COLUMBUS, Ohio -- The 5,512 confirmed coronavirus cases to date in Ohio are spread across 84 of the state’s 88 counties, with 213 deaths, the Ohio Department of Health reported Thursday.

This map is updated daily: see this link for the latest Ohio coronavirus maps.

The total was up from 5,148 cases in 83 counties from Wednesday, while the number of deaths increased from 193. Thursday’s report included the first case for Noble County in Southeast Ohio.

Details for each county including hospitalizations, deaths and per capita rates are in a chart at the bottom of this story.

The number of confirmed cases increased by 7% from Wednesday, continuing a recent trend for increases that have been much lower than in March when the daily increases were often above 20% and sometimes above 40%.

The running total of confirmed coronavirus cases in Ohio increased by 7% from Wednesday to Thursday. The Ohio Department of Health does not have data for existing cases.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

The state has not released information on the number of current cases, excluding those who no longer have coronavirus, saying that information is not available.

Yet health officials have said coronavirus often runs its course in 14 days, though severe cases can last longer. Based on state estimates of the onset of symptoms, large numbers of the cases reported to date may no longer exist.

These are the estimated onset dates for each of Ohio's 5,148 confirmed coronavirus cases. Confirmation often is days after the first symptoms, leading to smaller numbers for the most recent days.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

Among the 5,512 cases confirmed by the state, 213 have have died, 2,678 others had an onset within the last two weeks and 2,621 earlier.

Among the 5,512 cases confirmed by the state, 213 have have died, 2,678 others had an onset within the last two weeks and 2,621 earlier. Health officials have said people coronavirus often last fewer than 14 days.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

Acton said many more people than confirmed likely have coronavirus in Ohio, but testing has been limited. There have been 55,985 tests to date, with tests concentrated on the sickest and health care workers. Just under 10% of the tests have been positive, according to the state records.

The age range for confirmed cases to date is from under 1 to 101, with a median age of 54.

Nearly half of all deaths have been to people age 80 and over (102 of the 213, or 47.9%). Another 56 people (26.3%) were in their 70s. Only two deaths have been reported for people under the age of 50.

The 213 deaths are spread across 40 counties, including highs of 28 in Mahoning County, 23 in Cuyahoga, 16 in Lucas and 14 in Miami.

Just under half of all known coronavirus-related deaths in Ohio were people at least 80 years old.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

The state reported there have been 1,612 hospitalizations to date (including those discharged) and 497 in intensive care units. These totals were 1,495 and 472 on Wednesday, 1,354 and 417 on Tuesday, 1,214 and 371 on Monday, and 1,104 and 346 on Sunday.

There have been 54.3 cases per 100,000 people in Ohio, but some counties have been harder hit than others.

In Mahoning County, which includes Youngstown, the rate is three times as high at 146.1 cases per 100,000. The next highest rates are in Miami County (102.8 per 100,000), Lucas (94.1), Cuyahoga (82.1) and Columbiana (79.5).

Four of the seven counties with the highest per capita rates of coronavirus cases are in Northeast Ohio.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

The counties with the most cases are Ohio’s largest, Cuyahoga (Cleveland) with 1,104, Franklin (Columbus) with 802 and Hamilton (Cincinnati) with 473.

The four counties with no reported cases - Harrison, Hocking, Putnam and Vinton - are among Ohio’s least populated. Their populations range from 13,085 to 33,861.

The statewide total of confirmed cases was 5,148 on Wednesday, 4,782 on Tuesday, 4,450 on Monday, 4,043 on Sunday, 3,739 on Saturday, 3,312 on Friday and 2,902 last Thursday.

Ohio's increase in confirmed coronavirus cases from three on March 9 to 5,512 on Thursday.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

The first three cases were confirmed on March 9. The total topped 100 on March 19, exceeded 1,000 on March 27, topped 2,000 on Tuesday and 3,000 on Friday. Sunday marked the first time over 4,000, then the number reached 5,000 for the first time on Wednesday.

Some numbers may change from day to day. As the state works to clean data, it sometimes has reduced the number of cases in individual counties from one day to the next.

The chart below shows what the Ohio Department of Health reported on Sunday. Cleveland.com calculated the cases per 100,000 rates based on 2019 census population estimates.

Rich Exner, data analysis editor for cleveland.com, writes about numbers on a variety of topics. Follow on Twitter @RichExner. See other data-related stories at cleveland.com/datacentral.

County Cases Hosp. Death Case

per

100,000 Adams 3 0 0 10.8 Allen 23 17 1 22.5 Ashland 4 1 0 7.5 Ashtabula 19 6 0 19.5 Athens 3 1 1 4.6 Auglaize 8 3 1 17.5 Belmont 36 6 1 53.7 Brown 4 1 1 9.2 Butler 108 41 2 28.2 Carroll 9 5 0 33.4 Champaign 5 2 0 12.9 Clark 14 4 0 10.4 Clermont 33 5 1 16.0 Clinton 12 3 0 28.6 Columbiana 81 52 6 79.5 Coshocton 12 2 0 32.8 Crawford 12 0 0 28.9 Cuyahoga 1,014 283 23 82.1 Darke 40 3 7 78.3 Defiance 10 5 0 26.3 Delaware 84 14 2 40.2 Erie 10 8 1 13.5 Fairfield 68 15 0 43.2 Fayette 5 0 0 17.5 Franklin 802 152 14 60.9 Fulton 5 2 0 11.9 Gallia 4 3 1 13.4 Geauga 47 13 1 50.2 Greene 21 7 1 12.4 Guernsey 4 0 0 10.3 Hamilton 473 89 14 57.9 Hancock 16 5 0 21.1 Hardin 3 1 0 9.6 Harrison 0 0 0 0.0 Henry 1 1 0 3.7 Highland 6 2 0 13.9 Hocking 0 0 0 0.0 Holmes 3 1 0 6.8 Huron 10 4 1 17.2 Jackson 2 1 0 6.2 Jefferson 19 7 0 29.1 Knox 8 3 1 12.8 Lake 106 32 5 46.1 Lawrence 15 2 0 25.2 Licking 78 16 3 44.1 Logan 5 1 0 10.9 Lorain 140 43 5 45.2 Lucas 403 144 16 94.1 Madison 21 7 2 46.9 Mahoning 334 149 28 146.1 Marion 40 7 0 61.5 Medina 98 31 5 54.5 Meigs 1 0 0 4.4 Mercer 12 3 1 29.1 Miami 110 42 14 102.8 Monroe 2 2 0 14.6 Montgomery 156 50 4 29.3 Morgan 2 0 0 13.8 Morrow 6 2 0 17.0 Muskingum 8 2 0 9.3 Noble 1 0 0 6.9 Ottawa 8 4 0 19.7 Paulding 2 1 0 10.7 Perry 6 2 0 16.6 Pickaway 39 0 0 66.7 Pike 1 0 0 3.6 Portage 116 32 14 71.4 Preble 9 4 1 22.0 Putnam 0 0 0 0.0 Richland 27 14 1 22.3 Ross 10 5 0 13.0 Sandusky 7 5 1 12.0 Scioto 2 0 0 2.7 Seneca 7 2 1 12.7 Shelby 21 8 0 43.2 Stark 120 28 8 32.4 Summit 221 85 12 40.8 Trumbull 132 65 8 66.7 Tuscarawas 26 6 0 28.3 Union 9 0 0 15.3 Van Wert 2 1 0 7.1 Vinton 0 0 0 0.0 Warren 53 9 0 22.6 Washington 34 3 0 56.8 Wayne 30 12 1 25.9 Williams 1 1 0 2.7 Wood 42 22 2 32.1 Wyandot 8 2 1 36.7 Statewide 5,512 1,612 213 54.3

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