Coronavirus:: Six months after pandemic declared, where are global hotspots?

Mothers bring their children for vaccination Delhi, India, 9 Sept 2020 Image copyright Getty Images

Coronavirus is continuing its spread across the world, with more than 27 million confirmed cases in 188 countries. About 900,000 people have lost their lives.

Exactly six months after the World Health Organization declared a pandemic - a worldwide spread - cases of the disease are continuing to surge in many countries. Some that had apparent success in suppressing initial outbreaks have seen infections rise again.

However, the number of confirmed cases during the spring peak is likely to be an underestimate of the true level of infection, as widespread testing was not available in many countries earlier in the year.

mapped

Confirmed cases around the world

Group 4

Please upgrade your browser to see the full interactive

Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies

Figures last updated 10 September 2020, 09:26 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.

Where are cases and deaths rising?

Asia and Latin America are the continents that currently have the highest number of daily confirmed cases.

India now has the second largest number of confirmed cases in the world, behind the United States, after a recent surge in reported infections.

Newly recorded cases have hit 90,000 a day. In August, India saw cases increase by almost two million, the highest single-month rise reported anywhere in the world during the pandemic.

The surge comes as the government continues to lift restrictions to try to boost the economy, but is also a reflection of increased testing - as daily tests have risen to more than a million.

Given the size of its population, India has a low death rate from Covid-19. But nearly 1,000 deaths have been recorded every day from across the country since 2 September.

In Latin America, Brazil has the highest number of deaths, with more than 128,000 so far. It has also recorded more than four million cases, the third highest in the world.

Newly confirmed cases in the region are also rising in Argentina, which now has more than half a million in total. The country recorded its highest daily total so far - more than 12,000 - on Tuesday.

In the Middle East, Iran has been badly affected by the virus and documents leaked to the BBC Persian service suggest the death toll there is more than double the official total, which currently stands at more than 22,000. Neighbouring Iraq has also seen a spike in cases.

Cases are also continuing to rise in Indonesia and the country has recorded more than 8,000 deaths - the highest number in South East Asia.

Africa has recorded more than a million confirmed cases, although the true extent of the pandemic in the continent is not known. Testing rates are reported to be low, which could distort official estimates.

South Africa and Egypt have seen the largest recorded outbreaks so far, with South Africa one of only 10 countries in the world to record more than 500,000 confirmed cases.

The World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has warned: "No country can just pretend the pandemic is over."

Coronavirus cases rising again in Europe

France and Spain have recently recorded their highest numbers of daily cases since the spring, and the WHO has warned of a possible resurgence of the disease in Europe in October and November.

Spain has now become the first country in the EU to pass half a million, adding 100,000 new cases in the last month.

Hans Kluge, the director general of the WHO's Europe office, has likened Covid-19 to a "tornado with a long tail" and warned that rising cases among young people could spread the disease to more vulnerable older people.

A number of countries have re-imposed local lockdowns in their worst-affected regions, and there have been renewed appeals for people to wear face coverings and follow social distancing rules.

The pattern of rising infections following the end of lockdown restrictions is not limited to Europe.

Other countries that have seen a resurgence of the virus include Peru, Israel, South Korea and Australia.

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

Scroll table to see more data

*Deaths per 100,000 people

US 188,433 57.6 6,239,501
Brazil 126,650 60.5 4,137,521
India 71,642 5.3 4,204,613
Mexico 67,558 53.5 634,023
UK 41,551 61.9 347,152
Italy 35,541 58.6 277,634
France 30,701 47.2 324,777
Peru 29,838 93.3 689,977
Spain 29,418 63.0 498,989
Iran 22,293 27.3 386,658
Colombia 21,412 43.1 666,521
Russia 17,768 12.2 1,022,228
South Africa 14,889 25.8 638,517
Chile 11,592 61.9 422,510
Belgium 9,907 86.3 88,367
Argentina 9,859 22.2 478,792
Germany 9,330 11.2 251,728
Canada 9,194 24.8 133,890
Indonesia 8,025 3.0 194,109
Iraq 7,512 19.5 260,370
Ecuador 6,724 39.4 118,045
Turkey 6,673 8.1 279,806
Pakistan 6,345 3.0 298,903
Netherlands 6,243 36.6 74,805
Sweden 5,835 58.5 84,985
Egypt 5,530 5.6 99,863
Bolivia 5,398 47.5 120,769
China 4,730 0.3 90,058
Bangladesh 4,479 2.8 325,157
Saudi Arabia 4,081 12.1 320,688
Romania 3,893 20.0 95,014
Philippines 3,875 3.6 237,365
Ukraine 2,929 6.6 141,345
Guatemala 2,852 16.5 77,683
Poland 2,120 5.6 70,824
Panama 2,086 49.9 97,043
Switzerland 2,013 23.6 44,401
Honduras 2,007 20.9 64,764
Dominican Republic 1,845 17.4 99,333
Portugal 1,840 17.9 60,258
Ireland 1,777 36.9 29,672
Kazakhstan 1,588 8.7 106,361
Algeria 1,556 3.7 46,364
Afghanistan 1,415 3.8 38,494
Japan 1,366 1.1 72,011
Morocco 1,361 3.8 72,394
Moldova 1,063 26.2 39,797
Kyrgyzstan 1,060 16.8 44,458
Nigeria 1,057 0.5 55,005
Israel 1,019 12.2 131,641
Ethiopia 918 0.8 58,672
Armenia 900 30.5 44,845
Sudan 833 2.0 13,437
El Salvador 764 11.9 26,308
Australia 762 3.1 26,322
Austria 736 8.3 29,271
Oman 728 15.1 87,072
Serbia 724 10.4 31,905
Belarus 711 7.5 72,859
Bulgaria 676 9.6 17,089
Bosnia and Herzegovina 655 19.7 21,560
Denmark 627 10.9 17,883
Hungary 624 6.4 8,387
North Macedonia 617 29.6 15,090
Kenya 597 1.2 35,103
Yemen 572 2.0 1,987
Azerbaijan 548 5.5 37,329
Kuwait 544 13.1 89,582
Kosovo 488 26.4 12,683
Costa Rica 478 9.6 46,920
Czech Republic 436 4.1 28,156
Paraguay 435 6.3 22,486
Venezuela 428 1.5 53,289
Cameroon 415 1.6 19,604
United Arab Emirates 388 4.0 73,984
Uzbekistan 350 1.1 43,775
South Korea 336 0.7 21,296
Finland 336 6.1 8,291
Albania 316 11.0 10,255
Zambia 295 1.7 12,776
Senegal 290 1.8 13,987
Nepal 289 1.0 46,257
Libya 285 4.3 17,749
Greece 284 2.7 11,524
Ghana 283 1.0 44,777
Norway 264 4.9 11,388
DR Congo 260 0.3 10,210
Haiti 214 1.9 8,360
Zimbabwe 208 1.4 7,116
Qatar 203 7.3 120,095
Bahrain 200 12.7 55,415
Madagascar 200 0.8 15,319
Croatia 198 4.8 11,964
Lebanon 191 2.8 20,426
Palestinian Territories 181 3.7 26,127
Malawi 175 1.0 5,614
Mauritania 160 3.6 7,142
Nicaragua 141 2.2 4,668
Slovenia 135 6.5 3,165
Syria 134 0.8 3,171
Malaysia 128 0.4 9,397
Mali 127 0.7 2,842
Luxembourg 124 20.5 6,950
Ivory Coast 119 0.5 18,588
Angola 117 0.4 2,965
Montenegro 108 17.2 5,553
Congo 102 1.9 4,628
Cuba 101 0.9 4,309
Gambia 99 4.3 3,197
Somalia 97 0.6 3,362
Eswatini 94 8.3 4,853
Tunisia 93 0.8 5,041
Namibia 89 3.6 8,685
Lithuania 86 3.1 3,083
Suriname 85 14.8 4,346
Equatorial Guinea 83 6.3 4,972
Liberia 82 1.7 1,307
Chad 79 0.5 1,039
Sierra Leone 71 0.9 2,054
Tajikistan 70 0.8 8,792
Niger 69 0.3 1,177
Estonia 64 4.8 2,516
French Guiana 62 21.9 9,322
Central African Republic 62 1.3 4,729
Guinea 61 0.5 9,798
Djibouti 61 6.4 5,388
Thailand 58 0.1 3,445
Bahamas 56 14.5 2,506
Burkina Faso 55 0.3 1,452
Gabon 53 2.5 8,601
Andorra 53 68.8 1,215
South Sudan 48 0.4 2,544
Channel Islands 48 28.2 626
Guyana 46 5.9 1,468
Uruguay 45 1.3 1,679
Cape Verde 42 7.7 4,330
San Marino 42 124.3 716
Uganda 41 0.1 3,667
Mayotte 40 15.4 3,374
Benin 40 0.3 2,213
Guinea-Bissau 38 2.0 2,245
Slovakia 37 0.7 4,614
Latvia 35 1.8 1,429
Vietnam 35 0.0 1,049
Trinidad and Tobago 34 2.4 2,250
Jamaica 33 1.1 3,103
Togo 32 0.4 1,488
Lesotho 31 1.5 1,148
Maldives 29 5.6 8,584
Singapore 27 0.5 57,022
Mozambique 27 0.1 4,444
New Zealand 24 0.5 1,776
Isle of Man 24 28.5 337
Cyprus 21 1.8 1,509
Tanzania 21 0.0 509
Rwanda 19 0.2 4,374
Georgia 19 0.5 1,684
Saint Martin 19 51.0 511
Guadeloupe 18 4.5 1,363
Martinique 18 4.8 758
Jordan 16 0.2 2,411
Belize 15 3.9 1,194
Sao Tome and Principe 15 7.1 898
Aruba 14 13.2 2,449
Malta 14 3.2 2,039
Réunion 13 1.5 2,222
Diamond Princess cruise ship 13 712
Sri Lanka 12 0.1 3,123
Iceland 10 3.0 2,141
Mauritius 10 0.8 356
Bermuda 9 14.3 175
Botswana 8 0.4 2,002
Myanmar 8 0.0 1,419
Taiwan 7 0.0 493
Comoros 7 0.8 452
Barbados 7 2.4 178
Turks and Caicos Islands 5 13.3 598
Papua New Guinea 5 0.1 497
Brunei 3 0.7 145
Antigua and Barbuda 3 3.1 95
Fiji 2 0.2 31
MS Zaandam cruise ship 2 9
Burundi 1 0.0 462
Cayman Islands 1 1.6 205
Monaco 1 2.6 147
Liechtenstein 1 2.6 107
Curaçao 1 0.6 92
British Virgin Islands 1 3.4 63
Montserrat 1 20.0 13
Western Sahara 1 0.2 10
French Polynesia 0 0.0 694
Faroe Islands 0 0.0 413
Eritrea 0 0.0 330
Gibraltar 0 0.0 315
Mongolia 0 0.0 310
Cambodia 0 0.0 274
Bhutan 0 0.0 230
Seychelles 0 0.0 136
St Vincent and the Grenadines 0 0.0 61
Timor-Leste 0 0.0 27
Saint Lucia 0 0.0 26
New Caledonia 0 0.0 26
Grenada 0 0.0 24
Laos 0 0.0 22
Dominica 0 0.0 22
Saint Barthelemy 0 0.0 18
Saint Kitts and Nevis 0 0.0 17
Greenland 0 0.0 14
Falkland Islands 0 0.0 13
Vatican 0 0.0 12
Saint Pierre and Miquelon 0 0.0 6
Anguilla 0 0.0 3

Please update your browser to see full interactive

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: 7 September 2020, 09:50 BST

Cases in the US have slowed after second surge

The US has had more than six million cases of coronavirus, almost a quarter of the world's total. It saw an increase in the number of daily cases to record levels in July, but the numbers have fallen since then.

With more than 190,000 deaths, the US has the world's highest death toll.

A projection from the University of Washington suggests there could be more than 400,000 deaths by the end of the year, though it says this could be reduced to 286,000 if 95% of Americans wear masks in public.

The outbreak has had a devastating impact on the US economy, with GDP falling by a record rate of 33% in the three months from April to June.

How did coronavirus spread?

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

glad I

The outbreak spread quickly across the globe in the first months of 2020 and 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.

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

Governments across the world have been forced to limit public movement and close businesses and venues in a bid to slow the spread of the virus. This has had a devastating impact on the global economy.

The International Monetary Fund has said the world is in the midst of the worst recession since the Great Depression and warned that it could take two years for economic output to return to pre-pandemic levels.

The United Nations has said that up to 265 million people could face starvation by the end of the year because of the impact of Covid-19.

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.

More on this story