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In Germany there are now more than 5.000 people died with positive results, and there is also a new record among those infected. An overview of current figures.
The corona virus continues to spread in Germany. How this happens and how the number of infected people in the federal states is distributed can be seen in the video above or in the infographic below. Nationwide there are 148,453 confirmed infections (Starting April 22 at 6:45 a.m.), as the Johns Hopkins University figures show. 5,086 people have died. That’s 220 more than the day before. 95,200 people are now considered to have recovered.
The following map shows the absolute number of cases. Go to a county to see more information.
Since this is a dynamic situation, the numbers may differ from those in other places.
By Tuesday (April 22, 6:45 p.m.), according to Johns Hopkins University, they were worldwide 2,564,190 infections registered 177,445 people have died.
The following table shows the number of days on which crown cases in Germany double compared to other countries. Therefore, a higher value is better because it indicates a slower spread.
The following map shows which districts are the most affected in relation to their population. Here the absolute number of cases in large cities is put into perspective and focused on more rural regions:
Methodology
t-online.de retrieves the German world and federal case numbers from Johns Hopkins University.
Because the university does not publish any numbers on counties and federal states, these come from the Risklayer company. This in turn gathers the data in the so-called crowdsourcing process. This means that volunteers request the information from the regional authorities and enter it in a common document, where others verify and verify it repeatedly. The respective websites of the counties and other official agencies serve as the primary source.
Local authorities often report new cases faster than state or federal institutions and update their information at irregular intervals. The total number at the state and federal level in the data presented here may differ from the Robert Koch Institute figures or due to delayed reporting. Johns Hopkins University come.
In order to reproduce new developments at the district level in real time, we update our infographic every hour. This means that as soon as Risklayer completes your data, you will see it with us. (Hint: You may need to zoom in on the map to see cities.)
However, these data cannot reflect the actual outbreak. Among other things, this is due to factors such as the incubation period, the number of tests performed, and the respective diagnostic and reporting procedures in the regions. Experts assume a large number of unreported cases among those infected and those who have already recovered.