Nationally Notifiable Infectious Diseases and Conditions, United States: Annual Tables

TABLE 2o. Annual reported cases* of notifiable diseases, by region and reporting area, United States, U.S. Territories, and Non-U.S. Residents, 2020
Data from some reporting areas may be incomplete due to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic or due to post-reconciliation data updates that could not be confirmed or included in the final data set. Please see Note #9 and Note #10, respectively.
Reporting Area Salmonellosis (excluding S. Typhi infection and S. Paratyphi infection) § Severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus disease Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) Shigellosis Smallpox
U.S. Residents, excluding U.S. Territories 45,442 9,922 9,108
New England 1,541 273 224
Connecticut 349 77 48
Maine 111 11 4
Massachusetts 737 94 125
New Hampshire 151 22 8
Rhode Island 115 28 32
Vermont 78 41 7
Middle Atlantic 4,557 1,078 1,040
New Jersey 1,057 30 173
New York (excluding New York City) 1,210 366 166
New York City 923 392 510
Pennsylvania 1,367 290 191
East North Central 4,814 1,343 729
Illinois 1,340 357 245
Indiana 684 135 58
Michigan 907 205 152
Ohio 1,178 355 202
Wisconsin 705 291 72
West North Central 3,150 1,488 346
Iowa 612 363 62
Kansas 488 162 17
Minnesota 714 416 143
Missouri 797 250 64
Nebraska 269 152 38
North Dakota 90 48 10
South Dakota 180 97 12
South Atlantic 15,026 1,539 1,562
Delaware 194 22 10
District of Columbia 34 9 33
Florida 6,738 454 549
Georgia 2,063 284 442
Maryland 702 129 112
North Carolina 2,354 256 203
South Carolina 1,705 80 65
Virginia 985 231 130
West Virginia 251 74 18
East South Central 3,317 531 601
Alabama 882 99 346
Kentucky 662 157 55
Mississippi 940 39 54
Tennessee 833 236 146
West South Central 5,629 854 1,747
Arkansas 461 79 32
Louisiana 1,314 83 176
Oklahoma 822 179 154
Texas 3,032 513 1,385
Mountain 2,382 1,044 677
Arizona 631 186 253
Colorado 599 294 219
Idaho 206 147 19
Montana 187 91 15
Nevada 52 41 67
New Mexico 250 38 53
Utah 351 194 50
Wyoming 106 53 1
Pacific 5,026 1,772 2,182
Alaska 57 8 1
California 3,667 1,244 1,723
Hawaii 134 6 41
Oregon 465 206 192
Washington 703 308 225
U.S. Territories 321 7 4
American Samoa
Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands
Guam 4 4
Puerto Rico 313 7
U.S. Virgin Islands 4
Non-U.S. Residents 2 2
Total 45,765 9,929 9,114
  • —: No reported cases — The reporting jurisdiction did not submit any cases to CDC.
  • N: Not reportable — The disease or condition was not reportable by law, statute, or regulation in the reporting jurisdiction.
  • U: Unavailable — The data are unavailable.
  • * Cases are assigned to the reporting jurisdiction submitting the case to NNDSS if the case's country of usual residence is the United States, a U.S. territory, unknown, or country is not reported; otherwise, the case is assigned to the Non-U.S. Residents' category. Country of usual residence is currently not reported by all jurisdictions or for all conditions because this data element is only available in the HL7 generic version 2 and disease-specific message mapping guides. If a jurisdiction sends data in legacy formats, they are not able to send this information. For further information on interpretation of these data, see https://www.cdc.gov/nndss/data-statistics/readers-guides/.
  • † To calculate rates, use the populations provided in Table 8. Note that calculation of rates for the following conditions use population subsets presented in Table 8: Zika virus infection, congenital; Zika virus disease, congenital; Infant botulism; Congenital rubella syndrome; Perinatal Hepatitis B infection; Perinatal Hepatitis C infection; Haemophilus influenzae, invasive disease; Invasive pneumococcal disease; and Influenza-associated pediatric mortality. Also see Notes #3 and #7.
  • § Beginning in January 2019, cases began to be reported as salmonellosis (excluding Salmonella Typhi infection and Salmonella Paratyphi infection). In 2018, cases were reported as salmonellosis (excluding paratyphoid fever and typhoid fever). Prior to 2018, cases of paratyphoid fever were considered salmonellosis.