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MONTHLY REPORT

Surveillance Main

West Virginia Provisional Monthly Infectious Disease Surveillance Report*
As of November 30, 2020

Reportable
Condition
January February March April May June July August September October November December 2020 2019
Acute flaccid myelitis00000000000001
Adenovirus311330125761111200128239
AIDS00000000000000
Anaplasmosis00000010010024
Anthrax00000000000000
Babesiosis00000000000000
Botulism, foodborne00000000000000
Botulism, infant00000000000003
Brucellosis00000000000000
Campylobacteriosis23212317275326116100208425
Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE)8141171412100049143
Chickenpox (Varicella)4520311001001771
Chikungunya virus00000000000000
Chlamydia trachomatis infection4815465212922994364225954343330043595635
Cholera00000000000000
Coronavirus11446581014500200240466
Cryptosporidiosis32421282300003674
Cyclosporiasis00000210000034
Dengue fever00000000000006
Diphtheria00000000000000
Ehrlichiosis, chaffeensis000001020100411
Ehrlichiosis/Anaplasmosis, undetermined00000000000000
Enterovirus221411110543980047438
Giardiasis9111241358400057103
Gonorrhea1581401511211091751401901451210014501784
Haemophilus influenzae, invasive6343231411002842
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome00000000000000
Hemolytic uremic syndrome, post-diarrheal00000000000000
Hepatitis A, acute20201793410000074467
Hepatitis B, acute8036210100002176
Hepatitis B, chronic3223171211400000099393
Hepatitis B, perinatal00000000000000
Hepatitis C, acute53332194510000099104
Hepatitis C, chronic3587735243321773963571181881070033306531
HIV00000000000000
Influenza107920781351861144110045433288
Influenza Related Pediatric Death00000000000000
La Crosse encephalitis00000020400063
Latent Tuberculosis Infection2423211421411625275400266301
Legionellosis6430151010002186
Leptospirosis00000000000002
Listeriosis000000000000012
Lyme disease1817241932138250203475007531009
Malaria00000000000002
Measles (Rubeola)00000000000000
Meningococcal disease, invasive00010000000010
Metapneumovirus47651111210000000236264
Mumps00000000000005
Mycoplasma pneumoniae221100002000830
Parainfluenza33101130440010066537
Paratyphoid Fever00000000000000
Pertussis8371200000002139
Plague00000000000000
Poliomyelitis00000000000000
Q fever (Acute or Chronic)00000000000000
Rhinovirus1411542033312112681820007431720
RSV2272191251641000000592561
Rubella00000000000000
S. aureus (GISA/VISA, GRSA/VRSA)00000100000010
Salmonellosis00000000000001
SARS00000000200020
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)55523117450004769
Shigellosis2110120120001021
Smallpox00000000000000
Spotted Fever Rickettsiosis2000123422001642
Streptococcal disease, Group B, invasive211826191621833000135251
Streptococcal toxic-shock syndrome01000000000014
Streptococcus pneumoniae, invasive3435351856720200144328
Syphilis2022171715181924151200179204
Tetanus00000000000000
Toxic-shock syndrome, staphylococcal00000000000000
Trichinosis00000000000000
Tuberculosis14102001000099
Tularemia00000000000000
Typhoid Fever00000000000000
VHF (Viral Hemorrhagic Fever)00000000000000
Vibriosis (non-cholera species)110121010000712
West Nile Virus00000000000000
Yellow fever00000000000000
Zika Virus (congenital or non-congenital)00000000000000

* NOTES:

  1. Cases are counted by date of report to the West Virginia Electronic Disease Surveillance System (WVEDSS).
  2. Case counts are provisional and subject to change as new information becomes available.
  3. This report includes cases that have been closed as confirmed, probable, or suspect.
  4. Case counts from Sunday to Saturday are compiled and reported the following week.
  5. Not all WV reportable infectious disease condtions appear in this list. For the complete list prescribed by WV Code 16-3-1;64CSR7, click here.
  6. This summary underestimates the true burden of disease as not all case-patients are detected or reported.
  7. For the purpose of reporting data to the CDC, date ranges correspond to CDC defined surveillance weeks. For 2015, the first week ran from Sunday, January 4th through Saturday, January 10th. Likewise, January 2015 as a month in the report would correspond to MMWR Weeks 1-4 (Jan.4 -Jan. 31)
  8. Respiratory virus counts represent positive lab specimens received via ELR and underestimate total incidence within the state.
  9. The number of facilities submitting ELR across the state is increasing, which may lead to significant differences in respiratory virus totals from 2017 to 2018.
  10. HIV and AIDS monthly totals cannot be accurately reported due to the time required for proper case investigation.

For a printable version of this report, click here.