Coronavirus pandemic: Tracking the global outbreak

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Coronavirus is continuing its spread across the world, with about 11 million confirmed cases in 188 countries. More than half a million people have lost their lives.

This series of maps and charts tracks the global outbreak of the virus.

Where are coronavirus cases and deaths still rising?

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, reaching 10 million confirmed cases towards the end of June.

Europe and North America saw the first major outbreaks in April but as they began to ease, Latin America and Asia started seeing an increase in cases.

In the last few weeks, North America has seen a resurgence of infections mostly driven by new outbreaks in the US, but Mexico has also seen an increasing numbers of cases.

World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has warned that the fight against the virus is "not even close to being over," adding: "Although many countries have made some progress globally, the pandemic is actually speeding up."

The WHO says the pandemic has not yet reached its peak in Central and South America, where Brazil has been the worst-hit so far. It is only the second country in the world, after the US, to have confirmed more than one million cases and its death toll stands at more than 60,000.

The surge in cases in Asia is largely down to widespread outbreaks in India and Pakistan. The healthcare systems in both countries are under increasing strain.

Are any countries seeing a 'second wave' of cases?

Previous pandemics have unfolded in "waves" of infections, with fresh outbreaks recurring after the initial peak subsides. Health experts think Covid-19 may follow a similar pattern - but there is no firm agreement on what exactly constitutes a second wave.

Although a number of countries have seen a rise in infections after appearing to have the virus under control, they may still be in the first stages of the outbreak. And rising cases may sometimes be down to increased testing.

Fears of a second wave have grown in Iran, where the number of daily deaths has risen again. Israel has also seen a surge in cases since easing restrictions at the end of May.

Cases in Portugal have been slowly increasing again after the country successfully reduced infections throughout April and May.

US seeing a second surge of cases

The US has seen record numbers of new cases in recent days and the top US health official for infectious diseases, Dr Anthony Fauci, has said it's clear the country is "not in control right now".

The surge is being driven by fresh outbreaks in the south and west of the country, with Dr Fauci saying about half of all new cases come from four states: Arizona, California, Florida and Texas.

Those states and about a dozen others have paused or rolled back their reopening plans.

The White House has said the rise in cases is a product of an uptick in US testing capacity. But Dr Fauci has warned that higher percentages of positive tests "cannot be explained by increased testing".

So far, the US has recorded about 2.8 million cases of the virus and nearly 130,000 deaths.

The University of Washington predicts the death toll could hit 175,000 by October - though it says this could be reduced to 150,000 if 95% of Americans wear masks in public.

How many cases and deaths have there been?

There have been about 11 million confirmed cases so far and more than half a million people have died.

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Confirmed cases around the world

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Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies

Figures last updated 4 July 2020, 12:55 BST

Note: The map, table and animated bar chart 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. US figures do not include Puerto Rico, Guam or the US Virgin Islands.

The US accounts for about 25% of the global total of cases, according to figures collated by Johns Hopkins University. It also has the world's highest death toll, followed by Brazil and the UK.

In China, the official death toll is some 4,600 from about 85,000 confirmed cases, although critics have questioned whether the country's official numbers can be trusted.

South Africa and Egypt have seen the largest outbreaks so far in Africa. But testing rates are reported to be extremely low in some parts of the continent so this could be distorting understanding of how far the virus has spread.

Globally, the true number of cases is thought to be much higher than the reported figures, as many people with milder symptoms have not been tested and counted.

In the table below, countries can be reordered by deaths, death rate and total cases. In the coloured bars on the right-hand side, countries in which cases have risen to more than 5,000 per day are those with black bars on the relevant date.

data in detail

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*Deaths per 100,000 people

US 128,576 39.3 2,731,899
Brazil 61,884 29.5 1,496,858
UK 43,955 65.5 283,757
Italy 34,818 57.4 240,961
France 29,875 46.0 166,378
Mexico 29,189 23.1 238,511
Spain 28,368 60.8 250,103
India 18,213 1.3 625,544
Iran 11,106 13.6 232,863
Peru 10,045 31.4 292,004
Russia 9,844 6.8 666,941
Belgium 9,765 85.0 61,727
Germany 9,010 10.8 196,723
Canada 8,700 23.5 106,643
Netherlands 6,113 35.8 50,342
Chile 5,920 31.6 284,541
Sweden 5,411 54.3 70,639
Turkey 5,167 6.3 202,284
China 4,641 0.3 84,830
Ecuador 4,639 27.2 59,468
Pakistan 4,551 2.1 221,896
Colombia 3,650 7.3 102,261
Egypt 3,120 3.2 71,299
Indonesia 2,987 1.1 59,394
South Africa 2,844 4.9 168,061
Iraq 2,160 5.6 53,708
Switzerland 1,965 23.0 31,967
Bangladesh 1,926 1.2 153,277
Saudi Arabia 1,752 5.2 197,608
Ireland 1,738 36.1 25,489
Romania 1,687 8.6 27,746
Portugal 1,587 15.5 42,782
Poland 1,492 3.9 35,146
Argentina 1,385 3.1 69,941
Philippines 1,274 1.2 38,805
Bolivia 1,271 11.2 35,528
Ukraine 1,227 2.8 47,705
Japan 977 0.8 19,080
Algeria 928 2.2 14,657
Guatemala 843 4.9 20,072
Afghanistan 819 2.2 32,324
Dominican Republic 765 7.2 34,197
Austria 705 7.9 17,941
Panama 667 16.0 35,237
Nigeria 616 0.3 27,110
Denmark 606 10.5 12,815
Sudan 604 1.4 9,663
Honduras 591 6.2 21,120
Hungary 588 6.1 4,172
Moldova 560 13.8 17,150
Armenia 469 15.9 27,320
Belarus 405 4.3 62,698
Kuwait 359 8.7 47,859
Czech Republic 353 3.3 12,178
Finland 328 5.9 7,241
Israel 326 3.9 27,611
Yemen 325 1.1 1,221
North Macedonia 321 15.4 6,625
United Arab Emirates 317 3.3 49,469
Cameroon 313 1.2 12,592
Serbia 287 4.1 15,195
South Korea 282 0.6 12,967
Norway 251 4.7 8,902
Bulgaria 232 3.3 5,315
Morocco 229 0.6 12,969
Azerbaijan 228 2.3 18,684
El Salvador 200 3.1 7,000
Greece 192 1.8 3,458
Bosnia and Herzegovina 189 5.7 4,788
Kazakhstan 188 1.0 44,075
Oman 188 3.9 42,555
DR Congo 176 0.2 7,189
Kenya 152 0.3 6,941
Mauritania 129 2.9 4,606
Malaysia 121 0.4 8,643
Senegal 121 0.8 7,054
Qatar 118 4.2 97,897
Ghana 117 0.4 18,134
Mali 117 0.6 2,260
Slovenia 111 5.3 1,634
Haiti 110 1.0 6,101
Luxembourg 110 18.2 4,395
Croatia 110 2.6 2,912
Australia 104 0.4 8,066
Ethiopia 103 0.1 5,846
Bahrain 94 6.0 27,837
Somalia 90 0.6 2,944
Cuba 86 0.8 2,353
Nicaragua 83 1.3 2,519
Lithuania 78 2.8 1,825
Kyrgyzstan 76 1.2 6,767
Chad 74 0.5 868
Albania 69 2.4 2,662
Estonia 69 5.2 1,991
Ivory Coast 68 0.3 9,992
Niger 68 0.3 1,081
Sierra Leone 60 0.8 1,518
Thailand 58 0.1 3,180
Venezuela 57 0.2 6,273
Djibouti 55 5.7 4,715
Kosovo 55 3.0 3,064
Burkina Faso 53 0.3 967
Tajikistan 52 0.6 6,058
Andorra 52 67.5 855
Equatorial Guinea 51 3.9 3,071
Tunisia 50 0.4 1,178
Central African Republic 47 1.0 3,788
Channel Islands 47 27.6 571
Gabon 42 2.0 5,513
San Marino 42 124.3 698
Congo 41 0.8 1,382
South Sudan 38 0.3 2,021
Liberia 37 0.8 819
Mayotte 35 13.5 2,650
Lebanon 35 0.5 1,796
Guinea 33 0.3 5,450
Nepal 31 0.1 14,519
Zambia 30 0.2 1,632
Latvia 30 1.6 1,122
Slovakia 28 0.5 1,720
Uruguay 28 0.8 947
Uzbekistan 27 0.1 9,199
Singapore 26 0.5 44,479
Libya 26 0.4 891
Madagascar 24 0.1 2,403
Guinea-Bissau 24 1.3 1,654
Isle of Man 24 28.5 336
New Zealand 22 0.5 1,530
Benin 21 0.2 1,199
Tanzania 21 0.0 509
Paraguay 19 0.3 2,303
Cyprus 19 1.6 999
Costa Rica 18 0.4 4,023
Angola 17 0.1 315
French Guiana 16 5.7 4,444
Malawi 16 0.1 1,342
Cape Verde 15 2.8 1,301
Georgia 15 0.4 943
Saint Martin 15 40.3 77
Togo 14 0.2 667
Guyana 14 1.8 250
Martinique 14 3.7 242
Guadeloupe 14 3.5 182
Sao Tome and Principe 13 6.2 717
Diamond Princess cruise ship 13 712
Suriname 13 2.3 547
Montenegro 12 1.9 616
Sri Lanka 11 0.1 2,066
Eswatini 11 1.0 873
Bahamas 11 2.9 104
Maldives 10 1.9 2,400
Iceland 10 3.0 1,850
Jamaica 10 0.3 715
Mauritius 10 0.8 341
Palestinian Territories 9 0.2 3,080
Jordan 9 0.1 1,136
Malta 9 2.0 671
Syria 9 0.1 312
Bermuda 9 14.3 146
Trinidad and Tobago 8 0.6 130
Zimbabwe 7 0.0 617
Taiwan 7 0.0 448
Comoros 7 0.8 303
Barbados 7 2.4 97
Mozambique 6 0.0 918
Myanmar 6 0.0 304
Monaco 4 10.3 106
Rwanda 3 0.0 1,063
Brunei 3 0.7 141
Aruba 3 2.8 104
Antigua and Barbuda 3 3.1 69
Réunion 2 0.2 531
Gambia 2 0.1 55
Turks and Caicos Islands 2 5.3 44
Belize 2 0.5 28
MS Zaandam cruise ship 2 9
Botswana 1 0.0 227
Cayman Islands 1 1.6 201
Burundi 1 0.0 170
Liechtenstein 1 2.6 83
Curaçao 1 0.6 23
Montserrat 1 20.0 11
Western Sahara 1 0.2 10
British Virgin Islands 1 3.4 8
Uganda 0 0.0 902
Vietnam 0 0.0 355
Namibia 0 0.0 293
Mongolia 0 0.0 220
Eritrea 0 0.0 215
Faroe Islands 0 0.0 187
Gibraltar 0 0.0 178
Cambodia 0 0.0 141
Seychelles 0 0.0 81
Bhutan 0 0.0 77
French Polynesia 0 0.0 62
Lesotho 0 0.0 35
St Vincent and the Grenadines 0 0.0 29
Timor-Leste 0 0.0 24
Grenada 0 0.0 23
New Caledonia 0 0.0 21
Saint Lucia 0 0.0 19
Laos 0 0.0 19
Fiji 0 0.0 18
Dominica 0 0.0 18
Saint Kitts and Nevis 0 0.0 15
Falkland Islands 0 0.0 13
Greenland 0 0.0 13
Vatican 0 0.0 12
Papua New Guinea 0 0.0 11
Saint Barthelemy 0 0.0 6
Anguilla 0 0.0 3
Saint Pierre and Miquelon 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 and UN population data

Figures last updated: 3 July 2020, 10:31 BST

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

Globally, at least 4.5 billion people - half the world's population - were living under social distancing measures at the height of the pandemic in Europe, 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.

Europe easing lockdown restrictions

In Europe, 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.

But as many countries ease restrictions, there are fears that the region could see a second surge in infections.

The risk of a "second wave" of infections requiring the reintroduction of lockdowns is moderate to high, according to the EU agency that monitors infectious diseases.

The UK has reported about 44,000 deaths so far, the highest number in Europe.

Italy has the second highest death toll in the region with nearly 35,000, while both France and Spain are just below 30,000.

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 that final international comparisons are complicated.

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 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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