COVID-19 pandemic in Texas

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COVID-19 pandemic in Texas
COVID-19 rolling 14day Prevalence in Texas by county.svg
Map of the outbreak in Texas by confirmed new infections per 100,000 people over 14 days (last updated March 2021)
  1,000+
  500–1,000
  200–500
  100–200
  50–100
  20–50
  10–20
  0–10
  No confirmed new cases or no/bad data
COVID-19 Prevalence in Texas by county.svg
Map of the outbreak in Texas by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (last updated March 2021)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data
DiseaseCOVID-19
Virus strainSARS-CoV-2
LocationTexas, U.S.
Index caseSan Antonio (evacuee), Fort Bend County (non-evacuee)
Arrival dateMarch 4, 2020
Confirmed cases2,401,898[1]
Active cases95,027[1]
Hospitalized cases2,840 (current)[1]
Recovered2,646,788[1]
Deaths
47,725[2]
Government website
www.dshs.texas.gov/coronavirus/

The COVID-19 pandemic in Texas is a part of the ongoing viral pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a novel infectious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The state of Texas confirmed its first case on February 13, 2020, among U.S. nationals evacuated from China to Joint Base San Antonio–Lackland beginning in early February; however, retrospective analyses have suggested a much earlier origin than previously thought. The first documented case of COVID-19 in Texas outside of evacuees at Lackland was confirmed on March 4 in Fort Bend County, and many of the state's largest cities recorded their first cases throughout March. The state recorded its first death associated with the disease on March 17 in Matagorda County.

As of April 3, 2021, Texas has the second-highest number of confirmed cases in the United States, behind California, and the 26th highest number of confirmed cases per capita. It has the third-highest number of deaths related to the virus, behind New York and California, and the 24th-highest count of deaths per capita.[3][4][5]

Although Texas had a higher concentration of cases, it had fewer deaths. As of late May 2021, there were 50,198 COVID-19 related deaths reported in that state. The death rate in Texas was 175 for every 100,000 people, while national COVID-19 death rate was 179 per 100,000.[6]

As of April 3, 2021, vaccination in Texas lagged behind the US average, with rates lower than in three of four neighboring states, having administered 12,565,129 COVID-19 vaccine doses, equivalent to 43,334 doses per-100,000 of the state's population.[7][8]

Timeline[edit]

COVID-19 cases in Texas, United States  ()
     Deaths        Recoveries        Active cases and recoveries
202020202021202120222022
MarMarAprAprMayMayJunJunJulJulAugAugSepSepOctOctNovNovDecDec
JanJanFebFebMarMarAprAprMayMayJunJunJulJulAugAugSepSepOctOctNovNovDecDec
JanJanFebFebMarMar
Last 15 daysLast 15 days
Date
# of cases
# of deaths
2020-03-06 5(n.a.)
2020-03-13 22(n.a.)
2020-03-20
175(n.a.) 5(n.a.)
2020-03-27
1,731(n.a.) 23(n.a.)
2020-04-03
5,330(n.a.) 90(n.a.)
2020-04-10
11,671(n.a.) 226(n.a.)
2020-04-17
17,371(n.a.) 428(n.a.)
2020-04-24
22,806(n.a.) 593(n.a.)
2020-05-01
29,229(n.a.) 816(n.a.)
2020-05-08
36,609(n.a.) 1,004(n.a.)
2020-05-15
45,198(n.a.) 1,272(n.a.)
2020-05-22
53,449(n.a.) 1,480(n.a.)
2020-05-29
61,006(n.a.) 1,626(n.a.)
2020-06-05
71,613(n.a.) 1,788(n.a.)
2020-06-12
83,680(n.a.) 1,939(n.a.)
2020-06-19
103,305(n.a.) 2,140(n.a.)
2020-06-26
137,624(n.a.) 2,324(n.a.)
2020-07-01
168,062(n.a.) 2,481(n.a.)
2020-07-02
175,977(+4.7%) 2,525(+1.8%)
2020-07-03
183,532(+4.3%) 2,575(+2%)
2020-07-04
191,790(+4.5%) 2,608(+1.3%)
2020-07-05
195,239(+1.8%) 2,637(+1.1%)
2020-07-06
200,557(+2.7%) 2,655(+0.68%)
2020-07-07
210,585(+5%) 2,715(+2.3%)
2020-07-08
220,564(+4.7%) 2,813(+3.6%)
2020-07-09
230,346(+4.4%) 2,918(+3.7%)
2020-07-10
240,111(+4.2%) 3,013(+3.3%)
2020-07-11
250,462(+4.3%) 3,112(+3.3%)
2020-07-12
258,658(+3.3%) 3,192(+2.6%)
2020-07-13
264,313(+2.2%) 3,235(+1.3%)
2020-07-14
275,058(+4.1%) 3,322(+2.7%)
2020-07-15
282,365(+2.7%) 3,432(+3.3%)
2020-07-16
292,656(+3.6%) 3,561(+3.8%)
2020-07-17
307,572(+5.1%) 3,735(+4.9%)
2020-07-18
317,730(+3.3%) 3,865(+3.5%)
2020-07-19
325,030(+2.3%) 3,958(+2.4%)
2020-07-20
332,434(+2.3%) 4,020(+1.6%)
2020-07-21
341,739(+2.8%) 4,151(+3.3%)
2020-07-22
351,618(+2.9%) 4,348(+4.7%)
2020-07-23
361,125(+2.7%) 4,521(+4%)
2020-07-24
369,826(+2.4%) 4,717(+4.3%)
2020-07-25
375,846(+1.6%) 4,885(+3.6%)
2020-07-26
381,656(+1.5%) 5,038(+3.1%)
2020-07-27
385,923(+1.1%) 5,489(+9%)
2020-07-28
394,265(+2.2%) 5,650(+2.9%)
2020-07-29
403,307(+2.3%) 5,952(+5.3%)
2020-07-30
412,107(+2.2%) 6,274(+5.4%)
2020-07-31
420,946(+2.1%) 6,569(+4.7%)
2020-08-01
430,485(+2.3%) 6,837(+4.1%)
2020-08-02
436,711(+1.4%) 7,016(+2.6%)
2020-08-03
442,014(+1.2%) 7,016
2020-08-04
451,181(+2.1%) 7,261(+3.5%)
2020-08-05
459,887(+1.9%) 7,497(+3.3%)
2020-08-06
467,485(+1.7%) 7,803(+4.1%)
2020-08-07
474,524(+1.5%) 8,096(+3.8%)
2020-08-08
481,483(+1.5%) 8,343(+3.1%)
2020-08-09
486,362(+1%) 8,459(+1.4%)
2020-08-10
490,817(+0.92%) 8,490(+0.37%)
2020-08-11
500,620(+2%) 8,710(+2.6%)
2020-08-12
506,820(+1.2%) 9,034(+3.7%)
2020-08-13
513,575(+1.3%) 9,289(+2.8%)
2020-08-14
520,593(+1.4%) 9,602(+3.4%)
2020-08-15
528,838(+1.6%) 9,840(+2.5%)
2020-08-16
535,042(+1.2%) 9,983(+1.5%)
2020-08-17
542,950(+1.5%) 10,034(+0.51%)
2020-08-18
550,232(+1.3%) 10,250(+2.2%)
2020-08-19
557,256(+1.3%) 10,559(+3%)
2020-08-20
562,559(+0.95%) 10,793(+2.2%)
2020-08-21
567,580(+0.89%) 11,051(+2.4%)
2020-08-22
573,139(+0.98%) 11,266(+1.9%)
2020-08-23
577,537(+0.77%) 11,370(+0.92%)
2020-08-24
580,384(+0.49%) 11,395(+0.22%)
2020-08-25
586,730(+1.1%) 11,576(+1.6%)
2020-08-26
592,137(+0.92%) 11,805(+2%)
2020-08-27
597,737(+0.95%) 12,070(+2.2%)
2020-08-28
602,768(+0.84%) 12,266(+1.6%)
2020-08-29
606,530(+0.62%) 12,420(+1.3%)
2020-08-30
610,354(+0.63%) 12,510(+0.72%)
2020-08-31
612,969(+0.43%) 12,536(+0.21%)
2020-09-01
617,333(+0.71%) 12,681(+1.2%)
2020-09-02
621,667(+0.7%) 12,870(+1.5%)
2020-09-03
625,347(+0.59%) 13,091(+1.7%)
2020-09-04
630,829(+0.88%) 13,231(+1.1%)
2020-09-05
635,315(+0.71%) 13,408(+1.3%)
2020-09-06
638,310(+0.47%) 13,472(+0.48%)
2020-09-07
640,370(+0.32%) 13,492(+0.15%)
2020-09-08
641,791(+0.22%) 13,553(+0.45%)
2020-09-09
645,791(+0.62%) 13,692(+1%)
2020-09-10
649,809(+0.62%) 13,853(+1.2%)
2020-09-11
653,356(+0.55%) 13,997(+1%)
2020-09-12
657,589(+0.65%) 14,143(+1%)
2020-09-13
659,434(+0.28%) 14,190(+0.33%)
2020-09-14
663,445(+0.61%) 14,211(+0.15%)
2020-09-15
668,746(+0.8%) 14,343(+0.93%)
2020-09-16
674,772(+0.9%) 14,478(+0.94%)
2020-09-17
678,819(+0.6%) 14,590(+0.77%)
2020-09-18
682,241(+0.5%) 14,713(+0.84%)
2020-09-19
686,068(+0.56%) 14,848(+0.92%)
2020-09-20
688,534(+0.36%) 14,893(+0.3%)
2020-09-21
698,387(+1.4%) 14,917(+0.16%)
2020-09-22
716,207(+2.6%) 14,994(+0.52%)
2020-09-23
719,599(+0.47%) 15,129(+0.9%)
2020-09-24
723,919(+0.6%) 15,267(+0.91%)
2020-09-25
728,552(+0.64%) 15,364(+0.64%)
2020-09-26
733,438(+0.67%) 15,485(+0.79%)
2020-09-27
735,132(+0.23%) 15,522(+0.24%)
2020-09-28
739,743(+0.63%) 15,533(+0.07%)
2020-09-29
743,284(+0.48%) 15,604(+0.46%)
2020-09-30
748,967(+0.76%) 15,711(+0.69%)
2020-10-01
752,501(+0.47%) 15,823(+0.71%)
2020-10-02
756,004(+0.47%) 15,895(+0.46%)
2020-10-03
763,010(+0.93%) 15,992(+0.61%)
2020-10-04
765,894(+0.38%) 16,025(+0.21%)
2020-10-05
769,303(+0.45%) 16,033(+0.05%)
2020-10-06
773,435(+0.54%) 16,111(+0.49%)
2020-10-07
777,556(+0.53%) 16,230(+0.74%)
2020-10-08
781,794(+0.55%) 16,334(+0.64%)
2020-10-09
785,830(+0.52%) 16,432(+0.6%)
2020-10-10
790,060(+0.54%) 16,526(+0.57%)
2020-10-11
792,478(+0.31%) 16,557(+0.19%)
2020-10-12
795,126(+0.33%) 16,558(+0.01%)
2020-10-13
800,415(+0.67%) 16,622(+0.39%)
2020-10-14
805,082(+0.58%) 16,717(+0.57%)
2020-10-15
809,808(+0.59%) 16,812(+0.57%)
2020-10-16
815,678(+0.72%) 16,903(+0.54%)
2020-10-17
820,563(+0.6%) 16,984(+0.48%)
2020-10-18
823,779(+0.39%) 17,014(+0.18%)
2020-10-19
825,673(+0.23%) 17,022(+0.05%)
2020-10-20
833,557(+0.95%) 17,087(+0.38%)
2020-10-21
838,809(+0.63%) 17,201(+0.67%)
2020-10-22
845,100(+0.75%) 17,286(+0.49%)
2020-10-23
851,572(+0.77%) 17,375(+0.51%)
2020-10-24
858,071(+0.76%) 17,456(+0.47%)
2020-10-25
862,375(+0.5%) 17,504(+0.27%)
2020-10-26
867,076(+0.55%) 17,514(+0.06%)
2020-10-27
874,367(+0.84%) 17,595(+0.46%)
2020-10-28
879,994(+0.64%) 17,700(+0.6%)
2020-10-29
886,820(+0.78%) 17,819(+0.67%)
2020-10-30
893,451(+0.75%) 17,934(+0.65%)
2020-10-31
900,596(+0.8%) 18,024(+0.5%)
2020-11-01
904,855(+0.47%) 18,077(+0.29%)
2020-11-02
909,257(+0.49%) 18,097(+0.11%)
2020-11-03
916,773(+0.83%) 18,194(+0.54%)
2020-11-04
926,400(+1.1%) 18,320(+0.69%)
2020-11-05
934,994(+0.93%) 18,453(+0.73%)
2020-11-06
942,539(+0.81%) 18,589(+0.74%)
2020-11-07
950,549(+0.85%) 18,700(+0.6%)
2020-11-08
956,234(+0.6%) 18,743(+0.23%)
2020-11-09
963,019(+0.71%) 18,769(+0.14%)
2020-11-10
974,230(+1.2%) 18,863(+0.5%)
2020-11-11
985,380(+1.1%) 18,863
2020-11-12
993,841(+0.86%) 19,147(+1.5%)
2020-11-13
1,004,983(+1.1%) 19,320(+0.9%)
2020-11-14
1,014,160(+0.91%) 19,470(+0.78%)
2020-11-15
1,020,721(+0.65%) 19,559(+0.46%)
2020-11-16
1,027,889(+0.7%) 19,579(+0.1%)
2020-11-17
1,039,513(+1.1%) 19,696(+0.6%)
2020-11-18
1,048,383(+0.85%) 19,883(+0.95%)
2020-11-19
1,060,883(+1.2%) 20,113(+1.2%)
2020-11-20
1,072,698(+1.1%) 20,296(+0.91%)
2020-11-21
1,085,524(+1.2%) 20,467(+0.84%)
2020-11-22
1,094,275(+0.81%) 20,556(+0.43%)
2020-11-23
1,100,979(+0.61%) 20,588(+0.16%)
2020-11-24
1,115,371(+1.3%) 20,750(+0.79%)
2020-11-25
1,130,980(+1.4%) 20,950(+0.96%)
2020-11-26
1,143,616(+1.1%) 21,156(+0.98%)
2020-11-27
1,147,045(+0.3%) 21,207(+0.24%)
2020-11-28
1,151,069(+0.35%) 21,309(+0.48%)
2020-11-29
1,157,273(+0.54%) 21,357(+0.23%)
2020-11-30
1,168,111(+0.94%) 21,379(+0.1%)
2020-12-01
1,184,250(+1.4%) 21,549(+0.8%)
2020-12-02
1,200,674(+1.4%) 21,756(+0.96%)
2020-12-03
1,215,113(+1.2%) 22,000(+1.1%)
2020-12-04
1,228,812(+1.1%) 22,255(+1.2%)
2020-12-05
1,240,750(+0.97%) 22,502(+1.1%)
2020-12-06
1,249,323(+0.69%) 22,594(+0.41%)
2020-12-07
1,258,214(+0.71%) 22,627(+0.15%)
2020-12-08
1,272,504(+1.1%) 22,808(+0.8%)
2020-12-09
1,283,674(+0.88%) 23,081(+1.2%)
2020-12-10
1,296,132(+0.97%) 23,325(+1.1%)
2020-12-11
1,448,002(+12%)[i] 23,565(+1%)
2020-12-12
1,464,362(+1.1%) 23,800(+1%)
2020-12-13
1,472,711(+0.57%) 23,911(+0.47%)
2020-12-14
1,482,141(+0.64%) 23,937(+0.11%)
2020-12-15
1,500,538(+1.2%) 24,142(+0.86%)
2020-12-16
1,519,340(+1.3%) 24,394(+1%)
2020-12-17
1,539,189(+1.3%) 24,660(+1.1%)
2020-12-18
1,555,981(+1.1%) 24,954(+1.2%)
2020-12-19
1,573,888(+1.2%) 25,226(+1.1%)
2020-12-20
1,581,668(+0.49%) 25,348(+0.48%)
2020-12-21
1,591,948(+0.65%) 25,415(+0.26%)
2020-12-22
1,613,095(+1.3%) 25,606(+0.75%)
2020-12-23
1,636,458(+1.4%) 25,900(+1.1%)
2020-12-24
1,653,522(+1%) 26,208(+1.2%)
2020-12-25
1,657,857(+0.26%) 26,408(+0.76%)
2020-12-26
1,660,551(+0.16%) 26,421(+0.05%)
2020-12-27
1,668,597(+0.48%) 26,472(+0.19%)
2020-12-28
1,683,426(+0.89%) 26,521(+0.19%)
2020-12-29
1,715,978(+1.9%) 26,762(+0.91%)
2020-12-30
1,737,447(+1.3%) 27,088(+1.2%)
2020-12-31
1,756,242(+1.1%) 27,437(+1.3%)
2021-01-01
1,772,483(+0.92%) 27,771(+1.2%)
2021-01-02
1,777,246(+0.27%) 27,867(+0.35%)
2021-01-03
1,793,341(+0.91%) 27,917(+0.18%)
2021-01-04
1,811,523(+1%) 27,969(+0.19%)
2021-01-05
1,843,153(+1.7%) 28,219(+0.89%)
2021-01-06
1,867,163(+1.3%) 28,545(+1.2%)
2021-01-07
1,891,741(+1.3%) 28,938(+1.4%)
2021-01-08
1,915,261(+1.2%) 29,310(+1.3%)
2021-01-09
1,938,551(+1.2%) 29,691(+1.3%)
2021-01-10
1,954,406(+0.82%) 29,877(+0.63%)
2021-01-11
1,969,240(+0.76%) 29,933(+0.19%)
2021-01-12
1,995,292(+1.3%) 30,219(+0.96%)
2021-01-13
2,022,635(+1.4%) 30,624(+1.3%)
2021-01-14
2,045,699(+1.1%) 31,050(+1.4%)
2021-01-15
2,072,903(+1.3%) 31,450(+1.3%)
2021-01-16
2,097,560(+1.2%) 31,831(+1.2%)
2021-01-17
2,113,962(+0.78%) 32,038(+0.65%)
2021-01-18
2,125,552(+0.55%) 32,084(+0.14%)
2021-01-19
2,135,028(+0.45%) 32,394(+0.97%)
2021-01-20
2,166,283(+1.5%) 32,844(+1.4%)
2021-01-21
2,188,643(+1%) 33,285(+1.3%)
2021-01-22
2,211,289(+1%) 33,707(+1.3%)
2021-01-23
2,228,961(+0.8%) 34,114(+1.2%)
2021-01-24
2,240,526(+0.52%) 34,322(+0.61%)
2021-01-25
2,246,845(+0.28%) 34,394(+0.21%)
2021-01-26
2,273,119(+1.2%) 34,701(+0.89%)
2021-01-27
2,292,732(+0.86%) 35,168(+1.3%)
2021-01-28
2,310,952(+0.79%) 35,639(+1.3%)
2021-01-29
2,330,028(+0.83%) 35,988(+0.98%)
2021-01-30
2,349,262(+0.83%) 36,320(+0.92%)
2021-01-31
2,360,632(+0.48%) 36,491(+0.47%)
2021-02-01
2,392,443(+1.3%) 36,539(+0.13%)
2021-02-02
2,415,490(+0.96%) 36,870(+0.91%)
2021-02-03
2,433,110(+0.73%) 37,288(+1.1%)
2021-02-04
2,448,391(+0.63%) 37,727(+1.2%)
2021-02-05
2,462,886(+0.59%) 38,128(+1.1%)
2021-02-06
2,476,783(+0.56%) 38,476(+0.91%)
2021-02-07
2,483,742(+0.28%) 38,643(+0.43%)
2021-02-08
2,491,227(+0.3%) 38,700(+0.15%)
2021-02-09
2,504,556(+0.54%) 39,001(+0.78%)
2021-02-10
2,517,453(+0.51%) 39,386(+0.99%)
2021-02-11
2,529,343(+0.47%) 39,771(+0.98%)
2021-02-12
2,541,845(+0.49%) 40,095(+0.81%)
2021-02-13
2,553,127(+0.44%) 40,378(+0.71%)
2021-02-14
2,560,060(+0.27%) 40,537(+0.39%)
2021-02-15
2,563,949(+0.15%) 40,593(+0.14%)
2021-02-16
2,567,297(+0.13%) 40,645(+0.13%)
2021-02-17
2,571,063(+0.15%) 40,717(+0.18%)
2021-02-18
2,574,194(+0.12%) 40,814(+0.24%)
2021-02-19
2,577,131(+0.11%) 40,986(+0.42%)
2021-02-20
2,583,617(+0.25%) 41,213(+0.55%)
2021-02-21
2,588,101(+0.17%) 41,343(+0.32%)
2021-02-22
2,594,466(+0.25%) 41,407(+0.15%)
2021-02-23
2,606,275(+0.46%) 41,641(+0.57%)
2021-02-24
2,613,792(+0.29%) 41,980(+0.81%)
2021-02-25
2,621,181(+0.28%) 42,285(+0.73%)
2021-02-26
2,629,136(+0.3%) 42,575(+0.69%)
2021-02-27
2,640,209(+0.42%) 42,739(+0.39%)
2021-02-28
2,644,024(+0.14%) 42,936(+0.46%)
2021-03-01
2,647,845(+0.14%) 42,995(+0.14%)
2021-03-02
2,655,592(+0.29%) 43,266(+0.63%)
2021-03-03
2,663,414(+0.29%) 43,563(+0.69%)
2021-03-04
2,671,442(+0.3%) 43,878(+0.72%)
2021-03-05
2,678,295(+0.26%) 44,134(+0.58%)
2021-03-06
2,683,865(+0.21%) 44,367(+0.53%)
2021-03-07
2,686,818(+0.11%) 44,451(+0.19%)
2021-03-08
2,689,413(+0.1%) 44,483(+0.07%)
2021-03-09
2,694,726(+0.2%) 44,650(+0.38%)
2021-03-10
2,699,589(+0.18%) 44,875(+0.5%)
2021-03-11
2,704,344(+0.18%) 45,106(+0.51%)
2021-03-12
2,710,849(+0.24%) 45,318(+0.47%)
2021-03-13
2,715,755(+0.18%) 45,474(+0.34%)
2021-03-14
2,718,383(+0.1%) 45,543(+0.15%)
2021-03-15
2,721,126(+0.1%) 45,570(+0.06%)
2021-03-16
2,726,194(+0.19%) 45,700(+0.29%)
2021-03-17
2,731,270(+0.19%) 45,879(+0.39%)
2021-03-18
2,735,811(+0.17%) 46,077(+0.43%)
2021-03-19
2,739,385(+0.13%) 46,235(+0.34%)
2021-03-20
2,743,179(+0.14%) 46,354(+0.26%)
2021-03-21
2,745,161(+0.07%) 46,413(+0.13%)
2021-03-22
2,747,693(+0.09%) 46,478(+0.14%)
2021-03-23
2,752,288(+0.17%) 46,558(+0.17%)
2021-03-24
2,756,632(+0.16%) 46,736(+0.38%)
2021-03-25
2,759,866(+0.12%) 46,868(+0.28%)
2021-03-26
2,765,446(+0.2%) 46,986(+0.25%)
2021-03-27
2,769,665(+0.15%) 47,093(+0.23%)
2021-03-28
2,772,080(+0.09%) 47,156(+0.13%)
2021-03-29
2,775,669(+0.13%) 47,169(+0.03%)
2021-03-30
2,778,808(+0.11%) 47,278(+0.23%)
2021-03-31
2,783,305(+0.16%) 47,404(+0.27%)
2021-04-01
2,786,642(+0.12%) 47,522(+0.25%)
2021-04-02
2,790,160(+0.13%) 47,639(+0.25%)
2021-04-03
2,791,810(+0.06%) 47,725(+0.18%)
2021-04-04
2,793,524(+0.06%) 47,746(+0.04%)
2021-04-05
2,794,483(+0.03%) 47,749(+0.01%)
2021-04-06
2,800,254(+0.21%) 47,822(+0.15%)
2021-04-07
2,804,798(+0.16%) 47,921(+0.21%)
2021-04-08
2,809,497(+0.17%) 48,013(+0.19%)
2021-04-09
2,812,899(+0.12%) 48,109(+0.2%)
2021-04-10
2,816,097(+0.11%) 48,185(+0.16%)
2021-04-11
2,817,869(+0.06%) 48,211(+0.05%)
2021-04-12
2,819,529(+0.06%) 48,219(+0.02%)
2021-04-13
2,826,806(+0.26%) 48,273(+0.11%)
2021-04-14
2,830,228(+0.12%) 48,341(+0.14%)
2021-04-15
2,833,504(+0.12%) 48,425(+0.17%)
2021-04-16
2,836,978(+0.12%) 48,508(+0.17%)
2021-04-17
2,839,660(+0.09%) 48,573(+0.13%)
2021-04-18
2,841,564(+0.07%) 48,611(+0.08%)
2021-04-19
2,842,763(+0.04%) 48,620(+0.02%)
2021-04-20
2,848,820(+0.21%) 48,677(+0.12%)
2021-04-21
2,853,676(+0.17%) 48,759(+0.17%)
2021-04-22
2,857,017(+0.12%) 48,828(+0.14%)
2021-04-23
2,860,489(+0.12%) 48,897(+0.14%)
2021-04-24
2,862,938(+0.09%) 48,946(+0.1%)
2021-04-25
2,864,345(+0.05%) 48,966(+0.04%)
2021-04-26
2,866,263(+0.07%) 48,973(+0.01%)
2021-04-27
2,871,871(+0.2%) 49,022(+0.1%)
2021-04-28
2,876,140(+0.15%) 49,091(+0.14%)
2021-04-29
2,879,712(+0.12%) 49,158(+0.14%)
2021-04-30
2,883,227(+0.12%) 49,217(+0.12%)
2021-05-01
2,886,713(+0.12%) 49,278(+0.12%)
2021-05-02
2,888,020(+0.05%) 49,303(+0.05%)
2021-05-03
2,889,561(+0.05%) 49,309(+0.01%)
2021-05-04
2,893,714(+0.14%) 49,362(+0.11%)
2021-05-05
2,896,218(+0.09%) 49,417(+0.11%)
2021-05-06
2,898,578(+0.08%) 49,474(+0.12%)
2021-05-07
2,901,504(+0.1%) 49,527(+0.11%)
2021-05-08
2,903,694(+0.08%) 49,572(+0.09%)
2021-05-09
2,905,110(+0.05%) 49,591(+0.04%)
2021-05-10
2,905,863(+0.03%) 49,594(+0.01%)
2021-05-11
2,909,829(+0.14%) 49,651(+0.11%)
2021-05-12
2,912,195(+0.08%) 49,719(+0.14%)
2021-05-13
2,914,643(+0.08%) 49,774(+0.11%)
2021-05-14
2,917,256(+0.09%) 49,835(+0.12%)
2021-05-15
2,919,239(+0.07%) 49,877(+0.08%)
2021-05-16
2,919,889(+0.02%) 49,877
2021-05-17
2,920,389(+0.02%) 49,900(+0.05%)
2021-05-18
2,924,466(+0.14%) 49,941(+0.08%)
2021-05-19
2,926,481(+0.07%) 49,999(+0.12%)
2021-05-20
2,928,384(+0.07%) 50,051(+0.1%)
2021-05-21
2,929,961(+0.05%) 50,094(+0.09%)
2021-05-22
2,931,314(+0.05%) 50,138(+0.09%)
2021-05-23
2,932,082(+0.03%) 50,154(+0.03%)
2021-05-24
2,932,769(+0.02%) 50,158(+0.01%)
2021-05-25
2,936,733(+0.14%) 50,198(+0.08%)
2021-05-26
2,938,914(+0.07%) 50,259(+0.12%)
2021-05-27
2,940,203(+0.04%) 50,308(+0.1%)
2021-05-28
2,942,235(+0.07%) 50,361(+0.11%)
2021-05-29
2,943,316(+0.04%) 50,403(+0.08%)
2021-05-30
2,943,700(+0.01%) 50,423(+0.04%)
2021-05-31
2,943,844(=) 50,426(+0.01%)
2021-06-01
2,944,003(+0.01%) 50,441(+0.03%)
2021-06-02
2,945,998(+0.07%) 50,486(+0.09%)
2021-06-03
2,947,860(+0.06%) 50,544(+0.11%)
2021-06-04
2,950,622(+0.09%) 50,590(+0.09%)
2021-06-05
2,952,601(+0.07%) 50,621(+0.06%)
2021-06-06
2,953,238(+0.02%) 50,639(+0.04%)
2021-06-07
2,953,743(+0.02%) 50,641(=)
2021-06-08
2,957,674(+0.13%) 50,690(+0.1%)
2021-06-09
2,964,083(+0.22%) 50,733(+0.08%)
2021-06-10
2,964,503(+0.01%) 50,767(+0.07%)
2021-06-11
2,965,966(+0.05%) 50,807(+0.08%)
2021-06-12
2,967,034(+0.04%) 50,844(+0.07%)
2021-06-13
2,967,354(+0.01%) 50,857(+0.03%)
2021-06-14
2,967,730(+0.01%) 50,858(=)
2021-06-15
2,969,037(+0.04%) 50,883(+0.05%)
2021-06-16
2,970,470(+0.05%) 50,925(+0.08%)
2021-06-17
2,972,237(+0.06%) 50,964(+0.08%)
2021-06-18
2,973,171(+0.03%) 51,000(+0.07%)
2021-06-19
2,975,175(+0.07%) 51,017(+0.03%)
2021-06-20
2,975,701(+0.02%) 51,030(+0.03%)
2021-06-21
2,975,787(=) 51,031(=)
2021-06-22
2,977,580(+0.06%) 51,060(+0.06%)
2021-06-23
2,978,259(+0.02%) 51,092(+0.06%)
2021-06-24
2,980,499(+0.08%) 51,130(+0.07%)
2021-06-25
2,982,177(+0.06%) 51,163(+0.06%)
2021-06-26
2,984,022(+0.06%) 51,188(+0.05%)
2021-06-27
2,984,340(+0.01%) 51,199(+0.02%)
2021-06-28
2,984,523(+0.01%) 51,201(=)
2021-06-29
2,986,847(+0.08%) 51,223(+0.04%)
2021-06-30
2,988,457(+0.05%) 51,245(+0.04%)
2021-07-01
2,990,703(+0.08%) 51,273(+0.05%)
2021-07-02
2,992,614(+0.06%) 51,313(+0.08%)
2021-07-03
2,994,052(+0.05%) 51,338(+0.05%)
2021-07-04
2,994,471(+0.01%) 51,349(+0.02%)
2021-07-05
2,994,817(+0.01%) 51,349
2021-07-06
2,989,577(−0.17%) 51,359(+0.02%)
2021-07-07
2,997,665(+0.27%) 51,384(+0.05%)
2021-07-08
3,001,708(+0.13%) 51,416(+0.06%)
2021-07-09
3,004,105(+0.08%) 51,455(+0.08%)
2021-07-10
3,006,425(+0.08%) 51,478(+0.04%)
2021-07-11
3,007,025(+0.02%) 51,486(+0.02%)
2021-07-12
3,007,562(+0.02%) 51,490(+0.01%)
2021-07-13
3,011,214(+0.12%) 51,519(+0.06%)
2021-07-14
3,014,340(+0.1%) 51,549(+0.06%)
2021-07-15
3,019,221(+0.16%) 51,585(+0.07%)
2021-07-16
3,023,502(+0.14%) 51,610(+0.05%)
2021-07-17
3,027,139(+0.12%) 51,640(+0.06%)
2021-07-18
3,029,285(+0.07%) 51,651(+0.02%)
2021-07-19
3,030,342(+0.03%) 51,652(=)
2021-07-20
3,034,779(+0.15%) 51,676(+0.05%)
2021-07-21
3,039,980(+0.17%) 51,709(+0.06%)
2021-07-22
3,048,575(+0.28%) 51,749(+0.08%)
2021-07-23
3,056,111(+0.25%) 51,802(+0.1%)
2021-07-24
3,062,715(+0.22%) 51,830(+0.05%)
2021-07-25
3,065,073(+0.08%) 51,848(+0.03%)
2021-07-26
3,066,674(+0.05%) 51,853(+0.01%)
2021-07-27
3,075,316(+0.28%) 51,890(+0.07%)
2021-07-28
3,088,316(+0.42%) 51,949(+0.11%)
2021-07-29
3,096,756(+0.27%) 51,984(+0.07%)
2021-07-30
3,112,803(+0.52%) 52,041(+0.11%)
2021-07-31
3,125,699(+0.41%) 52,085(+0.08%)
2021-08-01
3,128,102(+0.08%) 52,106(+0.04%)
2021-08-02
3,132,479(+0.14%) 52,110(+0.01%)
2021-08-03
3,147,040(+0.46%) 52,161(+0.1%)
2021-08-04
3,166,376(+0.61%) 52,221(+0.12%)
2021-08-05
3,180,107(+0.43%) 52,297(+0.15%)
2021-08-06
3,199,220(+0.6%) 52,370(+0.14%)
2021-08-07
3,219,300(+0.63%) 52,435(+0.12%)
2021-08-08
3,225,082(+0.18%) 52,463(+0.05%)
2021-08-09
3,227,531(+0.08%) 52,471(+0.02%)
2021-08-10
3,245,115(+0.54%) 52,555(+0.16%)
2021-08-11
3,263,283(+0.56%) 52,667(+0.21%)
2021-08-12
3,278,469(+0.47%) 52,787(+0.23%)
2021-08-13
3,292,180(+0.42%) 52,931(+0.27%)
2021-08-14
3,318,801(+0.81%) 53,048(+0.22%)
2021-08-15
3,323,973(+0.16%) 53,091(+0.08%)
2021-08-16
3,329,808(+0.18%) 53,100(+0.02%)
2021-08-17
3,353,995(+0.73%) 53,196(+0.18%)
2021-08-18
3,380,120(+0.78%) 53,370(+0.33%)
2021-08-19
3,393,841(+0.41%) 53,564(+0.36%)
2021-08-20
3,411,118(+0.51%) 53,738(+0.32%)
2021-08-21
3,440,612(+0.86%) 53,928(+0.35%)
2021-08-22
3,445,183(+0.13%) 53,994(+0.12%)
2021-08-23
3,450,934(+0.17%) 54,023(+0.05%)
2021-08-24
3,472,002(+0.61%) 54,222(+0.37%)
2021-08-25
3,496,374(+0.7%) 54,455(+0.43%)
2021-08-26
3,513,718(+0.5%) 54,691(+0.43%)
2021-08-27
3,531,043(+0.49%) 54,991(+0.55%)
2021-08-28
3,547,835(+0.48%) 55,251(+0.47%)
2021-08-29
3,551,496(+0.1%) 55,371(+0.22%)
2021-08-30
3,561,407(+0.28%) 55,404(+0.06%)
2021-08-31
3,590,156(+0.81%) 55,635(+0.42%)
2021-09-01
3,611,990(+0.61%) 55,955(+0.58%)
2021-09-02
3,634,358(+0.62%) 56,296(+0.61%)
2021-09-03
3,661,361(+0.74%) 56,598(+0.54%)
2021-09-04
3,678,922(+0.48%) 56,903(+0.54%)
2021-09-05
3,686,523(+0.21%) 57,057(+0.27%)
2021-09-06
3,690,755(+0.11%) 57,110(+0.09%)
2021-09-07
3,697,884(+0.19%) 57,238(+0.22%)
2021-09-08
3,733,656(+0.97%) 57,524(+0.5%)
2021-09-09
3,763,626(+0.8%) 57,932(+0.71%)
2021-09-10
3,787,220(+0.63%) 58,332(+0.69%)
2021-09-11
3,800,528(+0.35%) 58,689(+0.61%)
2021-09-12
3,804,969(+0.12%) 58,855(+0.28%)
2021-09-13
3,815,158(+0.27%) 58,901(+0.08%)
2021-09-14
3,839,170(+0.63%) 59,197(+0.5%)
2021-09-15
3,864,455(+0.66%) 59,608(+0.69%)
2021-09-16
3,883,678(+0.5%) 59,980(+0.62%)
2021-09-17
3,902,306(+0.48%) 60,357(+0.63%)
2021-09-18
3,917,282(+0.38%) 60,674(+0.53%)
2021-09-19
3,919,804(+0.06%) 60,784(+0.18%)
2021-09-20
3,925,108(+0.14%) 60,832(+0.08%)
2021-09-21
3,938,888(+0.35%) 61,178(+0.57%)
2021-09-22
3,958,042(+0.49%) 61,570(+0.64%)
2021-09-23
3,970,552(+0.32%) 62,033(+0.75%)
2021-09-24
3,984,407(+0.35%) 62,469(+0.7%)
2021-09-25
3,996,847(+0.31%) 62,786(+0.51%)
2021-09-26
4,002,111(+0.13%) 62,942(+0.25%)
2021-09-27
4,008,025(+0.15%) 62,980(+0.06%)
2021-09-28
4,023,240(+0.38%) 63,245(+0.42%)
2021-09-29
4,035,920(+0.32%) 63,626(+0.6%)
2021-09-30
4,046,932(+0.27%) 63,976(+0.55%)
2021-10-01
4,057,845(+0.27%) 64,304(+0.51%)
2021-10-02
4,065,735(+0.19%) 64,590(+0.44%)
2021-10-03
4,068,619(+0.07%) 64,732(+0.22%)
2021-10-04
4,071,599(+0.07%) 64,785(+0.08%)
2021-10-05
4,081,849(+0.25%) 65,062(+0.43%)
2021-10-06
4,095,261(+0.33%) 65,433(+0.57%)
2021-10-07
4,104,149(+0.22%) 65,690(+0.39%)
2021-10-08
4,113,124(+0.22%) 66,057(+0.56%)
2021-10-09
4,119,056(+0.14%) 66,332(+0.42%)
2021-10-10
4,120,845(+0.04%) 66,465(+0.2%)
2021-10-11
4,123,515(+0.06%) 66,467(=)
2021-10-12
4,133,381(+0.24%) 66,700(+0.35%)
2021-10-13
4,142,962(+0.23%) 67,012(+0.47%)
2021-10-14
4,149,312(+0.15%) 67,202(+0.28%)
2021-10-15
4,156,151(+0.16%) 67,477(+0.41%)
2021-10-16
4,162,041(+0.14%) 67,724(+0.37%)
2021-10-17
4,162,747(+0.02%) 67,812(+0.13%)
2021-10-18
4,165,022(+0.05%) 67,847(+0.05%)
2021-10-19
4,172,288(+0.17%) 68,043(+0.29%)
2021-10-20
4,178,148(+0.14%) 68,313(+0.4%)
2021-10-21
4,182,835(+0.11%) 68,573(+0.38%)
2021-10-22
4,188,319(+0.13%) 68,792(+0.32%)
2021-10-23
4,192,541(+0.1%) 69,001(+0.3%)
2021-10-24
4,194,151(+0.04%) 69,072(+0.1%)
2021-10-25
4,196,041(+0.05%) 69,089(+0.02%)
2021-10-26
4,202,317(+0.15%) 69,267(+0.26%)
2021-10-27
4,207,272(+0.12%) 69,485(+0.31%)
2021-10-28
4,211,838(+0.11%) 69,668(+0.26%)
2021-10-29
4,217,243(+0.13%) 69,846(+0.26%)
2021-10-30
4,221,582(+0.1%) 69,922(+0.11%)
2021-10-31
4,222,311(+0.02%) 69,981(+0.08%)
2021-11-01
4,223,527(+0.03%) 70,000(+0.03%)
2021-11-02
4,228,433(+0.12%) 70,129(+0.18%)
2021-11-03
4,233,278(+0.11%) 70,293(+0.23%)
2021-11-04
4,236,624(+0.08%) 70,432(+0.2%)
2021-11-05
4,240,146(+0.08%) 70,573(+0.2%)
2021-11-06
4,243,143(+0.07%) 70,705(+0.19%)
2021-11-07
4,244,349(+0.03%) 70,758(+0.07%)
2021-11-08
4,245,949(+0.04%) 70,766(+0.01%)
2021-11-09
4,251,485(+0.13%) 70,862(+0.14%)
2021-11-10
4,255,280(+0.09%) 71,021(+0.22%)
2021-11-11
4,259,194(+0.09%) 71,186(+0.23%)
2021-11-12
4,262,152(+0.07%) 71,502(+0.44%)
2021-11-13
4,266,084(+0.09%) 71,586(+0.12%)
2021-11-14
4,266,698(+0.01%) 71,624(+0.05%)
2021-11-15
4,268,082(+0.03%) 71,633(+0.01%)
2021-11-16
4,272,442(+0.1%) 71,722(+0.12%)
2021-11-17
4,277,364(+0.12%) 71,844(+0.17%)
2021-11-18
4,282,152(+0.11%) 71,982(+0.19%)
2021-11-19
4,286,622(+0.1%) 72,082(+0.14%)
2021-11-20
4,289,373(+0.06%) 72,169(+0.12%)
2021-11-21
4,290,380(+0.02%) 72,198(+0.04%)
2021-11-22
4,292,386(+0.05%) 72,208(+0.01%)
2021-11-23
4,296,053(+0.09%) 72,301(+0.13%)
2021-11-24
4,300,466(+0.1%) 72,381(+0.11%)
2021-11-29
4,309,721(+0.22%) 72,529(+0.2%)
2021-11-30
4,316,162(+0.15%) 72,607(+0.11%)
2021-12-01
4,318,429(+0.05%) 72,707(+0.14%)
2021-12-02
4,320,806(+0.06%) 72,808(+0.14%)
2021-12-03
4,323,817(+0.07%) 72,882(+0.1%)
2021-12-04
4,326,416(+0.06%) 72,956(+0.1%)
2021-12-05
4,327,926(+0.03%) 72,986(+0.04%)
2021-12-06
4,330,392(+0.06%) 72,989(=)
2021-12-07
4,333,929(+0.08%) 73,052(+0.09%)
2021-12-08
4,336,310(+0.05%) 73,147(+0.13%)
2021-12-09
4,338,790(+0.06%) 73,227(+0.11%)
2021-12-10
4,364,714(+0.6%)[ii] 73,337(+0.15%)
2021-12-11
4,369,418(+0.11%) 73,364(+0.04%)
2021-12-12
4,372,008(+0.06%) 73,400(+0.05%)
2021-12-13
4,376,245(+0.1%) 73,409(+0.01%)
2021-12-14
4,380,886(+0.11%) 73,477(+0.09%)
2021-12-15
4,385,832(+0.11%) 73,568(+0.12%)
2021-12-16
4,391,567(+0.13%) 73,658(+0.12%)
2021-12-17
4,397,558(+0.14%) 73,756(+0.13%)
2021-12-18
4,405,621(+0.18%) 73,834(+0.11%)
2021-12-19
4,413,046(+0.17%) 73,859(+0.03%)
2021-12-20
4,423,658(+0.24%) 73,865(+0.01%)
2021-12-21
4,434,762(+0.25%) 73,918(+0.07%)
2021-12-22
4,444,883(+0.23%) 74,003(+0.11%)
2021-12-23
4,457,359(+0.28%) 74,092(+0.12%)
2021-12-27
4,516,356(+1.32%) 74,262(+0.23%)
2021-12-28
4,531,151(+0.33%) 74,330(+0.09%)
2021-12-29
4,545,437(+0.32%) 74,401(+0.1%)
2021-12-30
4,561,037(+0.34%) 74,491(+0.12%)
2022-01-03
4,745,139(+4.04%) 74,736(+0.33%)
2022-01-04
4,798,692(+1.1%) 74,796(+0.08%)
2022-01-05
4,847,637(+1%) 74,888(+0.12%)
2022-01-06
4,892,604(+0.93%) 75,014(+0.17%)
2022-01-07
4,946,867(+1.1%) 75,128(+0.15%)
2022-01-08
5,000,819(+1.1%) 75,233(+0.14%)
2022-01-09
5,043,610(+0.86%) 75,281(+0.06%)
2022-01-10
5,090,847(+0.94%) 75,287(+0.01%)
2022-01-11
5,147,506(+1.1%) 75,397(+0.15%)
2022-01-12
5,223,323(+1.5%) 75,533(+0.18%)
2022-01-13
5,297,814(+1.4%) 75,650(+0.15%)
2022-01-14
5,402,259(+2%)[iii] 75,783(+0.18%)
2022-01-15
5,472,025(+1.3%) 75,934(+0.2%)
2022-01-16
5,522,176(+0.92%) 75,996(+0.08%)
2022-01-17
5,590,444(+1.2%) 76,000(+0.01%)
2022-01-18
5,644,397(+0.97%) 76,123(+0.16%)
2022-01-19
5,700,444(+0.99%) 76,277(+0.2%)
2022-01-20
5,746,859(+0.81%) 76,443(+0.22%)
2022-01-21
5,813,105(+1.2%) 76,612(+0.22%)
2022-01-22
5,876,122(+1.1%) 76,798(+0.24%)
2022-01-23
5,934,240(+0.99%) 76,875(+0.1%)
2022-01-24
5,973,164(+0.66%) 76,904(+0.04%)
2022-01-25
6,018,220(+0.75%) 77,058(+0.2%)
2022-01-26
6,048,954(+0.51%) 77,321(+0.34%)
2022-01-27
6,083,750(+0.58%) 77,555(+0.3%)
2022-01-28
6,122,432(+0.64%) 77,780(+0.29%)
2022-01-29
6,166,582(+0.72%) 78,015(+0.3%)
2022-01-30
6,192,817(+0.43%) 78,136(+0.16%)
2022-01-31
6,219,346(+0.43%) 78,160(+0.03%)
2022-02-01
6,254,867(+0.57%) 78,360(+0.26%)
2022-02-02
6,280,583(+0.41%) 78,658(+0.38%)
2022-02-03
6,308,728(+0.45%) 78,981(+0.41%)
2022-02-04
6,330,497(+0.35%) 79,135(+0.19%)
2022-02-05
6,351,228(+0.33%) 79,369(+0.3%)
2022-02-06
6,369,286(+0.28%) 79,412(+0.05%)
2022-02-07
6,383,581(+0.22%) 79,429(+0.02%)
2022-02-08
6,395,334(+0.18%) 79,711(+0.36%)
2022-02-09
6,407,921(+0.2%) 80,005(+0.37%)
2022-02-10
6,423,519(+0.24%) 80,310(+0.38%)
2022-02-11
6,436,773(+0.21%) 80,566(+0.32%)
2022-02-12
6,449,575(+0.2%) 80,760(+0.24%)
2022-02-13
6,458,425(+0.14%) 80,988(+0.28%)
2022-02-14
6,464,783(+0.1%) 81,030(+0.05%)
2022-02-15
6,475,736(+0.17%) 81,258(+0.28%)
2022-02-16
6,482,436(+0.1%) 81,557(+0.37%)
2022-02-17
6,490,838(+0.13%) 81,844(+0.35%)
2022-02-18
6,501,313(+0.16%) 82,084(+0.29%)
2022-02-19
6,510,356(+0.14%) 82,332(+0.3%)
2022-02-20
6,512,240(+0.03%) 82,416(+0.1%)
2022-02-21
6,517,258(+0.08%) 82,435(+0.02%)
2022-02-22
6,523,116(+0.09%) 82,627(+0.23%)
2022-02-23
6,527,652(+0.07%) 82,887(+0.31%)
2022-02-24
6,533,512(+0.09%) 83,121(+0.28%)
2022-02-25
6,540,116(+0.1%) 83,271(+0.18%)
2022-02-26
6,545,177(+0.08%) 83,437(+0.2%)
2022-02-27
6,546,256(+0.02%) 83,516(+0.09%)
2022-02-28
6,549,206(+0.05%) 83,549(+0.04%)
2022-03-01
6,554,035(+0.07%) 83,693(+0.17%)
2022-03-02
6,557,619(+0.05%) 83,899(+0.25%)
2022-03-03
6,561,554(+0.06%) 83,997(+0.12%)
2022-03-04
6,565,395(+0.06%) 84,224(+0.27%)
2022-03-05
6,569,683(+0.07%) 84,356(+0.16%)
2022-03-06
6,570,340(+0.01%) 84,409(+0.06%)
2022-03-07
6,573,567(+0.05%) 84,418(+0.01%)
2022-03-08
6,578,556(+0.08%) 84,513(+0.11%)
2022-03-09
6,583,747(+0.08%) 84,645(+0.16%)
2022-03-10
6,589,275(+0.08%) 84,780(+0.16%)
2022-03-11
6,597,153(+0.12%) 84,882(+0.12%)
2022-03-12
6,600,601(+0.05%) 84,997(+0.14%)
2022-03-13
6,601,878(+0.02%) 85,039(+0.05%)
2022-03-14
6,602,737(+0.01%) 85,049(+0.01%)
2022-03-15
6,605,761(+0.05%) 85,123(+0.09%)
2022-03-16
6,608,537(+0.04%) 85,211(+0.1%)
2022-03-17
6,613,467(+0.07%) 85,320(+0.13%)
2022-03-18
6,616,597(+0.05%) 85,399(+0.09%)
2022-03-19
6,618,153(+0.02%) 85,472(+0.09%)
2022-03-20
6,620,575(+0.04%) 85,479(+0.01%)
2022-03-21
6,621,379(+0.01%) 85,513(+0.04%)
2022-03-22
6,626,632(+0.08%) 85,568(+0.06%)
2022-03-23
6,629,014(+0.04%) 85,641(+0.09%)
Cases: The number of cumulative confirmed and probable cases in Texas.

Sources:"Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)". Texas Department of State Health Services., "Texas Case Counts | COVID-19". Texas Department of State Health Services.
Notes:

  1. ^ Probable cases are included from December 11, 2020.
  2. ^ Cases with unknown county of residence were omitted from December 1 through December 9, 2021.
  3. ^ Texas ceased estimating recoveries on January 14, 2022.

The initial origin of community spread in Texas remains unclear, but numerous anecdotal accounts by those later confirmed have included onset dates as early as December 28 in Point Venture, and retrospective analyses have found unexplained statistical increases in deaths during this time.[9][10][11] Testing capacity across the state remained extremely limited until after the first recorded cases were announced.[9]

Photograph of the cruise ship
The first confirmed cases in Texas were associated with travelers on board the M.S. A'sara river cruise ship in Egypt

Research from Austin Public Health conducted in May found 68 COVID-19 patients in Central Texas who began reporting symptoms dating back to around the beginning of March.[12] On March 2, San Antonio Mayor Nirenberg issued a public health emergency after an individual positive for the virus is mistakenly released from quarantine at JBSA–Lackland.[13] Two days later, the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) reported a presumptive positive test result for COVID-19 from a resident of Fort Bend County in the Houston area. A man in his 70s was the first known positive case of the disease in Texas outside of those evacuated from Wuhan and the Diamond Princess cruise ship.[14] The patient had recently traveled to Egypt and was hospitalized.[15] DSHS commissioner John Hellerstedt called the confirmation a "significant development" but indicated that "the immediate risk to most Texans is low."[14]

On March 5, at least eight cumulative cases, including both positive and presumptive positive cases, were identified in the Houston area. The cases involved individuals in the counties of Fort Bend and Harris counties. All individuals with confirmed cases were part of a group that traveled to Egypt in February, including the first confirmed case in Fort Bend County. The travel group rode aboard the Nile River cruise ship MS A’sara.[16][17][18] Additional individuals are also investigated as possible carriers in the Houston area in connection with the Egypt trip.[18] The state announced six public health laboratories within its Laboratory Response Network capable of testing for COVID-19.[19]

On March 8, JBSA–Lackland received approximately 100 evacuees from the cruise ship Grand Princess following a localized outbreak on board.[20][21] Rice University became the first university in the state to enact significant cancellations, suspending in-person classes and undergraduate labs during the week in response to an employee testing positive in connection with the viral cluster that traveled to Egypt.[22] The next day, the cumulative number of confirmed cases in Texas reported by the DSHS surpassed 10.[1] That same day, a resident in his 30s of Frisco, a suburb of Dallas in Collin County, received a presumptive positive test for the virus, having recently traveled to Silicon Valley in California. He was the first case identified in the Dallas–Fort Worth metropolitan area.[23][24][25] His wife and 3-year-old child later contracted the disease, with the latter among the youngest confirmed to have the virus in the U.S.[26]

On March 11, local health officials reported a positive test for COVID-19 in Montgomery County, and identified as the first possible case of community spread—not directly related to travel or known contact with positive travelers—in Texas and in the Houston area. The patient's attendance of a barbecue at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo on February 28 was reported as a possible but unconfirmed source of the virus.[27] The city of Houston ordered the Houston Livestock Show and Radio to close after announcing an emergency health declaration.[28] Montgomery Independent School District in the Houston area and Alvarado Independent School District in the Dallas area were the first two public school districts in Texas to temporarily close classes over COVID-19, affecting approximately 12,400 students across 17 schools.[29]

On March 13, Governor Abbott declared a state of disaster for all counties in Texas, invoking emergency powers for the his administration, and ordered state employees to remote work. Day cares, nursing homes, and prisons were asked to limit visitations.[30][31] The state's first mobile testing center for COVID-19 opened in San Antonio.[32] Colleges and universities throughout the state extended spring breaks with some transitioning to online instruction, including Baylor University, the University of Houston, the University of North Texas, the University of Texas at Austin, Texas State University, and Texas Tech University.[33] School districts also announced temporary suspensions of classes statewide.[34][35][36]

Empty shelves at a store
Empty shelves from panic buying at the Sams Club in Lufkin on March 13, 2020

On March 17, DSHS reported that a man in his 90s in Matagorda County died of COVID-19 after being hospitalized, becoming the first official COVID-19 fatality in Texas.[37] The Texas National Guard was activated, making Texas the 21st U.S. state to activate its National Guard; the security force was not yet deployed.[38] Abbott granted waivers to hospitals to bolster unused bed capacity without applying or paying added fees.[39] Abbott also asked the Small Business Administration to declare an Economic Injury Disaster Declaration for the state,[40] with eligibility granted three days later.[41]

On March 19, the cumulative number of confirmed cases in Texas reported by the DSHS surpassed 100.[1] The DSHS declared a public health disaster, marking the first such declaration since 1901.[42] DSHS Director Hellerstedt issued the disaster declaration as the disease "has created an immediate threat, poses a high risk of death to a large number of people and creates a substantial risk of public exposure because of the disease’s method of transmission and evidence that there is community spread in Texas."[43] Abbott issued four executive orders to ban gatherings of more than 10 people; discourage eating and drinking at bars, food courts restaurants, and visiting gyms (and close bars and restaurant dining rooms); proscribe visitation of nursing homes, retirement centers, and long-term care facilities with exception of providing critical care; and temporarily close all Texas schools.[44]

Texas National Guard personnel setting up a mobile testing station
The Texas National Guard was deployed on March 27 to aid mobile COVID-19 testing

On March 26, the cumulative number of confirmed cases in Texas exceeded 1,000,[1] and Abbott mandated visitors flying from Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and New Orleans, Louisiana, to self-quarantine for 14 days.[45] A team of researchers at the University of Texas at Austin projected that the healthcare capacity of Greater Austin would be exceeded if "extensive social distancing measures" were not implemented. Their findings indicate that a 90 percent compliance scenario would maintain hospitalizations within capacity through August 17.[46]

Aerial view of tents at a parking lot
Mass distribution sites for food were established in Texas, including one at the Alamodome

On April 17, Abbott announces the start of his plan to reopen the Texas economy, citing a "semi-flattened curve" of COVID-19 cases in the state.[47] The reopening was outlined in three executive orders allowing for state parks to open under social distancing regulations on April 20, limiting nonessential surgeries at hospitals beginning after April 21, and product pickup at retail stores beginning April 24.[48] The reopening process also established the Strike Force to Open Texas, an advisory panel to Abbott for reopening economy. The panel was led by James Huffines with Mike Toomey as chief operating officer; its consulting members are all members of the Republican Party. The panel also consisted of a medical team and a special advisory council.[49] Abbott also called for public schools to remain closed for the rest of the 2019–2020 academic year.[50] Ten days later, pursuant to the executive order establishing the Strike Force to Open Texas, Abbott released the Texas Governor's Report to Open Texas, putting forth a phased approach to reopen the state's economy.[51][52]

On May 5, Abbott modified his earlier reopening timetable, allowing barbershops, hairdressers, and nail salons to begin reopening on May 8 while maintaining social distancing. Gyms and exercise facilities were allowed to reopen beginning May 18 while operating at quarter occupancy.[53] On May 18, Texas entered Phase 2 of the governor's reopening plan.[54] On June 3, Texas enters Phase 3 of Abbott's reopening plan.[55]

On June 23, the state reported more than 5,000 new cases of COVID-19 in a single day for the first time, documenting 5,489. Hospitalizations related to COVID-19 also reached a record high with 4,092.[56] Abbott gives approval for mayors and county judges to enact restrictions on outdoor gatherings with more than 100 people, reducing the size limit from 500. Abbott also indicated that respirator enforcement is within the purview of local officials.[57] Abbott ordered the HHSC to reinstate COVID-19 health and safety standards at child care centers, reversing the agency's lifting of those requirements on June 12.[58][59] Two days later, a record-high number of new COVID-19 cases, 5,996, was set for the third consecutive day in Texas; the three days contribute over 17,000 cases to the cumulative case count.[60][61] Abbott paused the reopening of the businesses in the state as hospitalizations deaths and new COVID-19 cases begin to quickly rise, though prior relaxations of COVID-19 restrictions remain in place.[62][63]

On June 26, Abbott began rolling back some of the lifted restrictions from his earlier state reopening plan, issuing an executive order that promptly closed bars except for takeout and curbside pickup and closed rafting and tubing businesses in addition to restricting indoor dining at restaurants to 50 percent capacity. The order also required most outdoor gatherings with at least 100 people to seek approval by local governments.[64] Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo evaluated the county as having reached the highest threat level, indicating a "severe and uncontrolled level of COVID-19", and called for the reinstatement of a stay-at-home order for the county in addition to prohibiting outdoor gatherings with more than 100 people in unincorporated parts of the county.[65][66][67]

On July 2, Abbott mandated the wearing of face coverings in public spaces,[68] with fines for non-first time offenders. Counties with 20 or fewer active cases, children under 10, and persons with interfering medical conditions were allowed to opt-out of the order,[69] as well as people attending church, voting at polling places, or exercising outdoors.[69][70] Austin Mayor Adler issued an executive order restricting gatherings with more than 10 people outside of child-care services, religious gatherings, and recreational sports.[71]

On August 11, 2020, Texas became the third state in the U.S. after California and Florida to exceed 500,000 in total number of reported cases.[72] On a per capita basis Texas ranks 12th among US states, with Louisiana, Florida, Arizona, Mississippi and Georgia leading the list.[73] By October 29, 2020, larger hospitals in Amarillo, Lubbock, and El Paso did not have space available to accept transfers of seriously ill COVID patients from rural areas.[74][75]

During the fifth wave of infections in August 2021, demand for ICU beds in at least 50 Texas hospitals reached or exceeded 100% of ICU capacity.[76] A surge in hospitalizations among children caused Houston and Dallas to run out of pediatric ICU beds, with Houston resorting to an air lift evacuation in one case. Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins told parents that "if your child is in a car wreck, if your child has a congenital heart defect or something and needs an ICU bed or more likely if they COVID and need an ICU bed...your child will wait for another child to die. Your child will just not get on a ventilator."[77] On August 17, 2021, it was announced that Governor Abbott had tested positive for COVID-19.[78] He had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and began taking Regeneron's monoclonal antibodies.[79]

Epidemiology[edit]

The first positive test result for COVID-19 in Texas, outside of the evacuees quarantined at JBSA–Lackland from China and the Diamond Princess cruise ship, was reported by the DSHS on March 4 and involved a resident of Fort Bend County.[14][15] The patient was a man in his 70s and had traveled on the Nile River cruise ship MS A'sara in Egypt.[15][80] A total of 12 positive test results were reported in Fort Bend and Harris counties from travelers aboard the same ship.[81][82] The first case of possible community spread—where the source of infection is unknown—was reported by public health officials on March 11, involving a man in his 40s in Montgomery County; he had recently attended a barbecue at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo on February 28.[26][27][83][84] The first death in Texas identified in connection with COVID-19 occurred on March 14 from a man in his 90s at the Matagorda Regional Medical Center; Matagorda County officials reported the death on March 15 and the DSHS confirmed it the following day.[85][37][86] According to the DSHS, the state exceeded 100 total cases of COVID-19 by March 19 and 1,000 cases by March 26.[1] By the end of March 2020, there were 3,266 known cases of COVID-19 and 41 fatalities in Texas, with nearly half of the state's counties reporting at least one case.[87] An analysis of the first month of COVID-19's spread in Texas, published in the Journal of Community Health, found that while the total case counts were highest in the state's metropolitan areas, the highest incidence rates of the disease per capita occurred in Donley County, with 353.5 cases per 100,000 people. The case fatality rate (CFR) was 10.3 percent in Comal County; high CFR counties had "a higher proportion of non-Hispanic Black residents, adults aged 65 and older, and adults smoking, but lower number of ICU beds per 100,000 population, and number of primary care physicians per 1000 population."[85]

The cumulative number of COVID-19 cases confirmed by the DSHS reached 10,000 on April 9 and 100,000 on June 19. The number of confirmed fatalities eclipsed 100 on April 4 and 1,000 on May 9.[1] Counties that adopted shelter-in-place orders early showed a 19–26 percent decrease in COVID-19 case growth 2.5 weeks following the enactment of those orders according to an analysis published in the National Bureau of Economic Research. The same analysis found that such orders in urbanized counties accounted for 90 percent of attenuated case growth in the state by May.[88] A surge in new COVID-19 cases began in June with large increases in the state's major cities and within a younger population compared to the beginning of the pandemic.[89][90]

Responses[edit]

State responses[edit]

The government of Texas did not have a coordinated, statewide response to the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, relying mostly on local policies.[91] Governor Abbott declared a state of disaster on March 13, 2020, giving him powers to order state-wide public health measures,[92][93] and prohibited large social gatherings and dine-in service at bars and restaurants on March 19.[94][95] On March 31, Abbott issued an executive order requiring all residents to remain at their homes unless conducting essential activities, and to minimize gatherings with people from outside of their immediate household. Abbott specifically avoided use of terms such as "shelter-in-place" or "stay-at-home order", as he felt that they did not adequately reflect his goals.[96] A suspension of elective medical procedures faced legal disputes for effectively prohibiting abortions.[97]

In May 2020, Texas began to lift its initial restrictions via a phased timetable, via executive orders superseding all local health orders,[98][99][100] the process was paused on June 25 due to a surge of cases,[101] and Abbott rolled back some of the orders the next day, including reducing restaurant capacity to 50%, closing bars, and prohibiting unapproved gatherings of more than 100 people.[102][103] On July 2, Abbott announced that the wearing of face masks would be mandated in enclosed public spaces in counties with a minimum number of cases, and gatherings of more than 10 people without government approval would be prohibited.[104] On September 17, capacity limits for businesses were raised to 75%.[105]

On March 2, 2021, as COVID-19 vaccines began to be administered throughout the country, Abbott announced the final phase of reopening. All remaining COVID-19 restrictions in Texas would be lifted effective March 10 via an executive order that supersedes all local orders. It only allowed the reinstatement of restrictions on businesses in counties where COVID hospitalizations accounted for more than 15% of their local bed capacity for at least seven days. However, business capacity could not be lowered below 50%. In addition, all mask mandates were lifted, and all jurisdictions are prohibited from enforcing mask mandates. Abbott stated that residents had " "mastered the daily habits to avoid getting COVID", and thus enforceable public health orders were no longer necessary. The action was considered premature by President Joe Biden and other health experts.[106][107] The city of Austin continued to enforce its mask mandate, resulting in a threat of legal action by the Texas Attorney General. On March 26, District Judge Lora Livingston blocked a request by the AG for a temporary injunction against a retaliatory lawsuit filed by Austin, thus allowing the enforceable mandate to remain in force.[108][109]

Following the lifting of all restrictions, the state government imposed further restrictions on COVID-19-related public health measures; in April, Abbott issued an executive order prohibiting state agencies from issuing "vaccine passports" or requiring proof of vaccination with COVID-19 vaccines that are currently administered pursuant to Emergency Use Authorization (EUA). In July, a bill was signed prohibiting private businesses from requesting proof of vaccination from their customers.[110][111] Later that month, despite rising cases, Abbott strictly prohibited counties from imposing capacity restrictions on businesses, even if they have a large number of COVID-19-related hospitalizations.[112] On August 26, the prohibition of proof of vaccination by state agencies was extended to any COVID-19 vaccine, even if approved by the FDA.[113]

Local responses[edit]

On March 2, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg and Bexar County both declared a "local state of disaster and a public health emergency" after an individual was mistakenly released from quarantine at Joint Base San Antonio by the CDC before a third test for coronavirus returned a positive result.[114] The city subsequently petitioned the federal government to extend the quarantine of US nationals at Joint Base San Antonio; the petition was denied by Judge Xavier Rodriguez in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas.[115][116] Both the city of Dallas and Dallas County have declared a "local disaster of public health emergency".[117]

Abbott left the decision to local governments to set stricter guidelines. Two hours later, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins ordered residents of Dallas County to shelter in place beginning 11:59 p.m. on the following day.[118] A day later on March 23, Bell,[119] Bexar,[120] Brazos,[121] Cameron,[122] Hunt,[123] McLennan,[124] Stephens[125] counties and the city of Forney,[126] issued a shelter in place for their communities. Collin,[127] Galveston,[128] Harris,[129] Travis,[120][130] and Williamson[130] counties issued same measures on March 24. However, Collin County had more relaxed guidelines for their shelter in place order. Collin County's order stated that all businesses are essential and would be allowed to remain open as long as they followed physical distancing guidelines.[131]

In Austin, where the South by Southwest festival was closed, many bar owners on Sixth Street boarded their windows to protect the stock they had amassed in preparation for the cancelled event. A street art campaign decorated the boarded businesses with art capturing the mood of lockdown.[132]

In mid-June 2020, some county officials requested that the governor grant them the power to fine individuals for not wearing a mask in public, as local governments were prohibited from doing so by the governor's order; the governor refused.[133] Nelson Wolff, the Bexar County judge, found a loophole in the order, and on June 17 issued an order fining businesses for allowing in customers without a mask. Other counties and cities followed suit. In response, the governor said this had been the "plan all along", which some local officials doubted,[134] and that the judge "finally figured that out". This angered some people in areas where people had been dying of COVID-19.[135]

Nacogdoches County sheriff Jason Bridges announced he would not be enforcing the statewide mask order, because it was "borderline infringing on some ... constitutional rights", even though legal experts agree[136] such measures are constitutional under the state's police power.[137] Bridges said enforcing public health measures during the pandemic "is not something we have time to be doing", despite health experts' agreement that mask wearing reduces transmission significantly.[137]

During a July 14 press conference, Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner along with Dr. David Persse and Houston Fire Department Chief Sam Pena announced that the Army medical task force arrived Monday July 13 to help ramp up the city's response to COVID-19 with plans to open more facilities as medical resorts.[138] Over the weekend prior, Turner said he proposed a two-week shutdown to Abbott to help curb the soaring rates; Hidalgo, an early proponent of extending the shutdown, voiced support for another shut down.[139] During a July 15 press conference, Turner announced 16 new COVID-19 related deaths as well as two new testing sites to handle the demand of residents seeking testing in response to the surging coronavirus cases, calling for a minimum 90 percent compliance from residents for the safety measures to be effective.[140] In a July 15 press conference, Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner announced 16 new COVID-19 related deaths as well as two new testing sites to handle the demand of residents seeking testing in response to the surging coronavirus cases, calling for a minimum 90 percent compliance from residents for the safety measures to be effective.[140]

On October 29, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton challenged a two-week shutdown of nonessential businesses ordered by El Paso County Judge Ricardo Samaniego. El Paso had daily case counts of over 1,000 per day, and hospitals were overwhelmed, with 44% of patients under treatment for COVID-19.[74][75]

Business and community responses[edit]

H-E-B, in January 2020, activated a comprehensive pandemic emergency management plan first conceived in 2009 in response to concerns over H1N1.[141] Other essential businesses collectively began limiting operational hours, providing previously in-store experiences in palatable to-go forms, restricting points of entry, and requiring use of sanitizer or face masks for all customers. Many restaurants began offering pre-prepared ingredients to recreate their experiences at home, and a resurgence of drive-in theaters was seen particularly in the Greater Austin and Greater San Antonio areas.

Economic and social impact[edit]

Crime[edit]

A survey conducted by KPRC-TV found an increase in homicide and car theft. In Houston the murder rate went up 39%. Law enforcement officials report a rise in fraud and identity theft as well and say they have been receiving more phone calls for assault, domestic violence, mental health related complaints and drug use. Police and psychologists have attributed the rise in crime to changes in behavior brought on by the extreme stress and anxiety of the pandemic. Some police officers blame bond reform too likening it to a "catch and release system". Police reported increased cooperation on investigating groups of individuals who travel from city to city committing robberies and other property crimes. Some jurisdictions have seen more cases of purse snatchings and people being followed from ATMs.[142]

Effect on businesses[edit]

Sixth Street in Austin after all bars and restaurants were ordered closed

On March 13, Six Flags (based in Texas) suspended operations to all twelve of their properties nationwide as well as in Mexico, that were operating in the month of March, until the end of the month; these include the two Texas parks, Six Flags Fiesta Texas and Six Flags Over Texas. On March 30, the closure was extended to all of their properties.[143] Sea World San Antonio announced plans to close from March 16 to April 1, along with all Schlitterbahn waterparks,[144] the parks have delayed the closure. Both Schlitterbahn waterparks announced they'd be the first major water park in the state to reopen in mid-June.[145] The two Texas Six Flags parks will reopen the parks on June 19.[146][147]

On March 14, H-E-B announced that all of their stores across the state will reduce open hours, to help restock items. This also includes their pharmacies and Central Market locations.[148] The announcement comes a day after the company announced that its Houston area stores would be the only locations to implement changes to their operations.[149] A month later, H-E-B expanded their store hours across the state (closer to normal store hours), as supply availability has improved.[150][151]

As of May 26, KVUE reported that "The Texas Restaurant Association estimates that 6% of restaurants in Austin have shut down for good during the pandemic, and that number is estimated to be at 12% statewide".[152] A number of these restaurants that closed had been famous and well-established in the state for decades. Some notable ones include Highland Park Cafeteria, a Dallas restaurant that had served comfort food for 95 years, and Threadgill's, an 81-year old tavern that was the first post-Prohibition Austin business with a beer license before becoming a restaurant in 1981 (Janis Joplin started her music career here).[153][154]

Abbott's plans to lift the stay-at-home order and reopen Texas was followed by a spike in coronavirus cases reaching 50,000 new cases by Memorial Day weekend.[155] The number rose consistently pushing Texas to chart at the top of cases nationwide and hospitals in the state's largest cities reaching near or full ICU capacity.[156][157] In response to the resurgence of COVID-19 cases, Abbott issued an executive order shutting down bars for a second time since the beginning of the pandemic.[158] Several Texas bar owners filed a $10 million federal lawsuit stating that Abbott's order violates their constitutional rights; the order impacted restaurants with high alcohol sales as well, with the Texas Restaurant Association estimating that at least 1,500 restaurants that serve alcohol were forced to close, which displaced more than 35,000 employees.[159]

Event cancellations[edit]

For the first time in the event's history, South by Southwest was cancelled as a result of local health concerns about the coronavirus pandemic.[160][161] The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo cancelled the rest of the event on March 11, that was slated to run until March 22. It was confirmed that a resident from Montgomery County, Texas that was tested positive, attended the BBQ cook off at the rodeo on February 28.[162] The attendance for the rodeo on February 28, was 77,632, with 73,433 of the visitors went to the "World Championship Barb-B-Que Contest," where that person attended.[163] The FIRST Championship, slated to occur in Houston around mid-April, was canceled due to the Coronavirus, along with all the other FIRST competitions in Texas. The Championship is one of the world's largest gatherings in competitive robotics.[164]

After the announcement of the ban of gatherings of over 500 people on March 13 (in San Antonio), Fiesta San Antonio postponed their event to November 2020, that was originally slated for mid-April and eventually cancelled to April 2021, and then later pushed to June 2021.[165]

Austin City Limits Music Festival, originally scheduled for October 2020, was cancelled on July 1; its organizers describing the cancellation as "the only responsible solution."[166][167]

Impact on education[edit]

Measures such as mandatory masking, social distancing, and plastic dividers taken at a Texas public school to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in January 2021.

Among the closures of school districts and universities across the state, Abbott waived all State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR) testing for the 2019–20 school year for public grade schools on March 16.[168]

On March 19, Abbott issued an executive order that closed schools statewide until at least April 3.[169] On March 31, the Governor announced that schools in the state will continue to stay closed until May 4.[170] On April 17, Abbott said that Texas public schools would be closed for the remainder of the 2019–20 school year and that schools will continue to offer distance learning.[171]

As of July 16, the state had still not established concrete rules for school reopenings in the Fall, but the latest word from Abbott on July 14 was that districts can expect more flexibility on opening classrooms, with state education officials agreeing to continue to fund school districts who choose to stay virtual if mandated by local health officials.[172]

K-12 schools[edit]

Houston Independent School District, the state's largest school district, is among dozens of school districts extending their spring break, to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus.[173] The closures are not without precedent, as many schools closed for two weeks during the 2009 H1N1 flu when Houston experienced a major outbreak.[173] The CDC issued guidelines for K-12 school administrators to help "protect the health, safety, and wellbeing of students, teachers, other school staff, their families, and communities" as they prepare to return to school in fall 2020.[174]

Universities[edit]

As of May 19, University of Texas at Austin disclosed that they were rolling out a series of "financial mitigation measures" to alleviate employee furloughs and other economic distress from COVID-19, even after receiving government grants.[175][176] On May 20, it was announced that UT-Austin would open the campus for the Fall semester of 2020, but would conduct all classes and tests remotely after Thanksgiving break.[177] They later announced on June 3 that classrooms would be kept at 40 percent capacity, and that around 2,100 classes (about a fifth of all available classes) will be conducted online during the fall.[178] On June 8, both UT-Austin and Texas A&M University announced that wearing masks will be required when inside campus buildings during the Fall 2020 semester.[179] On June 23, UT Austin announced that it is waiving SAT and ACT testing requirements for high school students who apply for fall 2021 undergraduate admission to ensure that COVID-19 does not affect a student's ability to apply to the university.[180][181]

Sports[edit]

A Dallas Renegades XFL game at Globe Life Park in Arlington on March 7, 2020; this was their final game before the league's suspension and demise.

All major professional sports leagues in Texas suspended play, including the NBA (Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets and San Antonio Spurs)[182] NHL (Dallas Stars),[183] Major League Baseball (Texas Rangers and Houston Astros),[184] and Major League Soccer (Houston Dynamo and FC Dallas).[185] The XFL (Dallas Renegades and Houston Roughnecks) suspended play, and later filed for bankruptcy part-way into the rebooted league's inaugural season.[186] In April 2020, the University Interscholastic League (UIL) cancelled all spring high school sports state-wide.[187]

On May 28, Governor Abbott announced that professional sporting events at outdoor venues would be allowed to admit a limited number of spectators, capped at 25% of normal capacity, and subject to approval by health authorities.[188] In June 2020, Fort Worth hosted the first IndyCar Series and PGA Tour events held since pandemic-related restrictions took affect, the Genesys 300 at Texas Motor Speedway,[189] and the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club.[190] Both events were held without spectators.[190][189]

The pandemic impacted sports across the state at all levels: Texas high school started voluntary summer workouts on June 8 in anticipation of a full season return, but the UIL recommended all workouts statewide be postponed from July 3–13 as a safety measure, impacting around 200 schools across the state, many of which had already made the decision to shut down independently ahead of official orders.[191] Professional teams such as the Houston Rockets were further impacted as players tested positive for COVID-19.[192] On July 21, the UIL announced its plan to resume fall sports, splitting them into two categories: football and volleyball practices would begin first with 1A through 4A schools on August 3, schools with 5A and 6A designations would resume practices on September 7, with state football championships held in January.[193]

To reduce travel and the impact of outbreaks, Major League Baseball scheduled its 2020 playoffs at neutral sites in Texas and California; Minute Maid Park in Houston and newly opened Globe Life Field in Arlington would host National League Division Series games during the postseason, while the 2020 National League Championship Series and 2020 World Series would be hosted entirely in Arlington (marking the first World Series to be held at a single ballpark since 1944). The NLCS and World Series would also be the first MLB games that season to admit spectators, capped at a capacity of 11,500 out of around 40,000.[194][195] Citing looser restrictions in comparison to its traditional home of Las Vegas, the National Finals Rodeo also relocated to Globe Life Field.[196]

To take advantage of the loosened restrictions, the Texas Rangers announced that they would not cap their capacity for their home opener against the Toronto Blue Jays on April 5. The team did not limit capacity for a pre-season exhibition series against the Milwaukee Brewers either, although they only attracted 12,911 and 10,859 spectators respectively. The official attendance for the home opener was 38,238, nearly 95% capacity.[197]

Corrections[edit]

In November 2020 the University of Texas at Austin concluded that from March to October, 231 prisoners in the state died due to COVID-19. Due to the delay in announcing whether someone died from the disease, which can take as long as several months, Vox reported that "The 231 figure is likely to be a conservative count."[198]

Based on an early 190 deaths count, UT Austin issued a report stating that the death rate of people in correctional supervision in Texas was 135% the general death rate.[199]

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) banned prisoner visitation on March 12, 2020, and resumed it on March 15, 2021.[200] The agency vaccinated prison staff but as of February 2021 the prisoners did not yet receive them.[201]

Statistics[edit]

COVID-19 pandemic medical cases in Texas by county
County[a] Confirmed
Cases[b][c]
Probable
Cases[b][d]
Total
Cases[b]
Deaths[e] Population[f] Total
Cases / 100k
254 / 254 5,483,442 1,155,572 6,639,014 85,641 29,001,602 22,891.9
Anderson 6,618 2,905 9,523 234 59,025 16,133.8
Andrews 3,431 359 3,790 71 19,279 19,658.7
Angelina 8,943 6,348 15,291 479 90,989 16,805.3
Aransas 3,169 912 4,081 81 23,710 17,212.1
Archer 1,858 263 2,121 28 9,228 22,984.4
Armstrong 338 179 517 9 2,001 25,837.1
Atascosa 10,744 2,721 13,465 231 50,898 26,454.9
Austin 4,415 1,263 5,678 73 32,067 17,706.7
Bailey 919 523 1,442 39 7,113 20,272.7
Bandera 2,545 1,036 3,581 75 23,129 15,482.7
Bastrop 16,199 5,460 21,659 232 89,564 24,182.7
Baylor 314 495 809 32 3,751 21,567.6
Bee 6,545 1,707 8,252 152 33,471 24,654.2
Bell 53,627 13,113 66,740 882 359,255 18,577.3
Bexar 466,153 85,704 551,857 6,049 1,997,417 27,628.5
Blanco 1,438 1,085 2,523 34 12,159 20,750.1
Borden 75 22 97 2 680 14,264.7
Bosque 2,849 1,202 4,051 70 19,062 21,251.7
Bowie 11,873 8,165 20,038 428 96,380 20,790.6
Brazoria 76,846 16,272 93,118 978 380,439 24,476.5
Brazos 54,481 5,638 60,119 405 230,789 26,049.3
Brewster 789 267 1,056 29 9,092 11,614.6
Briscoe 335 119 454 8 1,572 28,880.4
Brooks 1,153 456 1,609 51 7,115 22,614.2
Brown 6,145 5,087 11,232 228 38,993 28,805.2
Burleson 4,062 939 5,001 66 18,373 27,219.3
Burnet 8,907 1,887 10,794 166 48,716 22,157.0
Caldwell 11,981 2,156 14,137 175 43,199 32,725.3
Calhoun 3,604 2,081 5,685 48 22,028 25,808.1
Callahan 1,420 1,373 2,793 72 14,070 19,850.7
Cameron 78,919 21,572 100,491 2,014 426,210 23,577.8
Camp 1,768 1,064 2,832 74 12,914 21,929.7
Carson 1,069 450 1,519 34 5,951 25,525.1
Cass 4,522 2,671 7,193 194 30,451 23,621.6
Castro 1,791 487 2,278 47 7,380 30,867.2
Chambers 10,120 175 10,295 69 44,298 23,240.3
Cherokee 3,264 4,671 7,935 253 53,539 14,821.0
Childress 2,461 161 2,622 31 7,038 37,254.9
Clay 1,776 276 2,052 34 10,351 19,824.2
Cochran 642 236 878 23 2,904 30,234.2
Coke 335 497 832 19 3,390 24,542.8
Coleman 1,035 586 1,621 69 8,191 19,790.0
Collin 157,464 50,576 208,040 1,481 1,033,046 20,138.5
Collingsworth 493 208 701 16 2,853 24,570.6
Colorado 2,996 778 3,774 62 22,283 16,936.7
Comal 21,854 11,495 33,349 543 156,317 21,334.2
Comanche 2,440 853 3,293 78 13,878 23,728.2
Concho 551 523 1,074 11 2,716 39,543.4
Cooke 5,786 1,463 7,249 131 40,477 17,908.9
Coryell 14,859 2,309 17,168 210 75,137 22,848.9
Cottle 254 27 281 9 1,354 20,753.3
Crane 337 933 1,270 24 4,678 27,148.4
Crockett 143 841 984 19 3,461 28,431.1
Crosby 1,026 843 1,869 45 5,702 32,778.0
Culberson 470 39 509 14 2,211 23,021.3
Dallam 1,730 418 2,148 40 7,053 30,455.1
Dallas 486,641 81,378 568,019 6,673 2,647,576 21,454.3
Dawson 1,863 937 2,800 93 12,720 22,012.6
Deaf Smith 3,749 1,035 4,784 111 19,572 24,443.1
Delta 740 1,060 1,800 25 5,295 33,994.3
Denton 128,727 40,143 168,870 1,340 886,563 19,047.7
DeWitt 3,977 2,467 6,444 98 20,611 31,264.9
Dickens 205 240 445 16 2,119 21,000.5
Dimmit 4,786 956 5,742 51 9,709 59,141.0
Donley 452 687 1,139 26 3,228 35,285.0
Duval 2,501 827 3,328 69 10,907 30,512.5
Eastland 1,959 830 2,789 113 18,307 15,234.6
Ector 20,210 17,033 37,243 693 167,383 22,250.2
Edwards 313 152 465 11 1,959 23,736.6
El Paso 195,542 11,413 206,955 3,698 852,224 24,284.1
Ellis 38,026 10,591 48,617 575 188,464 25,796.4
Erath 5,958 2,695 8,653 123 43,042 20,103.6
Falls 3,160 594 3,754 63 17,401 21,573.5
Fannin 4,243 2,577 6,820 183 36,230 18,824.2
Fayette 3,146 1,609 4,755 104 26,328 18,060.6
Fisher 554 52 606 24 3,859 15,703.6
Floyd 1,131 813 1,944 48 5,535 35,122.0
Foard 160 39 199 11 1,139 17,471.5
Fort Bend 158,192 21,763 179,955 1,153 805,788 22,332.8
Franklin 1,488 677 2,165 42 10,791 20,063.0
Freestone 2,272 1,582 3,854 82 20,621 18,689.7
Frio 4,424 1,332 5,756 93 19,103 30,131.4
Gaines 1,567 457 2,024 83 21,170 9,560.7
Galveston 83,073 12,177 95,250 841 339,931 28,020.4
Garza 611 651 1,262 27 6,115 20,637.8
Gillespie 3,246 2,083 5,329 107 27,375 19,466.7
Glasscock 74 124 198 3 1,369 14,463.1
Goliad 792 405 1,197 32 8,007 14,949.4
Gonzales 3,328 1,386 4,714 97 20,769 22,697.3
Gray 4,139 2,026 6,165 124 21,930 28,112.2
Grayson 23,670 3,396 27,066 621 135,612 19,958.4
Gregg 12,366 10,726 23,092 671 126,116 18,310.1
Grimes 7,414 1,030 8,444 119 29,466 28,656.8
Guadalupe 26,164 11,690 37,854 397 166,961 22,672.4
Hale 6,198 337 6,535 244 33,165 19,704.5
Hall 862 226 1,088 23 3,017 36,062.3
Hamilton 1,689 270 1,959 32 8,641 22,671.0
Hansford 643 1,276 1,919 29 5,327 36,024.0
Hardeman 498 57 555 19 3,856 14,393.2
Hardin 5,622 6,393 12,015 248 59,178 20,303.2
Harris 970,575 38,899 1,009,474 10,831 4,698,655 21,484.3
Harrison 6,861 6,380 13,241 224 68,559 19,313.3
Hartley 1,034 320 1,354 3 5,861 23,101.9
Haskell 387 506 893 39 5,628 15,867.1
Hays 51,809 5,633 57,442 428 228,364 25,153.7
Hemphill 1,073 157 1,230 7 3,838 32,047.9
Henderson 12,205 3,152 15,357 422 82,989 18,504.9
Hidalgo 139,828 59,842 199,670 3,500 886,294 22,528.6
Hill 6,660 2,199 8,859 191 37,069 23,898.7
Hockley 6,334 1,305 7,639 161 22,862 33,413.5
Hood 8,585 4,748 13,333 272 60,984 21,863.1
Hopkins 4,659 2,542 7,201 176 37,312 19,299.4
Houston 2,204 1,935 4,139 107 23,381 17,702.4
Howard 3,676 3,032 6,708 182 36,294 18,482.4
Hudspeth 789 193 982 18 3,680 26,684.8
Hunt 11,301 4,426 15,727 359 97,842 16,073.9
Hutchinson 5,370 1,333 6,703 135 20,550 32,618.0
Irion 208 231 439 3 1,592 27,575.4
Jack 1,307 194 1,501 28 9,265 16,200.8
Jackson 2,615 627 3,242 59 14,561 22,265.0
Jasper 3,461 2,607 6,068 185 35,726 16,984.8
Jeff Davis 165 56 221 9 2,411 9,166.3
Jefferson 42,932 3,119 46,051 824 251,590 18,304.0
Jim Hogg 796 1,808 2,604 22 5,092 51,139.0
Jim Wells 8,594 2,572 11,166 205 40,204 27,773.4
Johnson 32,881 9,715 42,596 729 174,777 24,371.6
Jones 2,947 1,583 4,530 92 19,697 22,998.4
Karnes 4,744 872 5,616 68 15,508 36,213.6
Kaufman 27,870 7,255 35,125 533 135,410 25,939.7
Kendall 4,786 3,348 8,134 118 47,284 17,202.4
Kenedy 45 37 82 2 390 21,025.6
Kent 64 138 202 4 759 26,614.0
Kerr 4,419 5,154 9,573 181 52,829 18,120.7
Kimble 368 314 682 15 4,604 14,813.2
King 30 11 41 0 274 14,963.5
Kinney 643 93 736 10 3,575 20,587.4
Kleberg 4,879 2,289 7,168 145 32,135 22,305.9
Knox 286 205 491 24 3,683 13,331.5
La Salle 1,739 601 2,340 48 7,426 31,510.9
Lamar 3,976 5,599 9,575 254 50,440 18,983.0
Lamb 3,250 1,062 4,312 122 12,565 34,317.5
Lampasas 4,737 774 5,511 90 21,326 25,841.7
Lavaca 2,658 1,527 4,185 118 20,437 20,477.6
Lee 2,142 2,093 4,235 60 17,411 24,323.7
Leon 2,745 957 3,702 93 17,588 21,048.4
Liberty 13,661 4,270 17,931 400 91,098 19,683.2
Limestone 3,603 1,469 5,072 124 23,709 21,392.7
Lipscomb 554 164 718 16 3,208 22,381.5
Live Oak 1,616 522 2,138 41 12,164 17,576.5
Llano 2,645 1,226 3,871 97 21,784 17,769.9
Loving 42 128 170 1 96 177,083.3
Lubbock 64,846 28,477 93,323 1,313 308,880 30,213.4
Lynn 1,211 272 1,483 38 6,151 24,109.9
Madison 2,849 855 3,704 53 14,188 26,106.6
Marion 977 698 1,675 59 9,760 17,161.9
Martin 723 456 1,179 26 5,731 20,572.3
Mason 304 476 780 12 4,301 18,135.3
Matagorda 6,876 1,396 8,272 175 36,292 22,792.9
Maverick 19,339 1,423 20,762 459 57,888 35,865.8
McCulloch 647 638 1,285 46 8,323 15,439.1
McLennan 48,442 8,752 57,194 896 255,400 22,393.9
McMullen 134 34 168 9 749 22,429.9
Medina 7,294 2,871 10,165 196 53,794 18,896.2
Menard 218 293 511 12 2,128 24,013.2
Midland 25,238 13,949 39,187 495 176,814 22,162.8
Milam 2,771 2,144 4,915 101 25,185 19,515.6
Mills 1,193 278 1,471 36 4,899 30,026.5
Mitchell 1,735 126 1,861 47 8,531 21,814.6
Montague 4,026 623 4,649 125 19,695 23,605.0
Montgomery 108,913 29,265 138,178 1,279 604,391 22,862.4
Moore 3,725 1,848 5,573 110 21,046 26,480.1
Morris 1,651 858 2,509 72 12,428 20,188.3
Motley 124 160 284 13 1,205 23,568.5
Nacogdoches 9,004 3,200 12,204 256 65,027 18,767.6
Navarro 6,126 6,294 12,420 219 52,013 23,878.6
Newton 802 561 1,363 60 13,317 10,235.0
Nolan 2,806 249 3,055 99 14,256 21,429.6
Nueces 60,832 21,317 82,149 1,250 363,049 22,627.5
Ochiltree 2,060 356 2,416 48 10,219 23,642.2
Oldham 310 250 560 6 2,126 26,340.5
Orange 6,244 8,673 14,917 351 82,461 18,089.8
Palo Pinto 6,158 859 7,017 152 29,008 24,189.9
Panola 2,618 1,958 4,576 129 24,586 18,612.2
Parker 26,992 7,166 34,158 445 141,080 24,211.8
Parmer 1,453 891 2,344 52 9,501 24,671.1
Pecos 2,066 654 2,720 71 15,052 18,070.7
Polk 5,013 2,794 7,807 247 50,293 15,523.0
Potter 27,500 1,796 29,296 642 116,063 25,241.5
Presidio 691 274 965 36 6,535 14,766.6
Rains 1,014 817 1,831 59 12,416 14,747.1
Randall 25,387 1,847 27,234 487 139,034 19,588.0
Reagan 291 565 856 14 3,836 22,314.9
Real 563 244 807 24 3,499 23,063.7
Red River 1,058 1,232 2,290 64 11,649 19,658.3
Reeves 2,240 2,353 4,593 73 16,154 28,432.6
Refugio 1,146 613 1,759 33 6,871 25,600.3
Roberts 147 26 173 2 851 20,329.0
Robertson 3,633 893 4,526 76 17,708 25,559.1
Rockwall 19,875 6,511 26,386 263 103,363 25,527.5
Runnels 1,127 1,157 2,284 66 10,121 22,566.9
Rusk 6,433 4,313 10,746 231 54,526 19,708.0
Sabine 690 546 1,236 88 10,917 11,321.8
San Augustine 526 538 1,064 43 8,458 12,579.8
San Jacinto 4,005 1,466 5,471 100 29,506 18,542.0
San Patricio 8,715 2,307 11,022 338 66,688 16,527.7
San Saba 809 428 1,237 35 6,227 19,865.1
Schleicher 240 280 520 9 2,822 18,426.6
Scurry 4,569 392 4,961 102 16,697 29,711.9
Shackelford 213 460 673 12 3,382 19,899.5
Shelby 2,726 1,697 4,423 130 24,249 18,239.9
Sherman 366 131 497 16 3,077 16,152.1
Smith 28,934 16,391 45,325 958 231,516 19,577.5
Somervell 1,321 784 2,105 35 9,569 21,998.1
Starr 14,524 5,246 19,770 363 63,690 31,041.0
Stephens 992 836 1,828 45 9,556 19,129.3
Sterling 95 150 245 6 1,254 19,537.5
Stonewall 74 278 352 7 1,382 25,470.3
Sutton 382 460 842 12 3,664 22,980.3
Swisher 1,253 692 1,945 34 7,439 26,146.0
Tarrant 454,913 82,266 537,179 5,205 2,060,239 26,073.6
Taylor 13,181 17,262 30,443 714 139,044 21,894.5
Terrell 79 42 121 3 794 15,239.3
Terry 1,477 1,019 2,496 84 12,544 19,898.0
Throckmorton 87 181 268 8 1,448 18,508.3
Titus 5,720 2,850 8,570 127 33,690 25,437.8
Tom Green 8,586 21,958 30,544 460 117,613 25,969.9
Travis 202,074 18,222 220,296 1,704 1,273,554 17,297.7
Trinity 1,800 701 2,501 72 14,530 17,212.7
Tyler 1,674 1,704 3,378 85 22,735 14,858.1
Upshur 3,539 4,192 7,731 181 41,204 18,762.7
Upton 134 693 827 18 3,619 22,851.6
Uvalde 9,768 789 10,557 141 26,743 39,475.8
Val Verde 13,829 461 14,290 296 50,853 28,100.6
Van Zandt 6,731 3,624 10,355 278 56,376 18,367.7
Victoria 16,722 1,766 18,488 409 91,329 20,243.3
Walker 16,245 2,120 18,365 211 75,949 24,180.7
Waller 7,876 1,597 9,473 105 54,822 17,279.6
Ward 2,058 752 2,810 43 11,530 24,371.2
Washington 7,670 1,454 9,124 146 35,570 25,650.8
Webb 85,236 7,608 92,844 1,025 280,775 33,067.0
Wharton 7,012 2,030 9,042 208 41,224 21,933.8
Wheeler 922 245 1,167 23 5,178 22,537.7
Wichita 28,763 1,067 29,830 667 132,920 22,442.1
Wilbarger 2,791 652 3,443 86 12,465 27,621.3
Willacy 5,852 1,085 6,937 126 21,566 32,166.4
Williamson 108,248 22,357 130,605 864 589,216 22,165.9
Wilson 7,491 3,372 10,863 157 52,127 20,839.5
Winkler 1,491 346 1,837 34 7,990 22,991.2
Wise 14,092 2,788 16,880 265 69,609 24,249.7
Wood 5,008 2,979 7,987 281 45,084 17,715.8
Yoakum 831 270 1,101 41 8,829 12,470.3
Young 3,307 591 3,898 90 19,029 20,484.5
Zapata 2,387 1,280 3,667 52 14,196 25,831.2
Zavala 3,376 662 4,038 68 12,116 33,327.8
Updated March 23, 2022
Data is publicly reported by Texas Department of State Health Services[202][203]
  1. ^ County where individuals with a positive case reside. Location of diagnosis and treatment may vary.
  2. ^ a b c Reported confirmed and probable cases. Actual case numbers are probably higher.
  3. ^ Includes 68,199 cases from unknown counties.
  4. ^ Includes 6,447 cases from unknown counties.
  5. ^ Includes 23 deaths from unknown counties.
  6. ^ July 2019 population estimate from "2019_txpopest_county.csv". Texas Demographic Center. Retrieved November 9, 2020.


See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Texas Case Counts: COVID-19 Coronavirus Disease 2019". Texas Department of State Health Services. Archived from the original on July 1, 2020. Retrieved July 6, 2020 – via ArcGIS.
  2. ^ "ArcGIS Dashboards". txdshs.maps.arcgis.com.
  3. ^ "Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the U.S." Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Archived from the original on March 2, 2020. Retrieved September 28, 2020.
  4. ^ "ArcGIS Dashboards". Johns Hopkins University. Archived from the original on May 21, 2020. Retrieved September 28, 2020.
  5. ^ "Coronavirus (COVID-19) U.S. Deaths". RealClearPolitics. Retrieved September 28, 2020.
  6. ^ Stebbins, Samuel (May 30, 2021). "How Current COVID-19 Cases in Texas Compare to the Nation". MSN. Archived from the original on June 2, 2021. Retrieved June 1, 2021.
  7. ^ "Texas becomes first state to administer 1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine". Texas Tribune. January 14, 2021. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  8. ^ "COVID-19 Vaccinations in the United States". CDC COVID Data Tracker. February 10, 2021. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
  9. ^ a b Priest, Jessica (May 7, 2020). "Coronavirus in Texas: Death data suggest COVID-19 undercount possible". Austin American-Statesman. Archived from the original on June 7, 2020. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
  10. ^ Maciborski, Walt (July 9, 2020). "Former UT football player believes he had COVID-19 in January". CBS Austin. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  11. ^ Mulder, Brandon (May 7, 2020). "Exclusive: Bastrop County judge contracted, recovered from COVID-19, test shows". Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. Archived from the original on May 31, 2020. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  12. ^ Plohetski, Tony (May 16, 2020). "Coronavirus was here before we knew it, Austin officials conclude". Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. Archived from the original on June 7, 2020. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  13. ^ Feuer, Will (March 2, 2020). "San Antonio declares emergency after CDC released a woman infected with coronavirus: 'Totally unacceptable'". CNBC. Archived from the original on June 8, 2020. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
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External links[edit]