 4,557 Indonesia 4,521 United Arab Emirates 4,054 Serbia 3,472 Panama 3,292 Luxembourg 3,231 Qatar 3,167 Dominican Republic 3,102 Ukraine 3,064 Finland 2,919 Belarus 2,918 Singapore 2,852 Colombia 2,579 Thailand 2,277 Argentina 2,272 South Africa 2,190 Egypt 2,145 Greece 1,983 Algeria 1,763 Morocco 1,712 Moldova 1,711 Iceland 1,650 Croatia 1,458 Hungary 1,378 Iraq 1,366 New Zealand 1,361 Bahrain 1,332 Estonia 1,300 Kuwait 1,212 Slovenia 1,148 Azerbaijan 1,091 Kazakhstan 1,062 Lithuania 1,039 Armenia 1,037 Bosnia and Herzegovina 998 Uzbekistan 854 North Macedonia 848 Cameroon 803 Bangladesh 769 Slovakia 727 Oman 726 Cuba 726 Tunisia 712 Diamond Princess 685 Bulgaria 665 Afghanistan 662 Cyprus 655 Latvia 646 Andorra 632 Lebanon 626 Cote d'Ivoire 612 Costa Rica 566 Ghana 548 Niger 515 Burkina Faso 483 Uruguay 467 Albania 419 Kyrgyzstan 397 Honduras 393 Taiwan* 391 Jordan 384 Malta 371 San Marino 354 Bolivia 343 Nigeria 324 Mauritius 319 Guinea 308 West Bank and Gaza 298 Djibouti 291 Senegal 283 Kosovo 274 Montenegro 272 Georgia 265 Vietnam 235 Congo (Kinshasa) 218 Sri Lanka 208 Kenya 189 Venezuela 167 Guatemala 147 Paraguay 137 El Salvador 136 Brunei 127 Rwanda 123 Mali 122 Cambodia 113 Trinidad and Tobago 106 Madagascar 93 Monaco 79 Liechtenstein 77 Togo 74 Ethiopia 73 Jamaica 72 Barbados 62 Burma 60 Congo (Brazzaville) 60 Somalia 59 Liberia 57 Gabon 54 Uganda 49 Bahamas 49 Tanzania 47 Guyana 45 Zambia 40 Haiti 38 Guinea-Bissau 35 Benin 34 Eritrea 29 Sudan 26 Libya 25 Syria 23 Antigua and Barbuda 23 Chad 21 Equatorial Guinea 21 Mozambique 20 Maldives 19 Angola 19 Laos 18 Belize 17 Mongolia 17 Zimbabwe 16 Dominica 16 Fiji 16 Malawi 16 Namibia 15 Eswatini 15 Saint Lucia 14 Grenada 14 Nepal 13 Botswana 12 Saint Kitts and Nevis 12 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 11 Central African Republic 11 Seychelles 10 Cabo Verde 10 Sierra Leone 10 Suriname 9 Gambia 9 MS Zaandam 9 Nicaragua 8 Holy See 7 Mauritania 6 Western Sahara 5 Bhutan 5 Burundi 4 Sao Tome and Principe 4 South Sudan 4 Timor-Leste 2 Papua New Guinea 1 Yemen Total US deaths attributed to coronavirus as of April 13, at the 10 p.m. update: 23,608. Total tested in the US: 2,935,006 1 1 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 14, 2020 Author Share Posted April 14, 2020 Ask, and ye shall receive. https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/us-map On the bottom bar, go to Confirmed by Population. 3 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 14, 2020 Author Share Posted April 14, 2020 (edited) https://bao.arcgis.com/covid-19/jhu/county/15003.html https://bao.arcgis.com/covid-19/jhu/county/15001.html Edited April 14, 2020 by Ambergris 2 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 15, 2020 Author Share Posted April 15, 2020 608,377 US 174,060 Spain 162,488 Italy 132,210 Germany 131,361 France 94,845 United Kingdom 74,877 Iran 65,111 Turkey 31,119 Belgium 27,580 Netherlands 27,063 Canada 25,936 Switzerland 25,262 Brazil 21,102 Russia 17,448 Portugal 14,226 Austria 12,046 Israel 11,487 India 11,479 Ireland 11,445 Sweden 10,564 Korea, South 10,303 Peru 7,917 Chile 7,645 Japan 7,603 Ecuador 7,202 Poland 6,879 Romania 6,706 Denmark 6,623 Norway 6,415 Australia 6,111 Czechia 5,837 Pakistan 5,369 Saudi Arabia 5,223 Philippines 5,014 Mexico 4,987 Malaysia 4,933 United Arab Emirates 4,839 Indonesia 4,465 Serbia 3,574 Panama 3,428 Qatar 3,372 Ukraine 3,307 Luxembourg 3,286 Dominican Republic 3,281 Belarus 3,252 Singapore 3,161 Finland 2,979 Colombia 2,613 Thailand 2,415 South Africa 2,350 Egypt 2,277 Argentina 2,170 Greece 2,070 Algeria 1,934 Moldova 1,888 Morocco 1,720 Iceland 1,704 Croatia 1,528 Bahrain 1,512 Hungary 1,400 Iraq 1,373 Estonia 1,366 New Zealand 1,355 Kuwait 1,232 Kazakhstan 1,220 Slovenia 1,197 Azerbaijan 1,165 Uzbekistan 1,083 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1,070 Lithuania 1,067 Armenia 1,012 Bangladesh 908 North Macedonia 848 Cameroon 835 Slovakia 813 Oman 766 Cuba 747 Tunisia 714 Afghanistan 713 Bulgaria 712 Diamond Princess 695 Cyprus 659 Andorra 657 Latvia 641 Lebanon 638 Cote d'Ivoire 636 Ghana 618 Costa Rica 570 Niger 528 Burkina Faso 492 Uruguay 475 Albania 430 Kyrgyzstan 407 Honduras 397 Jordan 393 Malta 387 Kosovo 373 Nigeria 372 San Marino 363 Djibouti 363 Guinea 354 Bolivia 324 Mauritius 308 West Bank and Gaza 300 Georgia 299 Senegal 283 Montenegro 266 Vietnam 241 Congo (Kinshasa) 233 Sri Lanka 216 Kenya 189 Venezuela 167 Guatemala 159 Paraguay 149 El Salvador 144 Mali 136 Brunei 134 Rwanda 122 Cambodia 113 Trinidad and Tobago 108 Madagascar 105 Jamaica 93 Monaco 82 Ethiopia 79 Liechtenstein 77 Togo 74 Congo (Brazzaville) 73 Barbados 63 Burma 60 Somalia 59 Liberia 57 Gabon 55 Uganda 53 Tanzania 49 Bahamas 47 Guyana 45 Zambia 43 Guinea-Bissau 41 Equatorial Guinea 40 Haiti 35 Benin 35 Eritrea 35 Libya 32 Sudan 30 Mongolia 29 Syria 28 Mozambique 23 Antigua and Barbuda 23 Chad 20 Maldives 19 Angola 19 Laos 18 Belize 17 Zimbabwe 16 Dominica 16 Fiji 16 Malawi 16 Namibia 16 Nepal 15 Eswatini 15 Saint Lucia 14 Grenada 14 Saint Kitts and Nevis 13 Botswana 12 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 11 Cabo Verde 11 Central African Republic 11 Seychelles 11 Sierra Leone 10 Suriname 9 Gambia 9 MS Zaandam 9 Nicaragua 8 Holy See 7 Mauritania 6 Timor-Leste 6 Western Sahara 5 Bhutan 5 Burundi 4 Sao Tome and Principe 4 South Sudan 2 Papua New Guinea 1 Yemen Total deaths in the US attributed to coronavirus: 25,992 Total Tested in the US: 3,081,620 Per update of April 14, 9 p.m. Eastern 2 Link to comment
Mt_Rider Posted April 15, 2020 Share Posted April 15, 2020 So Diamond Princess: ...the cruise ship folks aren't still on the ship, are they? Are they being monitored elsewhere and.....not to be counted in the states they come from???? In the beginning, that would have noticeably raised statistics. Now... Thanks for Hawaii stats on Oahu/Big Isle. Oahu running 2.? % of population with COVID. Maui has had 88 confirmed/ 3 deaths/ 41 recovered/ 44 active. My family is busy distributing extra food from hotels to folks that are in need of it. [with social distance] Just their group from one of their businesses. They were somewhere harvesting leaves to use in laulau and sent me pics last week. SIL and GrS14 have gone spear fishing too. DD2 says they're eating better now than usual. Yeah, cuz she's crazy busy and doesn't take time to eat! She reports that Costco limits how many can go in at a time there. So it's actually a peaceful shopping experience. There is only a few gaps in what is available. Feeding her boys full time tho, she almost passed out at the total on the register. 'Course she was buying for her sister too. Two teen boys tho....they EAT! MtRider 3 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 15, 2020 Author Share Posted April 15, 2020 Diamond Princess and MS Zaandam and presumably other ships will be counted as their own sources. 3 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 16, 2020 Author Share Posted April 16, 2020 (edited) 637,716 US 180,659 Spain 165,155 Italy 134,753 Germany 134,582 France 99,489 United Kingdom 83,367 China 76,389 Iran 69,392 Turkey 33,573 Belgium 28,746 Brazil 28,316 Netherlands 28,253 Canada 26,336 Switzerland 24,490 Russia 18,091 Portugal 14,350 Austria 12,547 Ireland 12,501 Israel 12,370 India 11,927 Sweden 11,475 Peru 10,591 Korea, South 8,626 Japan 8,273 Chile 7,858 Ecuador 7,582 Poland 7,216 Romania 6,876 Denmark 6,797 Norway 6,440 Australia 6,383 Pakistan 6,301 Czechia 5,862 Saudi Arabia 5,847 Mexico 5,453 Philippines 5,365 United Arab Emirates 5,136 Indonesia 5,072 Malaysia 4,873 Serbia 3,764 Ukraine 3,751 Panama 3,728 Belarus 3,711 Qatar 3,699 Singapore 3,614 Dominican Republic 3,373 Luxembourg 3,237 Finland 3,105 Colombia 2,643 Thailand 2,571 Argentina 2,506 South Africa 2,505 Egypt 2,192 Greece 2,160 Algeria 2,049 Moldova 2,024 Morocco 1,741 Croatia 1,727 Iceland 1,671 Bahrain 1,579 Hungary 1,415 Iraq 1,405 Kuwait 1,401 New Zealand 1,400 Estonia 1,302 Uzbekistan 1,295 Kazakhstan 1,253 Azerbaijan 1,248 Slovenia 1,231 Bangladesh 1,111 Armenia 1,110 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1,091 Lithuania 974 North Macedonia 910 Oman 863 Slovakia 848 Cameroon 814 Cuba 784 Afghanistan 780 Tunisia 747 Bulgaria 715 Cyprus 712 Diamond Princess 673 Andorra 666 Latvia 658 Lebanon 654 Cote d'Ivoire 641 Ghana 626 Costa Rica 584 Niger 542 Burkina Faso 494 Albania 493 Uruguay 449 Kyrgyzstan 435 Djibouti 419 Honduras 407 Nigeria 404 Guinea 401 Jordan 399 Malta 397 Bolivia 395 Taiwan* 393 San Marino 387 Kosovo 374 West Bank and Gaza 324 Mauritius 314 Senegal 306 Georgia 288 Montenegro 268 Vietnam 254 Congo (Kinshasa) 238 Sri Lanka 225 Kenya 197 Venezuela 180 Guatemala 174 Paraguay 159 El Salvador 148 Mali 136 Brunei 136 Rwanda 125 Jamaica 122 Cambodia 117 Congo (Brazzaville) 114 Trinidad and Tobago 110 Madagascar 93 Monaco 88 Tanzania 85 Ethiopia 81 Togo 80 Gabon 80 Somalia 79 Liechtenstein 75 Barbados 74 Burma 59 Liberia 56 Cabo Verde 55 Guyana 55 Uganda 53 Bahamas 51 Equatorial Guinea 48 Libya 48 Zambia 43 Guinea-Bissau 41 Haiti 35 Benin 35 Eritrea 33 Syria 32 Sudan 30 Mongolia 29 Mozambique 23 Antigua and Barbuda 23 Chad 23 Maldives 23 Zimbabwe 19 Angola 19 Laos 18 Belize 16 Dominica 16 Fiji 16 Malawi 16 Namibia 16 Nepal 15 Eswatini 15 Saint Lucia 14 Grenada 14 Saint Kitts and Nevis 13 Botswana 13 Sierra Leone 12 Central African Republic 12 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 11 Seychelles 10 Suriname 9 Gambia 9 MS Zaandam 9 Nicaragua 8 Holy See 8 Timor-Leste 7 Mauritania 6 Western Sahara 5 Bhutan 5 Burundi 4 Sao Tome and Principe 4 South Sudan 2 Papua New Guinea 1 Yemen Total Deaths attributed to coronavirus in the US: 28,430 Update of April 15, 9:30 p.m. Edited April 16, 2020 by Ambergris 1 1 Link to comment
Jeepers Posted April 16, 2020 Share Posted April 16, 2020 I saw on a map where the U.S. Military is counting their own now. As of 4/15/2020 4,766 positive and 17 dead. 1 3 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 16, 2020 Author Share Posted April 16, 2020 (edited) I've been looking for that information, Jeeps. I started to add yours to mine, but they're right together, and mine is no longer broken down by state. I think the military would be considered a state. Maybe each base or ship a city. Edited April 16, 2020 by Ambergris 2 Link to comment
Jeepers Posted April 16, 2020 Share Posted April 16, 2020 1 hour ago, Ambergris said: I've been looking for that information, Jeeps. I started to add yours to mine, but they're right together, and mine is no longer broken down by state. I think the military would be considered a state. Maybe each base or ship a city. I'll try to post the link here. Kindle is picky. The individual states are right under the "World" stats but you have to scroll through the World stats and then back up to get the USA stats to show. https://ncov2019.live/data 1 Link to comment
snapshotmiki Posted April 16, 2020 Share Posted April 16, 2020 (edited) Thought this might be relevant! Only a one minute video Edited April 16, 2020 by snapshotmiki 5 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted April 16, 2020 Author Share Posted April 16, 2020 New York City's Health Department said Tuesday it is now reporting "probable" Covid-19 deaths of individuals who have not been tested for the coronavirus but are presumed to be positive. The 4,059 probable cases pushed the death toll in New York City to nearly 11,000 victims. This means New York's figures are as useful as China's. Does anyone want me to continue posting the numbers? 1 Link to comment
Mother Posted April 16, 2020 Share Posted April 16, 2020 I have been following your numbers daily and have really appreciated it. I know it's a lot of work for you. Thank you so much for all you do to help us stay informed. If you don't post it perhaps there is a way to make a sticky somewhere with the links. (((((((Ambergris)))))))) My granddaughter, who is an OB/ delivery nurse, has coronavirus. She is self quarantined at home in Texas while her three children are with others. She is young and healthy but I am still worried. Please everyone stay cautious. 9 Link to comment
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