The latest numbers from The United States
| United States |
Case DetailsThe average number of new cases in the United States fell to 456,871 yesterday, a 12 percent decrease from the day before. Since January 2020, at least 1 in 4 people who live in the United States have been infected, and at least 1 in 375 people have died. U.S.A. maps & charts |
| ON JAN. 31 | 7-DAY DAILY AVG. | PER 100,000 | 14-DAY CHANGE | TOTAL REPORTED |
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Cases | 660,923 | 456,871 | 138 | –42% | 74,989,453 | Deaths | 2,568 | 2,558 | 0.77 | +30% | 885,938 | Hospitalized | 131,069 | 140,440 | 42 | –11% | |
Vaccination rate for the U.S. |
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Source: New York Times database of reports from state and local health agencies and hospitals. Population and demographic data from Census Bureau. Hospitalization data from the Covid Tracking Project. Vaccination data from the Centers for Disease Control. The daily average is calculated with data that was reported in the last seven days. 14-day change trends are calculated with 7-day averages. Numbers may be revised to reflect improvements in data reporting. View your tracker online for the most up to date figures. For more about how this data was collected and compiled see our F.A.Q. page. About Risk Levels: The Times worked with public health experts to develop county-specific guidance for common activities to help you lower your risk of Covid-19. These risk levels have been added to this email for counties that you're tracking. Learn more about the risk guidance and methodology. |
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