Data in Motion
COVID-19 Data in Motion: Wednesday, October 14, 2020
A 60-second, daily summary of the most important data on COVID-19 in the U.S., updated every morning.
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By Region
Explore stats and trends specific to your country or U.S. state
Testing Trends Tool
State Timeline
A look at how social distancing measures may have influenced trends in COVID-19 cases and deaths
Follow global cases and trends.
Updated daily.
news | October 14, 2020
The total number of contact tracers reported in all U.S. states and territories was 53,116, falling far short of the more than 100,000 public health experts have been calling for since the pandemic began.
experts | October 10, 2020
Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, discusses the current number of COVID-19 cases in the U.S.
news | October 9, 2020
Death rates from the novel coronavirus are lower in hot spots around the world, even as new infections accelerate in what may be the pandemic’s next wave.
Providing public access to COVID-19 testing data, resources, and expert analysis
Testing tracker
A state-by-state comparison.
Testing tracker
A state-level look at weekly changes in testing rates.
Testing tracker
See which states meet or exceed test positivity rates recommended by the World Health Organization.
Resources and Expert Guidance for Tracing the COVID-19 Pandemic
news | October 5, 2020
President Trump's COVID-19 diagnosis highlights the importance of contact tracing. What does it entail?
news | October 3, 2020
What does it look like when you're contact tracing the President of the United States, in the hectic, jam-packed last weeks of a reelection campaign?
news | August 30, 2020
A patchwork approach to contact tracing across state health departments is making it increasingly difficult to know where people are getting exposed to COVID-19.
news | October 13, 2020
A pair of new studies assert that the U.S. response to the COVID-19 pandemic has been a disaster, causing more deaths than thought and prolonging Americans' suffering more than any other country.
news | October 13, 2020
Health officials, including experts from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, are coming around to the conclusion that they do more harm than good, except in limited circumstances.