COVID-19 pandemic in Missouri

The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached the U.S. state of Missouri in March 2020. As of June 14, 2020, the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services has confirmed 15,810 cases and 879 deaths in the state.[1]

COVID-19 pandemic in Missouri
Map of the outbreak in Missouri by confirmed infections per 100,000 people (as of June 26)
  1,000+ confirmed infected
  500–1,000 confirmed infected
  100–500 confirmed infected
  20–100 confirmed infected
  0–20 confirmed infected
DiseaseCOVID-19
Virus strainSARS-CoV-2
LocationMissouri, U.S.
First outbreakMilan, Italy
Index caseSt. Louis County
Arrival dateMarch 6, 2020
Confirmed cases15,810
Hospitalized cases647 (current)
Ventilator cases65 (current)
Deaths
879
Government website
Missouri Department of Health & Senior Services

Timeline

COVID-19 cases in Missouri, United States  ()
     Deaths        Active cases

Mar Mar Apr Apr May May Jun Jun Last 15 days Last 15 days

Date
# of cases
# of deaths
2020-03-07
1(n.a.)
2020-03-10
1(=)
2020-03-12
2(+100%)
2020-03-13
4(+100%)
2020-03-14
5(+25%)
2020-03-16
8(+60%)
2020-03-17
15(+88%)
2020-03-18
24(+60%) 1(n.a.)
2020-03-19
28(+17%) 1(=)
2020-03-20
47(+68%) 1(=)
2020-03-21
73(+55%) 3(+200%)
2020-03-22
90(+23%) 3(=)
2020-03-23
183(+103%) 3(=)
2020-03-24
255(+39%) 5(+67%)
2020-03-25
356(+40%) 8(+60%)
2020-03-26
502(+41%) 8(=)
2020-03-27
670(+33%) 9(+12%)
2020-03-28
838(+25%) 10(+11%)
2020-03-29
903(+7.8%) 12(+20%)
2020-03-30
1,031(+14%) 13(+8.3%)
2020-03-31
1,327(+29%) 14(+7.7%)
2020-04-01
1,581(+19%) 18(+29%)
2020-04-02
1,834(+16%) 19(+5.6%)
2020-04-03
2,113(+15%) 19(=)
2020-04-04
2,291(+8.4%) 24(+26%)
2020-04-05
2,367(+3.3%) 34(+42%)
2020-04-06
2,722(+15%) 39(+15%)
2020-04-07
3,037(+12%) 53(+36%)
2020-04-08
3,327(+9.5%) 58(+9.4%)
2020-04-09
3,539(+6.4%) 77(+33%)
2020-04-10
3,799(+7.3%) 96(+25%)
2020-04-11
4,024(+5.9%) 109(+14%)
2020-04-12
4,160(+3.4%) 110(+0.92%)
2020-04-13
4,383(+5.4%) 114(+3.6%)
2020-04-14
4,686(+6.9%) 133(+17%)
2020-04-15
4,895(+4.5%) 147(+11%)
2020-04-16
5,111(+4.4%) 152(+3.4%)
2020-04-17
5,283(+3.4%) 165(+8.6%)
2020-04-18
5,517(+4.4%) 175(+6.1%)
2020-04-19
5,667(+2.7%) 176(+0.57%)
2020-04-20
5,807(+2.5%) 177(+0.57%)
2020-04-21
5,941(+2.3%) 189(+6.8%)
2020-04-22
6,137(+3.3%) 208(+10%)
2020-04-23
6,321(+3%) 218(+4.8%)
2020-04-24
6,625(+4.8%) 262(+20%)
2020-04-25
6,826(+3%) 273(+4.2%)
2020-04-26
6,997(+2.5%) 274(+0.37%)
2020-04-27
7,171(+2.5%) 288(+5.1%)
2020-04-28
7,303(+1.8%) 314(+9%)
2020-04-29
7,425(+1.7%) 318(+1.3%)
2020-04-30
7,562(+1.8%) 329(+3.5%)
2020-05-01
7,835(+3.6%) 337(+2.4%)
2020-05-02
8,154(+4.1%) 351(+4.2%)
2020-05-03
8,386(+2.8%) 352(+0.28%)
2020-05-04
8,754(+4.4%) 358(+1.7%)
2020-05-05
8,916(+1.9%) 377(+5.3%)
2020-05-06
9,102(+2.1%) 396(+5%)
2020-05-07
9,341(+2.6%) 417(+5.3%)
2020-05-08
9,489(+1.6%) 449(+7.7%)
2020-05-09
9,666(+1.9%) 472(+5.1%)
2020-05-10
9,844(+1.8%) 482(+2.1%)
2020-05-11
9,918(+0.75%) 488(+1.2%)
2020-05-12
10,006(+0.89%) 524(+7.4%)
2020-05-13
10,142(+1.4%) 542(+3.4%)
2020-05-14
10,317(+1.7%) 562(+3.7%)
2020-05-15
10,456(+1.3%) 576(+2.5%)
2020-05-16
10,675(+2.1%) 589(+2.3%)
2020-05-17
10,789(+1.1%) 594(+0.85%)
2020-05-18
10,945(+1.4%) 605(+1.9%)
2020-05-19
11,080(+1.2%) 616(+1.8%)
2020-05-20
11,232(+1.4%) 631(+2.4%)
2020-05-21
11,340(+0.96%) 661(+4.8%)
2020-05-22
11,558(+1.9%) 671(+1.5%)
2020-05-23
11,752(+1.7%) 676(+0.75%)
2020-05-24
11,988(+2%) 681(+0.74%)
2020-05-25
12,167(+1.5%) 685(+0.59%)
2020-05-26
12,291(+1%) 686(+0.15%)
2020-05-27
12,492(+1.6%) 696(+1.5%)
2020-05-28
12,673(+1.4%) 707(+1.6%)
2020-05-29
12,795(+0.96%) 738(+4.4%)
2020-05-30
12,962(+1.3%) 771(+4.5%)
2020-05-31
13,147(+1.4%) 772(+0.13%)
2020-06-01
13,327(+1.4%) 775(+0.39%)
2020-06-02
13,575(+1.9%) 783(+1%)
2020-06-03
13,767(+1.4%) 786(+0.38%)
2020-06-04
14,057(+2.1%) 789(+0.38%)
2020-06-05
14,253(+1.4%) 799(+1.3%)
2020-06-06
14,442(+1.3%) 799(=)
2020-06-07
14,553(+0.77%) 809(+1.3%)
2020-06-08
14,734(+1.2%) 819(+1.2%)
2020-06-09
14,913(+1.2%) 840(+2.6%)
2020-06-10
15,187(+1.8%) 848(+0.95%)
2020-06-11
15,390(+1.3%) 860(+1.4%)
2020-06-12
15,585(+1.3%) 872(+1.4%)
2020-06-13
15,810(+1.4%) 879(+0.8%)
2020-06-14
15,983(+1.1%) 879(=)
2020-06-15
16,189(+1.3%) 880(+0.11%)
2020-06-16
16,417(+1.4%) 882(+0.23%)
2020-06-17
16,625(+1.3%) 909(+3.1%)
2020-06-18
16,908(+1.7%) 946(+4.1%)
2020-06-19
17,201(+1.7%) 948(+0.21%)
2020-06-20
17,590(+2.3%) 955(+0.74%)
2020-06-21
18,003(+2.3%) 956(+0.1%)
2020-06-22
18,143(+0.78%) 961(+0.52%)
2020-06-23
18,577(+2.4%) 966(+0.52%)
2020-06-24
18,868(+1.6%) 975(+0.93%)
2020-06-25
19,421(+2.9%) 982(+0.72%)
2020-06-26
19,914(+2.5%) 990(+0.81%)
2020-06-27
20,261(+1.7%) 996(+0.61%)
Cases: The number of cases confirmed in Missouri.
Sources: Missouri DHSS.

On March 6, a woman from Saint Louis County tested positive for the virus.[2] A student of Indiana University who had been studying abroad in Milan, Italy, she had flown into O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois, on March 3 and traveled to St. Louis via Amtrak on March 4.[3][4] Two days later, on March 8, family members of the patient violated quarantine, leading Villa Duchesne and Oak Hill School to close.[3]

On March 12, the second case in the state was reported, at a clinic in Springfield in Greene County.[5] The person had recently traveled to Austria.[6]

On March 13 the second case in St. Louis County, and the third case in the state was also announced.

On March 14, Henry County officials confirmed their first case; Greene County confirmed its second case.[7][8]

On March 16, Greene County confirmed its third case.[9] The city of St. Louis announced its first case: a student at Saint Louis University.[10] Cass County reported its first case: a resident of Drexel.[11]

Missouri Governor Mike Parson announced on March 18 that a Boone County man in his 60s was the first coronavirus-related death in the state.[12]

On March 19, the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services announced four more cases of coronavirus in the state, increasing the total number of positive cases to 28 in the state.[13]

On March 24, agents with the FBI shot and killed an armed man just before he could detonate a car bomb outside a hospital in Kansas City. The man, identified as 36-year-old Timothy Wilson, was a suspected white supremacist who had been in touch with other far-right extremists and intended to take advantage of the additional stress placed on American society by the pandemic.[14] Wilson allegedly targeted the hospital because he believed it was treating COVID-19 patients.[15] The officer-involved shooting occurred days after the FBI's New York field office and the Department of Homeland Security issued alerts warning of the possibility of far-right extremists and others exploiting the pandemic to commit terrorist attacks.[16][17][18]

On April 1, St Louis County has its fifth confirmed death from COVID-19. The death came from a man who was around the age of 50 to 59 years old.[19]

On April 16, the state surpassed 5,000 positive COVID-19 cases and 150 deaths.[20]

On May 4, the state reported a record high number of 368 new COVID-19 cases. That same day salons were given permission by the governor to reopen. On May 23, it was reported that a stylist at one of the salons had tested positive after working eight days while symptomatic. On May 24, the local health department announced that a second hairstylist at the same salon had tested positive.[21] Anthony Fauci has said local outbreaks are "inevitable" as restrictions are eased. On June 12, the Springfield-Greene County Health Department announced that none of the 140 customers and six coworkers that interacted with the hair stylists were infected.[22]

On June 17, the University of Kansas Health System reported the state to have a higher death rate of the virus double that of Kansas.[23]

Government response

Governor Mike Parson declared a state of emergency on March 13.[24] The National Park Service closed the Gateway Arch and the associated museum beginning March 18 until further notice.[25]

By March 19, all 555 school districts in Missouri reported some form of district-wide school closures. Many of the school districts were initially closed until at least April 3.[26]

Both St. Louis City and St. Louis County issued a stay-at-home order effective Monday, March 23.[27] Various city and county ordinances were enacted in several areas of the state.[28]

At the end of March, Governor Parson announced no plans to issue a stay-at-home order. However, on April 3, Governor issued an official stay-at-home order that would be in effect for Missouri from April 6 until April 24, 2020. The order states Missouri residents should avoid leaving their homes unless necessary, giving authorization only to do so for essential activities, essential business, or essential travel with detailed guidelines.[29] On April 16, Governor Parson extended the stay-at-home order until May 3.[20]

On April 22, Attorney General Eric Schmitt filed a lawsuit in U.S. federal court against the Chinese government.[30] The lawsuit, considered the first of its kind, said, "Chinese authorities deceived the public, suppressed crucial information, arrested whistleblowers, denied human-to-human transmission in the face of mounting evidence, destroyed critical medical research, permitted millions of people to be exposed to the virus, and even hoarded personal protective equipment—thus causing a global pandemic that was unnecessary and preventable." Due to the Chinese government's sovereign immunity, it will be difficult for the lawsuit to succeed, according to legal experts.[31]

Statistics by county

County [lower-alpha 1] Cases [lower-alpha 2] Deaths Pop. Cases / 100k Ref.
113 of 115 17,201 948 6,498,864 264.7
Adair 85 0 25,607 331.9
Andrew 39 0 17,291 225.6
Atchison 3 0 5,685 52.8
Audrain 133 1 25,529 521
Barry 28 0 35,597 78.7
Barton 15 0 12,402 120.9
Bates 12 1 17,049 70.4
Benton 14 0 19,056 73.5
Bollinger 11 0 12,363 89
Boone 246 2 162,642 151.3
Buchanan 802 3 89,201 899.1
Butler 59 0 42,794 137.9
Caldwell 8 0 9,424 84.9
Callaway 42 1 44,332 94.7
Camden 45 1 44,002 102.3
Cape Girardeau 117 3 75,674 154.6
Carroll 11 0 9,295 118.3
Carter 6 1 6,265 95.8
Cass 112 8 99,478 112.6
Cedar 9 0 13,982 64.4
Chariton 6 0 7,831 76.6
Christian 31 0 77,422 40
Clark 1 0 7,139 14
Clay 334 3 221,939 150.5
Clinton 22 0 20,743 106.1
Cole 58 1 75,990 76.3
Cooper 12 0 17,601 68.2
Crawford 10 0 24,696 40.5
Dade 1 0 7,883 12.7
Dallas 9 0 16,777 53.6
Daviess 7 0 8,433 83
DeKalb 10 0 12,892 77.6
Dent 1 0 15,657 6.4
Douglas 3 0 13,684 21.9
Dunklin 66 3 31,953 206.6
Franklin 180 18 101,492 177.4
Gasconade 3 0 15,222 19.7
Gentry 54 9 6,738 801.4
Greene 214 8 275,174 77.8
Grundy 16 0 10,261 155.9
Harrison 9 0 8,957 100.5
Henry 17 3 22,272 76.3
Hickory 0 0 9,627 0
Holt 1 0 4,912 20.4
Howard 3 0 10,144 29.6
Howell 31 0 40,400 76.7
Iron 2 0 10,630 18.8
Jackson 976 22 674,158 144.8
Jasper 157 0 117,404 133.7
Jefferson 391 19 218,733 178.8
Johnson 90 0 52,595 171.1
Joplin 39 0 50,150 77.8 [lower-alpha 3]
Kansas City 1,872 30 459,787 407.1 [lower-alpha 4]
Knox 2 0 4,131 48.4
Laclede 12 0 35,571 33.7
Lafayette 86 2 33,381 257.6
Lawrence 11 0 38,634 28.5
Lewis 7 1 10,211 68.6
Lincoln 91 1 52,566 173.1
Linn 13 1 12,761 101.9
Livingston 6 0 15,195 39.5
Macon 7 0 15,566 45
Madison 3 0 12,226 24.5
Maries 2 0 9,176 21.8
Marion 10 0 28,781 34.7
McDonald 132 0 23,083 571.8
Mercer 5 0 3,785 132.1
Miller 8 0 24,748 32.3
Mississippi 77 0 14,358 536.3
Moniteau 49 1 15,607 314
Monroe 4 0 8,840 45.2
Montgomery 13 0 12,236 106.2
Morgan 12 0 20,565 58.4
New Madrid 34 2 18,956 179.4
Newton 123 2 58,114 211.7
Nodaway 17 0 23,370 72.7
Oregon 6 0 10,881 55.1
Osage 5 0 13,878 36
Ozark 0 0 9,723 0
Pemiscot 105 6 18,296 573.9
Perry 88 0 18,971 463.9
Pettis 95 1 42,201 225.1
Phelps 6 0 45,156 13.3
Pike 33 1 18,516 178.2
Platte 102 4 89,322 114.2
Polk 10 0 31,137 32.1
Pulaski 106 1 52,274 202.8
Putnam 2 0 4,979 40.2
Ralls 5 0 10,167 49.2
Randolph 12 0 25,414 47.2
Ray 25 0 23,494 106.4
Reynolds 2 0 6,696 29.9
Ripley 12 0 14,100 85.1
Saline 278 4 23,370 1,189.6
Schuyler 2 0 4,431 45.1
Scotland 8 1 4,843 165.2
Scott 155 10 39,191 395.5
Shannon 6 0 8,441 71.1
Shelby 2 0 6,373 31.4
St. Charles 943 69 360,485 261.6
St. Clair 2 0 9,805 20.4
St. Francois 50 2 65,359 76.5
St. Louis City 2,102 148 319,294 658.3 [lower-alpha 5]
St. Louis 5,520 543 998,954 552.6
Ste. Genevieve 14 1 18,145 77.2
Stoddard 127 7 29,968 423.8
Stone 10 0 32,202 31.1
Sullivan 93 0 6,714 1,385.2
Taney 30 2 51,675 58.1
Texas 1 0 26,008 3.8
Vernon 12 0 21,159 56.7
Warren 32 0 32,513 98.4
Washington 14 1 25,195 55.6
Wayne 0 0 13,521 0
Webster 20 0 36,202 55.2
Worth 4 0 2,171 184.2
Wright 14 0 18,815 74.4
Pending 1 0
Updated Jun 19, 2020
Data is publicly reported by Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services[32][33]
  1. County where individuals with a positive case diagnosed, not where they were reside. Location of original infection may vary.
  2. Reported cases includes presumptive and confirmed case. Actual case numbers are probably higher.
  3. Joplin spans across Jasper and Newton counties
  4. Kansas City spans across Jackson, Platte, Cass and Clay counties.
  5. Independent city and not within limits of a county.

NOTE: The total number of cases is greater than the sum of all cases currently attributed to specific counties. Per the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services: "Cases by county will be updated as information is verified and patients are notified. The breakdown may not match the total case count above."[34] Thus, discrepancies between the cases by county and total number should be expected.

See also

References

  1. "COVID-19 Outbreak | Health & Senior Services". health.mo.gov. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  2. KMBC 9 News Staff (2020-03-08). "Gov. Parson says first Missouri coronavirus case is young woman who studied abroad in Italy". KMBC. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  3. Iati, Marisa (March 10, 2020). "County says a father ignored a coronavirus quarantine directive. His lawyer says he was never told". Washington Post. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  4. "Missouri Woman With Coronavirus Flew Into O'Hare, Took Train From Chicago". NBC Chicago. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  5. "Parson: Missouri reports second presumptive positive coronavirus case". FOX2now.com. 2020-03-12. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  6. KY3. "Missouri Governor Parson declares State of Emergency; 2 more presumptive positive cases of COVID-19". www.ky3.com. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  7. "PRESUMPTIVE POSITIVE CASE OF COVID-19 REPORTED IN HENRY COUNTY". KMMO. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  8. "Second Case of Coronavirus Confirmed in Greene County". KTTS. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  9. Kull, Katie. "Third case of coronavirus confirmed in Greene County". Springfield News-Leader. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  10. "First case of COVID-19 in St. Louis City is SLU student, university says". KMOV.com. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  11. "Cass County records first case of coronavirus". FOX 4 Kansas City WDAF-TV | News, Weather, Sports. 2020-03-17. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  12. MARGARET STAFFORD, SUMMER BALLENTINE AND JIM SALTER. "Missouri sees 1st coronavirus death; local elections delayed". Associated Press. Retrieved 2020-03-20 via KMOV.com.
  13. Team, ABC 17 News (2020-03-19). "THURSDAY UPDATES: At least 36 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Missouri". ABC17NEWS. Retrieved 2020-03-20.
  14. Levine, Mike. "FBI learned of coronavirus-inspired bomb plotter through radicalized US Army soldier". ABC News. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  15. Perez, Evan; Shortell, David. "Man under investigation for plotting an attack at a hospital believed to be treating Covid-19 patients was killed during an FBI investigation". CNN. Retrieved 2020-04-01.
  16. Margolin, Josh. "White supremacists encouraging their members to spread coronavirus to cops, Jews, FBI says". ABC News. Archived from the original on 2020-03-24. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  17. Mallin, Alexander; Margolin, Josh. "Homeland Security warns terrorists may exploit COVID-19 pandemic". ABC News. Archived from the original on 2020-03-24. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  18. Mallin, Alexander. "DOJ weighs terror charges for those who make threats to spread coronavirus". ABC News. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  19. "Coronavirus updates: 5th death in STL County, police will not tolerate non-compliance of SAH order". KSDK. Retrieved 2020-04-05.
  20. "Gov. Parson makes announcement on Missouri's stay-at-home order". www.ky3.com. Retrieved Apr 21, 2020.
  21. Karimi, Faith (May 24, 2020). "Second hairstylist potentially exposed 56 clients to Covid-19, officials say - CNN". CNN. Archived from the original on June 5, 2020.
  22. Lanese, Nicoletta (12 June 2020). "Hairstylists with COVID-19 didn't infect any of their 140 clients. Face masks may be why. Live Science". Live Science. Archived from the original on 15 June 2020. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  23. Moore, Kaite (June 17, 2020). "Missouri's COVID-19 death rate is more than double Kansas' and doctors aren't sure why". The Kansas City Star.
  24. "Governor Parson Signs Executive Order 20-02 Declaring a State of Emergency in Missouri | Governor Michael L. Parson". governor.mo.gov. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  25. "Gateway Arch National Park to Temporarily Close Starting March 18". The Gateway Arch. 2020-03-18. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  26. Strange, Lainie (2020-03-17). "Coronavirus (COVID-19) Information". Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Retrieved 2020-03-20.
  27. "St. Louis City, County Issues stay at home order | KMOX-AM". Kmox.radio.com. 2020-03-21. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  28. "Mike Parson doesn't plan to issue stay-at-home order for Missouri, calls it 'individual responsibilities'". KMOV.com. Retrieved Apr 21, 2020.
  29. "Gov. Parson issues statewide stay-at-home order for Missouri". health.mo.gov. 2020-04-03. Retrieved 2020-04-16.
  30. "Missouri sues China for 'not doing enough' to stop coronavirus spread". The Guardian. Associated Press. 2020-04-22. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-04-23.
  31. Maxouris, Christina; Sutton, Joe (April 21, 2020). "Missouri is suing China over coronavirus impacts saying the country did 'little to stop the spread of the disease'". CNN. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  32. "COVID-19 Testing Reported to Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services". Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  33. "COVID-19 Outbreak". Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  34. "COVID-19 Outbreak | Health & Senior Services". Health.mo.gov. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
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