CDC Updates U.S. H1N1 Flu Situation: 48 states | 6552 cases

Sunday, May 24, 2009

CDC Updates U.S. H1N1 Flu Situation: 48 states | 6552 cases
Table. U.S. Human Cases of H1N1 Flu Infection
(As of May 22, 2009, 11:00 AM ET)


States* Confirmed and Probable Cases Deaths
Alabama
66 cases
0 deaths
Arkansas
3 cases
0 deaths
Arizona
520 cases
2 deaths
California
553 cases
0 deaths
Colorado
59 cases
0 deaths
Connecticut
81 cases
0 deaths
Delaware
94 cases
0 deaths
Florida
129 cases
0 deaths
Georgia
27 cases
0 deaths
Hawaii
33 cases
0 deaths
Idaho
18 cases
0 deaths
Illinois
877 cases
0 deaths
Indiana
106 cases
0 deaths
Iowa
71 cases
0 deaths
Kansas
34 cases
0 deaths
Kentucky**
22 cases
0 deaths
Louisiana
86 cases
0 deaths
Maine
9 cases
0 deaths
Maryland
41 cases
0 deaths
Massachusetts
197 cases
0 deaths
Michigan
176 cases
0 deaths
Minnesota
39 cases
0 deaths
Mississippi
7 cases
0 deaths
Missouri
24 cases
1 deaths
Montana
10 cases
0 deaths
Nebraska
29 cases
0 deaths
Nevada
32 cases
0 deaths
New Hampshire
23 cases
0 deaths
New Jersey
47 cases
0 deaths
New Mexico
97 cases
0 deaths
New York
327 cases
1 deaths
North Carolina
12 cases
0 deaths
North Dakota
5 cases
0 deaths
Ohio
14 cases
0 deaths
Oklahoma
50 cases
0 deaths
Oregon
101 cases
0 deaths
Pennsylvania
73 cases
0 deaths
Rhode Island
9 cases
0 deaths
South Carolina
36 cases
0 deaths
South Dakota
4 cases
0 deaths
Tennessee
89 cases
0 deaths
Texas
900 cases
3 deaths
Utah
122 cases
1 deaths
Vermont
2 cases
0 deaths
Virginia
25 cases
0 deaths
Washington
494 cases
1 death
Washington, D.C.
13 cases
0 deaths
Wisconsin
766 cases
0 deaths
TOTAL*(48)
6,552 cases
9 deaths

*includes the District of Columbia

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

This table will be updated daily Monday-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