This repository contains data — and pointers to data — related to the 2015–16 Zika virus outbreak. Please feel free to suggest additions and/or modifications.
This repository also contains archived PDFs and data extracted from the resources below.
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The Pan American Health Organization / World Health Organization is publishing weekly counts of suspected and confirmed cases, by country and territory, as reported by each country. The data portal includes a few important notes:
- "The suspected cases in Brazil are unofficial (media monitoring)"
- "Data is shared in an effort to transparently disseminate available information reported by Member States. Any subsequent interpretation and analysis of this data should consider differences in surveillance systems and reporting requirements."
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The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control is tracking countries and territories with local Zika transmission and classifying them into several categories.
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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is maintaining a list of "Countries and territories with active Zika virus transmission." The Pan American Health Organization is maintaining a similiar list.
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HealthMap.org is mapping news and social-media alerts about Zika.
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Wikipedia's page on the outbreak includes a referenced table of confirmed case counts since April 2015, by country.
Per the WHO, "Zika virus is transmitted to people through the bite of an infected mosquito from the Aedes genus, mainly Aedes aegypti in tropical regions. This is the same mosquito that transmits dengue, chikungunya and yellow fever."
- The global compendium of Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus occurrence. Data, as CSV files, available here. Published 2015-07-07 in Nature Scientific Data.
- "A global geographic database of known occurrences of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus between 1960 and 2014 [...] derived from peer-reviewed literature and unpublished studies including national entomological surveys and expert networks. [...] This is the first comprehensive global database of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus occurrence, consisting of 19,930 and 22,137 geo-positioned occurrence records respectively."
- Brazil's health ministry is publishing reports on Zika and microcephaly.
- Colombia's national institute of health is publishing weekly Zika-related reports.
- The Dominican Republic's Ministry of Public Health is publishing Zika data in its weekly epidemiological bulletins.
- El Salvador's Ministry of Health is publishing Zika data in its weekly bulletins. (Click on "Boletines Epidemiológicos 2016..." in the middle of the page.)
- Guatemala's Ministry of Health is publishing Zika data on its website. (See "Salas situacionales" at the bottom of the page.)
- Haiti's Ministry of Public Health has begun publishing occasional reports on Zika.
- Mexico's Ministry of Health publishes weekly epidemiological bulletins, which contain data on Zika cases.
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The CDC is keeping a list of "laboratory-confirmed Zika virus disease cases reported to ArboNET by [U.S.] state or territory".
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Puerto Rico's Department of Health is publishing weekly reports on suspected and confirmed cases of Zika (and other arboviruses).
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California's Department of Public Health is publishing a weekly PDF of "Travel-Associated Cases of Zika Virus in California", updated every Friday.
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The U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Health is publishing weekly Zika surveillance reports.
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A team of public health researchers are standardizing official Zika data from several countries.
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Scientific American mapping the known U.S. cases and the locations where the virus in those cases was contracted.
Special thanks to Torsten Wurm, @benparkergit, @pushthings4ward, Matt Osborn, Daniel Chen, Daina Bouquin, @cdcepi, and @derektlo.
Please file an issue or email [email protected].
For more open-source data, methodologies, analyses, guides, and tools from BuzzFeed News, see BuzzFeedNews/everything.