COVID-19 North Carolina Dashboard

Updated daily by 11 a.m. each day. Last updated 11:00 a.m., April 5, 2020. 

Cases Deaths Completed Tests Currently Hospitalized Number of Counties
2,585 31 40,045 261 89

*Cases reflect cases that were tested and returned positive, including the NC State Laboratory of Public Health and reporting hospital and commercial labs. All data are preliminary. Not all cases of COVID-19 are tested, so this does not represent the total number of people in North Carolina who have or had COVID-19.

*Deaths reflect deaths in persons with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 reported by local health departments to the NC Department of Health and Human Services.

*Completed tests reflect testing completed by the NC State Laboratory of Public Health and reporting hospital and commercial labs.

*Currently hospitalized reflect the number of patients with COVID-19 that are currently hospitalized in reporting hospitals.

For COVID-19 U.S. case information go to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website. 

NC Case COVID-19

County Map

County Map

*County case numbers may change once residence is verified. Therefore, the total number on the county map may differ from the number of NC Cases.

By Counties

By Counties

County Cases Deaths
Alamance County 18 0
Alexander County 2 0
Alleghany County 2 0
Anson County 5 0
Ashe County 1 0
Beaufort County 8 0
Bertie County 7 1
Bladen County 1 0
Brunswick County 24 1
Buncombe County 28 1
Burke County 15 1
Cabarrus County 67 1
Caldwell County 6 0
Carteret County 15 0
Caswell County 2 0
Catawba County 22 1
Chatham County 21 0
Cherokee County 8 1
Chowan County 1 0
Clay County 3 0
Cleveland County 15 0
Columbus County 5 0
Craven County 15 0
Cumberland County 42 0
Currituck County 2 0
Dare County 1 0
Davidson County 57 0
Davie County 16 2
Duplin County 4 0
Durham County 186 1
Edgecombe County 5 0
Forsyth County 86 2
Franklin County 14 0
Gaston County 45 1
Gates County 1 0
Granville County 37 0
Greene County 6 0
Guilford County 96 3
Halifax County 10 0
Harnett County 25 2
Haywood County 2 0
Henderson County 50 0
Hertford County 4 0
Hoke County 10 0
Iredell County 44 0
Johnston County 32 3
Lee County 3 0
Lenoir County 7 0
Lincoln County 9 0
Macon County 1 0
Martin County 3 0
McDowell County 9 0
Mecklenburg County 664 3
Mitchell County 1 0
Montgomery County 9 1
Moore County 9 0
Nash County 21 0
New Hanover County 37 0
Northampton County 42 0
Onslow County 16 1
Orange County 52 0
Pamlico County 3 0
Pasquotank County 8 0
Pender County 1 0
Perquimans County 2 0
Person County 4 0
Pitt County 36 0
Polk County 6 0
Randolph County 29 1
Robeson County 5 0
Rockingham County 6 1
Rowan County 45 1
Rutherford County 14 0
Sampson County 2 0
Scotland County 2 0
Stanly County 7 0
Stokes County 6 0
Surry County 3 0
Transylvania County 5 0
Union County 67 0
Vance County 12 0
Wake County 304 0
Warren County 2 0
Washington County 4 0
Watauga County 7 0
Wayne County 15 0
Wilkes County 4 1
Wilson County 28 1
Yadkin County 9 0

All data are preliminary and may change as cases are investigated.

By Age

By Age

*All data are preliminary and might change as cases are investigated. Numbers may not sum to 100% due to rounding.

By Gender

By Gender

*All data are preliminary and might change as cases are investigated. Numbers may not sum to 100% due to rounding.

Cases Over Time

Cases Over Time

Number of new COVID-19 cases each day by the date the person's specimen was collected. This number reflects cases that were tested and returned positive, including the NC State Laboratory of Public Health and reporting hospital and commercial labs. All data is preliminary. Not all cases of COVID-19 are tested, so this does not represent the total number of people in North Carolina who have or had COVID-19.

Cumulative total number of COVID-19 cases by the date the person's specimen was collected. This number reflects cases that were tested and returned positive, including testing completed by the NC State Laboratory of Public Health and reporting hospital and commercial labs. All data is preliminary. Not all cases of COVID-19 are tested, so this does not represent the total number of people in North Carolina who have or had COVID-19. 

All data are preliminary and might change as cases are investigated. Numbers may not sum to 100% due to rounding.

By Reporting Hospitals

By Reporting Hospitals

Empty beds reflects beds which are able to be staffed but do not currently have patients. These numbers reflect the current percent of hospitals reporting. These numbers do not reflect hospital surge.

Number of patients on a ventilator (not specific to COVID-19), as self-reported by hospitals. Ventilators in hospitals as self-reported by hospitals. This number does not reflect ventilators from other sources, including those purchased but not yet deployed to hospitals.

These data reflect 62% of hospitals reporting statewide.

PPE

PPE

These numbers reflect the first shipments from the Strategic National Stockpile and will be updated as new items are received. This does not reflect other sources of supplies.

By Congregate Living

By Congregate Living

Outbreaks in congregate living settings by setting type

Facility/Setting Ongoing Outbreaks1
Nursing Home2 8
Residential Care Facilities3 4
Correctional Facility4 2
Other 1

1 In a congregate living setting, a COVID-19 outbreak is defined as two or more laboratory confirmed cases. An outbreak is considered over after 28 days have passed since the date of symptom onset of the last case. In situations where all persons in a congregate living setting test positive for COVID-19, the outbreak will be considered over when all persons have recovered or been released from isolation. These numbers are subject to change as more information is obtained during outbreak investigations

2 Nursing homes (nursing homes/skilled nursing facilities) provide nursing or convalescent care.

3 Residential Care Facilities can include adult care homes, family care homes, multi-unit assisted housing, group homes, Intermediate Care Facilities for Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities (ICF/IID) homes

4 Correctional facilities could include federal and state prisons and local jails.

By Race/Ethnicity

By Race/Ethnicity

Race Patients with COVID-19 % Patients with COVID-19 Deaths from COVID-19 % Deaths from COVID-19
  n (%) n (%)
Total with known race1 1,763   30  
American Indian Alaskan Native 9 1% 0 0%
Asian 28 2% 1 3%
Black or African American 647 37% 6 20%
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander 3 0% 0 0%
White 1,018 58% 23 77%
Other 58 3% 0 0%
Hispanic Ethnicity        
Total with known ethnicity2 1,458   27  
Yes 122 8% 1 4%
No 1,336 92% 26 96%

1 Race data are missing for 822 patients and 1 death

2 Ethnicity data are missing for 1,127 patients and 4 deaths

About the Data

About the Data

Data in the North Carolina Dashboard

North Carolina collects data from several sources and partners to monitor the COVID-19 pandemic in North Carolina. The following data is used in the dashboard. New data sources may be added.

North Carolina Electronic Disease Surveillance System (NC EDSS)

NC EDSS, the North Carolina Electronic Disease Surveillance System, is a component of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) initiative to move states to web-based health surveillance and reporting systems. NC EDSS is also part of the Public Health Information Network (PHIN). The electronic system replaced a patchwork of smaller disease-specific surveillance systems and paper-based reporting.
NC EDSS is used by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Public Health, the state's 86 local and multi-county district health departments (LHDs), and eight HIV/STD Regional Offices. Laboratories also report electronically to NC EDSS.

NC EDSS creates a central repository of person-based public health data. Local Health Departments collect and enter the data included in the dashboard, including COVID cases, COVID deaths, and demographic information for cases).

ReadyOps

Data on hospitalizations, hospital beds, and ventilators is collected using the ReadyOps system. This system uses a survey to collect self-reported data from hospitals. The data are reported throughout the day and collected and aggregated at 10 pm EDT. The percent of hospitals reporting to the survey statewide is updated daily. The percent responding may change.

Regional data is shown by Healthcare Coalition Preparedness Coalition Region.

Personal Protective Equipment 
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) from the Strategic National Stockpile is tracked and monitored by North Carolina Emergency Management. This information reflects key pieces of PPE requested from and received from the Strategic National Stockpile. It does not reflect PPE purchased or received from other sources.

How North Carolina Counts COVID-19 Cases

Recognizing the threat posed by COVID-19, North Carolina acted in early February to add COVID-19 to the lists of conditions that physicians and laboratories are required to report to the state. This means that all positive tests results must be reported to the state. The number of laboratory-confirmed cases has been tracked since that time. 

Health providers determine to which lab they send their COVID-19 tests. There are multiple hospital and commercial labs that conduct tests. These labs manage their own supplies and operate independently from the Department of Health and Human Services and the North Carolina State Laboratory of Public Health. 

North Carolina will continue to track and post the number of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases. However, it is important to recognize that there are many people with COVID-19 who will not be included in daily counts of laboratory-confirmed cases, including:

  1. People who had minimal or no symptoms and were not tested.
  2. People who had symptoms but did not seek medical care.
  3. People who sought medical care but were not tested.
  4. People with COVID-19 in whom the virus was not detected by testing.

Therefore, the number of laboratory-confirmed cases through testing will increasingly provide a limited picture of the spread of infections in the state as COVID-19 becomes more widespread and the number of people in the first three groups above increases.

Surveillance Strategies

To get a more complete picture of COVID-19 in our state, North Carolina plans to use evidence-based surveillance tools, including what is known as syndromic surveillance. Syndromic surveillance refers to tools that gather information about patients' symptoms (such as cough, fever, or shortness of breath) and do not rely only on laboratory testing.

In North Carolina, as well as in other states and at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), public health scientists are modifying existing surveillance tools for COVID-19. These tools have been used for decades to track influenza annually and during seasonal epidemics and pandemics. These include the following:  

  • The Influenza-Like Illness Surveillance Network (ILINet). ILINet is a network of clinical sites across the country, including in North Carolina, that is coordinated by the CDC. ILINet sites report data each week on fever and respiratory illness in their patients. They also submit samples (swabs) from a subset of patients for laboratory testing at the North Carolina State Laboratory of Public Health. This network will now test for COVID-19 in addition to influenza.
     
  • Emergency department (ED) surveillance based on symptoms (syndromic). In North Carolina, we receive ED data in near real-time from all 126 hospitals in the state using the North Carolina Disease Event Tracking and Epidemiologic Collection Tool (NC DETECT). This is an effective way to track respiratory illness, including COVID-19. Specifically, we will use NC DETECT to track trends in respiratory illness across the state and over time. 
     
  • Data on severe illnesses. Public health scientists will use a variety of sources to track hospitalizations related to COVID-19. These include data reported directly by hospitals (including current numbers of patients hospitalized with COVID-19) and more detailed data from a network of epidemiologists in the state’s largest healthcare systems (including total hospitalizations and intensive care unit admissions for respiratory illness).  Deaths due to COVID-19 have also been added to the list of conditions that physicians are required to report in North Carolina.