Tennessee Overview
- Notes, data anomalies, and official cautions for Tennessee
- Data sources and screenshots for Tennessee
Current data completeness grade:
Key Metrics
New tests Total test results (Specimens)
New cases (Notes)
Current hospitalizations
New deaths
- Dec 20: On December 20, 2020, Tennessee released case, test, and death data for both December 19 and December 20. This was explained by the state on December 19 as being due to the volume of tests being processed.
We calculate daily changes based on the data states report each day. Some states report new cases, tests, and deaths using other methods. Please consult official state data sources for more information. We chart “New tests” using different units across jurisdictions, because not all states and territories report tests in the same units. Learn more about total test units and see what we chart for each jurisdiction in our total tests documentation.
We do not have a complete dataset for every metric in every state. If we have data for less than 30% of the past 90 days for a given metric, you’ll see a warning instead of a chart for that metric.
All the data for these charts is available for download. You can also review tabular national data on our US historical data page and data for each state and territory on the individual state or territory’s overview page.
Viral (PCR) tests
Tennessee viral (PCR) testing Historical data(test encounters)
(specimens)
(people)
Antigen tests
Tennessee antigen testing Historical dataWarning: Antigen reporting may significantly understate the true number of tests administered
Antibody tests
Tennessee antibody testing Historical dataHospitalization
Tennessee hospitalization Historical dataHospitalization (HHS data)
See this HHS hospitalization data on a map.
This data is published by HHS.
Long-term care (LTC)
Tennessee long-term care datafrom LTC facilities24.4%
Race & ethnicity data
We compute the number of cases and deaths per 100k people for each race and ethnicity.
These numbers show the scale of outcomes compared to the size of each group’s population. These are not the number of cases or deaths, rather the proportion of each demographic group who have been affected.
Race & ethnicity: cases per capita
(All data is calculated)
Race & ethnicity: deaths per capita
(All data is calculated)
* Based on <10 deaths among members of this race/ethnicity. Interpret with caution.
Our latest tweets about Tennessee
Our twitter handle is @COVID19Tracking
As of today, vaccine data is readily available across 49 states and territories, but our team only found vaccine data on doses administered in LTCs in seven states: Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas.
January 14, 2021
Tennessee didn’t update its dashboard today. The state announced that, due to the high volume of tests being processed, it will likely release a combined report with data from today and tomorrow.
December 20, 2020
We are able to see the disparate impact of COVID-19 for each state and territory with these cards. In Tennessee, the ‘Hispanic or Latino’ population is much more likely to have tested positive for COVID-19.
October 16, 2020
Six states saw a rise of over 100 (FL, CA, TX, AZ, GA, TN) in their number of currently hospitalized COVID-19 patients. All six set new record highs for their states.
July 14, 2020
Though Mondays are typically low reporting days, three states broke that trend. Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee reported large numbers today.
July 13, 2020