After three years of around-the-clock tracking of COVID-19 data from...
Reduced counts in U.S. cases and deaths are the result of states and territories not reporting the information for some or all of the weekend. Those states and territories are: Alaska, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Guam, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Northern Mariana Islands, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, U.S. Virgin Islands, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Typically, these states" Monday updates include the weekend totals.
Choose a World Country or U.S. State
Vermont has not reported any COVID-19 deaths since December 21, 2022. On January 11, 2023, we observed an increase in deaths in Vermont equal to 11% of their cumulative deaths to date (from 791 to 881). These are older deaths identified via a “Health Department review of COVID-19 data”. We do not anticipate that we will back distribute these deaths.
State press release: https://www.healthvermont.gov/media/newsroom/Health-Department-Reports-Previously-Unidentified-COVID-19-Deaths-January-6-2023
GitHub announcement: https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19/issues/6466
As of May 18, 2022, Vermont decommissioned its dashboard. The state will provide data in an open data portal but with an unspecified update schedule.
On October 30, 2020, our data source for test data, the Covid Tracking Project, changed its definition of the contents of its totalTestResults field for Vermont. We use this data for our positivity calculation denominator. This will will likely reduce the state's positivity percentage because people are deduplicated people less frequently, resulting in a bigger denominator.