Coronavirus pandemic: Tracking the global outbreak

Mourners wearing protective masks at a mass burial of coronavirus victims in Manaus, Brazil - 19 May 2020 Image copyright Getty Images

Coronavirus is continuing its spread across the world, with nearly five million confirmed cases in 188 countries. More than 300,000 people have lost their lives.

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 then spread quickly across the globe in the first months of 2020.

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Confirmed cases around the world

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Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies

Figures last updated 19 May 2020, 17:04 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, around five times as many as any other country according to figures collated by Johns Hopkins University. With more than 90,000 fatalities, it also has the world's highest death toll.

The UK, Italy, France and Spain are the worst-hit European countries.

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.

data in detail

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*Deaths per 100,000 people

US 90,297 27.6 1,508,055
UK 35,341 52.6 248,818
Italy 32,007 52.8 225,886
France 28,239 43.5 142,903
Spain 27,709 59.3 231,606
Brazil 16,941 8.1 257,396
Belgium 9,108 79.3 55,791
Germany 8,067 9.7 177,289
Iran 7,119 8.7 124,603
Canada 5,960 16.1 79,411
Netherlands 5,715 33.5 44,255
Mexico 5,332 4.2 51,633
China 4,638 0.3 84,063
Turkey 4,171 5.1 150,593
Sweden 3,743 37.5 30,799
India 3,169 0.2 102,335
Russia 2,837 1.9 299,941
Ecuador 2,799 16.4 33,582
Peru 2,789 8.7 94,933
Switzerland 1,890 22.2 30,618
Ireland 1,547 32.1 24,200
Portugal 1,247 12.2 29,432
Indonesia 1,221 0.5 18,496
Romania 1,126 5.8 17,191
Poland 941 2.5 19,080
Pakistan 939 0.4 43,966
Philippines 837 0.8 12,942
Japan 749 0.6 16,305
Egypt 645 0.7 12,764
Austria 632 7.1 16,321
Colombia 592 1.2 16,295
Algeria 555 1.3 7,201
Denmark 551 9.6 11,044
Ukraine 548 1.2 18,876
Chile 478 2.6 46,059
Hungary 467 4.8 3,556
Dominican Republic 434 4.1 12,725
Argentina 382 0.9 8,371
Bangladesh 370 0.2 25,121
Saudi Arabia 329 1.0 59,854
Czech Republic 301 2.8 8,604
Finland 301 5.5 6,399
South Africa 286 0.5 16,433
Panama 279 6.7 9,726
Israel 277 3.3 16,650
South Korea 263 0.5 11,078
Serbia 234 3.4 10,733
Norway 233 4.4 8,264
United Arab Emirates 227 2.4 25,063
Moldova 219 5.4 6,138
Morocco 193 0.5 6,972
Nigeria 191 0.1 6,175
Afghanistan 178 0.5 7,653
Belarus 175 1.9 31,508
Bolivia 174 1.5 4,263
Greece 165 1.6 2,836
Honduras 146 1.5 2,798
Cameroon 140 0.6 3,529
Bosnia and Herzegovina 134 4.0 2,321
Iraq 127 0.3 3,554
Kuwait 121 2.9 16,764
Malaysia 114 0.4 6,978
Bulgaria 112 1.6 2,259
Luxembourg 107 17.7 3,947
North Macedonia 106 5.1 1,839
Sudan 105 0.3 2,591
Slovenia 104 5.0 1,467
Australia 100 0.4 7,068
Croatia 96 2.3 2,232
Cuba 79 0.7 1,881
Armenia 64 2.2 5,041
Estonia 64 4.8 1,791
DR Congo 61 0.1 1,538
Lithuania 60 2.1 1,562
Somalia 57 0.4 1,455
Thailand 56 0.1 3,033
Niger 55 0.2 909
Chad 53 0.3 519
Mali 52 0.3 874
Burkina Faso 51 0.3 796
Andorra 51 66.2 761
Kenya 50 0.1 963
Tunisia 46 0.4 1,043
Channel Islands 43 25.2 555
Tajikistan 41 0.5 1,936
San Marino 41 121.4 655
Azerbaijan 40 0.4 3,387
Guatemala 38 0.2 2,001
Kazakhstan 35 0.2 6,751
Sierra Leone 33 0.4 519
Ghana 31 0.1 5,918
Albania 31 1.1 949
Senegal 30 0.2 2,617
El Salvador 30 0.5 1,498
Kosovo 29 1.6 985
Ivory Coast 28 0.1 2,119
Slovakia 28 0.5 1,495
Oman 27 0.6 5,671
Lebanon 26 0.4 954
Isle of Man 24 28.5 335
Liberia 23 0.5 233
Singapore 22 0.4 28,794
New Zealand 21 0.4 1,503
Latvia 21 1.1 1,012
Haiti 21 0.2 533
Tanzania 21 0.0 509
Uruguay 20 0.6 737
Yemen 20 0.1 130
Mayotte 18 6.9 1,370
Cyprus 17 1.4 917
Guinea 16 0.1 2,796
Qatar 15 0.5 35,606
Congo 15 0.3 412
Saint Martin 15 40.3 77
Kyrgyzstan 14 0.2 1,243
Martinique 14 3.7 192
Uzbekistan 13 0.0 2,825
Diamond Princess cruise ship 13 712
Guadeloupe 13 3.3 155
Bahrain 12 0.8 7,374
Georgia 12 0.3 702
Togo 12 0.2 330
Gabon 11 0.5 1,432
Paraguay 11 0.2 788
Bahamas 11 2.9 96
Iceland 10 3.0 1,802
Costa Rica 10 0.2 866
Venezuela 10 0.0 618
Mauritius 10 0.8 332
Guyana 10 1.3 124
Sri Lanka 9 0.0 1,020
Jordan 9 0.1 629
Jamaica 9 0.3 520
Montenegro 9 1.4 324
Bermuda 9 14.3 125
Trinidad and Tobago 8 0.6 116
Nicaragua 8 0.1 25
Djibouti 7 0.7 1,518
Zambia 7 0.0 772
Equatorial Guinea 7 0.5 719
Taiwan 7 0.0 440
Sao Tome and Principe 7 3.3 246
Barbados 7 2.4 88
Malta 6 1.4 569
Myanmar 6 0.0 191
Ethiopia 5 0.0 365
Maldives 4 0.8 1,143
Guinea-Bissau 4 0.2 1,032
South Sudan 4 0.0 290
Monaco 4 10.3 97
Mauritania 4 0.1 81
Zimbabwe 4 0.0 46
Cape Verde 3 0.6 328
Aruba 3 2.8 101
Malawi 3 0.0 70
Libya 3 0.0 65
Syria 3 0.0 58
Angola 3 0.0 50
Antigua and Barbuda 3 3.1 25
Nepal 2 0.0 402
Palestinian Territories 2 0.0 388
Benin 2 0.0 339
Madagascar 2 0.0 326
Eswatini 2 0.2 205
Belize 2 0.5 18
MS Zaandam cruise ship 2 9
French Guiana 1 0.4 210
Brunei 1 0.2 141
Cayman Islands 1 1.6 94
Liechtenstein 1 2.6 82
Burundi 1 0.0 42
Botswana 1 0.0 25
Gambia 1 0.0 24
Curaçao 1 0.6 16
Turks and Caicos Islands 1 2.7 12
Montserrat 1 20.0 11
Suriname 1 0.2 11
Comoros 1 0.1 11
British Virgin Islands 1 3.4 8
Réunion 0 0.0 446
Central African Republic 0 0.0 366
Vietnam 0 0.0 324
Rwanda 0 0.0 297
Uganda 0 0.0 260
Faroe Islands 0 0.0 187
Gibraltar 0 0.0 147
Mozambique 0 0.0 145
Mongolia 0 0.0 140
Cambodia 0 0.0 122
French Polynesia 0 0.0 60
Eritrea 0 0.0 39
Timor-Leste 0 0.0 24
Grenada 0 0.0 22
Bhutan 0 0.0 21
Laos 0 0.0 19
Fiji 0 0.0 18
New Caledonia 0 0.0 18
Saint Lucia 0 0.0 18
St Vincent and the Grenadines 0 0.0 17
Namibia 0 0.0 16
Dominica 0 0.0 16
Saint Kitts and Nevis 0 0.0 15
Falkland Islands 0 0.0 13
Vatican 0 0.0 12
Seychelles 0 0.0 11
Greenland 0 0.0 11
Papua New Guinea 0 0.0 8
Saint Barthelemy 0 0.0 6
Western Sahara 0 0.0 6
Anguilla 0 0.0 3
Lesotho 0 0.0 1

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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: 19 May 2020, 17:04 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.

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.

A sharp increase in cases in Latin America has led the WHO to say the Americas are currently at the centre of the pandemic.

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

Brazil now has the third highest number of infections in the world - overtaking the UK, Spain and Italy. However, the country's health experts have warned that the real number of confirmed infections could be far higher, due to a lack of testing.

Bruno Covas, mayor of Brazil's largest city, São Paulo, which is home to 12 million people, has warned its health system could collapse because of the growing demand for emergency beds.

Mexico has also seen a spike in new infections, while Ecuador saw its health system collapse in April.

Outside South America, Russia has seen infections rise rapidly and now has the second highest number worldwide, according to official data. It has been reporting around 10,000 new cases a day since the beginning of May.

In Africa, Lesotho confirmed its first cases on 13 May, which means coronavirus is now present in all countries on the continent, mainly in urban populations. Worst-hit are South Africa, Egypt and Algeria.

Europe easing lockdown restrictions

After being labelled the "epicentre of the pandemic " by the WHO in March, Europe is now slowly beginning to ease restrictions brought in to slow the spread of the virus.

The UK, Italy, Spain and France, along with others, now appear to have passed the peak, with the number of new confirmed cases and deaths falling.

The UK and Italy have seen more than 30,000 deaths, while France and Spain have both recorded about 28,000.

However, 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.

European countries have varied in their plans to ease lockdowns, but the WHO has urged all nations to adopt a "slow, steady" approach.

New York the worst-hit in US outbreak

With more than 1.5 million cases, the US has the highest number of confirmed infections in the world. It has also recorded more than 90,000 deaths.

The state of New York has been particularly badly affected, with more than 28,000 deaths, but the number of new cases there has been on a downward trend in recent weeks.

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.

Top US infectious diseases doctor Anthony Fauci has cautioned against opening up public life too soon, warning of further "little spikes" which could become bigger outbreaks.

President Trump, who disagrees with Dr Fauci's advice, has made it clear he is keen to reopen the US economy "vaccine or no vaccine".

The latest figures show more than 36 million people have lost their jobs since the outbreak hit the US. That's nearly a quarter of the American workforce.

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

About this data

The data used on this page comes from a variety of sources. It includes figures collated by Johns Hopkins University, data from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, national governments and health agencies, as well as UN data on populations.

When comparing figures from different countries it is important to bear in mind that not all governments are recording coronavirus cases and deaths in the same way. This makes like for like comparisons between countries difficult.

Other factors to consider include: different population sizes, the size of the a country's elderly population or whether a particular country has a large amount of its people living in densely populated areas. In addition, countries may be in different stages of the pandemic.

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