CDC Updates U.S. H1N1 Flu Situation: 48 states | 6764 cases

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

CDC Updates U.S. H1N1 Flu Situation: 48 states | 6764 cases
Table. U.S. Human Cases of H1N1 Flu Infection
(As of May 25, 2009, 11:00 AM ET)



States* Confirmed and Probable Cases Deaths
Alabama
66 cases
0 deaths
Arkansas
4 cases
0 deaths
Arizona
531 cases
3 deaths
California
553 cases
0 deaths
Colorado
60 cases
0 deaths
Connecticut
102 cases
0 deaths
Delaware
102 cases
0 deaths
Florida
139 cases
0 deaths
Georgia
28 cases
0 deaths
Hawaii
40 cases
0 deaths
Idaho
9 cases
0 deaths
Illinois
896 cases
0 deaths
Indiana
120 cases
0 deaths
Iowa
71 cases
0 deaths
Kansas
34 cases
0 deaths
Kentucky**
27 cases
0 deaths
Louisiana
86 cases
0 deaths
Maine
9 cases
0 deaths
Maryland
41 cases
0 deaths
Massachusetts
238 cases
0 deaths
Michigan
176 cases
0 deaths
Minnesota
44 cases
0 deaths
Mississippi
7 cases
0 deaths
Missouri
24 cases
1 deaths
Montana
12 cases
0 deaths
Nebraska
29 cases
0 deaths
Nevada
49 cases
0 deaths
New Hampshire
23 cases
0 deaths
New Jersey
29 cases
0 deaths
New Mexico
97 cases
0 deaths
New York
343 cases
1 deaths
North Carolina
12 cases
0 deaths
North Dakota
6 cases
0 deaths
Ohio
14 cases
0 deaths
Oklahoma
51 cases
0 deaths
Oregon
116 cases
0 deaths
Pennsylvania
88 cases
0 deaths
Rhode Island
10 cases
0 deaths
South Carolina
36 cases
0 deaths
South Dakota
3 cases
0 deaths
Tennessee
94 cases
0 deaths
Texas
900 cases
3 deaths
Utah
122 cases
1 deaths
Vermont
2 cases
0 deaths
Virginia
25 cases
0 deaths
Washington
517 cases
1 death
Washington, D.C.
13 cases
0 deaths
Wisconsin
766 cases
0 deaths
TOTAL*(48)
6,764 cases
10 deaths

*includes the District of Columbia

**one case is resident of KY but currently hospitalized in GA.

This table will be updated Monday, Wednesday and Friday at around 11 AM ET

International Human Cases of Swine Flu Infection
See: World Health Organization External Web Site Policy..

NOTE: Because of daily reporting deadlines, the state totals reported by CDC may not always be consistent with those reported by state health departments. If there is a discrepancy between these two counts, data from the state health departments should be used as the most accurate number.

Read full article>>



No comments:

Post a Comment