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The Worst Virus Outbreaks in the U.S. Are Now in Rural Areas

New reported cases by day in the United States, 7-day average

Rural areas

200 per million

Metro areas

March 1

Oct. 20

New reported cases by day in the United States, 7-day average

Rural areas

200 per million

Metro areas

March 1

Oct. 20

New reported cases by day in the United States, 7-day average

Rural areas

200 per million

Metro areas

March 1

Oct. 20

New reported cases by day in the United States,

7-day average

Rural areas

200 per million

Metro areas

March 1

Oct. 20

Note: Rural areas are those counties located outside of metropolitan areas, as defined by the United States Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service. They may include small cities and towns.

The coronavirus was slow to come to Foster County, N.D., a community of just over 3,000 people in the eastern part of the state. When virus cases surged in the Northeast in the spring, the county recorded just one positive case. When national case counts peaked in mid-July, it had recorded just two more.

But by Tuesday, about one in every 20 residents had tested positive for the virus. More than half of those cases were reported in the past two weeks.

Most of the worst outbreaks in the United States right now are in rural places like Foster County. Where earlier peaks saw virus cases concentrated mainly in cities and suburbs, the current surge is the most geographically dispersed yet, and it is hitting hard remote counties that often lack a hospital or other critical health care resources.

Since late summer, per capita case and death rates in rural areas have outpaced those in metropolitan areas.

New reported deaths by day in the United States, 7-day average

10 per million

Rural areas

Metro areas

March 1

Oct. 20

New reported deaths by day in the United States, 7-day average

10 per million

Rural areas

Metro areas

March 1

Oct. 20

New reported deaths by day in the United States, 7-day average

10 per million

Rural areas

Metro areas

March 1

Oct. 20

New reported deaths by day in the United States,

7-day average

10 per million

Rural areas

Metro areas

March 1

Oct. 20

Note: Rural areas are those counties located outside of metropolitan areas, as defined by the United States Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service. They may include small cities and towns.

The total number of coronavirus cases and deaths in rural places remains smaller than those in cities because of the comparatively low population in rural areas. But the rural share of the virus burden has grown over time.

Now, about one in four deaths from the virus is recorded in a rural county. That stands in contrast to March and April, when almost every death was in a metropolitan area, as the virus tore through the Northeast, after early clusters in the Seattle area and populous parts of California.

These maps show the case rates in rural areas at different points of the national outbreak:

Avg. daily cases per million in the past week

100

300

500

700

Few or

no cases

Rural counties

Cases in rural areas now

Oct. 20

Metro areas

are not shown

Cases in rural areas when cases peaked over the summer

July 25

Navajo County, Ariz.

The summer surge spread

to many rural counties

in the South.

Cases in rural areas when cases first peaked

April 10

Clusters at

meatpacking plants

in Iowa

Counties outside

Albany, Ga.

Avg. daily cases per million in the past week

100

300

500

700

Few or

no cases

Rural counties

Cases in rural areas now

Oct. 20

Metro areas

are not shown

Cases in rural areas when cases peaked over the summer

July 25

Navajo County, Ariz.

The summer surge spread

to many rural counties

in the South.

Cases in rural areas when cases first peaked

April 10

Clusters at

meatpacking plants

in Iowa

Counties outside

Albany, Ga.

Avg. daily cases per million in the past week

100

300

500

700

Few or

no cases

Rural counties

Cases in rural areas now

Oct. 20

Metro areas

are not shown

Cases in rural areas when cases peaked over the summer

July 25

Navajo County, Ariz.

The summer surge spread

to many rural counties

in the South.

Cases in rural areas when cases first peaked

April 10

Clusters at

meatpacking plants

in Iowa

Counties outside

Albany, Ga.

Avg. daily cases per million in the past week

100

300

500

700

Few or

no cases

Cases in rural areas now

Oct. 20

Metro areas

are not shown

Cases in rural areas when cases peaked

over the summer

July 25

Cases in rural areas when cases first peaked

April 10

Avg. daily cases per million in the past week

100

300

500

700

Few or

no cases

Rural counties

Cases in rural areas now

Oct. 20

Metro areas

are not shown

Cases in rural areas when cases peaked over the summer

July 25

Navajo County, Ariz.

The summer surge spread

to many rural counties

in the South.

Cases in rural areas when cases first peaked

April 10

Clusters at

meatpacking plants

in Iowa

Counties outside

Albany, Ga.

During the summer surge, rural outbreaks occurred more often than they had in the spring, but reported cases per million remained higher in cities and their suburbs than in rural counties.

It was not until August, when the outbreak was receding from Sun Belt cities like Houston, Miami and Phoenix that per capita rates of cases and deaths in rural areas surpassed those in metropolitan areas.

Now, with the national case count and hospitalization rates approaching a third peak, none of the country’s biggest hotspots are in a large city. Almost all the counties with the largest outbreaks have populations under 50,000, and most have populations under 10,000. Nearly all are in the Midwest or the Mountain West.

Though the outbreak’s geographic spread is expanding, many of the same kinds of places remain at risk for clusters of infections. In Norton County, Kan., the hardest-hit county in the country relative to its population, all 62 residents of one nursing home have been infected with the virus, and 10 have died. A state prison in the county also has an outbreak.

Hospitals across the Upper Midwest and the Mountain West are also feeling the surge. Facilities are struggling with capacity, and in some cases residents are finding that the nearest hospital with available beds is hours away, or in another state.

Earlier this month, hospitals in North Dakota had to turn patients away. Bismarck, the state’s capital, had one staffed I.C.U. bed available as of Monday.

Overwhelmed by the record case numbers, North Dakota suspended its contact tracing program this week. New Mexico’s governor, also seeing hospital beds fill up in her state, plans to put in effect new restrictions on restaurants, bars and retail stores.

And Alaska, which is experiencing record numbers, provides a cautionary tale: Even with extensive testing and robust contact tracing, the virus is poised to thrive as temperatures drop and people move activities indoors.

Most of the counties with the worst per capita outbreaks now have fewer than 10,000 people
COUNTY POPULATION AVG. DAILY CASES,
LAST 7 DAYS
AVG. DAILY CASES
PER 10,000
1 Norton, Kan. 5,486 39 72
2 Miner, S.D. 2,229 7 31
3 Bon Homme, S.D. 6,969 21 31
4 Harding, S.D. 1,311 4 31
5 Faulk, S.D. 2,322 6 26
6 Sheridan, Kan. 2,506 6 26
7 Carter, Mont. 1,318 3 23
8 Menominee, Wis. 4,579 10 22
9 Foster, N.D. 3,290 7 21
10 Webster, Neb. 3,571 7 21
11 Buffalo, S.D. 2,053 4 20
12 Izard, Ark. 13,559 27 20
13 Oglala Lakota, S.D. 14,335 28 20
14 Blaine, Mont. 6,727 13 19
15 Towner, N.D. 2,246 4 18
16 Sheridan, N.D. 1,405 3 18
17 Eddy, N.D. 2,313 4 18
18 Decatur, Kan. 2,881 5 18
19 Madison, Idaho 38,705 68 18
20 Carroll, Miss. 10,129 17 17
21 Hill, Mont. 16,439 27 16
22 McIntosh, N.D. 2,654 4 16
23 Valley, Mont. 7,532 12 16
24 Sully, S.D. 1,331 2 16
25 Roosevelt, Mont. 11,228 18 16
26 Golden Valley, N.D. 1,882 3 16
27 Campbell, S.D. 1,435 2 16
28 McLean, N.D. 9,608 15 16
29 Mercer, N.D. 8,570 13 16
30 Langlade, Wis. 19,164 29 15
31 Hettinger, N.D. 2,576 4 15
32 Logan, N.D. 1,927 3 15
33 Florence, Wis. 4,337 6 15
34 Walworth, S.D. 5,510 8 15
35 Turner, S.D. 8,264 12 15
36 Glacier, Mont. 13,699 20 14
37 Big Horn, Mont. 13,376 19 14
38 Gove, Kan. 2,619 4 14
39 Perry, Tenn. 7,912 11 14
40 McCone, Mont. 1,630 2 14
41 Oliver, N.D. 1,837 3 14
42 LaMoure, N.D. 4,100 6 14
43 Golden Valley, Mont. 724 1 14
44 Dickey, N.D. 4,970 7 14
45 Deer Lodge, Mont. 9,100 12 14
46 Hayes, Neb. 943 1 14
47 Burleigh, N.D. 93,737 126 13
48 Morton, N.D. 30,544 41 13
49 Shawano, Wis. 41,009 54 13
50 Todd, S.D. 10,146 13 13

Tracking the Coronavirus