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  1. Good to have done mass testing on daily basis. Somehow no choice here I guess. India is the second largest country in the whole world. So no matter how many tests is being done, the number of tests overall will still be considered as little as compared to other smaller countries. That is why people say it is easier to manage if the country is small.
  2. The full data of tests conducted. Countries under safe category with mass testing done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 1 Faeroe Islands 8,986 183,981 48,842 2 Iceland 57,628 169,000 340,994 3 Gibraltar 5,615 166,657 33,692 4 UAE 1,600,923 162,092 9,876,618 5 Bahrain 255,633 150,906 1,693,992 6 Malta 54,866 124,296 441,413 7 Falkland Islands 426 122,873 3,467 8 Cayman Islands 7,576 115,430 65,633 9 San Marino 3,700 109,071 33,923 10 Luxembourg 64,018 102,465 624,780 11 Lithuania 253,004 92,806 2,726,154 12 Bermuda 5,719 91,793 62,303 13 Denmark 490,782 84,765 5,789,943 14 Mauritius 95,666 75,237 1,271,536 15 Cyprus 90,718 75,199 1,206,368 16 Portugal 674,000 66,079 10,199,902 17 Spain 3,037,840 64,977 46,752,802 18 Belgium 739,146 63,807 11,584,014 19 Israel 524,584 60,718 8,639,658 20 Kuwait 256,314 60,123 4,263,192 21 Ireland 295,626 59,947 4,931,451 22 Qatar 170,437 59,276 2,875,313 23 Estonia 73,731 55,586 1,326,438 24 Russia 7,840,880 53,731 145,927,633 25 Italy 3,171,719 52,450 60,471,440 26 New Zealand 244,838 50,819 4,817,799 27 Singapore 294,414 50,369 5,845,139 28 Isle of Man 4,262 50,151 84,983 29 Latvia 94,621 50,108 1,888,351 30 Andorra 3,750 48,543 77,251 31 Australia 1,137,558 44,670 25,465,832 32 UK 2,962,227 43,661 67,846,185 33 Germany 3,595,059 42,924 83,754,315 34 USA 14,173,807 42,849 330,785,250 35 Austria 385,637 42,845 9,000,647 36 Brunei 18,010 41,213 437,001 37 Norway 223,045 41,179 5,416,449 38 Switzerland 355,393 41,098 8,647,484 39 Belarus 387,673 41,025 9,449,661 40 Canada 1,375,126 36,471 37,704,575 41 Slovenia 73,319 35,268 2,078,907 42 Czechia 372,341 34,776 10,706,798 43 Kazakhstan 591,502 31,545 18,750,814 44 Greenland 1,767 31,132 56,759 45 Channel Islands 5,342 30,758 173,681 46 Finland 160,177 28,914 5,539,776 47 Slovakia 151,778 27,801 5,459,353 48 Grenada 3,007 26,737 112,465 49 Azerbaijan 245,609 24,249 10,128,787 50 Liechtenstein 900 23,612 38,116 51 Serbia 196,881 22,524 8,741,130 52 Hong Kong 168,291 22,468 7,490,095 53 Maldives 11,775 21,829 539,417 54 Peru 715,423 21,733 32,918,409 55 Venezuela 616,562 21,676 28,444,595 56 Chile 409,669 21,451 19,097,583 57 France 1,384,633 21,218 65,257,613 58 Sweden 209,900 20,798 10,092,199 59 Djibouti 20,056 20,334 986,323 60 Turkey 1,696,355 20,138 84,235,031 61 Réunion 17,200 19,227 894,592 62 Aruba 2,048 19,191 106,716 63 New Caledonia 5,454 19,124 285,185 64 Mayotte 5,200 19,117 272,012 65 Bhutan 14,527 18,851 770,633 66 Saudi Arabia 636,178 18,307 34,750,295 67 Poland 674,861 17,829 37,851,101 68 Netherlands 302,395 17,652 17,130,699 69 Romania 332,487 17,271 19,251,223 70 Bosnia and Herzegovina 55,624 16,943 3,282,976 71 Montenegro 10,167 16,188 628,057 72 Armenia 45,822 15,467 2,962,634 73 S. Korea 788,684 15,385 51,264,360 74 Hungary 147,511 15,266 9,662,990 75 Barbados 4,322 15,042 287,336 76 Jordan 152,615 14,975 10,191,568 77 Malaysia 481,411 14,896 32,317,999 78 Kyrgyzstan 94,441 14,504 6,511,518 79 Oman 72,000 14,143 5,090,680 80 Croatia 57,021 13,881 4,107,943 81 Uzbekistan 460,000 13,767 33,412,612 82 Caribbean Netherlands 357 13,629 26,195 83 Greece 139,445 13,372 10,428,469 84 French Polynesia 3,686 13,130 280,726 85 Panama 52,641 12,223 4,306,796 Countries under safe category with sufficient test done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total Population 86 North Macedonia 22,767 10,928 2,083,383 87 Uruguay 35,630 10,261 3,472,397 88 Georgia 40,711 10,203 3,989,993 89 Bulgaria 70,755 10,175 6,953,938 90 El Salvador 65,226 10,062 6,482,554 91 Moldova 40,565 10,053 4,034,973 92 Sint Maarten 425 9,925 42,820 93 Lebanon 65,363 9,572 6,828,703 94 Palestine 44,876 8,822 5,087,001 95 Iran 731,213 8,719 83,868,516 96 South Africa 506,861 8,559 59,222,219 97 Cuba 87,288 7,706 11,327,367 98 Saint Kitts and Nevis 391 7,356 53,157 99 Montserrat 36 7,212 4,992 100 Guadeloupe 2,866 7,163 400,117 Countries who should conduct more tests No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 101 Botswana 14,855 6,332 2,345,938 102 Dominica 433 6,017 71,966 103 Ghana 184,343 5,948 30,994,975 104 Ukraine 257,890 5,893 43,761,557 105 Ecuador 100,248 5,692 17,611,696 106 Dominican Republic 59,976 5,535 10,835,483 107 British Virgin Islands 167 5,528 30,208 108 Thailand 328,073 4,701 69,780,672 109 Bahamas 1,826 4,648 392,816 110 Albania 12,555 4,362 2,878,137 111 Saint Lucia 786 4,283 183,534 112 Colombia 214,536 4,221 50,820,749 113 Costa Rica 21,299 4,185 5,088,826 114 Rwanda 53,317 4,129 12,912,915 Countries who have not done enough test thus endangering the citizen lives No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 115 Nepal 110,583 3,803 29,074,659 116 Iraq 149,701 3,732 40,113,204 117 Tunisia 43,723 3,704 11,804,462 118 Mongolia 11,750 3,591 3,272,084 119 Eswatini 4,160 3,590 1,158,790 120 Gabon 7,966 3,589 2,219,341 121 Brazil 735,224 3,462 212,389,176 122 Belize 1,363 3,435 396,771 123 Jamaica 9,021 3,048 2,959,730 124 Paraguay 21,542 3,025 7,122,422 125 Curaçao 485 2,957 164,018 126 Taiwan 70,100 2,944 23,812,039 127 Morocco 104,915 2,846 36,860,148 128 Vietnam 275,000 2,828 97,239,013 129 Turks and Caicos 109 2,820 38,656 130 Argentina 112,370 2,489 45,148,586 131 Philippines 259,172 2,369 109,411,860 132 CAR 10,837 2,248 4,819,836 133 Sri Lanka 47,521 2,220 21,403,273 134 Benin 26,431 2,187 12,084,074 135 Japan 258,277 2,041 126,518,009 136 Trinidad and Tobago 2,785 1,991 1,398,987 137 Pakistan 429,600 1,949 220,380,264 138 India 2,615,920 1,898 1,378,455,853 139 Zimbabwe 28,019 1,888 14,837,674 140 Antigua and Barbuda 183 1,870 97,837 141 Togo 14,196 1,720 8,255,121 142 Uganda 77,456 1,700 45,558,511 143 Guyana 1,295 1,647 786,129 144 Cabo Verde 892 1,606 555,294 145 St. Vincent Grenadines 175 1,578 110,901 146 Senegal 24,599 1,474 16,689,519 147 Fiji 1,300 1,451 895,713 148 Mexico 185,755 1,442 128,777,650 149 Egypt 135,000 1,322 102,104,567 150 Bangladesh 214,114 1,302 164,502,000 151 Bolivia 14,803 1,270 11,654,518 152 Guatemala 20,820 1,165 17,876,171 153 Honduras 11,315 1,145 9,886,106 154 Zambia 19,014 1,038 18,319,980 155 Namibia 2,586 1,020 2,535,445 Countries who have done too little tests thus many cases went undetected No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 156 Cambodia 15,572 933 16,692,053 157 Kenya 49,405 921 53,628,156 158 Sao Tome and Principe 175 800 218,675 159 Guinea 10,304 787 13,088,713 160 Indonesia 211,883 776 273,192,339 161 Guinea-Bissau 1,500 764 1,962,338 162 Ivory Coast 19,174 729 26,298,323 163 Suriname 404 689 586,035 164 Afghanistan 26,707 688 38,822,151 165 Laos 4,743 653 7,263,242 166 Gambia 1,476 613 2,408,228 167 Equatorial Guinea 854 611 1,397,127 168 Ethiopia 65,760 574 114,615,025 169 Timor-Leste 738 561 1,315,452 170 Mauritania 2,583 557 4,634,593 171 Libya 3,633 530 6,860,437 172 South Sudan 3,356 300 11,178,612 173 Myanmar 15,838 291 54,368,782 174 Papua New Guinea 2,402 269 8,926,835 175 Niger 5,909 245 24,093,552 176 Mozambique 6,769 217 31,146,622 177 Madagascar 5,670 205 27,603,501 178 Haiti 2,270 199 11,386,485 179 Angola 6,136 187 32,737,396 180 Nigeria 38,231 186 205,514,164 181 Mali 3,483 173 20,178,087 182 Malawi 1,803 95 19,069,143 183 Burundi 284 24 11,846,415 184 Sudan 281 6 43,724,769 185 Yemen 120 4 29,746,579
  3. Latest data as of 20th May, 2020. Top best recovery rate (These countries have recorded more than 70% recovery rate) Data counted only for countries with more than 1000 cases. No Country Total Cases New Cases Total Deaths New Deaths Total Recovered Active Cases Percentage recovered from total cases 1. Iceland 1,803 +1 10 +0 1,789 4 99.22 % (excellent) 2. Hong Kong 1,056 +0 4 +0 1,026 26 97.16 % (excellent) 3. New Zealand 1,503 +0 21 +0 1,447 35 96.27 % (excellent) 4. Thailand 3,034 +1 56 +0 2,888 90 95.19 % (excellent) 5. China 82,965 +5 4,634 +0 78,244 87 94.31 % (excellent) 6. Luxembourg 3,958 +0 109 +0 3,718 131 93.94 % (excellent) 7. Australia 7,079 +11 100 + 6,444 535 91.03 % (excellent) 8. Austria 16,353 +32 633 +1 14,882 838 91.00 % (excellent) 9. South Korea 11,110 +32 263 +0 10,066 781 90.60 % (excellent) 10. Switzerland 30,658 +40 1,892 +1 27,700 1,066 90.35 % (excellent) 11. Croatia 2,234 +2 96 +0 1,978 160 88.54 % (good) 12. Germany 178,170 +343 8,213 +20 156,900 13,057 88.06 % (good) 13. Denmark 11,117 +73 554 +3 9,536 1,027 85.78 % (good) 14. Slovakia 1,496 +1 28 +0 1,231 237 82.29 % (good) 15. Malaysia 7,009 +31 114 +0 5,706 1,189 81.41 % (good) 16. Uzbekistan 2,927 +72 13 +0 2,369 545 80.94 % (good) 17. Ireland 24,251 +0 1,561 +0 19,470 3,220 80.29 % (good) 18. Iran 124,949 +2,346 7,183 +64 98,808 20,958 79.08 % (good)
  4. The full data of tests conducted. Countries under safe category with mass testing done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 1 Faeroe Islands 8,931 182,855 48,842 2 Iceland 57,187 167,710 340,988 3 UAE 1,600,923 162,098 9,876,291 4 Gibraltar 5,410 160,572 33,692 5 Bahrain 249,411 147,247 1,693,829 6 Falkland Islands 426 122,873 3,467 7 Malta 53,196 120,514 441,410 8 Cayman Islands 7,082 107,906 65,631 9 San Marino 3,610 106,417 33,923 10 Luxembourg 63,011 100,858 624,752 11 Bermuda 5,705 91,569 62,303 12 Lithuania 245,580 90,080 2,726,257 13 Denmark 490,782 84,765 5,789,887 14 Cyprus 90,718 75,201 1,206,344 15 Mauritius 92,764 72,955 1,271,531 16 Spain 3,037,840 64,977 46,752,753 17 Portugal 662,375 64,939 10,199,983 18 Belgium 720,228 62,175 11,583,877 19 Ireland 295,626 59,949 4,931,300 20 Israel 512,452 59,316 8,639,287 21 Kuwait 252,696 59,276 4,263,020 22 Qatar 166,182 57,799 2,875,180 23 Estonia 72,464 54,631 1,326,435 24 Russia 7,500,000 51,395 145,927,463 25 Italy 3,104,524 51,338 60,471,682 26 Isle of Man 4,234 49,822 84,982 27 New Zealand 238,725 49,552 4,817,692 28 Latvia 92,751 49,116 1,888,407 29 Andorra 3,750 48,543 77,251 30 Australia 1,108,311 43,523 25,465,024 31 Austria 379,592 42,175 9,000,506 32 Singapore 246,254 42,131 5,845,014 33 UK 2,772,552 40,866 67,845,213 34 Norway 219,984 40,615 5,416,333 35 Brunei 17,718 40,546 436,990 36 Switzerland 350,099 40,486 8,647,311 37 Belarus 375,076 39,692 9,449,669 38 USA 12,645,473 38,229 330,779,957 39 Germany 3,147,771 37,584 83,753,585 40 Canada 1,339,971 35,540 37,703,672 41 Czechia 372,341 34,776 10,706,744 42 Slovenia 70,970 34,138 2,078,906 43 Greenland 1,767 31,132 56,759 44 Channel Islands 5,342 30,758 173,676 45 Kazakhstan 571,547 30,482 18,750,200 46 Finland 152,300 27,492 5,539,752 47 Slovakia 148,845 27,264 5,459,346 48 Azerbaijan 240,220 23,717 10,128,537 49 Liechtenstein 900 23,612 38,116 50 Hong Kong 168,291 22,469 7,489,929 51 Maldives 11,775 21,830 539,391 52 Serbia 190,683 21,814 8,741,226 53 Venezuela 616,562 21,676 28,444,815 54 Grenada 2,419 21,509 112,464 55 France 1,384,633 21,218 65,257,220 56 Chile 397,200 20,799 19,097,135 57 Sweden 209,900 20,799 10,092,027 58 Peru 679,582 20,645 32,917,154 59 Turkey 1,675,517 19,892 84,232,553 60 Réunion 17,200 19,227 894,575 61 Djibouti 18,933 19,196 986,284 62 New Caledonia 5,454 19,125 285,178 63 Mayotte 5,200 19,118 271,994 64 Aruba 2,025 18,976 106,714 65 Bhutan 14,294 18,549 770,610 66 Saudi Arabia 618,084 17,787 34,748,812 67 Netherlands 302,395 17,652 17,130,596 68 Poland 653,224 17,258 37,851,214 69 Romania 322,074 16,730 19,251,572 70 Bosnia and Herzegovina 53,988 16,445 3,283,031 71 Montenegro 10,167 16,188 628,057 72 S. Korea 776,433 15,146 51,264,240 73 Armenia 44,071 14,876 2,962,619 74 Hungary 142,729 14,771 9,663,057 75 Malaysia 471,318 14,584 32,316,866 76 Jordan 148,482 14,569 10,191,291 77 Kyrgyzstan 94,441 14,504 6,511,224 78 Barbados 4,167 14,502 287,335 79 Uzbekistan 460,000 13,768 33,411,286 80 Caribbean Netherlands 357 13,629 26,195 81 Croatia 55,800 13,583 4,108,012 82 Greece 136,001 13,041 10,428,608 83 French Polynesia 3,496 12,454 280,722 84 Panama 51,815 12,032 4,306,610 85 Oman 61,000 11,984 5,090,324 Countries under safe category with sufficient test done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total Population 86 North Macedonia 22,255 10,682 2,083,384 87 Georgia 40,711 10,203 3,990,014 88 Uruguay 34,794 10,020 3,472,364 89 Bulgaria 68,243 9,813 6,954,080 90 El Salvador 62,838 9,694 6,482,464 91 Sint Maarten 414 9,669 42,819 92 Lebanon 63,720 9,331 6,828,786 93 Palestine 44,876 8,822 5,086,676 94 Iran 716,176 8,540 83,865,579 95 South Africa 488,609 8,251 59,220,176 96 Cuba 85,556 7,553 11,327,386 97 Saint Kitts and Nevis 391 7,356 53,156 98 Montserrat 36 7,212 4,992 99 Guadeloupe 2,866 7,163 400,116 Countries who should conduct more tests No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 100 Dominica 433 6,017 71,966 101 Ghana 180,567 5,826 30,993,199 102 Ukraine 248,529 5,679 43,762,271 103 Botswana 13,294 5,667 2,345,808 104 Ecuador 98,171 5,574 17,610,964 105 British Virgin Islands 167 5,528 30,208 106 Moldova 20,447 5,067 4,034,998 107 Bahamas 1,826 4,649 392,805 108 Dominican Republic 50,108 4,625 10,835,186 109 Albania 12,369 4,298 2,878,146 110 Saint Lucia 786 4,283 183,531 111 Thailand 286,008 4,099 69,780,195 112 Costa Rica 20,741 4,076 5,088,699 113 Rwanda 52,335 4,053 12,912,035 Countries who have not done enough test thus endangering the citizen lives No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 114 Colombia 201,808 3,971 50,819,268 115 Iraq 149,701 3,732 40,110,732 116 Nepal 107,253 3,689 29,073,225 117 Gabon 7,966 3,590 2,219,197 118 Eswatini 4,160 3,590 1,158,757 119 Mongolia 11,641 3,558 3,271,940 120 Tunisia 41,620 3,526 11,804,125 121 Brazil 735,224 3,462 212,385,054 122 Jamaica 8,828 2,983 2,959,694 123 Paraguay 21,121 2,966 7,122,183 124 Curaçao 485 2,957 164,017 125 Taiwan 69,876 2,934 23,811,922 126 Vietnam 275,000 2,828 97,236,622 127 Turks and Caicos 109 2,820 38,655 128 Morocco 100,367 2,723 36,858,953 129 Belize 1,043 2,629 396,752 130 Argentina 108,634 2,406 45,147,454 131 Philippines 244,800 2,237 109,407,875 132 Sri Lanka 46,413 2,169 21,403,028 133 Benin 25,471 2,108 12,083,204 134 Japan 255,675 2,021 126,519,062 135 Trinidad and Tobago 2,727 1,949 1,398,974 136 Zimbabwe 28,019 1,888 14,837,082 137 Pakistan 414,254 1,880 220,368,526 138 Antigua and Barbuda 183 1,870 97,835 139 India 2,512,388 1,823 1,378,418,813 140 Togo 13,825 1,675 8,254,589 141 Uganda 75,228 1,651 45,554,546 142 Guyana 1,269 1,614 786,119 143 Cabo Verde 892 1,606 555,278 144 Senegal 24,599 1,474 16,688,310 145 Fiji 1,300 1,451 895,695 146 Mexico 185,755 1,442 128,773,952 147 St. Vincent Grenadines 155 1,398 110,900 148 Egypt 135,000 1,322 102,099,285 149 Bolivia 14,803 1,270 11,654,083 150 Bangladesh 203,852 1,239 164,497,521 151 Guatemala 20,820 1,165 17,875,264 152 Honduras 10,775 1,090 9,885,675 153 Namibia 2,586 1,020 2,535,319 154 Zambia 18,519 1,011 18,318,568 Countries who have done too little tests thus many cases went undetected No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 155 Cambodia 15,572 933 16,691,420 156 Kenya 46,784 872 53,624,913 157 Sao Tome and Principe 175 800 218,664 158 Guinea 10,304 787 13,087,736 159 Guinea-Bissau 1,500 764 1,962,210 160 Indonesia 202,936 743 273,184,442 161 Ivory Coast 19,174 729 26,296,533 162 CAR 3,498 726 4,819,607 163 Suriname 404 689 586,020 164 Laos 4,743 653 7,262,953 165 Afghanistan 24,697 636 38,819,750 166 Gambia 1,476 613 2,408,042 167 Equatorial Guinea 854 611 1,397,001 168 Timor-Leste 738 561 1,315,383 169 Mauritania 2,583 557 4,634,257 170 Ethiopia 62,300 544 114,607,221 171 Libya 3,633 530 6,860,181 172 South Sudan 3,356 300 11,178,254 173 Myanmar 15,137 278 54,367,787 174 Papua New Guinea 2,402 269 8,926,371 175 Niger 5,909 245 24,091,143 176 Mozambique 6,537 210 31,144,220 177 Madagascar 5,670 205 27,601,550 178 Haiti 2,270 199 11,386,106 179 Angola 6,136 187 32,734,590 180 Nigeria 36,899 180 205,500,163 181 Mali 3,483 173 20,176,487 182 Malawi 1,803 95 19,067,788 183 Burundi 284 24 11,845,443 184 Sudan 281 6 43,721,964 185 Yemen 120 4 29,744,780
  5. Latest data as of 19th May, 2020. Top best recovery rate (These countries have recorded more than 70% recovery rate) Data counted only for countries with more than 1000 cases. No Country Total Cases New Cases Total Deaths New Deaths Total Recovered Active Cases Percentage recovered from total cases 1. Iceland 1,802 +0 10 +0 1,789 3 99.28 % (excellent) 2. Hong Kong 1,056 +0 4 +0 1,025 27 97.06 % (excellent) 3. New Zealand 1,503 +4 21 +0 1,442 40 95.94 % (excellent) 5. China 82,960 +6 4,634 +0 78,241 85 94.31 % (excellent) 4. Thailand 3,033 +2 56 +0 2,857 120 94.20 % (excellent) 6. Luxembourg 3,947 +0 107 +0 3,715 125 94.12 % (excellent) 7. Australia 7,068 +8 100 +1 6,413 555 90.73 % (excellent) 8. Switzerland 30,618 +21 1,889 +3 27,600 1,129 90.14 % (excellent 9. Austria 16,321 +52 632 +3 14,678 1,011 89.93 % (good) 10. South Korea 11,078 +13 263 +0 9,938 877 89.71 % (good) 11. Croatia 2,232 +4 96 +1 1,967 169 88.13 % (good) 12. Germany 177,387 +98 8,131 +8 155,700 13,556 87.77 % (good) 13. Denmark 11,044 +76 551 +3 9,416 1,077 85.26 % (good) 14. Uzbekistan 2,824 +34 13 +0 2,338 474 82.79 % (good) 15. Malaysia 6,978 +37 114 +1 5,646 1,218 80.91 % (good) 16. Ireland 24,200 +0 1,547 +0 19,470 3,183 80.45 % (good) 17. Slovakia 1,495 +0 28 +0 1,192 275 79.73 % (good) 18. Iran 124,603 +2,111 7,119 +62 97,173 20,311 77.99 % (good)
  6. The full data of tests conducted. Countries under safe category with mass testing done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 1 Faeroe Islands 8,863 181,466 48,841 2 Iceland 56,882 166,818 340,982 3 UAE 1,600,923 162,103 9,875,965 4 Gibraltar 5,187 153,953 33,692 5 Bahrain 243,031 143,494 1,693,667 6 Malta 51,677 117,073 441,407 7 Falkland Islands 402 115,950 3,467 8 San Marino 3,499 103,145 33,923 9 Luxembourg 62,260 99,660 624,724 10 Cayman Islands 5,900 89,899 65,629 11 Bermuda 5,549 89,063 62,304 12 Lithuania 231,104 84,767 2,726,360 13 Denmark 475,096 82,057 5,789,832 14 Cyprus 87,549 72,575 1,206,320 15 Mauritius 89,814 70,635 1,271,525 16 Spain 3,037,840 64,977 46,752,703 17 Portugal 652,497 63,970 10,200,063 18 Belgium 709,818 61,277 11,583,739 19 Israel 505,702 58,538 8,638,917 20 Kuwait 248,314 58,251 4,262,847 21 Qatar 161,695 56,241 2,875,047 22 Estonia 70,188 52,915 1,326,433 23 Ireland 258,808 52,484 4,931,150 24 Russia 7,352,316 50,383 145,927,292 25 Italy 3,041,366 50,294 60,471,924 26 Isle of Man 4,167 49,035 84,980 27 Andorra 3,750 48,543 77,251 28 New Zealand 233,843 48,539 4,817,585 29 Latvia 90,968 48,170 1,888,464 30 Australia 1,084,030 42,571 25,464,216 31 Singapore 246,254 42,132 5,844,888 32 Austria 372,435 41,380 9,000,366 33 Brunei 17,636 40,359 436,979 34 Norway 218,039 40,257 5,416,217 35 Switzerland 345,760 39,985 8,647,139 36 UK 2,682,716 39,542 67,844,241 37 Belarus 364,319 38,554 9,449,678 38 Germany 3,147,771 37,584 83,752,855 39 USA 12,300,744 37,188 330,774,664 40 Canada 1,323,371 35,100 37,702,769 41 Slovenia 69,842 33,596 2,078,905 42 Czechia 356,515 33,298 10,706,690 43 Channel Islands 5,342 30,759 173,672 44 Greenland 1,721 30,321 56,759 45 Kazakhstan 553,062 29,497 18,749,587 46 Finland 149,700 27,023 5,539,729 47 Slovakia 145,474 26,647 5,459,339 48 Liechtenstein 900 23,613 38,115 49 Azerbaijan 235,910 23,292 10,128,288 50 Hong Kong 168,291 22,469 7,489,763 51 Maldives 11,775 21,831 539,365 52 Grenada 2,419 21,509 112,462 53 France 1,384,633 21,218 65,256,826 54 Serbia 185,385 21,208 8,741,321 55 Venezuela 581,082 20,428 28,445,034 56 Peru 661,132 20,085 32,915,899 57 Chile 381,011 19,952 19,096,687 58 Turkey 1,650,135 19,591 84,230,075 59 Réunion 17,200 19,227 894,557 60 New Caledonia 5,454 19,125 285,170 61 Mayotte 5,200 19,119 271,976 62 Aruba 2,021 18,939 106,713 63 Djibouti 18,345 18,601 986,245 64 Bhutan 14,223 18,457 770,586 65 Sweden 177,500 17,588 10,091,856 66 Netherlands 297,347 17,358 17,130,492 67 Saudi Arabia 601,954 17,324 34,747,330 68 Poland 636,046 16,804 37,851,327 69 Romania 313,621 16,290 19,251,921 70 Montenegro 10,167 16,188 628,057 71 Bosnia and Herzegovina 51,320 15,632 3,283,087 72 S. Korea 765,574 14,934 51,264,120 73 Armenia 43,041 14,528 2,962,604 74 Hungary 138,697 14,353 9,663,123 75 Malaysia 462,257 14,304 32,315,733 76 Jordan 144,356 14,165 10,191,015 77 Barbados 4,004 13,935 287,335 78 Uzbekistan 460,000 13,768 33,409,960 79 Caribbean Netherlands 357 13,629 26,194 80 Croatia 54,820 13,344 4,108,081 81 Greece 131,684 12,627 10,428,746 82 French Polynesia 3,496 12,454 280,717 83 Oman 61,000 11,984 5,089,968 84 Panama 51,105 11,867 4,306,425 Countries under safe category with sufficient test done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total Population 85 North Macedonia 21,722 10,426 2,083,384 86 Georgia 39,573 9,918 3,990,035 87 Uruguay 34,384 9,902 3,472,331 88 Sint Maarten 414 9,669 42,817 89 Bulgaria 66,810 9,607 6,954,222 90 El Salvador 60,341 9,308 6,482,375 91 Lebanon 62,424 9,141 6,828,869 92 Kyrgyzstan 59,490 9,137 6,510,930 93 Palestine 44,876 8,823 5,086,351 94 Iran 701,640 8,367 83,862,642 95 South Africa 475,071 8,022 59,218,133 96 Cuba 83,868 7,404 11,327,404 97 Saint Kitts and Nevis 391 7,356 53,155 98 Montserrat 36 7,212 4,992 99 Guadeloupe 2,866 7,163 400,116 Countries who should conduct more tests No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 100 Dominica 433 6,017 71,965 101 Botswana 13,294 5,667 2,345,678 102 Ghana 173,096 5,585 30,991,423 103 British Virgin Islands 167 5,529 30,207 104 Ukraine 239,961 5,483 43,762,985 105 Ecuador 96,536 5,482 17,610,231 106 Moldova 20,447 5,067 4,035,024 107 Bahamas 1,826 4,649 392,795 108 Dominican Republic 50,108 4,625 10,834,889 109 Saint Lucia 786 4,283 183,529 110 Albania 12,192 4,236 2,878,155 111 Thailand 286,008 4,099 69,779,718 112 Costa Rica 20,352 4,000 5,088,572 Countries who have not done enough test thus endangering the citizen lives No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 113 Colombia 201,808 3,971 50,817,787 114 Rwanda 51,118 3,959 12,911,155 115 Iraq 149,701 3,732 40,108,260 116 Gabon 7,966 3,590 2,219,053 117 Eswatini 4,160 3,590 1,158,724 118 Tunisia 41,620 3,526 11,803,787 119 Mongolia 11,367 3,474 3,271,795 120 Brazil 735,224 3,462 212,380,932 121 Nepal 100,283 3,449 29,071,791 122 Jamaica 8,674 2,931 2,959,659 123 Taiwan 69,395 2,914 23,811,805 124 Vietnam 275,000 2,828 97,234,232 125 Paraguay 20,124 2,826 7,121,943 126 Turks and Caicos 109 2,820 38,653 127 Belize 1,043 2,629 396,732 128 Morocco 94,595 2,566 36,857,758 129 Curaçao 389 2,372 164,015 130 Argentina 105,829 2,344 45,146,322 131 Philippines 244,800 2,238 109,403,890 132 Sri Lanka 45,351 2,119 21,402,783 133 Benin 25,471 2,108 12,082,333 134 Japan 250,151 1,977 126,520,115 135 Trinidad and Tobago 2,720 1,944 1,398,962 136 Zimbabwe 28,019 1,889 14,836,491 137 Antigua and Barbuda 183 1,871 97,833 138 Pakistan 400,292 1,817 220,356,788 139 India 2,404,267 1,744 1,378,381,772 140 Togo 13,452 1,630 8,254,058 141 Uganda 73,485 1,613 45,550,580 142 Cabo Verde 892 1,606 555,261 143 Guyana 1,218 1,549 786,108 144 Senegal 24,599 1,474 16,687,100 145 Fiji 1,300 1,451 895,677 146 St. Vincent Grenadines 155 1,398 110,899 147 Mexico 177,133 1,376 128,770,253 148 Egypt 135,000 1,322 102,094,004 149 Bolivia 14,803 1,270 11,653,648 150 Bangladesh 193,645 1,177 164,493,041 151 Guatemala 20,820 1,165 17,874,358 152 Honduras 10,775 1,090 9,885,245 153 Zambia 17,875 976 18,317,156 Countries who have done too little tests thus many cases went undetected No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 154 Cambodia 15,447 925 16,690,788 155 Kenya 44,851 836 53,621,669 156 Namibia 2,074 818 2,535,193 157 Sao Tome and Principe 175 800 218,653 158 Guinea 10,304 787 13,086,759 159 Guinea-Bissau 1,500 764 1,962,083 160 CAR 3,498 726 4,819,377 161 Ivory Coast 18,608 708 26,294,743 162 Indonesia 190,660 698 273,176,544 163 Suriname 404 689 586,006 164 Laos 4,653 641 7,262,665 165 Afghanistan 24,697 636 38,817,349 166 Gambia 1,476 613 2,407,856 167 Equatorial Guinea 854 611 1,396,874 168 Timor-Leste 738 561 1,315,315 169 Mauritania 2,583 557 4,633,922 170 Libya 3,633 530 6,859,926 171 Ethiopia 59,029 515 114,599,417 172 South Sudan 3,356 300 11,177,895 173 Papua New Guinea 2,402 269 8,925,907 174 Myanmar 14,561 268 54,366,792 175 Niger 5,888 244 24,088,734 176 Madagascar 5,670 205 27,599,599 177 Mozambique 6,272 201 31,141,818 178 Angola 6,136 187 32,731,783 179 Haiti 2,120 186 11,385,726 180 Mali 3,483 173 20,174,887 181 Nigeria 35,345 172 205,486,161 182 Algeria 6,500 149 43,752,773 183 Malawi 1,803 95 19,066,433 184 Burundi 284 24 11,844,472 185 Yemen 120 4 29,742,981
  7. The full data of tests conducted. Countries under safe category with mass testing done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 1 Faeroe Islands 8,863 181,466 48,841 2 Iceland 56,875 166,801 340,976 3 UAE 1,600,923 162,108 9,875,638 4 Gibraltar 5,060 150,184 33,692 5 Bahrain 236,828 139,845 1,693,504 6 Falkland Islands 402 115,950 3,467 7 Malta 50,616 114,670 441,404 8 San Marino 3,499 103,145 33,923 9 Luxembourg 62,153 99,493 624,696 10 Cayman Islands 5,900 89,902 65,627 11 Lithuania 231,104 84,763 2,726,463 12 Bermuda 5,017 80,525 62,304 13 Denmark 463,016 79,971 5,789,776 14 Cyprus 87,549 72,577 1,206,296 15 Mauritius 86,887 68,333 1,271,519 16 Spain 3,037,840 64,977 46,752,654 17 Portugal 618,066 60,594 10,200,144 18 Belgium 696,840 60,157 11,583,602 19 Israel 505,702 58,540 8,638,547 20 Kuwait 244,476 57,353 4,262,674 21 Qatar 157,570 54,809 2,874,914 22 Ireland 258,808 52,486 4,930,999 23 Estonia 69,520 52,411 1,326,430 24 Italy 3,004,960 49,692 60,472,166 25 Russia 7,147,014 48,977 145,927,122 26 Andorra 3,750 48,544 77,250 27 Isle of Man 4,102 48,271 84,979 28 New Zealand 230,718 47,892 4,817,478 29 Latvia 89,123 47,192 1,888,520 30 Singapore 246,254 42,132 5,844,763 31 Australia 1,059,801 41,621 25,463,408 32 Austria 366,069 40,673 9,000,226 33 Switzerland 345,760 39,986 8,646,966 34 Norway 216,350 39,946 5,416,102 35 Brunei 17,414 39,852 436,967 36 UK 2,580,769 38,040 67,843,268 37 Germany 3,147,771 37,584 83,752,125 38 Belarus 350,515 37,093 9,449,686 39 USA 11,875,580 35,903 330,769,370 40 Canada 1,300,729 34,500 37,701,865 41 Slovenia 69,363 33,365 2,078,905 42 Czechia 356,515 33,299 10,706,636 43 Channel Islands 5,342 30,760 173,668 44 Kazakhstan 540,708 28,839 18,748,973 45 Greenland 1,629 28,701 56,758 46 Finland 146,800 26,500 5,539,705 47 Slovakia 143,433 26,273 5,459,332 48 Liechtenstein 900 23,613 38,115 49 Azerbaijan 232,077 22,914 10,128,038 50 Hong Kong 168,291 22,470 7,489,597 51 Maldives 11,775 21,832 539,339 52 Grenada 2,419 21,510 112,461 53 France 1,384,633 21,218 65,256,433 54 Serbia 181,272 20,737 8,741,417 55 Venezuela 575,374 20,227 28,445,253 56 Peru 650,613 19,767 32,914,644 57 Turkey 1,624,994 19,293 84,227,597 58 Réunion 17,200 19,228 894,540 59 New Caledonia 5,454 19,126 285,163 60 Mayotte 5,200 19,121 271,958 61 Chile 363,496 19,035 19,096,239 62 Aruba 1,985 18,601 106,712 63 Bhutan 13,962 18,119 770,563 64 Djibouti 17,532 17,777 986,206 65 Sweden 177,500 17,589 10,091,684 66 Saudi Arabia 586,405 16,877 34,745,848 67 Netherlands 287,943 16,809 17,130,389 68 Poland 620,249 16,386 37,851,440 69 Romania 313,621 16,290 19,252,270 70 Montenegro 10,167 16,188 628,057 71 Bosnia and Herzegovina 49,832 15,178 3,283,142 72 S. Korea 753,211 14,693 51,263,999 73 Hungary 137,243 14,203 9,663,190 74 Jordan 144,356 14,165 10,190,738 75 Armenia 41,850 14,126 2,962,589 76 Uzbekistan 460,000 13,769 33,408,634 77 Malaysia 443,263 13,717 32,314,600 78 Barbados 3,924 13,657 287,334 79 Caribbean Netherlands 357 13,630 26,193 80 Croatia 53,877 13,115 4,108,150 81 Greece 128,525 12,324 10,428,885 82 Oman 61,000 11,985 5,089,612 83 Panama 50,348 11,692 4,306,239 84 French Polynesia 3,216 11,457 280,713 Countries under safe category with sufficient test done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total Population 85 North Macedonia 21,436 10,289 2,083,384 86 Georgia 39,573 9,918 3,990,056 87 Uruguay 33,861 9,752 3,472,299 88 Sint Maarten 414 9,669 42,816 89 Bulgaria 65,936 9,481 6,954,364 90 Kyrgyzstan 59,490 9,137 6,510,635 91 Lebanon 61,479 9,003 6,828,952 92 El Salvador 57,883 8,929 6,482,286 93 Palestine 44,876 8,823 5,086,026 94 Iran 686,935 8,191 83,859,705 95 South Africa 460,873 7,783 59,216,090 96 Cuba 81,917 7,232 11,327,423 97 Montserrat 36 7,212 4,992 98 Guadeloupe 2,866 7,163 400,116 Countries who should conduct more tests No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 99 Saint Kitts and Nevis 327 6,152 53,154 100 Dominica 433 6,017 71,965 101 Botswana 13,294 5,668 2,345,548 102 Ghana 173,096 5,586 30,989,647 103 British Virgin Islands 167 5,529 30,207 104 Ecuador 95,047 5,397 17,609,499 105 Ukraine 232,899 5,322 43,763,700 106 Moldova 20,447 5,067 4,035,049 107 Dominican Republic 50,108 4,625 10,834,592 108 Bahamas 1,814 4,618 392,785 109 Saint Lucia 786 4,283 183,527 110 Albania 12,192 4,236 2,878,163 111 Thailand 286,008 4,099 69,779,241 Countries who have not done enough test thus endangering the citizen lives No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 112 Costa Rica 20,115 3,953 5,088,445 113 Rwanda 49,374 3,824 12,910,275 114 Colombia 190,114 3,741 50,816,306 115 Iraq 149,701 3,733 40,105,788 116 Eswatini 4,160 3,590 1,158,691 117 Brazil 735,224 3,462 212,376,810 118 Tunisia 40,559 3,436 11,803,449 119 Mongolia 11,000 3,362 3,271,651 120 Gabon 7,445 3,355 2,218,909 121 Nepal 95,941 3,300 29,070,358 122 Taiwan 69,395 2,914 23,811,687 123 Jamaica 8,515 2,877 2,959,624 124 Vietnam 275,000 2,828 97,231,841 125 Paraguay 20,124 2,826 7,121,704 126 Turks and Caicos 109 2,820 38,652 127 Belize 1,043 2,629 396,712 128 Morocco 89,957 2,441 36,856,563 129 Curaçao 389 2,372 164,013 130 Argentina 103,220 2,286 45,145,190 131 Benin 25,471 2,108 12,081,463 132 Sri Lanka 44,391 2,074 21,402,538 133 Philippines 215,060 1,966 109,399,904 134 Japan 244,452 1,932 126,521,169 135 Trinidad and Tobago 2,682 1,917 1,398,950 136 Antigua and Barbuda 183 1,871 97,830 137 Zimbabwe 27,059 1,824 14,835,899 138 Pakistan 387,335 1,758 220,345,049 139 India 2,302,792 1,671 1,378,344,732 140 Cabo Verde 892 1,606 555,245 141 Uganda 72,161 1,584 45,546,614 142 Togo 12,613 1,528 8,253,526 143 Senegal 24,599 1,474 16,685,890 144 Fiji 1,300 1,451 895,659 145 St. Vincent Grenadines 155 1,398 110,898 146 Guyana 1,089 1,385 786,098 147 Mexico 172,294 1,338 128,766,554 148 Egypt 135,000 1,322 102,088,722 149 Bolivia 14,803 1,270 11,653,213 150 Guatemala 20,820 1,165 17,873,451 151 Bangladesh 185,086 1,125 164,488,562 Countries who have done too little tests thus many cases went undetected No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 152 Zambia 17,354 947 18,315,744 153 Cambodia 15,242 913 16,690,156 154 Namibia 2,074 818 2,535,067 155 Kenya 43,712 815 53,618,426 156 Sao Tome and Principe 175 800 218,642 157 Guinea 10,304 787 13,085,782 158 Guinea-Bissau 1,500 765 1,961,955 159 CAR 3,498 726 4,819,147 160 Ivory Coast 18,303 696 26,292,953 161 Suriname 404 689 585,992 162 Indonesia 187,965 688 273,168,646 163 Laos 4,565 629 7,262,376 164 Equatorial Guinea 854 611 1,396,748 165 Afghanistan 23,497 605 38,814,948 166 Honduras 5,653 572 9,884,814 167 Timor-Leste 738 561 1,315,246 168 Gambia 1,341 557 2,407,670 169 Libya 3,633 530 6,859,671 170 Ethiopia 57,254 500 114,591,613 171 Mauritania 2,015 435 4,633,587 172 South Sudan 3,356 300 11,177,537 173 Papua New Guinea 2,402 269 8,925,443 174 Myanmar 14,561 268 54,365,797 175 Niger 5,816 241 24,086,326 176 Madagascar 5,670 205 27,597,647 177 Mozambique 6,011 193 31,139,416 178 Angola 6,136 187 32,728,977 179 Mali 3,383 168 20,173,287 180 Nigeria 33,970 165 205,472,159 181 Algeria 6,500 149 43,750,607 182 Haiti 1,669 147 11,385,346 183 Malawi 1,803 95 19,065,078 184 Burundi 284 24 11,843,500 185 Yemen 120 4 29,741,182
  8. Top 36 largest countries according to population. The data below shows the top 36 largest country data. It is to be noted that majority of the large countries in the world wide have done too little test thus endangering the lives of their own citizens. USA is exceptional because they have done mass testing for their citizens despite being the third largest country in the world. India the second largest country and Indonesia the forth largest country in the world have conducted too little test for their citizens. Countries ranking based on the number of population No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 1 China (no data) 1,439,323,776 2 India (too little test) 2,134,277 1,549 1,378,270,651 3 USA (mass testing) 11,090,900 33,532 330,758,784 4 Indonesia (too little test) 182,818 669 273,152,851 5 Pakistan (too little test) 359,264 1,631 220,321,573 6 Brazil (too little test) 735,224 3,462 212,368,566 7 Nigeria (too little test) 30,657 149 205,444,156 8 Bangladesh (too little) 167,114 1,016 164,479,603 9 Russia (mass testing) 6,656,340 45,614 145,926,781 10 Mexico (too little test) 163,691 1,271 128,759,156 11 Japan (too little test) 233,144 1,843 126,523,275 12 Ethiopia (too little test) 48,985 428 114,576,005 13 Philippines (too little) 191,963 1,755 109,391,934 14 Egypt (too little test) 135,000 1,323 102,078,159 15 Vietnam (too little test) 275,000 2,828 97,227,060 16 DRC (No data) 89,181,925 17 Turkey (mass testing) 1,547,389 18,373 84,222,640 18 Iran (sufficient test) 658,604 7,854 83,853,830 19 Germany (mass testing) 3,147,771 37,585 83,750,665 20 Thailand (not enough) 286,008 4,099 69,778,286 21 UK (mass testing) 2,353,078 34,685 67,841,324 22 France (mass testing) 1,384,633 21,219 65,255,646 23 Italy (mass testing) 2,875,680 47,553 60,472,650 24 Tanzania (No data) 59,498,998 25 South Africa (sufficient) 421,555 7,119 59,212,004 26 Myanmar (too little test) 13,634 251 54,363,807 27 Kenya (too little test) 36,918 689 53,611,938 28 S. Korea (mass testing) 741,145 14,457 51,263,759 29 Colombia (too little test) 177,050 3,484 50,813,344 30 Spain (mass testing) 3,037,840 64,977 46,752,556 31 Uganda (too little test) 70,117 1,540 45,538,682 32 Argentina (too little test) 96,893 2,146 45,142,926 33 Ukraine (not enough) 220,638 5,041 43,765,128 34 Algeria (too little test) 6,500 149 43,746,275 35 Sudan (no data) 43,710,745 36 Iraq (too little test) 140,573 3,505 40,100,844
  9. The full data of tests conducted. Countries under safe category with mass testing done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 1 Faeroe Islands 8,779 179,750 48,840 2 Iceland 56,219 164,883 340,964 3 UAE 1,560,923 158,068 9,874,985 4 Gibraltar 4,941 146,652 33,692 5 Bahrain 222,542 131,434 1,693,179 6 Falkland Islands 402 115,984 3,466 7 Malta 47,504 107,622 441,397 8 San Marino 3,394 100,053 33,922 9 Luxembourg 59,987 96,034 624,641 10 Cayman Islands 5,900 89,908 65,623 11 Lithuania 224,040 82,166 2,726,669 12 Bermuda 4,691 75,290 62,306 13 Cyprus 81,942 67,931 1,206,248 14 Spain 3,037,840 64,977 46,752,556 15 Denmark 368,889 63,715 5,789,665 16 Portugal 600,061 58,828 10,200,306 17 Israel 498,711 57,736 8,637,807 18 Belgium 663,755 57,303 11,583,327 19 Kuwait 236,004 55,370 4,262,329 20 Mauritius 69,773 54,874 1,271,508 21 Ireland 258,808 52,489 4,930,698 22 Estonia 68,840 51,899 1,326,425 23 Qatar 148,173 51,545 2,874,647 24 Andorra 3,750 48,544 77,250 25 Italy 2,875,680 47,553 60,472,650 26 Isle of Man 4,032 47,448 84,977 27 New Zealand 223,937 46,486 4,817,264 28 Latvia 87,377 46,265 1,888,633 29 Russia 6,656,340 45,614 145,926,781 30 Norway 216,350 39,947 5,415,870 31 Australia 1,013,615 39,809 25,461,791 32 Austria 351,351 39,039 8,999,946 33 Switzerland 334,274 38,659 8,646,621 34 Brunei 16,892 38,659 436,944 35 Singapore 224,262 38,371 5,844,512 36 Germany 3,147,771 37,585 83,750,665 37 UK 2,353,078 34,685 67,841,324 38 Belarus 321,705 34,044 9,449,703 39 USA 11,090,900 33,532 330,758,784 40 Czechia 348,849 32,583 10,706,527 41 Slovenia 67,701 32,566 2,078,903 42 Canada 1,225,049 32,495 37,700,059 43 Channel Islands 5,342 30,761 173,659 44 Greenland 1,629 28,701 56,758 45 Kazakhstan 505,216 26,948 18,747,746 46 Finland 143,900 25,976 5,539,658 47 Slovakia 139,986 25,642 5,459,317 48 Liechtenstein 900 23,613 38,114 49 Hong Kong 168,291 22,471 7,489,265 50 Maldives 11,775 21,834 539,287 51 Azerbaijan 220,363 21,759 10,127,539 52 Grenada 2,419 21,510 112,458 53 France 1,384,633 21,219 65,255,646 54 Serbia 168,670 19,295 8,741,609 55 Réunion 17,200 19,229 894,505 56 New Caledonia 5,454 19,127 285,148 57 Mayotte 5,200 19,123 271,922 58 Venezuela 540,236 18,992 28,445,691 59 Peru 605,383 18,394 32,912,133 60 Turkey 1,547,389 18,373 84,222,640 61 Aruba 1,937 18,152 106,709 62 Chile 341,347 17,876 19,095,344 63 Bhutan 13,660 17,728 770,517 64 Sweden 177,500 17,589 10,091,340 65 Djibouti 16,878 17,115 986,127 66 Netherlands 287,943 16,809 17,130,183 67 Montenegro 10,167 16,188 628,056 68 Romania 303,734 15,776 19,252,967 69 Saudi Arabia 530,265 15,263 34,742,883 70 Poland 576,276 15,225 37,851,666 71 S. Korea 741,145 14,457 51,263,759 72 Bosnia and Herzegovina 47,149 14,360 3,283,253 73 Uzbekistan 460,000 13,770 33,405,983 74 Caribbean Netherlands 357 13,630 26,192 75 Hungary 131,429 13,601 9,663,324 76 Malaysia 434,136 13,436 32,312,334 77 Jordan 136,229 13,369 10,190,185 78 Armenia 39,005 13,166 2,962,559 79 Barbados 3,651 12,707 287,332 80 Croatia 51,568 12,552 4,108,287 81 Oman 61,000 11,987 5,088,900 82 Greece 120,015 11,508 10,429,161 83 French Polynesia 3,216 11,457 280,704 84 Panama 47,768 11,094 4,305,867 Countries under safe category with sufficient test done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total Population 85 North Macedonia 20,548 9,863 2,083,384 86 Uruguay 32,225 9,281 3,472,233 87 Bulgaria 64,480 9,271 6,954,648 88 Kyrgyzstan 59,490 9,138 6,510,046 89 Georgia 36,248 9,084 3,990,097 90 Palestine 44,876 8,825 5,085,377 91 Lebanon 57,715 8,451 6,829,118 92 El Salvador 53,412 8,240 6,482,107 93 Iran 658,604 7,854 83,853,830 94 Sint Maarten 329 7,685 42,813 95 Montserrat 36 7,212 4,992 96 Guadeloupe 2,866 7,163 400,116 97 South Africa 421,555 7,119 59,212,004 Countries who should conduct more tests No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens 98 Cuba 77,374 6,831 11,327,461 99 Saint Kitts and Nevis 327 6,152 53,151 100 Dominica 420 5,836 71,964 101 Ghana 171,642 5,539 30,986,096 102 British Virgin Islands 167 5,529 30,206 103 Ecuador 89,817 5,101 17,608,034 104 Moldova 20,447 5,067 4,035,100 105 Ukraine 220,638 5,041 43,765,128 106 Botswana 11,495 4,901 2,345,288 107 Dominican Republic 50,108 4,625 10,833,998 108 Bahamas 1,700 4,328 392,764 109 Thailand 286,008 4,099 69,778,286 Countries who have not done enough test thus endangering the citizen lives No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 110 Albania 11,458 3,981 2,878,180 111 Saint Lucia 727 3,961 183,522 112 Costa Rica 18,655 3,666 5,088,192 113 Eswatini 4,160 3,590 1,158,626 114 Rwanda 46,198 3,579 12,908,515 115 Iraq 140,573 3,505 40,100,844 116 Colombia 177,050 3,484 50,813,344 117 Brazil 735,224 3,462 212,368,566 118 Tunisia 37,862 3,208 11,802,774 119 Gabon 7,050 3,178 2,218,621 120 Mongolia 10,162 3,106 3,271,362 121 Nepal 87,014 2,994 29,067,490 122 Taiwan 68,988 2,897 23,811,452 123 Vietnam 275,000 2,828 97,227,060 124 Turks and Caicos 109 2,820 38,649 125 Jamaica 7,946 2,685 2,959,554 126 Paraguay 18,856 2,648 7,121,225 127 Belize 1,043 2,629 396,673 128 Curaçao 389 2,372 164,009 129 Morocco 81,616 2,215 36,854,173 130 Argentina 96,893 2,146 45,142,926 131 Benin 25,471 2,109 12,079,722 132 Sri Lanka 42,056 1,965 21,402,049 133 Antigua and Barbuda 183 1,871 97,826 134 Trinidad and Tobago 2,597 1,856 1,398,925 135 Japan 233,144 1,843 126,523,275 136 Philippines 191,963 1,755 109,391,934 137 Zimbabwe 25,478 1,717 14,834,717 138 Pakistan 359,264 1,631 220,321,573 139 India 2,134,277 1,549 1,378,270,651 140 Uganda 70,117 1,540 45,538,682 141 Senegal 24,599 1,474 16,683,471 142 Togo 12,040 1,459 8,252,463 143 Fiji 1,300 1,452 895,624 144 Cabo Verde 791 1,425 555,212 145 St. Vincent Grenadines 155 1,398 110,896 146 Guyana 1,065 1,355 786,077 147 Egypt 135,000 1,323 102,078,159 148 Mexico 163,691 1,271 128,759,156 149 Bangladesh 167,114 1,016 164,479,603 Countries who have done too little tests thus many cases went undetected No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests per 1 million citizens Total population 150 Cambodia 14,684 880 16,688,891 151 Zambia 15,811 863 18,312,920 152 Namibia 2,074 818 2,534,815 153 Sao Tome and Principe 175 800 218,619 154 Guinea 10,304 788 13,083,829 155 Guinea-Bissau 1,500 765 1,961,700 156 CAR 3,498 726 4,818,688 157 Kenya 36,918 689 53,611,938 158 Suriname 404 689 585,963 159 Indonesia 182,818 669 273,152,851 160 Bolivia 7,651 657 11,652,343 161 Equatorial Guinea 854 612 1,396,494 162 Laos 4,424 609 7,261,799 163 Ivory Coast 15,260 580 26,289,372 164 Honduras 5,653 572 9,883,952 165 Timor-Leste 738 561 1,315,109 166 Gambia 1,341 557 2,407,297 167 Afghanistan 20,854 537 38,810,145 168 Libya 3,633 530 6,859,160 169 Mauritania 2,015 435 4,632,917 170 Ethiopia 48,985 428 114,576,005 171 Guatemala 7,200 403 17,871,637 172 South Sudan 3,356 300 11,176,820 173 Papua New Guinea 2,402 269 8,924,516 174 Myanmar 13,634 251 54,363,807 175 Niger 5,749 239 24,081,508 176 Madagascar 5,670 205 27,593,744 177 Angola 6,136 188 32,723,364 178 Mozambique 5,361 172 31,134,613 179 Algeria 6,500 149 43,746,275 180 Nigeria 30,657 149 205,444,156 181 Haiti 1,669 147 11,384,587 182 Mali 2,498 124 20,170,087 183 Malawi 1,363 72 19,062,368 184 Burundi 284 24 11,841,556 185 Yemen 120 4 29,737,584
  10. Latest data as of 16th May, 2020. Top best recovery rate (These countries have recorded more than 70% recovery rate) Data counted only for countries with more than 1000 cases. No Country Total Cases New Cases Total Deaths New Deaths Total Recovered Active Cases Percentage recovered from total cases 1. Iceland 1,802 +0 10 +0 1,782 10 98.89 % (excellent) 2. Hong Kong 1,053 +0 4 +0 1,022 27 97.06 % (excellent) 3. New Zealand 1,498 +0 21 +0 1,428 49 95.33 % (excellent) 4. Thailand 3,025 +0 56 +0 2,855 114 94.38 % (excellent) 5. China 82,941 +8 4,633 +0 78,219 89 94.31 % (excellent) 6. Luxembourg 3,923 +0 104 +0 3,682 137 93.86 % (excellent) 7. Australia 7,036 +17 98 +0 6,362 576 90.42 % (excellent) 8. Austria 16,201 +92 629 +1 14,524 1,048 89.65 % (good) 9. South Korea 11,037 +19 262 +2 9,851 924 89.25 % (good) 10. Switzerland 30,572 +58 1,878 +0 27,100 1,594 88.64 % (good) 11. Germany 175,699 +0 8,001 +0 152,600 15,098 86.85 % (good) 12. Croatia 2,224 +2 95 +0 1,913 216 86.02 % (good) 13. Denmark 10,858 +67 543 +6 9,107 1,208 83.87 % (good) 14. Ireland 23,956 +0 1,518 +0 19,470 2,968 81.27 % (good) 15. Uzbekistan 2,719 +33 11 +0 2,195 513 80.72 % (good) 16. Malaysia 6,872 +17 113 +1 5,512 1,247 80.21 % (good) 17. Iran 118,392 +1,757 6,937 +35 93,147 18,308 78.68 % (good) 18. Slovakia 1,493 +13 28 +1 1,151 314 77.09 % (good)
  11. Latest data as of 14th May, 2020. Top best recovery rate (These countries have recorded more than 70% recovery rate) Data counted only for countries with more than 1000 cases. No Country Total Cases New Cases Total Deaths New Deaths Total Recovered Active Cases Percentage recovered from total cases 1. Iceland 1,802 +0 10 +0 1,780 12 98.78 % 2. Hong Kong 1,052 +1 4 +0 1,009 39 95.91 % 3. Thailand 3,018 +1 56 +0 2,850 112 94.43 % 4. China 82,929 +3 4,633 +0 78,195 101 94.29 % 5. New Zealand 1,497 +0 21 +0 1,411 65 94.26 % 6. Luxembourg 3,904 +10 103 +1 3,629 172 92.96 % 7. Australia 6,989 +9 98 +0 6,301 611 90.16 % 8. Austria 16,058 +61 626 +2 14,405 1,027 89.70 % 9. Switzerland 30,463 +50 1,870 +0 27,100 1,493 88.96 % 10. South Korea 10,991 +29 260 +1 9,762 969 88.82 % 11. Germany 174,098 +552 7,861 +81 150,300 15,937 86.33 % 12. Croatia 2,221 +8 94 +0 1,850 277 83.30 % 13. Ireland 23,401 +159 1,497 +9 19,470 2,434 83.20 % 14. Denmark 10,713 +46 537 +4 8,805 1,371 82.19 % 15. Uzbekistan 2,636 +24 11 +0 2,136 489 81.03 % 16. Iran 114,533 +1,808 6,854 +71 90,539 17,140 79.05 % 17. Malaysia 6,819 +40 112 +1 5,351 1,356 78.47 % 18. Slovakia 1,477 +8 27 +0 1,112 338 75.29 %
  12. Latest data as of 13th May, 2020. Top best recovery rate (These countries have recorded more than 70% recovery rate) Data counted only for countries with more than 1000 cases. No Country Total Cases New Cases Total Deaths New Deaths Total Recovered Active Cases Percentage recovered from total cases 1. Iceland 1,802 +1 10 +0 1,780 12 98.78 % 2. Hong Kong 1,051 +3 4 +0 1,008 39 95.91 % 3. China 82,926 +7 4,633 +0 78,189 104 94.29 % 4. Thailand 3,017 +0 56 +0 2,844 117 94.27 % 5. New Zealand 1,497 +0 21 +0 1,402 74 93.65 % 6. Luxembourg 3,894 +6 102 +1 3,610 182 92.71 % 7. Australia 6,980 +16 98 +1 6,271 611 89.84 % 8. Austria 15,997 +36 624 +1 14,304 1,069 89.42 % 9. South Korea 10,962 +26 259 +1 9,695 1,008 88.44 % 10. Switzerland 30,413 +33 1,870 +3 26,800 1,743 88.12 % 11. Germany 173,546 +375 7,780 +42 148,700 17,066 85.68 % 12. Croatia 2,213 +6 94 +3 1,834 285 82.87 % 13. Denmark 10,667 +76 533 +6 8,663 1,471 81.21 % 14. Uzbekistan 2,568 +49 10 +0 2,040 518 79.44 % 15. Iran 112,725 +1,958 6,783 +50 89,428 16,514 79.33 % 16. Malaysia 6,779 +37 111 +2 5,281 1,387 77.90 % 17. Ireland 23,242 +107 1,488 +11 17,110 4,664 73.62 % 18. Azerbaijan 2,758 +65 35 +2 1,789 934 64.87 %
  13. Latest data as of 12th May, 2020. Top best recovery rate (These countries have recorded more than 70% recovery rate) Data counted only for countries with more than 1000 cases. No Country Total Cases New Cases Total Deaths New Deaths Total Recovered Active Cases Percentage recovered from total cases 1. Iceland 1,801 +0 10 +0 1,773 18 98.45 % 2. Hong Kong 1,048 +0 4 +0 991 53 94.56 % 3. China 82,919 +1 4,633 +0 78,171 115 94.27 % 4. New Zealand 1,497 +0 21 +0 1,398 78 93.39 % 5. Thailand 3,017 +2 56 +0 2,798 163 92.74 % 6. Luxembourg 3,888 +2 101 +0 3,602 185 92.64 % 7. Australia 6,964 +16 97 +0 6,229 638 89.45 % 8. Austria 15,961 +79 623 +3 14,148 1,190 88.64 % 9. South Korea 10,936 +27 258 +2 9,670 1,008 88.42 % 10. Switzerland 30,380 +36 1,857 +12 26,800 1,723 88.22 % 11. Germany 172,626 +50 7,661 +59 147,200 17,765 85.27 % 12. Croatia 2,207 +11 91 +0 1,808 308 81.92 % 13. Iran 110,767 +1,481 6,733 +48 88,357 15,677 79.77 % 14. Uzbekistan 2,509 +23 10 +0 1,988 511 79.23 % 15. Denmark 10,591 +78 533 +0 8,328 1,730 78.63 % 16. Malaysia 6,742 +16 109 +0 5,223 1,410 77.47 % 17. Ireland 23,135 +139 1,467 +9 17,110 4,558 73.96 % 18. Azerbaijan 2,589 +70 32 +0 1,680 877 64.89 %
  14. With special thanks to our best leader and also to all the frontliners (doctors and nurses) and good medical health service, Australia has done a good job to contain the virus. https://www.echo.net.au/2020/05/covid-19-update-may-11/ From the Prime Minister’s office – May 8 The National Cabinet met today to further discuss options for easing restrictions over the coming months, helping prepare Australians to go back to work in a COVID-19 safe environment and getting the economy back to a more sustainable level. The Chief Medical Officer Professor Brendan Murphy provided an update on the measures underway, the latest data and medical advice in relation to COVID-19. There have been 6,899 confirmed cases in Australia and sadly 97 people have died. There are now only around 1,000 active cases in Australia, and over the past week, daily infection rates have remained low. Testing remains high, with more than 730,000 tests undertaken in Australia. We need to continue to have the right controls in place to test more people, trace those who test positive and respond to local outbreaks when they occur. These are precedent conditions to enable Australia to relax baseline restrictions and enable Australians to live and work in a COVID-19 safe economy. National Cabinet again encouraged Australians to download the COVIDSafe app to ensure that we can protect Australians and reset baseline restrictions. More than 5.3 million Australians have already downloaded the COVIDSafe app. This is an enormous achievement, but more is needed. National Cabinet will meet again on Friday 15 May 2020. Re-opening a COVID-safe Australia and economy The National Cabinet met today to finalise the three-step plan to gradually remove baseline restrictions and make Australia COVID-safe. Australia has so far been highly successful in ‘flattening the curve’. The number of new COVID-19 cases in Australia each day is very low. We can now begin to take careful steps to ease some of the restrictions that have helped us suppress the spread of this virus. We are confidently and cautiously taking the first step to lifting restrictions. Our success so far means we have slowed the spread of COVID-19 and built the capacity in our health system to manage the impact of the virus. We can now start to progressively ease the restrictions we have in place. The AHPPC has provided strong advice on the conditions that must be met as we establish COVID safe ways of working and living so that we can reopen parts of the economy in the safest possible way while living with COVID-19. This means that many Australians can start getting out to the shops, undertaking some local trips and travel, visiting playgrounds and public parks, and having friends and family around with a bit more freedom. But the National Cabinet is very clear: continued suppression of COVID-19 is about collective action. Success depends on maintaining our new community norms – physical distancing, good hygiene practices and downloading the COVIDSafe app to keep us all safe while we are out and about. For businesses, this also means taking the time to prepare and develop a plan to operate in a COVID safe way to protect their customers and workers. With every one of us playing our part, we should all feel safe and confident in leaving the house and starting to do some of the things we’ve missed in the last few months – like getting back to work, having a quick bite in a restaurant or cafe, attending auctions and open houses, and participating in group exercise. Each step we take needs to be underpinned by a strong commitment from all of us to: stay 1.5 metres away from other people whenever and wherever we can maintain good hand washing and cough/sneeze hygiene stay home when we’re unwell, and getting tested if we have respiratory symptoms or a fever, download the COVIDSafe app so we can find the virus quickly, and Develop COVID safe plans for workplaces and plans. Our success depends on us making these behaviours part of our daily lives during the COVID-19 pandemic to keep us COVID safe. Australian governments are taking a measured approach. Our three-step plan provides a pathway for jurisdictions to move towards COVID safe communities in a way that best suits their individual circumstances. States and territories are able to move between the steps on the pathway at different times, in line with their current public health situation and local conditions. They’ll need to maintain steady case numbers and be able to rapidly contain outbreaks, which we’re set to do – with our enhanced testing regime, strengthened health surge capacity, and improved ability to quickly identify people who may have been exposed to the virus. For each of the major areas of restrictions we have set out three key steps between where we are now and where we want to be. Step 1 will focus on carefully reopening the economy, and giving Australians opportunities to return to work and social activities, including gatherings of up to 10 people, up to 5 visitors in the family home and some local and regional travel Step 2 builds on this with gatherings of up to 20, and more businesses reopening, including gyms, beauty services and entertainment venues like galleries and cinemas. Step 3 will see a transition to COVID safe ways of living and working, with gatherings of up to 100 people permitted. Arrangements under step 3 will be the ‘new normal’ while the virus remains a threat. International travel and mass gatherings over 100 people will remain restricted. Under the three-step plan, states and territories continue to make decisions to their individual circumstances and local conditions. Jurisdictions may ease restrictions at a different pace. Individuals and business should look to local authorities for the most up to date information, or visit www.australia.gov.au to be linked to state and territory resources. Special arrangements will need to be continued in Indigenous biosecurity areas and for vulnerable groups. National Cabinet also committed – as part of the three-step plan – to regular reviews and stocktake assessments of our progress every three weeks. We will be closely monitoring the situation as restrictions are eased. This will enable us to assess the impact of changes, track progress against our agreed precedent conditions, determine the pace of moving through the steps, and make any further decisions. The AHPPC and National Cabinet were very firm on this. We are prepared for an increase in case numbers or possible outbreaks, but relapse should not be an option. A second wave is not something we can afford to go through. The cost to our people, our economy, our social fabric, is too high. We should look to build success in each step, and move forward safely and with confidence. So long as Australians keep living and working in a COVID safe way, we’ll be able to keep case numbers low and continue taking steps on the pathway to relaxing more restrictions. National Cabinet’s goal is to have a sustainable COVID safe Australia in July 2020. We’ve shown what we can achieve when we work together – we flattened the curve. Now, let’s work together to get Australia COVID safe.
  15. The full data of tests conducted. Countries under safe category with mass testing done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests conducted per 1 million citizens 1 Faeroe Islands 8,450 172,932 2 Iceland 54,195 158,816 3 Gibraltar 4,099 121,665 4 UAE 1,200,000 121,330 5 Falkland Islands 402 115,517 6 Bahrain 189,174 111,176 7 Malta 43,397 98,285 8 Luxembourg 55,250 88,262 9 San Marino 2,985 87,973 10 Lithuania 186,565 68,532 11 Bermuda 4,020 64,549 12 Cyprus 76,139 63,062 13 Denmark 326,560 56,379 14 Mauritius 69,773 54,863 15 Israel 461,704 53,342 16 Spain 2,467,761 52,781 17 Cayman Islands 3,423 52,083 18 Portugal 517,660 50,767 19 Belgium 584,707 50,451 20 Estonia 63,964 48,219 21 Kuwait 196,397 45,988 22 Qatar 131,044 45,485 23 Isle of Man 3,773 44,371 24 Ireland 214,761 43,493 25 Italy 2,565,912 42,439 26 Latvia 77,147 40,901 27 New Zealand 194,191 40,270 28 Russia 5,636,763 38,625 29 Brunei 15,898 36,340 30 Switzerland 312,813 36,144 31 Norway 195,921 36,140 32 Austria 319,484 35,473 33 Australia 855,119 33,534 34 Germany 2,755,770 32,891 35 Channel Islands 5,342 30,725 36 Slovenia 63,365 30,480 37 Canada 1,135,984 30,099 38 Singapore 175,604 30,016 39 Belarus 274,060 29,003 40 Czechia 306,409 28,612 41 USA 9,461,609 28,585 42 UK 1,921,770 28,309 43 Greenland 1,435 25,277 44 Liechtenstein 900 23,605 45 Hong Kong 168,291 22,448 46 Finland 123,300 22,253 47 Slovakia 120,645 22,098 48 Maldives 11,775 21,784 49 Kazakhstan 408,713 21,767 50 Andorra 1,673 21,653 51 France 1,384,633 21,213 52 Réunion 17,200 19,211 53 Azerbaijan 193,411 19,076 54 New Caledonia 5,213 18,259 55 Venezuela 512,181 18,012 56 Aruba 1,874 17,552 57 Serbia 145,604 16,665 58 Turkey 1,370,598 16,251 59 Djibouti 15,304 15,490 60 Netherlands 265,156 15,475 61 Peru 504,930 15,314 62 Bhutan 11,673 15,128 63 Sweden 148,500 14,704 64 Chile 280,684 14,683 65 Mayotte 4,000 14,662 66 Romania 262,219 13,630 67 Saudi Arabia 467,369 13,425 68 S. Korea 668,492 13,039 69 Bosnia and Herzegovina 42,318 12,899 70 Poland 476,904 12,601 71 Grenada 1,406 12,495 72 Montenegro 7,816 12,445 73 Hungary 112,165 11,611 74 Armenia 32,561 10,988 75 Croatia 44,886 10,934 76 Jordan 111,285 10,907 77 French Polynesia 2,950 10,502 78 Barbados 2,990 10,405 Countries under safe category with sufficient test done No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests conducted per 1 million citizens 79 Panama 42,657 9,886 80 Oman 50,000 9,791 81 Uzbekistan 325,000 9,710 82 Greece 98,897 9,488 83 North Macedonia 19,241 9,235 84 Kyrgyzstan 59,490 9,118 85 Malaysia 271,721 8,395 86 Bulgaria 57,634 8,295 87 Uruguay 28,024 8,067 88 Sint Maarten 329 7,673 89 Lebanon 51,731 7,579 90 Georgia 29,736 7,454 91 Montserrat 36 7,212 92 Iran 601,324 7,159 Countries who should conduct more tests No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests conducted per 1 million citizens 93 Palestine 34,511 6,765 94 El Salvador 43,043 6,636 95 Saint Kitts and Nevis 327 6,147 96 Cuba 67,335 5,945 97 Dominica 420 5,834 98 South Africa 341,336 5,755 99 British Virgin Islands 167 5,524 100 Ghana 160,501 5,165 101 Moldova 20,447 5,069 102 Ecuador 84,287 4,777 103 Caribbean Netherlands 110 4,195 104 Ukraine 181,552 4,151 105 Botswana 9,540 4,057 Countries who have not done enough test thus endangering the citizen lives No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests conducted per 1 million citizens 106 Dominican Republic 42,615 3,928 107 Bahamas 1,500 3,814 108 Albania 10,559 3,669 109 Saint Lucia 620 3,376 110 Costa Rica 17,170 3,371 111 Rwanda 42,425 3,276 112 Thailand 227,860 3,264 113 Iraq 127,153 3,161 114 Colombia 151,396 2,975 115 Mongolia 9,707 2,961 116 Taiwan 67,400 2,830 117 Turks and Caicos 109 2,815 118 Tunisia 32,818 2,777 119 Vietnam 261,004 2,681 120 Belize 1,043 2,623 121 Nepal 76,367 2,621 122 Jamaica 7,101 2,398 123 Curaçao 389 2,371 124 Paraguay 15,446 2,166 125 Antigua and Barbuda 183 1,869 126 Argentina 83,018 1,837 127 Morocco 67,741 1,835 128 Sri Lanka 36,605 1,709 129 Japan 214,256 1,694 130 Trinidad and Tobago 2,307 1,648 131 Benin 19,474 1,606 132 Brazil 339,552 1,597 133 Philippines 173,144 1,580 134 Fiji 1,300 1,450 135 Cabo Verde 791 1,423 136 Zimbabwe 20,537 1,382 137 Pakistan 294,894 1,335 138 Uganda 58,606 1,281 139 Togo 10,377 1,253 140 St. Vincent Grenadines 137 1,235 141 India 1,673,688 1,213 142 Guyana 914 1,162 143 Senegal 18,969 1,133 144 Mexico 130,956 1,016 Countries who have done too little tests thus many cases went undetected No. Country No of tests conducted No of tests conducted per 1 million citizens 145 Egypt 90,000 879 146 Cambodia 14,094 843 147 Sao Tome and Principe 175 799 148 Bangladesh 129,865 789 149 Guinea-Bissau 1,500 762 150 CAR 3,498 724 151 Suriname 404 689 152 Bolivia 7,651 655 153 Eswatini 714 615 154 Equatorial Guinea 854 609 155 Namibia 1,543 607 156 Indonesia 161,351 590 157 Kenya 31,041 577 158 Honduras 5,653 571 159 Timor-Leste 738 560 160 Zambia 10,270 559 161 Ivory Coast 13,663 518 162 Laos 3,547 488 163 Libya 3,093 450 164 Guatemala 7,200 402 165 Afghanistan 15,560 400 166 Mauritania 1,842 396 167 Gambia 849 351 168 Gabon 724 325 169 Ethiopia 36,624 319 170 Papua New Guinea 2,402 268 171 Niger 5,562 230 172 Myanmar 11,222 206 173 Algeria 6,500 148 174 Madagascar 3,968 143 175 Mozambique 3,923 126 176 Nigeria 23,835 116 177 Haiti 1,296 114 178 South Sudan 1,247 111 179 Mali 2,172 107 180 Angola 3,000 91 181 Malawi 1,188 62 182 Burundi 284 24 183 Yemen 120 4
  16. Latest data as of 11th May, 2020. Top best recovery rate (These countries have recorded more than 70% recovery rate) Data counted only for countries with more than 1000 cases. No Country Total Cases New Cases Total Deaths New Deaths Total Recovered Active Cases Percentage recovered from total cases 1. Iceland 1,801 +0 10 +0 1,773 18 98.45 % 2. China 82,918 +17 4,633 +0 78,144 141 94.24 % 3. Hong Kong 1,048 +3 4 +0 985 59 93.99 % 4. Thailand 3,015 +6 56 +0 2,796 163 92.74 % 5. New Zealand 1,497 +3 21 +0 1,386 90 92.59 % 6. Luxembourg 3,886 +9 101 +0 3,586 199 92.28 % 7. Australia 6,948 +7 97 +0 6,179 672 88.93 % 8. Austria 15,882 +11 620 +2 14,061 1,201 88.53 % 9. South Korea 10,909 +35 256 +0 9,632 1,021 88.29 % 10. Switzerland 30,344 +39 1,834 +1 26,600 1,910 87.66 % 11. Germany 171,999 +120 7,569 +20 145,600 18,830 84.65 % 12. Croatia 2,196 +9 91 +1 1,784 321 81.24 % 13. Iran 109,286 +1,683 6,685 +45 87,422 15,179 79.99 % 14. Uzbekistan 2,482 +64 10 +0 1,982 490 79.85 % 15. Denmark 10,513 +84 533 +4 8,328 1,652 79.22 % 16. Malaysia 6,726 +70 109 +1 5,113 1,504 76.02 % 17. Ireland 22,996 +236 1,458 +12 17,110 4,428 74.40 % 18. Azerbaijan 2,519 +97 32 +1 1,650 837 65.50 % Based on the WHO website and WHO data these 18 countries below have done a good job to contain the virus as they have a high recovery rate of more than 70%. A good job done by all the frontliners including the doctors and nurses in these 18 countries who have done a great job to contain the virus and stop the virus from spreading. It is never easy to maintain a high recovery rate. Nonetheless these 18 countries as listed have proven that it can be done.
  17. Yes you are right. My current prime minister in Australia has really done an excellent job to control the virus and pandemic in my country. Of course I do not want to self praise my own country here. However it is also evident that those countries with female leaders are really doing a good job to control the pandemic in their country. This is also the true facts.
  18. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/06/global-report-several-asia-pacific-nations-pass-covid-19-peak-and-plot-return-to-work Global report: nations in Asia-Pacific pass Covid-19 peak and plot return to work Countries across the Asia-Pacific region have announced plans to cautiously reopen for business as governments around the world race to reboot economies devastated by the coronavirus pandemic. Hong Kong, South Korea and Australia have all vowed to get their residents back to school and work in the coming days as Covid-19 infection rates slow. Financial markets have become caught between concern about cratering economies and rising US-China tension, and the prospect of more countries reopening for business. On Tuesday, Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, announced plans to reopen schools, cinemas, bars and beauty parlours from Friday, with authorities set to hand out reusable face masks to all 7.5 million residents. Hong Kong has had 1,041 cases of coronavirus with four deaths. The move comes after the territory’s economy, already damaged by months of protest before the coronavirus outbreak, recorded its worst decline on record. GDP shrunk 8.9% year-on-year in the first quarter, the deepest contraction since records began in 1974, and the fourth consecutive quarter to drop. Lam noted it was worse than that experienced during the Asian financial crisis in 1998. In South Korea, once the worst-hit country outside China, the government relaxed social distancing rules on Wednesday and students will return to school from Monday. The country, with more than 10,800 cases and 255 deaths, has been held up as an example of how to contain the virus. On Wednesday the Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention reported two new cases – both imported – as the number of new infections continued to slow. The education minister, Yoo Eun-hae, said high school seniors, who are preparing for highly competitive university entrance exams, would return to schools on 13 May with younger students to follow in phases from 20 May. Students and teachers will have to wear a mask except during mealtimes, wipe their desks and observe social distancing as they move around. Schools will also be required to regularly disinfect their premises, conduct temperature checks and rearrange seating. The South Korean professional baseball season began on Tuesday, although teams played in empty stadiums, and football is to follow suit on Friday. Thailand, which has seen 2,987 cases and 54 deaths, began easing restrictions on movement and gatherings on Monday, allowing restaurants, hair salons and open-air markets to resume business, provided that social distancing is maintained and proprietors carry out temperature checks. In neighbouring Vietnam, which has had 271 cases and no deaths, life is also gradually returning to normal, but the economy, which relies on tourism for a 6% of its GDP, faces huge challenges. The Australian government on Wednesday said it was seeking ways to reopen locked down businesses as early as July, as its success in containing the coronavirus outbreak allows it to focus on trying to regain a million jobs lost since mid-March. Australia’s prime minister, Scott Morrison, and state leaders will discuss health protocols at a national cabinet meeting on Friday that could enable businesses to open in a “Covid-safe environment”, with the government saying the shutdown has been costing the economy A$4bn a week. “The lesson from history … is that the quicker you can get people back into jobs and off those unemployment queues, the better off the economy will be and the better off those individuals will be,” the treasurer, Josh Frydenberg, told ABC television. There would be three stages to easing restrictions on social distancing for affected industries, with cafes, restaurants and retail expected to be among the first to be allowed to reopen. Each state would move at its own pace with the common goal of having most of their economies rebooted by July. Australia has had fewer than 7,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus and there are fewer than 1,000 active cases remaining. Ninety-six people have died in the outbreak. The resumption of business might also coincide with the opening of the border between Australia and New Zealand, creating what has been dubbed a trans-Tasman “travel bubble”, given that both countries have significantly reduced infection levels and rates. In the US, the Trump administration is also pushing for an end to lockdowns to focus on economic growth, despite the nation leading the world in infections and deaths, and experts warning that the worst is yet to come. President Donald Trump has scrapped daily coronavirus task force briefings and marginalised his medical experts, preferring economic officials to publicly urge states to reopen. Chinese stock indices reopened in positive territory on Wednesday after the spring holiday but the Australian market lost 0.6% and futures trading pointed to a similar drop in London and New York later in the day. Disney cast a pall over Wall Street by announcing losses of $1.4bn in the first quarter and the entertainment company still had no indication when it might reopen its profitable theme parks in Europe and the US. Airbnb, the home booking site, said it was cutting 1,900 jobs amid the worldwide travel slump. In other coronavirus developments: Britain has overtaken Italy to become the worst-hit nation in Europe, and the second-worst in the world, with more than 32,000 deaths. Youth unemployment in Britain will reach 1 million people over the coming year unless the government provides job guarantees or incentives for school leavers and graduates to stay on in education, a thinktank warns. The global lockdown caused by Covid-19 risks a “devastating” surge in tuberculosis cases, with nearly 1.4 million additional deaths by 2025, new research shows. Brazil confirmed its highest daily coronavirus deaths on Tuesday. There were 6,935 new cases since Monday evening and 600 new deaths. The previous record of 474 deaths came on 28 April. Mexico’s president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, signalled some automotive factories could open in coming weeks. After two consecutive days of zero new coronavirus cases, on Wednesday New Zealand reported one new case of the virus and one more death. The prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, said success in curbing Covid-19 had provided a “safe haven” advantage allowing the country to be open for investment.
  19. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/how-south-korea-flattened-its-coronavirus-curve-n1167376 SEOUL, South Korea — It took Thomas Streetman two hours to walk out his front door, take a cab to the public health center, get tested for the coronavirus and make it back to his apartment. Streetman, 32, an Ohio native — who had a slight fever — was greeted with blue tents scattered across a surprisingly barren street. Medical staff clad head to toe in hazmat suits conducted screenings as another staff member fogged the sidewalk with disinfectant spray. "It was almost militaristic," said Streetman, who has lived in the South Korean capital for almost a decade. "They stuck a long swab up my nose pretty deep. It felt like a button poked my nerves and released my sinuses." Here's what we can learn from South Korea. Early testing, detection, prevention News that China had reported its first case of the coronavirus was enough reason for South Korean leaders and medical staff to brace themselves for the worst. "Acting fast was the most important decision South Korea made," said Hwang Seung-Sik, a professor at Seoul National University's Graduate School of Public Health. By early February, the first test had been approved. Active collaboration among central and regional government officials and medical staff took place before cases began piling up, enabling South Korea's current testing capacity of 20,000 people a day at 633 sites, including drive-thru centers and even phone booths. The collaborative effort was underway just 11 days after "Patient 31," a member of a secretive religious group called the Shincheonji Church, caused an explosion of infections in Daegu, a major city 170 miles southeast of Seoul. Early testing meant early detection of infections in South Korea, where a relatively larger proportion of patients showed either no symptoms or very mild ones, according to Hwang. "Among Shincheonji members, there were many 20- and 30-year-olds who were infected. Many of them may have never even known they were carrying the virus and recovered easily while silently infecting those around them," Hwang said. "Early testing is why Korea hasn't reached its breaking point yet." Under South Korea's single-payer health care system, getting tested costs $134. But with a doctor's referral or for those who've made contact with an infected person, testing is free. Even undocumented foreigners are urged to get tested and won't face threats due to their status. Extensive tracing and mapping South Korean leaders have amped up efficiency for overwhelmed hospitals by digitally monitoring lower-risk patients under quarantine, as well as keeping close tabs on visiting travelers who are required to enter their symptoms into an app. Sites like Corona Map generate real-time updates about where current patients are located and inform proactive Koreans focused on protecting themselves. That people are willing to forgo privacy rights and allow the publication of sensitive information underlines the willingness to pay the digital cost of state surveillance in the name of public safety, said professor Ju Youngkee, who teaches health and data journalism at Hallym University. According to a survey conducted last month by Seoul National University's Graduate School of Public Health, 78.5 percent of respondents agreed that they would sacrifice the protection of their privacy rights to help prevent a national epidemic. Public spaces transformed into PSA venues The refusal by some Britons to follow the government's social distancing measures in the United Kingdom prompted the closings of thousands of pubs, cafés and restaurants last week, leaving many to consider layoffs and shutting for good. In South Korea, however, reminders from the government aren't delivered in the form of blanket lockdowns. Commuters wait at platforms and in subway cars as announcements are played in different languages, including English and Chinese. A female voice lists tips such as "blocking" your mouth when coughing. The broadcasts are one of many upgrades from the 2015 Middle East Respiratory Syndrome outbreak — a failing of the South Korean system that cost 38 lives and amounted to 186 cases, the highest number outside the Middle East. Now, hand sanitizer bottles are placed in front of nearly every entrance and elevator for public use. And of the 1,000 people who took part in a study by Seoul "Wearing masks or self-monitoring alone isn't foolproof to people in Korea, but taking part in these practices as a group is believed to have an impact," said Michael Hurt, who teaches cultural theory at Korea National University of the Arts. "This says that your individual choices may not have immediate benefit to you as an individual but will benefit the herd — that it doesn't work unless everybody is in the game." Cautious hopefulness Despite its apparently swift recovery from the coronavirus, South Korea may only be entering the beginning stages of what experts suspect may be a long ride ahead. According to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 80 percent of COVID-19 cases can be categorized as mass infections. A call center in southwestern Seoul was at the center of a local outbreak this month that generated more than 156 infections. About 90 cases were traced to a Zumba class. "Even though the number of reported cases is declining, this may be painting an illusion of recovery," Hwang said. "All 210,000 Shincheonji members have been tested, which may account for the decline we're seeing, but local infection clusters are emerging every day in churches, hospitals and other mundane spaces." South Korea has already started new testing on all arrivals from Europe, according to local news reports, preparing for a "second wave" of imported clusters. Even those who test negative are required to self-quarantine for 14 days. "We are proceeding with cautious hopefulness," Hwang said.
  20. https://www.forbes.com/sites/avivahwittenbergcox/2020/04/13/what-do-countries-with-the-best-coronavirus-reponses-have-in-common-women-leaders/ What Do Countries With The Best Coronavirus Responses Have In Common? Women Leaders
  21. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/10/world/coronavirus-live-world-news-tracker.html Prime Minister Boris Johnson announces a quarantine for incoming travelers. ‘This Is Not the Time Simply to End the Lockdown,’ Boris Johnson Says In a recorded message to the British people, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said coronavirus restrictions would largely stay in place. It is now almost two months since the people of this country began to put up with restrictions on their freedom, your freedom, of a kind that we have never seen before in peace or war. And it’s thanks to your effort and sacrifice in stopping the spread of this disease that the death rate is coming down and hospital admissions are coming down. And thanks to you, we’ve protected our N.H.S. and saved many thousands of lives. And so, I know, you know, that it would be madness now to throw away that achievement by allowing a second spike. We must stay alert. This is not the time simply to end the lockdown this week. Instead, we’re taking the first careful steps to modify our measures. And the first step is a change of emphasis that we hope that people will act on this week. We said that you should work from home if you can and only go to work if you must. We now need to stress that anyone who can’t work from home — for instance, those in construction or manufacturing — should be actively encouraged to go to work. And we want it to be safe for you to get to work. So you should avoid public transport if at all possible. Because we must and will maintain social distancing, and capacity will therefore be limited. So, work from home if you can. But you should go to work if you can’t work from home. And from this Wednesday, we want to encourage people to take more and even unlimited amounts of outdoor exercise. You can sit in the sun in your local park. You can drive to other destinations. You can even play sports, only with members of your own household. You must obey the rules on social distancing. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced on Sunday that Britain would soon impose a mandatory quarantine on travelers arriving in the country by air to try to avert a new wave of coronavirus infections, signaling how cautious the country will be in relaxing its seven-week lockdown. In a much-anticipated national address, Mr. Johnson offered no details about how the quarantine would work. But with the transmission rate of the virus having declined sharply throughout the country, he made clear the government now views people from abroad as the greatest threat to a country that is already one of the contagion’s hardest hit in Europe. Mr. Johnson urged the British public to “stay alert,” softening his earlier admonition to “stay home,” and said that people could exercise outside as much as they wanted, sunbathe in parks, and return to work, if they could not work from home. Other than that, he said, the current restrictions would stay in place. “This is not the time simply to end the lockdown,” Mr. Johnson said, as he credited social distancing for slowing the spread of the virus. “Instead we are taking the first careful steps to modify our measures.” Critics claimed that the new guidance to “stay alert” was so vague that it risked confusion, and it set off fissures with political leaders in other parts of the United Kingdom, which had largely moved in lockstep in combating the virus. Scotland’s first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, said that Scotland would be sticking with the guidance for people to stay at home. Mr. Johnson did not announce another measure that had been rumored for days: asking people to wear face masks in public. India’s train network will gradually restart operations on Tuesday as the country eases its coronavirus lockdown, even as infections there are on the rise. The train network, one of the world’s largest, closed in late March when a strict lockdown was implemented. But as the country begins to slowly open back up this month, trains are the first mode of transport being allowed to crisscross the country. On Sunday, India reported more than 67,000 coronavirus cases with more than 2,200 deaths. The March closure was the first since the country gained its independence in 1947, offering a potent symbol of the global panic sweeping into the country. The Indian government converted some 20,000 train carriages into isolation wards, bracing for a devastating wave of coronavirus infections that many predicted would overwhelm hospitals. That disaster has largely failed to materialize, although some cities have fared worse than others, with entire hospitals shut in as staff became infected with coronavirus. On Sunday, the railways ministry said some trains would restart, running from the capital to cities across the country, but passengers would have to wear masks and undergo health screenings before being allowed to depart. New routes will also be introduced, the railways ministry said in a statement. The announcement comes after the government arranged for trains to shuttle thousands of migrant workers stranded in cities across India back to their homes, mostly in the rural hinterlands. Up to 45 million Indians travel each year from those areas to the country’s big cities to look for work. When the lockdown was announced, millions of migrant workers became homeless and jobless overnight and with interstate travel banned, many set off on foot to travel to their homes, sometimes hundreds of miles away.
  22. Thank you for your information. Anyway just as you have said Kerala is doing a good job with high recovery rate. Hope other districts can follow suit too.
  23. I think it must be very hard for India right? India is the second largest country in the whole wide world. So no matter how many tests carried out it will be impossible to test all their citizens right? I heard that those living in the slump area are more dangerous and prone to catch the virus. It is not easy. India is not a very righ country and with so many cases coming up it is just waiting like a bombshell and time bomb.
  24. Latest data as of 10th May, 2020. Top best recovery rate (These countries have recorded more than 70% recovery rate) Data counted only for countries with more than 1000 cases. No Country Total Cases New Cases Total Deaths New Deaths Total Recovered Active Cases Percentage recovered from total cases 1. Iceland 1,801 +0 10 +0 1,773 18 98.45 % 2. China 82,901 +14 4,633 +0 78,120 148 94.23 % 3. Hong Kong 1,048 +3 4 +0 982 62 93.70 % 4. Thailand 3,009 +5 56 +0 2,794 159 92.85 % 5. New Zealand 1,494 +2 21 +0 1,371 102 91.77 % 6. Luxembourg 3,877 +6 101 +1 3,550 226 91.57 % 7. Australia 6,941 +12 97 +0 6,163 681 88.79 % 8. South Korea 10,874 +34 256 +0 9,610 1,008 88.38 % 9. Austria 15,871 +38 618 +3 13,991 1,262 88.15 % 10. Switzerland 30,305 +54 1,830 +0 26,400 2,075 87.11 % 11. Germany 171,324 +736 7,549 +39 144,400 19,375 84.28 % 12. Croatia 2,187 +11 90 +3 1,764 333 80.66 % 13. Iran 107,603 +1,383 6,640 +51 86,143 14,820 80.05 % 14. Denmark 10,429 +110 529 +3 8,217 1,683 78.79 % 15. Uzbekistan 2,411 +62 10 +0 1,870 531 77.56 % 16. Malaysia 6,656 +67 108 +0 5,025 1,523 75.50 % 17. Ireland 22,760 +219 1,446 +17 17,110 4,204 75.18 % 18. Azerbaijan 2,422 +143 31 +3 1,620 771 66.89 %
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