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#COVID-19 by the numbers: A horrifying pandemic atlas

#COVID-19 by the numbers: A horrifying pandemic atlas

Month after dismal month, Americans have been inundated by an ever-rising tide of devastating numbers. Hundreds of thousands of deaths. Tens of million unemployed.

By mid-December, five in every 100 Americans — more than 16 million — had been infected by COVID-19.

Those numbers testify to a historic tragedy. But they don’t fully capture the multitude of ways, large and small, that the virus has upended and reconfigured everyday life in the U.S.

For that, there are a host of other numbers. Some may be less familiar than others, yet all are just as telling in calculating the pandemic’s sweeping impact:

REMOTE SCHOOL AND WORK

400 million

School lunches and breakfasts that went unserved in March and April after schools were closed: 400 million

10 million

Number of participants in meetings on Zoom each day last December: 10 million

300 million

Number of participants daily in Zoom meetings by the end of March: 300 million

ManPower DC founder and CEO Jimmie Jenkins, 30, poses for a portrait with his sons, Jahrei Montgomery, 11, and Ashton Cross, 5, outside their home in Washington
ManPower DC founder and CEO Jimmie Jenkins, 30, poses for a portrait with his sons, Jahrei Montgomery, 11, and Ashton Cross, 5, outside their home in Washington.
AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

JOBS

20.3 percent

Employment rate of low-wage workers as the year nears its end, compared to January: down 20.3 percent

Less than 1 percent

Employment rate of high-wage workers compared to January: up 0.2 percent

Almost 30 percent

Share of small businesses that are still closed even as the U.S. economy has reopened: 28.8 percent

384,000

People who applied for a job at Amazon.com in a single week, after the online retailer announced a hiring fair to keep up with skyrocketing orders: 384,000

$269 billion

Payments to Americans by the Internal Revenue Service to help ease the pandemic’s economic fallout: 153.1 million checks and direct deposits through August, totaling $269.3 billion

Empty lanes of the 110 Arroyo Seco Parkway lead to downtown Los Angeles on Sunday, April 26, 2020, during the coronavirus outbreak.
Empty lanes of the 110 Arroyo Seco Parkway lead to downtown Los Angeles on Sunday, April 26, 2020, during the coronavirus outbreak.
AP

TRAVEL

35.3 billion

Miles that Americans did not drive because they were unemployed, working or studying from home and traveling less: 35.3 billion (through August)

272 million

Drop in the number of passengers traveling on U.S. domestic flights this spring: 272.01 million, a decline of 76 percent (March to July, compared to the same period in 2019).

$188.5 billion

Dollars the international airline industry has lost this year: $118.5 billion

2.21 million

Passengers screened by Transportation Security Administration agents at U.S. airports on April 14 last year: 2.21 million

87,534

Passengers screened by the TSA on April 14 this year: 87,534

3,575

Number of TSA screening agents who have tested positive for COVID: 3,575

152

Number of TSA agents at New York’s John F. Kennedy International who have tested positive: 152

NEW YORK CITY

253,000

Number of people who went to a New York Broadway show during the first week of March: 253,453

0

Number of people who have been to a Broadway show since mid-March: 0

234,000

Number of jobs lost at New York City restaurants and bars between February and April: 233,751

Nearly 90,000

Number of jobs regained at New York City restaurants and bars from April through September: 89,559

A message is written on the front window of the Ranging Bull Saloon which remains closed during the coronavirus pandemic, Tuesday, April 28, 2020, in Augusta, Maine.
A message is written on the front window of the Ranging Bull Saloon which remains closed during the coronavirus pandemic, Tuesday, April 28, 2020, in Augusta, Maine.
AP

SPENDING

37 percent

Americans’ spending on restaurants and hotels, compared to January: down 36.6 percent

51 percent

Americans’ spending on transportation, compared to January: down 50.9 percent

64 percent

Americans’ spending on entertainment and recreation, compared to January: down 64.3 percent

2.7 percent

Americans’ spending on groceries, compared to January: down 2.7 percent

SPENDING ON ALCOHOL

$62.5 billion

Total sales of alcoholic beverages during the pandemic: $62.5 billion, up 21.8 percent

256 percent

Online sales of alcohol in September compared to a year ago: up 256 percent

56 percent

Sales of tequila for home consumption in September and October, compared to a year ago: up 56 percent

71 percent

Champagne: up 71 percent

131 percent

Ready-to-drink cocktails: up 131 percent

Judie Shape, center, who has tested positive for the coronavirus, blows a kiss to her son-in-law, Michael Spencer, left, as Shape's daughter, Lori Spencer, right, looks on, Wednesday, March 11, 2020, in Washington.
Judie Shape, center, who has tested positive for the coronavirus, blows a kiss to her son-in-law, Michael Spencer, left, as Shape’s daughter, Lori Spencer, right, looks on, Wednesday, March 11, 2020, in Washington.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

HAND SANITIZER

300 percent

Production increase in bottles of Purell hand sanitizer this year: up 300 percent

54 billion

Number of Purell single-pump “doses” contained in bottles shipped to U.S. hospitals this year: 54 billion

DENTISTS

97.1 percent

Dentists who closed their offices entirely, or to all but emergency patients, in April: 97.1 percent

65.6 percent

Dentists whose offices have reopened, but with fewer patients than usual: 65.6 percent

59.4 percent

Dentists who say they are seeing more patients who grind their teeth, usually an indicator of stress: 59.4 percent

With the seats in Dodger Stadium empty, Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Julio Urias throws the ball to a San Francisco Giants batter during the third inning of a baseball game Sunday, July 26, 2020, in Los Angeles.
With the seats in Dodger Stadium empty, Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Julio Urias throws the ball to a San Francisco Giants batter during the third inning of a baseball game Sunday, July 26, 2020, in Los Angeles.
AP

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

2,430

Games played during Major League Baseball’s regular season last year: 2,430

68,494,752

Fans who attended those games: 68,494,752

898

Games played during MLB’s shortened regular season this year: 898

0

Fans who attended those games: 0

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