COVID-19 pandemic in New Mexico | |
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Disease | COVID-19 |
Virus strain | SARS-CoV-2 |
Location | New Mexico, U.S. |
First outbreak | Wuhan, Hubei, China (Global) |
Index case | Socorro County, Bernalillo County |
Arrival date | March 11, 2020 |
Confirmed cases | 681,525 |
Hospitalized cases | 65 (current) 34,276 (cumulative) |
Recovered | 660,313 |
Deaths | 9,236 |
Government website | |
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The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached the U.S. state of New Mexico on March 11, 2020. On December 23, 2020, the New Mexico Department of Health reported 1,174 new COVID-19 cases and 40 deaths, bringing the cumulative statewide totals to 133,242 cases and 2,243 deaths since the start of the pandemic.[1] During the last quarter of 2020, COVID-19 hospitalizations in New Mexico increased, reaching a peak of 947 hospitalizations on December 3.
The most populous counties in the state have seen the largest number of infections, but by mid-April, the northwest counties of McKinley and San Juan became the most infected areas in the state, with Sandoval County also seeing a high infection rate. All of these counties have large Native American populations. According to the state's data dashboard, American Indians had nearly 58 percent of the statewide infection rates as of May 15. On April 25, McKinley County had the highest total number of cases while San Juan County had the highest number of deaths by April 26. However, by the end of July, Hispanics/Latinos had a plurality of cases. The portion of cases among American Indians continued to decline, and by mid February 2021 was below that of whites.[1]