- Here is our daily roundup of coronavirus stats from the last 24 hours, on a country-by-country basis.
- We'll start with the most-affected countries and then take a look at Russia, Belgium, Canada and Sweden.
- The plateau is holding up in the US.
- Progress in the UK looks to be under threat.
- The situation in Russia continues to look grave. But there is new hope in Belgium.
- Scroll on for charts based on data from Worldometers.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
The US: Good news! Plateau still holding up.
The active cases curve is flattening.
And a decline in new deaths is heartening.
Spain: Continued good news.
After a couple of bad days it looks like that declining trend reasserted itself.
Italy: Continues to move in lockstep with Spain.
Deaths and new cases are both in decline.
And it shows in the "active cases" curve tapering off.
France: This is either a miracle or — more likely — France didn't collect the data on Sunday very efficiently.
Expect to see the numbers pop upward again once Monday's info has been collated.
Germany: Possibly the best good news story in Europe right now.
That active cases curve is a thing of beauty — Germany is ahead of Italy and Spain in terms of reaching "the end" of this.
Deaths are also in decline (although let's remember this data is from Sunday, when many officials don't work!)
The UK: Increasingly worrying. Yesterday was the third-highest day for new cases, and the lows are getting higher.
The active cases curve looks to be unmoderated.
A good day for deaths, but it's still more than 600 deaths per day.
UK hospital admissions continue to decline.
Russia: These are the scariest big country stats right now.
Active cases is an unbroken upward line.
As are deaths.
Belgium: Good news from the small country with big country stats. New cases are (perhaps) in a plateau.
Deaths could be in decline.
Canada: Not nearly as bad as America. New case growth is slowing.
Deaths: A lagging indicator but growth slowing here too.
Sweden: The European country with the famously lax policy to lockdowns is seeing growth in new cases, with the low days getting higher.
Active cases show strong growth.
These stats look like Sweden doesn't report deaths on the weekend.
Here is the grid of most-affected countries from Worldometers.
If you want more detail on your country go to Worldometers.
This chart from analyst Claus Vistesen at Pantheon Macroeconomics shows declining growth across the major eurozone economies. That's a reduction in growth, not a reduction in the actual number of cases.
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