Yesterdays new cases (US - about 100)
United States:
- 1 new case in
Illinois, the first
community-transmitted case of the virus in Chicago: ab, currently hospitalized in
serious condition. Officials say that the man has not traveled to any countries impacted by coronavirus, and that he has no connection to any other existing cases [
source]
- 3 new cases in Kentucky [
source]
-
Washington state:
-- 20 new cases, 2 of which in Pierce County [
source]
--
3 new deaths (1 of which in Grant County) [
source] [
source]
- 1 new case in Minnesota (Carver County) [
source]
- First 3 cases in
Iowa [
source]
- 2 new cases in
Tennessee (Davidson County and first in Shelby County) [
source]
- 2 new cases in
Maryland [
source]
- 15 new cases in
Massachusetts, all connected to the Biogen employee conference in late February [
source]
- 7 new cases in
California:
---- 5 in Contra Costa County [
source]
---- 1 in Riverside County (locally acquired) [
source]
---- 1 in Fresno County (travel related) [
source]
- 2 new cases in
New Jersey [
source]
- 1 new case in
Connecticut (Wilton) [
source]
- 7 new cases in
Oregon. Governor declares
state of emergency which will last
for 60 days [
source]
- 1 new case in
Virginia (Fairfax City) [
source]
- 1 new case in
Indiana (Hendricks County) [
source]
- 16 new cases in
New York state [
source]
- 2 new cases in
New Hampshire: an adult male from
Grafton County who had contact with a confirmed case at
Hope Bible Fellowship in West Lebanon, NH
on March 1st at the morning service, and an adult male from
Rockingham County who
traveled to Italy [
source]
1st in Vermont [
source]
1st in Missouri (Louis County) [
source]
4 in Florida:
- 1 in Broward County [
source]
- 1 in Manatee County [
source]
- 2: 1 in Okaloosa County and 1 in Volusia County, both with a recent
history of travel [
source]
Todays cases appear to include 4 more for Ga and 4 more in SC
https://dph.georgia.gov/press-relea...onal-presumed-positive-cases-covid-19-georgia
https://www.scdhec.gov/news-release...e-cases-2019-novel-coronavirus-south-carolina