Total tests (positive and negative): 43,719,155
- Jan 31-Feb 6: 1,838,699
- Jan 24-30: 2,010,337
- Jan 17-23: 2,167,468
- Jan 10-16: 2.448,507
- Jan 3-9: 1,962,306
- Dec 27-Jan 2: 1,999,900
- Dec 20-26: 2,334,293
- Dec 13-19: 2,226,119
- Dec 6-12: 1,984,205
- Nov 29-Dec 5: 1,428,743
- Nov 22-28: 1,601,350
- Nov 15-21: 1,300,236
- Nov 8-14: 1,106,145
- Nov 1-7: 962,840
- Oct 25-31: 993,158
- Oct 18-24: 952,468
- Oct 11-17: 878,266
- Oct 4-10: 879,337
- Sep 27-Oct 3: 816,158
- Sep 20-26: 738,844
- Sep 13-19: 780,919
- Sep 6-12: 640,644
- Aug 30-Sep 5: 807,693
- Aug 23-29: 673,278
- Aug 16-22: 755,241
- Aug 9-15: 973,584
New cases week by week:
- Jan 31-Feb 6: 96,488 (down 31% from previous week)
- Jan 24-30: 139,334 (down 25%)
- Jan 17-23: 184,794 (down 34%)
- Jan 10-16: 278,969 (up 1%)
- Jan 3-9: 275,368 (up 1%)
- Dec 27-Jan 2: 273,344 (up 3%)
- Dec 20-26: 264,683 (down 8%)
- Dec 13-19: 286,550 (up 37%)
- Dec 6-12: 209,807 (up 67%)
- Nov 29-Dec 5: 125,305 (up 31% )
- Nov 22-28: 95,606 (up 21%)
- Nov 15-21: 79,334 (up 54%)
- Nov 8-14: 51,410 (up 47%)
- Nov 1-7: 34,952 (up 20%)
- Oct 25-31: 29,195 (up 3%)
- Oct 18-24: 28,455 (up 31%)
- Oct 11-17 21,679 (down 8%)
- Oct 4-10: 23,340 (up 10%)
- Sep 27-Oct 3: 21,139 (down 12%)
- Sep 20-26: 24,102 (up 1%)
- Sep 13-19: 23,827 (up 3%)
- Sep 6-12: 23,059 (down 31%)
- Aug 29-Sep 5: 33,400 (down 12%)
- Aug 23-29: 37,948 (down 12%)
- Aug 16-22: 43,202 (down 36%)
- Aug 9-15: 67,907 (up 49%)
- Aug 2-8: 45,657 (down 17%)
- Jul 26-Aug 1: 54,730 (down 22%)
- July 19-25: 70,037 (up 11%)
- July 12-18: 63,019 (up 9%)
- July 5-11: 57,599 (up 19%)
- Jun 28-Jul 4 48,213 (up 30%)
- June 21-27: 37,124 (up 57%)
- June 14-20: 23,666 (up 21%)
- June 7-13: 19,627 (up 2.5%)
- May 31-June 6: 19,138 (up 18%)
- May 24-30: 16,267 (up 18%)
- May 17-23: 13,818
- May 10-16: 12,232
- May 3-9: 13,364
- Apr 25-May 2: 11,060
- April 18-24: 12,174
- April 11-17: 9,491
- April 4-10: 7,446
Deaths reported:
- As of March 7 - 0
- As of March 14 - 5
- As of March 21 - 23 (+18)
- As of March 28 - 101 (+78)
- As of April 4 - 276 (+175)
- As of April 11 - 609 (+333)
- As of April 18- 1,072 (+463)
- As of April 25 - 1,651 (+579)
- As of May 2 - 2,171 (+520)
- As of May 9 - 2,678 (+507)
- As of May 16 - 3,204 (+526)
- As of May 23 - 3,708 (+504)
- As of May 30 - 4,156 (+448)
- As of June 6 - 4,559 (+403)
- As of June 13 - 4,989 (+430)
- As of June 20 - 5,424 (+435)
- As of June 27 - 5,872 (+448)
- As of July 4 - 6,263 (+391)
- As of July 11 - 6,945 (+682)
- As of July 18 - 7,595 (+650 )
- As of July 25 - 8,337 (+742)
- As of Aug 1 - 9,224 (+887)
- As of Aug 8 - 10,189 (+965)
- As of Aug 16 - 11,147 (+958)
- As of Aug 23 - 11,998 (+851)
- As of Aug 30 - 12,834 (+836)
- As of Sep 5- 13,643 (+809)
- As of Sep 12 - 14,251 (+608)
- As of Sep 19 - 14,912 (+661)
- As of Sep 26 - 15,532 (+620)
- As of Oct 3- 16,074 (+532)
- As of Oct 10 - 16,500 (+426)
- As of Oct 17 - 16,899 (+399)
- As of Oct 24- 17,311 (+412)
- As of Oct 31 - 17,626 (+315)
- As of Nov 7 - 17,939 (+313)
- As of Nov 14 - 18,218 (+279)
- As of Nov 21 - 18,643 (+425)
- As of Nov 28 - 19,089 (+446)
- As of Dec 5 - 19,791 (+702)
- As of Dec 12 - 20,847 (+1,056)
- As of Dec 19 - 22,432 (+1,585)
- As of Dec 26- 23,983 (+1,551)
- As of Jan 2 - 26,357 (+2,374)
- As of Jan 9 - 29,233 (+2,876)
- As of Jan 16 - 32,960 (+3,727)
- As of Jan 23- 36,361 (+3,401)
- As of Jan 30 - 40,216 (+3,855)
- As of Feb 6 - 43,647 (+3,441)
Related posts:
California. (2/7/2021)
Connecticut. (8/21/2020)
Florida. (2/1/2021)
Illinois. (2/2/2021)
Indiana. (2/6/2021)
New Jersey, (2/2/2021)
Washington State. (6/12/2020)
West Virginia. (2/3/2021)
Related reading:
How L.A. County became coronavirus epicenter: Slower shutdown, density, poverty among theories. (Los Angeles Times, 5/23/2020)
When Bay Area counties mandated on March 16 that all residents stay at home, officials said it didn’t make sense in L.A. County because far fewer cases of the coronavirus had been detected.
“We don’t have the same trajectory that they have up north,” L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said that day when asked about a stay-at-home order.
Two months later, the situation has shifted dramatically. L.A. County now has the highest rate of deaths from COVID-19 in the state, and the second highest infection rate. On Friday, federal officials singled out Los Angeles because of its stubbornly high case counts of the coronavirus, despite precautions to slow the spread.
Headline from Sacramento Bee (5/15/2020)
Los Angeles Times headlines (4/27/2020)
Los Angeles Times headlines (4/23/2020)
Los Angeles Times headlines (4/21/2020)
Los Angeles Times headlines (4/18/2020)
Los Angeles Times headlines (4/15/2020)
Los Angeles Times headlines (4/21/2020)
Los Angeles Times headlines (4/15/2020)
Headline news
Screenshot of San Francisco Chronicle headline (4/2/2020)
A Los Angeles Times data analysis found that California has 7,200 intensive-care beds across more than 365 hospitals. In total, the state has more than 70,000 beds. The Times data analysis shows roughly one intensive-care bed for every 5,500 people in California.
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