- Jan 29-Feb 4: 142,531
- Jan 22-28: 146,056
- Jan 15-21: 161,704
- Jan 8-14: 183,346
- Jan 1-7: 184,392
- Dec 25-31: 155,633
- Dec 18-24: 265,349
- Dec 11-17: 313,659
- Dec 4-10: 210,117
- Nov 27-Dec 3: 260,017
- Nov 20-26: 269,319
- Nov 13-19: 218,287
- Nov 6-12: 212,253
- Oct. 30-Nov 5: 190,743
- Oct 23-29: 199,253
- Oct 16-22: 166,133
- Oct 9-15: 177,443
- Oct 2-8: 197,432
- Sep 25-Oct 1: 171,942
- Sep 18-24: 163,445
- Sep 11-17: 170,814
- Sep 4-10: 127,337
- Aug 28-Sep 3: 136,774
- Aug 21-27: 176,126
- Aug 14-20: 164,382
- Aug 7-13: 132,530
- Jan 29-Feb 4: 18,787 (down 5% from previous week)
- Jan 22-28: 19,800 (down 27%)
- Jan 15-21: 27,301 (down 25%)
- Jan 8-14: 36,245 (down 24%)
- Jan 1-7: 47,435 (up 18%)
- Dec 25-31: 40,305 (down 24%)
- Dec 18-24: 53,267 (down 17%)
- Dec 11-17: 64,257 (up 58%)
- Dec 4-10: 40,727 (up 14%)
- Nov 27-Dec 3: 35,876 (up 48%)
- Nov 20-26: 24,288 (down 23%)
- Nov 13-19: 31,363 (up 26%)
- Nov 6-12: 24,854 (up 67%)
- Oct. 30-Nov 5: 14,891 (down 29%)
- Oct 23-29: 20,973 (up 33%)
- Oct 16-22: 15,808 (up 18%)
- Oct 9-15: 13,380 (up 11%)
- Oct 2-8: 12,015 (up 22%)
- Sep 25-Oct 1: 9,888 (up 5%)
- Sep 18-24: 9.404 (down 5%)
- Sep 11-17: 9,903 (up 7%)
- Sep 4 -10: 8,691 (down 16%)
- Aug 28-Sep 3: 10,367 (up 4%)
- Aug 21-27: 10,004 (down 4%)
- Aug 14-20: 10,463 (down 14%)
- Aug 7-13: 12,161 (down 10%)
- Jul 31-Aug 6: 13,479 (down 15%)
- July 24-30: 15,884 (up 3%)
- July 17-23: 15,447 (up 11%)
- July 10-16: 13,949 (up 30%)
- July 3-9: 10,701 (up 21%)
- Jun 26-Jul 2: 8,856 (up 70%)
- June 19-25: 5,205 (up 19%)
- June 12-18: 4,391 (up 28%)
- June 5-11: 3,418 (down 1%)
- May 29-June 4: 3,449 (up 27%)
- May 22-28: 2,718 (up 20%)
- May 15-21: 2,262
- May 8-14: 2,603
- May 1-7: 3,730
- April 24-30: 2,100
- April 17-23: 1,628
More data found at Tennessee Department of Health
Deaths reported:
- As of March 26 - 3
- As of April 2 - 32 (+ 29)
- As of April 9 - 94 (+ 62)
- As of April 16 - 141 (+ 47)
- As of April 23 - 170 (+ 29)
- As of April 30 - 204 (+ 34)
- As of May 7 - 237 (+ 33)
- As of May 14 - 287 (+ 50)
- As of May 21 - 313 (+ 26)
- As of May 28 - 356 (+ 43)
- As of June 4 - 401 (+ 45)
- As of June 11 - 441 (+ 40)
- As of June 18 - 509 (+ 68)
- As of June 25 - 567 (+ 58)
- As of July 2 - 620 (+ 53)
- As of July 9 - 710 (+ 90)
- As of July 16 - 796 (+ 86)
- As of July 23 - 925 (+129)
- As of July 30 - 1,033 (+108)
- As of Aug 6 - 1,186 (+153)
- As of Aug 13 - 1,313 (+127)
- As of Aug 20 - 1,488 (+175)
- As of Aug 27 - 1,673 (+185)
- As of Sep 3 - 1,815 (+142)
- As of Sep 10 - 1,988 (+173)
- As of Sep 17 - 2,164 (+176)
- As of Sep 24 - 2,310 (+146)
- As of Oct 1 - 2,501 (+191)
- As of Oct 8 - 2,705 (+204)
- As of Oct 15 - 2,864 (+159)
- As of Oct 22 - 3,033 (+169)
- As of Oct 29 - 3,241 (+208)
- As of Nov 5 - 3,509 (+268)
- As of Nov 12 - 3,788 (+279)
- As of Nov 19 - 4,128 (+340)
- As of Nov 26 - 4,519 (+391)
- As of Dec 3 - 4,781 (+262)
- As of Dec 10 - 5,240 (+459)
- As of Dec 17 - 5,845 (+605)
- As of Dec 24 - 6,431 (+586)
- As of Dec 31 - 6,907 (+476)
- As of Jan 7 - 7,492 (+585)
- As of Jan 14 - 8,232 (+740)
- As of Jan 21 - 8,684 (+552)
- As of Jan 28 - 9,417 (+733)
- As of Feb 4 - 10,202 (+785)
Related reading:
Across the South, ‘Walking a Tightrope’ While Awaiting the Worst. (The New York Times, 4/9/2020)He is worried, too, that the choices made by state leaders have left the South unprepared for a projected peak — and hundreds of virus-related deaths — that could come later this month.
“The governors of the Southern states did not take this seriously enough,” said Mr. Presley, a Republican who recently launched a campaign for an open U.S. Senate seat. He blamed hospital closures across the South on the refusal by members of his party in states like Tennessee to expand Medicaid insurance coverage, an option under the Affordable Care Act. “I think we’re really going to suffer through this pandemic.”
Related posts:
California. (1/17/2021)
Connecticut. (8/21/2020)
Florida. (2/1/2021)
Illinois. (2/2/2021)
Indiana. (1/16/2021)
New Jersey, (2/2/2021)
Washington State. (6/12/2020)
West Virginia. (1/20/2021)
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