Average infections increasing over the last 2 weeks. Daily reported trends New infections. How Iran compares There is no one perfect statistic to compare the outbreaks different countries have experienced during this pandemic. Total infections and deaths Total per population Average daily reported Average change from last week. What it tells you Gives the true human toll of the virus on a country.
Infections in Asia and the Middle East. In the long-term, the Iran Population is projected to trend around Trading Economics members can view, download and compare data from nearly countries, including more than 20 million economic indicators, exchange rates, government bond yields, stock indexes and commodity prices. Features Questions? Contact us Already a Member? It allows API clients to download millions of rows of historical data, to query our real-time economic calendar, subscribe to updates and receive quotes for currencies, commodities, stocks and bonds.
Click here to contact us. Please Paste this Code in your Website. Iran Population. The population of Iran represents 1. Compare Population by Country. How does these numbers look when we compare daily tests and daily new confirmed cases in absolute terms? This scatter chart provides another way of seeing the extent of testing relative to the scale of the outbreak in different countries. The chart shows the daily number of tests vertical axis against the daily number of new confirmed cases horizontal axis , both per million people.
Looking downward on the chart, we see some countries doing ten or a hundred times fewer tests than other countries with a similar number of new confirmed cases. Conversely, looking to the right, we see some countries find ten or a hundred times more cases than others out a similar number of tests. Where the number of confirmed cases is high relative to the extent of testing, this suggests that there may not be enough tests being carried out to properly monitor the outbreak.
In such countries, the true number of infections may be far higher than the number of confirmed cases. In a separate post we discuss how epidemiological models of COVID help us estimate the true number of infections. This chart shows the number of daily tests per thousand people. Because the number of tests is often volatile from day to day, we show the figures as a seven-day rolling average.
The number of tests does not refer to the same thing in each country — one difference is that some countries report the number of people tested, while others report the number of tests which can be higher if the same person is tested more than once. And other countries report their testing data in a way that leaves it unclear what the test count refers to exactly.
We indicate the differences in the chart and explain them in detail in our accompanying source descriptions. To understand the risks and respond appropriately we would also want to know the mortality risk of COVID — the likelihood that someone who is infected with the disease will die from it.
We look into this question in more detail on our page about the mortality risk of COVID , where we explain that this requires us to know — or estimate — the number of total cases and the final number of deaths for a given infected population. Because these are not known , we discuss what the current data can and can not tell us about the risk of death. How do the cumulative number of confirmed deaths and cases compare? The case fatality rate is the number of confirmed deaths divided by the number of confirmed cases.
During an outbreak — and especially when the total number of cases is not known — one has to be very careful in interpreting the CFR. We wrote a detailed explainer on what can and can not be said based on current CFR figures. This tracker collects publicly available information on 17 indicators of government responses, spanning containment and closure policies such as school closures and restrictions in movement ; economic policies; and health system policies such as testing regimes.
Travel bans, stay-at-home restrictions, school closures — how have countries responded to the pandemic? Explore the data on all policy measures. The chart here shows how governmental response has changed over time.
It shows the Government Stringency Index — a composite measure of the strictness of policy responses. The index on any given day is calculated as the mean score of nine policy measures, each taking a value between 0 and You can see all of these separately on our page on policy re s ponses.
There you can also compare these responses in countries across the world. None selected. Confirmed cases. Which world regions have the most daily confirmed cases?
Daily confirmed cases by region. What is important to note about these case figures? The reported case figures on a given date do not necessarily show the number of new cases on that day — this is due to delays in reporting. The actual number of cases is likely to be much higher than the number of confirmed cases — this is due to limited testing. Five quick reminders on how to interact with this chart By clicking on Add country you can show and compare the data for any country in the world you are interested in.
If you click on the title of the chart, the chart will open in a new tab. You can then copy-paste the URL and share it. If you move both ends of the time-slider to a single point you will see a bar chart for that point in time. Three tips on how to interact with this map By clicking on any country on the map you see the change over time in this country. By moving the time slider below the map you can see how the global situation has changed over time.
You can focus on a particular world region using the dropdown menu to the top-right of the map. Which world regions have the most cumulative confirmed cases? Cumulative confirmed cases by region. Tests conducted vs. In all our charts you can download the data We want everyone to build on top of our work and therefore we always make all our data available for download.
This chart shows the cumulative number of confirmed cases per million people. Why is it useful to look at biweekly changes in confirmed cases? Click to open interactive version. What is the weekly number of confirmed cases? Weekly confirmed cases per million people. What is the weekly change growth rate in confirmed cases?
Weekly change in confirmed cases. Global confirmed cases in comparison. Confirmed deaths. Which world regions have the most daily confirmed deaths?
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