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This map shows confirmed cases of w:en:COVID-19, coded by percentage of population confirmed to be infected in the 14 days leading up to 29 March 2021. The data is used from the data as aggregated and released by Johns Hopkins University and US census (2019 population estimate). As this is a current outbreak, the map might not be up to date.
1000+ confirmed new cases per 100,000 population
500 - 1000 confirmed new cases per 100,000 population
200 - 500 confirmed new cases per 100,000 population
100 - 200 confirmed new cases per 100,000 population
50 - 100 confirmed new cases per 100,000 population
20 - 50 confirmed new cases per 100,000 population
10 - 20 confirmed new cases per 100,000 population
0 - 10 confirmed new cases per 100,000 population
No confirmed new cases
The design is based on blank maps available in Public Domain (created by Yiling Chen from TIGER shapefiles). The script for creating the maps was written by Sukolsak Sakshuwong and Lodewijk Gelauff. Color scheme is based on ColorBrewer 6-class BuPu.
known issues with the data
* Cases from counties named 'Out of <state>' are not represented (these have no geographic representation)
Cases from counties named 'Unassigned' are not represented (these have no geographic representation)
The data from Dukes and Nantucket, MA may be distorted because sources represent them differently.
The data from the 5 counties of New York City are merged and prevalence is calculated jointly.
Cases from counties "Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC)" and "Federal Correctional Institution (FCI)" (both Michigan) are not represented (these have no geographic representation)
The data from the health districts of Utah span multiple counties and prevalence is calculated for those jointly.
The data from the 4 counties and city of Kansas City (Jackson, Clay, Platte, Cass) are merged and prevalence is calculated jointly.
Beginning August 19, only confirmed cases are counted in county total cases for Massachusetts. This makes it appear as though the case numbers have dropped, and until 14 days after that date, Massachusetts counties are likely to remain 'no data'.
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http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/deed.enCC0Creative Commons Zero, Public Domain Dedicationfalsefalse
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Captions
Rolling 14-day prevalence of new COVID-19 cases by county