Sen. Rick Scott Releases Daily Update on Coronavirus Growth Rate by State
March 26, 2020
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Senator Rick Scott released an update on the growth rate of cases of the Coronavirus by state, as of March 26, 2020, according to Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering data. Senator Scott is releasing this information daily to show which states are slowing the growth of Coronavirus. Please note: data provided from Johns Hopkins is compiled from federal data and may have discrepancies from latest state updates.
Please see the chart below of Confirmed Cases by US State, as of March 26, 2020.
Confirmed COVID-19 Cases |
|||||
State |
3/18/20 |
3/25/20 |
Rolling 7-Day Growth Rate in Confirmed Cases (3/18-3/25) |
Rank by Growth Rate (Highest=1st) |
Change from Previous Ranking |
West Virginia |
1 |
39 |
3800% |
1 |
?2 |
Michigan |
83 |
2296 |
2666% |
2 |
?1 |
Missouri |
18 |
354 |
1867% |
3 |
?1 |
New Jersey |
267 |
4402 |
1549% |
4 |
?3 |
Arizona |
27 |
401 |
1385% |
5 |
?1 |
Connecticut |
68 |
875 |
1187% |
6 |
?9 |
New York |
2495 |
30841 |
1136% |
7 |
?1 |
Indiana |
39 |
477 |
1123% |
8 |
– |
Tennessee |
79 |
916 |
1059% |
9 |
?3 |
Illinois |
162 |
1865 |
1051% |
10 |
?4 |
Mississippi |
34 |
377 |
1009% |
11 |
?6 |
Puerto Rico |
5 |
51 |
920% |
12 |
?9 |
Idaho |
9 |
91 |
911% |
13 |
?1 |
South Carolina |
47 |
424 |
802% |
14 |
?9 |
Oklahoma |
19 |
164 |
763% |
15 |
?20 |
Arkansas |
33 |
280 |
748% |
16 |
?3 |
Massachusetts |
218 |
1838 |
743% |
17 |
?22 |
North Carolina |
70 |
590 |
743% |
18 |
?4 |
Pennsylvania |
152 |
1260 |
729% |
19 |
– |
Alabama |
46 |
381 |
728% |
20 |
?11 |
Ohio |
86 |
704 |
719% |
21 |
?3 |
North Dakota |
6 |
45 |
650% |
22 |
?13 |
Kansas |
18 |
134 |
644% |
23 |
?13 |
Kentucky |
27 |
197 |
630% |
24 |
?6 |
Texas |
173 |
1229 |
610% |
25 |
?8 |
Louisiana |
257 |
1795 |
598% |
26 |
?2 |
Vermont |
18 |
125 |
594% |
27 |
?7 |
Alaska |
6 |
41 |
583% |
28 |
?18 |
Wisconsin |
92 |
621 |
575% |
29 |
?3 |
Utah |
51 |
340 |
567% |
30 |
?2 |
Hawaii |
14 |
91 |
550% |
31 |
?15 |
Georgia |
199 |
1247 |
527% |
32 |
?7 |
Delaware |
19 |
119 |
526% |
33 |
?5 |
District of Columbia |
31 |
187 |
503% |
34 |
?5 |
Montana |
11 |
65 |
491% |
35 |
?1 |
Nevada |
55 |
323 |
487% |
36 |
?4 |
Colorado |
184 |
1021 |
455% |
37 |
?4 |
Florida |
314 |
1682 |
436% |
38 |
?11 |
Virginia |
77 |
396 |
414% |
39 |
?3 |
Iowa |
29 |
146 |
403% |
40 |
?3 |
Maryland |
85 |
425 |
400% |
41 |
?8 |
New Mexico |
23 |
113 |
391% |
42 |
?2 |
New Hampshire |
26 |
108 |
315% |
43 |
?3 |
Rhode Island |
33 |
132 |
300% |
44 |
?6 |
California |
751 |
2998 |
299% |
45 |
?2 |
Oregon |
68 |
266 |
291% |
46 |
?2 |
South Dakota |
11 |
41 |
273% |
47 |
?3 |
Minnesota |
77 |
286 |
271% |
48 |
?5 |
Maine |
42 |
142 |
238% |
49 |
?3 |
Nebraska |
24 |
71 |
196% |
50 |
?1 |
Washington |
1014 |
2591 |
156% |
51 |
?1 |
Wyoming |
15 |
23 |
53% |
52 |
?1 |
Source: Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering.
Confirmed Cases by US State, as of March 26, 2020.
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