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Tracking Covid-19 cases in the US

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Since January, novel coronavirus has spread to nearly every state and territory

Reported cases and deaths

The figures below are based on data from the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering. These numbers are updated every 15 minutes but may differ from other sources due to differences in reporting times. For up-to-the-minute updates, follow our live coverage.

Location Cases ...per 100K people Deaths ...per 100K people
California 876,033 2,217 16,979 43
Texas 854,006 2,945 17,465 60
Florida 755,020 3,515 15,967 74
New York 484,281 2,489 33,357 171
Illinois 347,631 2,743 9,474 75
Georgia 340,558 3,208 7,638 72
North Carolina 246,028 2,346 3,934 38
Arizona 231,149 3,176 5,827 80
Tennessee 228,744 3,350 2,909 43
New Jersey 219,647 2,473 16,211 183
Pennsylvania 186,754 1,459 8,465 66
Ohio 181,787 1,555 5,067 43
Louisiana 175,781 3,781 5,750 124
Alabama 173,485 3,538 2,789 57
Wisconsin 166,186 2,854 1,574 27
Virginia 165,676 1,941 3,430 40
South Carolina 163,990 3,185 3,650 71
Michigan 161,105 1,613 7,340 73
Missouri 158,955 2,590 2,592 42
Indiana 147,582 2,192 3,937 58
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CNN)Covid-19 cases continue to soar across the country and one top infectious disease expert warned Americans that the next few months will be the "darkest of the pandemic."

Health experts say the predicted fall surge is here, and rising cases across the US appear to bear that out. The US is averaging more than 55,000 new cases a day, and 10 states reported their highest single-day case counts on Friday. At least 27 states are showing an upward trend in the number of cases reported, according to a CNN analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University.
"The next six to 12 weeks are going to be the darkest of the entire pandemic," Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, told NBC's"Meet the Press" on Sunday...
howdy folks