What do New York City, a ski resort community in Idaho, the homes of two large Ohio prisons and a northeast Nebraska meatpacking center have in common?
All rank among the American communities hit the hardest by the novel coronavirus.
A World-Herald analysis of data for the nation’s counties shows those with the highest per-capita rates of COVID-19 infection range from the densely populated northeast, into the Deep South, and to food production centers scattered from the Great Plains to the Rockies.
They include high-income, fashionable suburbs on Long Island and dirt-poor counties in rural Georgia.
Two Nebraska counties now rank among the nation’s top 25 counties for confirmed cases per capita. That includes Dakota County, which has recently rocketed all the way to No. 4. And Nebraska’s Hall County, which sits just outside the top 25 in virus spread, now ranks in the nation’s top 100 counties for coronavirus death rate.
In short, no matter where the virulent bug has been allowed to go to seed, it’s shown it can perilously spread like prairie wildfire.
The sun sets behind the Tyson Foods beef plant in Dakota City, Nebraska. Dakota County, with a population of about 20,000, has more coronavirus cases than Douglas County, with a population of about 500,000.
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“This virus is transmitted person to person, so it’s going to infiltrate a community wherever people are gathered,” said Dr. Angela Hewlett, an infectious disease expert at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. “We’re seeing this everywhere. No community is immune.”
As the coronavirus pandemic in recent weeks has rapidly spread through meatpacking communities in Nebraska and Iowa, The World-Herald analyzed data for all 3,100 counties in America to find the places the virus has most prevalently spread.
Not surprisingly, New York City and numerous surrounding counties in New York and New Jersey rank high for both infection and death rate. The images of refrigerated trucks storing bodies outside overwhelmed hospitals will always cement New York as ground zero in the nation’s pandemic.
But look at the most infected counties today and numerous other trends emerge — at times in places where many didn’t expect to see the virus spread so severely.
Five weeks ago, President Donald Trump during a White House coronavirus briefing reeled off a list of states that he said were “lightly affected.”
“You look at Nebraska, you look at Idaho, you look at Iowa,” he said. “You look at many — I could name many countries that are handling it very, very well and that are not affected to the same extent, or, frankly, not even nearly to the extent of New York.”
A discarded face mask outside the Tyson Foods beef plant in Dakota City, Nebraska. Tyson Fresh Meats has announced a temporary closure of its massive Dakota City beef plant to deep clean amid the novel coronavirus pandemic.
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Today, Nebraska, Idaho and Iowa all have counties ranked among the nation’s top 25 for infection rate.
While the largest cities in Nebraska and Iowa have indeed been only lightly affected, the large number of meatpacking hot spots as of Thursday had driven Nebraska’s state per-capita rate to the 18th highest among the 50 states, and Iowa’s up to 17th.
Look no further than Blaine County, Idaho — one of the nation’s first coronavirus epicenters outside New York — to see how quickly and easily the virus can spread.
The bug was likely first introduced in early March by one or more of the thousands of tourists who flock each winter to the mountain community, home to Sun Valley ski resort. And those visitors started mingling shoulder to shoulder on the lifts and with the locals in the packed lodges and restaurants.
Sun Valley quickly transformed into a snowy mountain petri dish.
“There were many introductions, and the epidemic became fairly violent there,” said Dr. Andrew Pavia, a pandemic expert at the University of Utah. “That was one way in which the virus easily seeded much of the rural west.”
Jeannie Jackson, left, wearing a face mask, sits more than 6 feet away and visits with her daughter Tracy Jones while picking up some homemade banana bread in South Sioux City, Nebraska.
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Now the nation’s biggest hot spots can be found much closer to home — in the Midwest meatpacking plants where workers at times stand feet apart doing the grueling, gritty work of turning cows and pigs into food for America’s tables.
Nebraska’s Dakota and Dawson Counties both rank in the nation’s top 25 in per-capita cases, particularly noteworthy in that just over three weeks ago the two meatpacking centers had a single confirmed case between them. Hall County stands at No. 26.
To be sure, those Nebraska counties have not seen anything close to the amount of death in New York, on either a real or even per-capita basis. But COVID-19 deaths tend to lag a week or more behind infections, and this past week brought some ominous signs.
On Wednesday, the three-county health district that includes Hall County reported 10 deaths in a single day. In the eight-county Omaha-Council Bluffs metro area, that would equate to a one-day death toll of 124.
The deaths were enough to help move Hall — which as of Thursday had seen 28 deaths overall — up to 86th nationally in coronavirus death rate.
Yard signs with positive messages outside Regency Square, an assisted living center with multiple residents who have the coronavirus disease, in South Sioux City, Nebraska.
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While neighboring Hamilton County was too small to be included in the Word-Herald analysis, which only ranked counties with populations of 10,000 or more, the county’s eight coronavirus deaths give it a per-capita rate that would rank it 30th highest nationally.
“I think the deaths, unfortunately, may be coming,” Pavia said of meatpacking country. “People haven’t had time to get sick enough to die.”
After a week in which U.S. coronavirus cases topped the 1 million mark, here’s a look at some of the trends that have emerged over the course of the pandemic. In fact, the vast majority of the most infected counties fall within four distinct trends.
New York City region
Officially, the first confirmed coronavirus case in New York City was reported March 1.
But experts today concede the virus had almost certainly been quietly circulating undetected for weeks in America’s most international city, likely brought in by numerous travelers from abroad. There’s no other way to account for the speed with which the virus spread, despite belated efforts to lock the region down.
“What probably happened in New York is multiple introductions, and by the time it came on anyone’s radar, there were substantial transmission events,” said Hewlett, the medical director in the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit at UNMC. “When you think about other outbreaks in our lifetime, we had never seen anything like this. Although a lot of us knew this would come, it took us a bit by surprise with how rapidly this occurred.”
New York City and surrounding counties make up 10 of the top 25 counties for per-capita coronavirus infection. And the grim list of the top 25 for per-capita deaths includes eight counties from the region.
Though it appears cases have now peaked, New York and New Jersey are still seeing hundreds of deaths daily.
Questions remain as to why New York was so severely infected. After all, some other major cities in the United States have in comparison been lightly impacted. Not one county from metro area Chicago, Los Angeles or Atlanta appears even among the top 50 in infection rate. Boston has a single county in the top 25.
Just for comparison, while Douglas County’s daily case numbers have recently been hitting new highs, New York City has 17 times Douglas County’s infection rate and more than 50 times its death rate. Douglas County ranks 825th nationally in per-capita infection rate.
Eleazar Becerra, 14, rides his bike with his family after they went to Dollar General for snacks in Dakota City, Nebraska. It was their first time outside their home and backyard since the middle of March. Dakota County, with a population of about 20,000, has more coronavirus cases than Douglas County, with a population of about 500,000.
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But Pavia said not even Chicago or Los Angeles can really compare to New York City. It’s by far the densest city, with more people riding together in high-rise elevators and on subways.
“Other cities are crowded,” Pavia said. “In New York, the magnitude of time you spend really crammed together with others is really of a magnitude of difference.”
There will also be second-guessing whether officials in New York acted quickly enough to shut down daily life. California was quicker to issue a stay-at-home order, even though the West Coast never saw the kind of exponential spread that New York did.
Omaha Public Schools Superintendent Cheryl Logan actually moved to extend spring break and keep district schools closed three days before New York City shut down its schools. Pavia said he knows New York City’s leaders were reluctant to shut down schools because of the large number of students who rely on school meals.
While federal health officials were also clearly slow to respond to what was coming from overseas, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in a recent interview pondered whether the state should have responded more quickly.
“I wish someone stood up and blew the bugle,” he said. “And if no one was going to blow the bugle, I would feel much better if I was the bugler blower last December and January.”
An Our Lady of Guadalupe window display in the front of a home in South Sioux City, Nebraska.
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Prisons
To date, no Nebraska prison inmate has tested positive for coronavirus. But a look around the country shows how explosively the virus can spread once it gets within the confining walls of a prison.
Four of the nation’s top nine counties for coronavirus rate are homes to major correctional facilities.
More than 80% of the 2,500 inmates at Ohio’s Marion Correctional Institution have tested positive for COVID-19.
The figures for the prison counties are no doubt influenced by high rate of testing, as most all prisoners in those facilities are being tested to try to isolate the sick and contain the spread.
The prison outbreaks as a whole have also not been particularly deadly. But a prison in Ohio’s Pickaway County that includes the correctional equivalent of a nursing home has seen the deaths of 18 inmates and one nurse.
“In some of these prisons, you get close to a 100% attack rate,” Pavia said. “What will be interesting to see is how much these prison outbreaks ultimately spread into the community.”
Impoverished regions
Of all the counties that lead the nation in infections, none are more head-scratching than a group of small, mostly contiguous rural counties in southwest Georgia.
They account for two of the nation’s top 25 and five of the top 50 counties in infection rate. And three others would crack the top 50 if they weren’t so tiny to be excluded from the analysis.
The virus has also proven extremely lethal there. Five of the Georgia counties rank in the top 10 nationally in per-capita deaths.
The words “Quality of Life” grace a water tower in South Sioux City, Nebraska.
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Published reports have said a large, 200-person funeral in late February is believed to have served as a super spreader in the region. But the region has no other obvious factors such as industries or unusual social practices that have helped seed the disease. The counties are isolated, dozens of miles from cities of any size.
“Georgia is really odd,” Pavia said of the outbreak.
However, Pavia and other experts have little doubt about why the disease has proven so deadly there.
Many of the counties rank near the bottom nationally in median household income. It’s long been well-known in public health circles that impoverished communities have poor access to health care and much higher rates of chronic medical conditions including diabetes and heart disease.
Those are also just the kinds of preexisting conditions the coronavirus has proven to feast upon.
That same economic factor is likely why the home county of New Orleans and nine others in Louisiana rank in the top 50 in coronavirus death rate.
A Mardi Gras celebration that in hindsight should have been called off may have helped widely circulate the virus. But underlying poor health is what made it so lethal.
“COVID-19 has just brought those things to the surface,” Hewlett said.
The Tyson Foods beef plant in Dakota City, Nebraska. Tyson Fresh Meats has announced a temporary closure of its massive Dakota City beef plant to deep clean amid the novel coronavirus pandemic.
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Meatpacking
On April 2, health officials in Louisa County, Iowa, reported the community’s first COVID-19 infection.
“While this is Louisa County’s first case, this may not be the last,” the local public health administrator said that day. It certainly proved an understatement.
Within just over two weeks, the southeast Iowa county that’s home to a Tyson pork-processing plant had emerged as one of the nation’s first coronavirus meatpacking hot spots. And many more have followed.
Today, seven of the nation’s top 25 counties for coronavirus rate are meatpacking centers, including two in Nebraska, two in Kansas and one each in Iowa, Minnesota and Indiana. Often, it takes less than two weeks for a meatpacking community to shoot toward the top of the rankings.
“This is moving really fast,” Hewlett said. “It’s definitely a disturbing trend.”
Dakota County, with a population of about 20,000, has more coronavirus cases than Douglas County, with a population of about 500,000.
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It’s also not hard to understand.
Working from home is not an option at these facilities, and the demands of the fast-moving production line make social distancing difficult. Thousands of workers stand nearly elbow to elbow doing work that was often grueling and dangerous even before the pandemic.
“These are just very difficult facilities to maintain social distancing in and stop the spread,” Hewlett said.
Of all the types of major outbreaks, those in meatpacking have also proven the most controversial.
Workers and their advocates say the plants aren’t doing nearly enough to protect them from the deadly virus, sacrificing worker health for profits. Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts and others have said the outbreaks aren’t solely the responsibility of the plants but are also a “community issue.”
Discarded face masks outside the Tyson Foods beef plant in Dakota City, Nebraska. Dakota County, with a population of about 20,000, has more coronavirus cases than Douglas County, with a population of about 500,000.
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Most workers in the plants tend to be immigrants and refugees, and many live in extended family households and among tight-knit communities. But advocates point out that immigrants working in other industries aren’t seeing the same kinds of explosive outbreaks, pointing to the packing plants as the primary driver.
Meanwhile as the illnesses mounted, the president last week signed an executive order requiring the plants to stay open to protect the food supply. Many have nonetheless suspended operations.
Nearly all the plants report doing the same things to try to arrest the virus. They’re using thermal scans to identify employees with elevated temperatures; handing out more personal protective equipment; installing acrylic shields and other barriers; and increasing the amount of cleaning and sanitation.
But the spread continues, hitting more plants every week.
So what is the answer? A team of Hewlett’s UNMC colleagues have been working on it, last week releasing a list of recommendations it’s hoped can make a difference.
Pavia said it will be interesting to see how many new packing plant outbreaks pop up in the weeks ahead.
Overall, Pavia said what all the numbers in The World-Herald analysis show is there really is no such thing as a national outbreak in this pandemic, or even a state outbreak.
In every county around the country where the lethal virus has taken hold, the reasons, the circumstances, the victims and the outcomes have proven in some way unique.
Said Pavia: “Every outbreak tells a story.”
World-Herald staff writer Erin Duffy contributed to this report.
The Tyson Foods beef plant in Dakota City, Nebraska. Tyson Fresh Meats has announced a temporary closure of its massive Dakota City beef plant to deep clean amid the novel coronavirus pandemic.
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Top 25 counties with the highest per-capita rates of COVID-19 infection
Lincoln County, Arkansas
Lincoln County, Arkansas
Population: 13024
Coronavirus cases: 814
Deaths: 0
Death rate rank: NA
Cases per 10K population: 625.0
Small county that’s home to a large prison with a big outbreak. Within days of first case April 12, at least 600 inmates in 1,800-bed maximum-security facility tested positive. At least a half dozen have been hospitalized, with no deaths.
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Bledsoe County, Tennessee
Bledsoe County, Tennessee
Population: 15064
Coronavirus cases: 594
Deaths: 0
Death rate rank: NA
Cases per 10K population: 394.3
Another prison outbreak, as by last week more than 580 of 2,300 inmates at Bledsoe County Correctional Complex had tested positive. Since first case April 12, prison has accounted for about 99% of all positive tests in the rural county.
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Rockland County, New York
Rockland County, New York
Population: 325789
Coronavirus cases: 11708
Deaths: 370
Death rate rank: 16
Cases per 10K population: 359
Of dozens of counties in the sprawling New York City metro area, none were hit at a harder rate than this Hudson River community about an hour’s drive north of Manhattan. Also one of highest per-capita death tolls, at one point requiring a refrigerated trailer outside coroner’s office.
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Dakota County, Nebraska
Dakota County, Nebraska
Population: 20026
Coronavirus cases: 704
Deaths: 1
Death rate rank: 818
Cases per 10K population: 351
Hard to believe the first case in county that’s part of Sioux City metro did not spring up until April 12. Now only three counties in nation have higher per-capita rate. County is home to an idled Tyson Fresh Meats plant, where reportedly 669 of 4,300 workers have tested positive.
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Nobles County, Minnesota
Nobles County, Minnesota
Population: 21629
Coronavirus cases: 742
Deaths: 1
Death rate rank: 860
Cases per 10K population: 341
In the southwest corner of Minnesota, it’s home to a JBS pork-processing plant where at least 239 of 2,000 workers have tested positive. Plant in Worthington that produces 4% of U.S. pork supply has closed. Plant this week euthanized 3,000+ pigs it couldn’t process.
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Marion County, Ohio
Marion County, Ohio
Population: 65093
Coronavirus cases: 2196
Deaths: 4
Death rate rank: 712
Cases per 10K population: 337
An astounding 80 percent of the 2,500 prisoners at Marion Correctional Institution have tested positive, along with 160 staffers. Four prisoners have died.
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Cass County, Indiana
Cass County, Indiana
Population: 37689
Coronavirus cases: 1164
Deaths: 2
Death rate rank: 788
Cases per 10K population: 308
Home to Tyson’s 2,200-worker Logansport pork-processing facility. Fast-rising county had 700 positive tests last weekend alone to quickly join nation’s highest per-capita counties. Rate is four times that of the next closest county in Indiana.
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Westchester County, New York
Westchester County, New York
Population: 967506
Coronavirus cases: 28969
Deaths: 1144
Death rate rank: 14
Cases per 10K population: 299
NYC metro’s epidemic first took off in this wealthy enclave, home to New Rochelle. Was reporting “only” 868 hospitalized patients last week. That was down from 1,200 at peak, when makeshift hospital was set up in community center.
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Pickaway County, Ohio
Pickaway County, Ohio
Population: 58457
Coronavirus cases: 1732
Deaths: 21
Death rate rank: 121
Cases per 10K population: 296
Home to another hard-hit Ohio prison. As of last week, 18 inmates and a nurse at Pickaway Correctional Institution had died. Prison includes a wing that’s the prison equivalent of a nursing home. In all, 1,485 inmates — 75 percent — and 81 staff have tested positive.
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Nassau County, New York
Nassau County, New York
Population: 1356924
Coronavirus cases: 35854
Deaths: 2111
Death rate rank: 5
Cases per 10K population: 264
Long Island County ranks 14th in U.S. in household income but even higher coronavirus death rate — 5th. More than 2,000 died in county of nearly 1.4 million and hundreds remain on respirators. But hospitalizations now in two-week decline.
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Passaic County, New Jersey
Passaic County, New Jersey
Population: 501826
Coronavirus cases: 12449
Deaths: 573
Death rate rank: 15
Cases per 10K population: 248
Of the many hard-hit counties in New Jersey directly across the Hudson from NYC. As a state, New Jersey was still reporting more than 450 deaths a day last week and has the second-highest toll after New York.
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Louisa County, Iowa
Louisa County, Iowa
Population: 11035
Coronavirus cases: 269
Deaths: 2
Death rate rank: 277
Cases per 10K population: 243
A Tyson pork-processing plant in Columbus Junction in southeast Iowa was closed after 186 employees tested positive and two died. Had the highest infection rate of any meat-processing county until it was passed by Dakota in the past week.
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Seward County, Kansas
Seward County, Kansas
Population: 21428
Coronavirus cases: 500
Deaths: NA
Death rate rank: NA
Cases per 10K population: 233
One of several meat-packing communities in southwest Kansas that has seen recent big spike in cases. The largest employer in the county is a National Beef Packing Company plant.
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Suffolk County, New York
Suffolk County, New York
Population: 1476601
Coronavirus cases: 33664
Deaths: 1228
Death rate rank: 32
Cases per 10K population: 228
On Long Island next to Nassau County, it also peaked in early April and is seeing cases wane. But county of nearly 1.5 million people is still seeing more than 700 new cases per day.
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Union County, New Jersey
Union County, New Jersey
Population: 556341
Coronavirus cases: 12578
Deaths: 690
Death rate rank: 11
Cases per 10K population: 226
County linked by bridge to NYC’s Staten Island has one of highest death rates in the metro, ranking 11th nationally.
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Orange County, New York
Orange County, New York
Population: 384940
Coronavirus cases: 8665
Deaths: 237
Death rate rank: 59
Cases per 10K population: 225
County near Poughkeepsie is more than an hour from Manhattan but became engulfed in NYC region pandemic. Outbreak in a large county-owned nursing home claimed at least 25 deaths.
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Hudson County, New Jersey
Hudson County, New Jersey
Population: 672391
Coronavirus cases: 14916
Deaths: 798
Death rate rank: 13
Cases per 10K population: 221
County located directly across the Hudson from the Statue of Liberty has seen the nation’s 13th highest per-capita death toll.
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Blaine County, Idaho
Blaine County, Idaho
Population: 23021
Coronavirus cases: 488
Deaths: 5
Death rate rank: 227
Cases per 10K population: 212
This home of the Sun Valley ski resort became one of the nation’s first coronavirus hot spots outside NYC. First case not confirmed until mid-March, but virus believed to be spreading for some time amid tourists and locals on slopes, lifts and lodges.
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Early County, Georgia
Early County, Georgia
Population: 10190
Coronavirus cases: 213
Deaths: 20
Death rate rank: 3
Cases per 10K population: 209
One of a number of counties in poor areas of rural southwest Georgia that have seen alarmingly high caseloads and deaths — with Early posting nation’s third death highest rate. County’s median household income of $31,567 is half the U.S. average.
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Ford County, Kansas
Ford County, Kansas
Population: 33619
Coronavirus cases: 675
Deaths: NA
Death rate rank: NA
Cases per 10K population: 200
Ford County is home to Dodge City where there have been positive cases reported in two meat processing plants.
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New York City, New York
New York City, New York
Population: 8398748
Coronavirus cases: 167489
Deaths: 12514
Death rate rank: 6
Cases per 10K population: 199
Clear epicenter of the national pandemic. Just in NYC alone, the over 16,000 deaths six times the number killed in the city in 9/11 terrorist attacks.
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Dawson County, Nebraska
Dawson County, Nebraska
Population: 23595
Coronavirus cases: 456
Deaths: NA
Death rate rank: NA
Cases per 10K population: 193
After Hall County, Dawson became the second Nebraska meatpacking county to see major surge in cases, many tied to the Tyson beef plant in Lexington.
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St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana
St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana
Population: 42837
Coronavirus cases: 768
Deaths: 69
Death rate rank: 4
Cases per 10K population: 179
Parish (that’s what they call counties in Louisiana) with the highest rate of cases and deaths in the New Orleans metro — and the nation’s fourth highest per-capita death toll. Air pollution from local refineries may contribute to underlying health problems.
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Essex County, New Jersey
Essex County, New Jersey
Population: 798975
Coronavirus cases: 13682
Deaths: 1186
Death rate rank: 7
Cases per 10K population: 171
Located in the northern part of the state, the county has several cities with over 1,000 cases including Newark with 5,579 coronavirus cases.
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Dougherty County, Georgia
Dougherty County, Georgia
Population: 87956
Coronavirus cases: 1506
Deaths: 120
Death rate rank: 9
Cases per 10K population: 171
It’s believed the outbreak that has spread through a wide area of rural counties in Georgia began with a 200-person funeral in this county. It quickly overwhelmed the small local hospital and staff.
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