Coronavirus pandemic: Tracking the global outbreak

A nun wearing protective mask and gloves prays in an empty Duomo (the Naples' cathedral) in the day of the May's Miracle of Saint Gennaro. Image copyright Getty Images

Coronavirus is continuing its spread across the world, with more than three million confirmed cases in 185 countries. More than 240,000 people have lost their lives.

The United States alone has more than one million confirmed cases - five times as many as any other country.

This series of maps and charts tracks the global outbreak of the virus since it emerged in China in December last year.

How many cases and deaths have there been?

The virus, which causes the respiratory infection Covid-19, was first detected in the city of Wuhan, China, in late 2019.

It is spreading rapidly in many countries and the number of deaths is still climbing.

mapped

Confirmed cases around the world

3,411,300 cases
244,242 deaths
1,050,389 recoveries
Group 4

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Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies

Figures last updated 3 May 2020, 15:00 BST

Note: The map and table in this page uses a different source for figures for France from that used by Johns Hopkins University which results in a slightly lower overall total.

The US has by far the largest number of cases, with more than one million confirmed infections, according to figures collated by Johns Hopkins University. With more than 66,000 fatalities, it also has the world's highest death toll.

France, Italy, Spain and the UK - the worst-hit European countries - have all recorded more than 20,000 deaths.

In China, the official death toll is approaching 5,000 from about 84,000 confirmed cases. Numbers for deaths jumped on 17 April after what officials called "a statistical review" and critics have questioned whether the country's official numbers can be trusted.

data in detail

Scroll table to see more data
Country
Deaths
Total Cases
US 66,385 1,133,069
Italy 28,710 209,328
UK 28,131 182,260
Spain 25,100 216,582
France 24,760 130,979
Belgium 7,844 49,906
Germany 6,812 164,967
Brazil 6,761 97,100
Iran 6,203 97,424
Netherlands 5,056 40,577
China 4,637 83,959
Canada 3,684 57,927
Turkey 3,336 124,375
Sweden 2,679 22,317
Mexico 2,061 22,088
Switzerland 1,762 29,905
Ecuador 1,371 27,464
India 1,323 39,980
Ireland 1,286 21,176
Russia 1,280 134,687
Peru 1,200 42,534
Portugal 1,023 25,190
Indonesia 845 11,192
Romania 790 13,163
Poland 678 13,693
Philippines 607 9,223
Austria 598 15,597
Denmark 484 9,523
Japan 474 14,571
Algeria 459 4,295
Pakistan 440 19,103
Egypt 415 6,193
Hungary 340 2,998
Dominican Republic 326 7,578
Colombia 324 7,285
Ukraine 288 11,913
South Korea 250 10,793
Chile 247 18,435
Czech Republic 245 7,755
Argentina 237 4,681
Israel 230 16,193
Finland 230 5,254
Norway 211 7,809
Panama 197 7,090
Serbia 189 9,362
Bangladesh 177 9,455
Saudi Arabia 176 25,459
Morocco 174 4,880
Greece 143 2,620
United Arab Emirates 126 14,163
Moldova 124 4,052
South Africa 123 6,336
Malaysia 105 6,298
Belarus 99 16,705
Slovenia 96 1,439
Australia 95 6,799
Iraq 95 2,219
Luxembourg 92 3,812
Afghanistan 85 2,704
Nigeria 85 2,388
North Macedonia 82 1,506
Croatia 79 2,096
Bosnia and Herzegovina 77 1,857
Honduras 76 1,010
Bulgaria 72 1,611
Bolivia 71 1,470
Cuba 66 1,611
Cameroon 64 2,077
Estonia 55 1,700
Thailand 54 2,969
Lithuania 46 1,410
Andorra 44 747
Burkina Faso 44 652
Tunisia 42 1,009
Sudan 41 592
San Marino 41 582
Channel Islands 41 543
Kuwait 38 4,983
Armenia 35 2,386
Niger 35 736
DR Congo 33 674
Albania 31 795
Somalia 31 671
Mali 26 544
Kazakhstan 25 3,877
Azerbaijan 25 1,894
Lebanon 25 737
Slovakia 24 1,408
Kosovo 22 823
Kenya 22 435
Isle of Man 22 320
New Zealand 20 1,487
Ghana 18 2,169
Liberia 18 154
Singapore 17 18,205
Guatemala 17 688
Uruguay 17 652
Latvia 16 879
Tanzania 16 480
Ivory Coast 15 1,362
Cyprus 15 864
Martinique 14 179
Diamond Princess cruise ship 13 712
Saint Martin 13 76
Qatar 12 15,551
Oman 12 2,568
Guadeloupe 12 152
El Salvador 11 490
Bahamas 11 83
Uzbekistan 10 2,136
Iceland 10 1,798
Kyrgyzstan 10 795
Paraguay 10 370
Venezuela 10 345
Mauritius 10 332
Chad 10 117
Senegal 9 1,115
Georgia 9 589
Jordan 9 460
Congo 9 229
Togo 9 123
Guyana 9 82
Bahrain 8 3,356
Jamaica 8 463
Montenegro 8 322
Sierra Leone 8 155
Trinidad and Tobago 8 116
Haiti 8 85
Guinea 7 1,586
Sri Lanka 7 705
Bermuda 7 114
Barbados 7 81
Costa Rica 6 733
Taiwan 6 432
Myanmar 6 151
Gabon 5 335
Mayotte 4 539
Malta 4 477
Monaco 4 95
Zimbabwe 4 34
Ethiopia 3 135
Zambia 3 124
Libya 3 63
Syria 3 44
Malawi 3 38
Antigua and Barbuda 3 25
Nicaragua 3 14
Djibouti 2 1,112
Palestinian Territories 2 353
Cape Verde 2 152
Aruba 2 100
Benin 2 90
Tajikistan 2 76
Angola 2 35
Belize 2 18
Yemen 2 10
MS Zaandam cruise ship 2 9
Maldives 1 519
Equatorial Guinea 1 315
Guinea-Bissau 1 257
Brunei 1 138
French Guiana 1 128
Eswatini 1 108
Liechtenstein 1 82
Cayman Islands 1 74
Botswana 1 23
Gambia 1 17
Curaçao 1 16
Sao Tome and Principe 1 16
Burundi 1 15
Turks and Caicos Islands 1 12
Montserrat 1 11
Suriname 1 10
Mauritania 1 8
British Virgin Islands 1 6
Réunion 0 423
Vietnam 0 271
Rwanda 0 255
Faroe Islands 0 187
Madagascar 0 149
Gibraltar 0 144
Cambodia 0 122
Uganda 0 88
Mozambique 0 79
Central African Republic 0 72
Nepal 0 69
French Polynesia 0 58
South Sudan 0 46
Eritrea 0 39
Mongolia 0 39
Timor-Leste 0 24
Grenada 0 21
Laos 0 19
Fiji 0 18
New Caledonia 0 18
Saint Lucia 0 17
Namibia 0 16
Dominica 0 16
St Vincent and the Grenadines 0 16
Saint Kitts and Nevis 0 15
Falkland Islands 0 13
Seychelles 0 11
Vatican 0 11
Greenland 0 11
Papua New Guinea 0 8
Bhutan 0 7
Western Sahara 0 6
Saint Barthelemy 0 6
Comoros 0 3
Anguilla 0 3

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This information is regularly updated but may not reflect the latest totals for each country.

Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies

Figures last updated: 3 May 2020, 15:00 BST

Note: The past data for new cases is a three day rolling average. Due to revisions in the number of cases for Spain, a three-day rolling average cannot be calculated for 24-26 April.

The outbreak was declared a global pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March. This is when an infectious disease is passing easily from person to person in many parts of the world at the same time.

More than three million people are known to have been infected worldwide, but the true figure is thought to be much higher as many of those with milder symptoms have not been tested and counted.

Globally, more than 4.5 billion people - half the world's population - have been living under social distancing measures, according to the AFP news agency's estimates.

Those restrictions have had a big impact on the global economy, with the International Monetary Fund saying the world faces the worst recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The UN World Food Programme has also warned that the pandemic could almost double the number of people suffering acute hunger.

Where are coronavirus cases rising?

While some regions are now starting to see confirmed cases and deaths fall following the introduction of strict lockdown restrictions, others are only now seeing them rise.

The latest numbers of daily deaths in Brazil, Russia, Peru and Mexico are double the numbers recorded between six and 10 days ago.

While the number of people dying each day in Brazil is much higher, the data suggests Russia, Mexico and Peru are all on a similar trajectory.

Across Latin America, where many economies are already struggling and millions live on what they can earn day-to-day, there are concerns about the strain the growing number of virus cases could put on health care systems.

Ecuador has already seen its health system collapse - thousands have died from the virus and other conditions that could not be treated because of the crisis.

The country's official coronavirus death toll is around 1,300, but the government said 6,700 people died in Guayas province in the first two weeks of April - far more than the usual 1,000 deaths there in the same period. For this reason, the virus death toll is thought to be much higher than official figures suggest.

The growing threat in South America and elsewhere comes as other regions are beginning to ease measures brought in to slow the spread of the virus.

Much of Europe, the US, New Zealand and Australia, among others, have started to relax some of their strict lockdown restrictions. Some US states are doing so despite still seeing new confirmed cases and deaths increasing.

New Zealand, which has managed to avoid the comparatively high death tolls elsewhere, says it has effectively eliminated the threat posed by the virus after fewer than 1,500 confirmed cases and just 20 deaths. Its authorities had brought in some of the toughest restrictions on travel and activity early in the pandemic.

Australia is also planning to review its lockdown earlier than expected, after health officials said the nation had "pretty convincingly" curbed the spread of the virus.

Europe is beginning to ease lockdown measures

The four worst-hit countries in Europe are Italy, the UK, Spain and France - all of which have recorded at least 20,000 deaths.

However, all four countries appear to have passed through the peak of the virus and the number of reported cases and deaths is falling.

Germany and Belgium have also recorded a relatively high number of deaths and are now seeing those numbers decrease, though as Belgium has a far smaller population than Germany the number of deaths per capita there has been higher.

How countries across Europe are planning to move out of lockdown varies, with the EU saying there is "no one-size-fits-all approach" to lifting containment measures.

Spain has announced a four-phase plan to lift its lockdown and return to a "new normality" by the end of June. Children are now allowed to leave home for an hour a day, after seven weeks in lockdown. Adults were able to exercise outdoors on Saturday for the first time in seven weeks. Masks will be compulsory on public transport from Monday.

In Italy, some shops and factories have now reopened and further measures are due to be eased from Monday.

In France, non-essential shops and markets are to open their doors again from 11 May, but not bars and restaurants. Schools would also be reopened gradually.

In the UK, lockdown measures are still in full effect. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has promised to reveal a "comprehensive plan" in the next week for how the country will get moving again.

Denmark, which became the first European country to begin easing its lockdown measures earlier this month, says its overall number of Covid-19 infections has continued to fall. The country has allowed young children to return to school, and hairdressers and other small businesses to reopen.

Other European countries easing restrictions include Austria, Switzerland, the Czech Republic and Germany.

New York remains the epicentre of the US outbreak

With more than one million cases, the US has the highest number of confirmed infections in the world. The country has also recorded more than 66,000 deaths.

The state of New York has been particularly badly affected, with 18,000 deaths in New York City alone.

At one point, more than 90% of the US population was under mandatory lockdown orders, but from Friday, Georgia, Texas, Maine and other states have loosened their stay-at-home restrictions and allow some businesses to reopen.

The re-opening of many businesses follows the release of official unemployment figures showing that more than 30 million Americans have lost their jobs since mid-March.

But public health authorities have warned that increasing human interaction and economic activity could spark a fresh surge of infections just as the number of new cases is beginning to ease off.

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