Coronavirus pandemic: Tracking the global outbreak

Members of a coronavirus testing station stand on the factory premises of the Westfleisch meat processing company in Hamm, western Germany, on May 10, 2020. Image copyright Getty Images

Coronavirus is continuing its spread across the world, with more than four million confirmed cases in 187 countries. More than 282,000 people have lost their lives.

The United States alone has more than 1.3 million confirmed cases - almost six 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.

mapped

Confirmed cases around the world

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Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies

Figures last updated 11 May 2020, 10:47 BST

Note: The map and table in this page use 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, according to figures collated by Johns Hopkins University. With more than 79,000 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 25,000 deaths.

In China, the official death toll is some 4,600 from about 84,000 confirmed cases, although critics have questioned whether the country's official numbers can be trusted.

Wuhan reported five new cases on Monday, after confirming its first case since 3 April on Sunday.

data in detail

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*Death rate per 100,000 people

Country
Deaths
Death rate*
Total Cases
US 79,408 24.28 1,327,381
UK 31,855 47.44 219,183
Italy 30,560 50.41 219,070
Spain 26,621 57.01 224,350
France 26,380 40.59 139,063
Brazil 11,123 5.31 162,699
Belgium 8,656 75.39 53,081
Germany 7,569 9.11 171,879
Iran 6,640 8.12 107,603
Netherlands 5,440 31.89 42,633
Canada 4,991 13.46 70,091
China 4,637 0.32 84,010
Turkey 3,786 4.60 138,657
Mexico 3,465 2.75 35,022
Sweden 3,225 32.34 26,322
India 2,212 0.16 67,259
Ecuador 2,127 12.45 29,559
Russia 2,009 1.38 221,344
Peru 1,889 5.91 67,307
Switzerland 1,833 21.50 30,305
Ireland 1,458 30.26 22,996
Portugal 1,135 11.07 27,581
Indonesia 991 0.37 14,265
Romania 961 4.93 15,362
Poland 803 2.12 16,206
Philippines 726 0.68 11,086
Pakistan 667 0.31 30,941
Japan 624 0.49 15,777
Austria 618 6.95 15,871
Denmark 529 9.20 10,429
Egypt 525 0.53 9,400
Algeria 502 1.19 5,723
Colombia 463 0.93 11,063
Hungary 421 4.34 3,284
Ukraine 408 0.92 15,648
Dominican Republic 388 3.65 10,347
Chile 312 1.67 28,866
Argentina 305 0.69 6,034
Czech Republic 280 2.63 8,123
Finland 267 4.83 5,962
South Korea 256 0.50 10,909
Israel 254 3.03 16,492
Saudi Arabia 246 0.73 39,048
Panama 244 5.84 8,448
Bangladesh 228 0.14 14,657
Norway 219 4.10 8,105
Serbia 215 3.08 10,032
United Arab Emirates 198 2.06 18,198
South Africa 194 0.34 10,015
Morocco 188 0.52 6,063
Moldova 171 4.22 4,927
Greece 151 1.44 2,716
Nigeria 143 0.07 4,399
Belarus 131 1.39 22,973
Afghanistan 120 0.32 4,402
Bolivia 118 1.04 2,556
Cameroon 114 0.45 2,579
Iraq 109 0.28 2,767
Malaysia 108 0.34 6,656
Honduras 108 1.13 1,972
Bosnia and Herzegovina 107 3.22 2,117
Slovenia 102 4.91 1,457
Luxembourg 101 16.72 3,886
Australia 97 0.39 6,948
Bulgaria 91 1.29 1,981
North Macedonia 91 4.37 1,642
Croatia 90 2.17 2,187
Cuba 77 0.68 1,766
Sudan 70 0.17 1,365
Estonia 61 4.61 1,741
Kuwait 58 1.40 8,688
Thailand 56 0.08 3,015
Somalia 51 0.34 1,054
Lithuania 50 1.78 1,485
Burkina Faso 49 0.25 751
Andorra 48 62.33 755
Armenia 46 1.56 3,392
Niger 46 0.20 821
Tunisia 45 0.39 1,032
DR Congo 41 0.05 991
San Marino 41 121.36 628
Channel Islands 41 24.05 545
Mali 38 0.20 704
Azerbaijan 32 0.32 2,519
Kenya 32 0.06 672
Kazakhstan 31 0.17 5,126
Albania 31 1.08 868
Chad 31 0.20 322
Kosovo 28 1.52 870
Slovakia 26 0.48 1,457
Guatemala 26 0.15 1,052
Lebanon 26 0.38 845
Isle of Man 23 27.36 330
Ghana 22 0.07 4,263
Ivory Coast 21 0.08 1,700
New Zealand 21 0.44 1,497
Tanzania 21 0.04 509
Singapore 20 0.35 23,822
Tajikistan 20 0.22 612
Liberia 20 0.42 199
Senegal 19 0.12 1,709
Uruguay 19 0.55 707
Latvia 18 0.93 946
Sierra Leone 18 0.24 307
Oman 17 0.35 3,573
El Salvador 17 0.26 958
Cyprus 16 1.35 898
Haiti 15 0.13 182
Saint Martin 15 40.25 76
Qatar 14 0.50 22,520
Martinique 14 3.73 187
Diamond Princess cruise ship 13 712
Guadeloupe 13 3.25 154
Kyrgyzstan 12 0.19 1,016
Guinea 11 0.09 2,146
Mayotte 11 4.24 1,023
Togo 11 0.14 174
Bahamas 11 2.85 92
Uzbekistan 10 0.03 2,453
Iceland 10 2.97 1,801
Paraguay 10 0.14 713
Georgia 10 0.25 638
Venezuela 10 0.03 414
Mauritius 10 0.79 332
Congo 10 0.19 274
Guyana 10 1.28 104
Sri Lanka 9 0.04 863
Jordan 9 0.09 540
Jamaica 9 0.31 502
Montenegro 9 1.43 324
Bahrain 8 0.51 4,941
Gabon 8 0.38 661
Trinidad and Tobago 8 0.58 116
Yemen 8 0.03 51
Costa Rica 7 0.14 792
Zambia 7 0.04 267
Bermuda 7 11.15 118
Barbados 7 2.44 84
Taiwan 6 0.03 440
Myanmar 6 0.01 180
Malta 5 1.14 496
Ethiopia 5 0.00 239
Sao Tome and Principe 5 2.37 208
Nicaragua 5 0.08 16
Equatorial Guinea 4 0.31 439
Monaco 4 10.34 96
Zimbabwe 4 0.03 36
Djibouti 3 0.31 1,210
Maldives 3 0.58 835
Guinea-Bissau 3 0.16 726
Aruba 3 2.83 101
Libya 3 0.04 64
Malawi 3 0.02 56
Syria 3 0.02 47
Antigua and Barbuda 3 3.12 25
Palestinian Territories 2 0.04 375
Benin 2 0.02 319
Cape Verde 2 0.37 246
Eswatini 2 0.18 172
Angola 2 0.01 45
Belize 2 0.52 18
MS Zaandam cruise ship 2 9
French Guiana 1 0.35 144
Brunei 1 0.23 141
Liechtenstein 1 2.64 82
Cayman Islands 1 1.56 81
Botswana 1 0.04 23
Gambia 1 0.04 20
Curaçao 1 0.61 16
Burundi 1 0.01 15
Turks and Caicos Islands 1 2.65 12
Comoros 1 0.12 11
Montserrat 1 20.03 11
Suriname 1 0.17 10
Mauritania 1 0.02 8
British Virgin Islands 1 3.36 7
Réunion 0 0.00 436
Vietnam 0 0.00 288
Rwanda 0 0.00 284
Madagascar 0 0.00 193
Faroe Islands 0 0.00 187
South Sudan 0 0.00 156
Gibraltar 0 0.00 146
Central African Republic 0 0.00 143
Cambodia 0 0.00 122
Uganda 0 0.00 121
Nepal 0 0.00 120
Mozambique 0 0.00 91
French Polynesia 0 0.00 60
Mongolia 0 0.00 42
Eritrea 0 0.00 39
Timor-Leste 0 0.00 24
Grenada 0 0.00 21
Laos 0 0.00 19
Fiji 0 0.00 18
Saint Lucia 0 0.00 18
New Caledonia 0 0.00 18
St Vincent and the Grenadines 0 0.00 17
Dominica 0 0.00 16
Namibia 0 0.00 16
Saint Kitts and Nevis 0 0.00 15
Falkland Islands 0 0.00 13
Vatican 0 0.00 12
Seychelles 0 0.00 11
Greenland 0 0.00 11
Bhutan 0 0.00 9
Papua New Guinea 0 0.00 8
Saint Barthelemy 0 0.00 6
Western Sahara 0 0.00 6
Anguilla 0 0.00 3

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

** The past data for new cases is a three day rolling average. Due to revisions in the number of cases, an average cannot be calculated for this date.

Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies

Figures last updated: 11 May 2020, 10:47 BST

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.

The true number of cases is thought to be much higher than the reported figures, 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 warning the world faces the worst recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The United Nations World Food Programme has also warned that the pandemic could almost double the number of people suffering acute hunger, and the UN has appealed for $6.7bn (£5.4bn) in funding.

UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Mark Lowcock said "the spectre of multiple famines" loomed.

Where are coronavirus cases still rising?

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

Russia's latest official data shows it now has the third highest number of infections worldwide. The country has reported more than 10,000 new cases for eight consecutive days.

These charts show four countries where deaths are on an upward trajectory - as shown by the red lines - each following a similar pattern.

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 coronavirus 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 number of coronavirus deaths is around 2,100 but the death toll is thought to be much higher.

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

New Zealand says it has effectively eliminated the threat posed by the virus after fewer than 1,500 confirmed cases and just 21 deaths. Its authorities had brought in some of the toughest restrictions on travel and activity early in the pandemic.

Europe slowly easing lockdown measures

In Europe, the UK became the first country to record more than 30,000 coronavirus deaths last week.

It surpassed Italy, which was the first country in the region to see a rapid increase in deaths in early March.

Differences in population size and how countries report their figures, with some including deaths in care homes, or deaths of those suspected but not confirmed of having the virus, means international comparisons are complicated.

However, the UK, Italy, Spain, France and many other European countries appear to have passed through the peak of the virus and the number of new 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.

In Germany, all shops can now reopen with extra measures in place and schools have partially reopened. Members of two different households are now allowed to meet up with each other and Bundesliga football matches are due to resume behind closed doors on Saturday 16 May.

Infection rates in Germany have increased in recent days and according to the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), the reproduction rate - the estimated number of people a confirmed patient infects - is now above 1.

France has been split into red and green zones with restrictions being eased more areas designated green than those designated red. From 11 May, all shops except Paris shopping centres can open, but not bars and restaurants. Car journeys within a radius of up to 100km (62 miles) from home are permitted.

Spain has announced a four-phase plan to lift its lockdown and return to a "new normality" by the end of June. However, schools will not be fully reopened until September.

In Italy, some shops and factories have now reopened and bars and cafes are being allowed to offer takeaway services.

In the UK, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a limited easing of restrictions on Sunday, saying that those who cannot work from home should now be "actively encouraged" to return to their workplace, but not use public transport.

Other European countries easing restrictions include Poland, Denmark, Switzerland and the Netherlands.

New York remains epicentre of US outbreak

With more than 1.3 million cases, the US has the highest number of confirmed infections in the world. It has also recorded more than 79,000 deaths.

The state of New York has been particularly badly affected, with more than 26,000 deaths.

At one point, more than 90% of the US population was under mandatory lockdown orders, but many states have now begun to loosen their stay-at-home restrictions and allowed some businesses to reopen - a move health officials fear could further spread the virus.

Last week President Donald Trump said he would refocus the White House task force on kickstarting the US economy, a day after suggesting he would disband it.

The US unemployment rate has risen to 14.7%, with 20.5 million jobs lost in April, as the coronavirus pandemic devastated the economy.

The rise means the jobless rate is now worse than at any time since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Former US President Barack Obama has criticised his successor's response to the crisis. During a private phone call to former staffers, Mr Obama called the response "an absolute chaotic disaster".

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