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On January 26, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirmed the first case in California, the third case in the U.S. The person, a man in his 50s, who had returned from travel to Wuhan, China, was released from the hospital in Orange County on February 1 in good condition to in-home isolation. [1]
This timeline of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant (November 2021 – February 2022) is a dynamic list, and as such may never satisfy criteria of completeness. Some events may only be fully understood and/or discovered in retrospect.
On January 6, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced that it had found at least 52 confirmed cases of the more contagious SARS-CoV-2 variant: 26 in California, 22 in Florida, two in Colorado, and one each in Georgia and New York. The agency also stressed that there could already be more cases in the country.
The sobering number undoubtedly will continue to climb in the days and weeks ahead even as the state emerges from the worst of this winter's Omicron surge. California COVID-19 death toll tops ...
No state has suffered more pandemic-related deaths than California. However, on a per capita basis, California has the 11th-lowest COVID-19 death rate. California COVID-19 deaths near 90,000, but ...
It has the highest count of deaths related to the virus, but a relatively low (35th highest) count of deaths per capita. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] [ 13 ] As of June 15, 2021 [update] , California had administered 40,669,793 COVID-19 vaccine doses, the largest number of doses nationwide, and was one of the highest ranked (11th out of 50 states) in terms of ...
The milestone comes as Gov. Gavin Newsom is set to end California’s state of emergency next week. California officially surpasses 100,000 COVID-19 deaths, state health officials say Skip to main ...
Weekly confirmed COVID-19 deaths Map of cumulative COVID-19 death rates by US state. [1]The CDC publishes official numbers of COVID-19 cases in the United States. The CDC estimates that, between February 2020 and September 2021, only 1 in 1.3 COVID-19 deaths were attributed to COVID-19. [2]