This article needs to be updated.(January 2022) |
COVID-19 pandemic in San Marino | |
---|---|
Disease | COVID-19 |
Virus strain | SARS-CoV-2 |
Location | San Marino |
First outbreak | Wuhan, Hubei, China |
Arrival date | 27 February 2020 (4 years, 8 months, 2 weeks and 1 day) |
Date | As of 25 June 2021[update][1] |
Confirmed cases | 20,552[2] (total) |
Active cases | 201[2] (in quarantine or isolation) |
Hospitalized cases | Unknown (active) |
Critical cases | 4 (active) |
Recovered | 20,351[2] (total) |
Deaths | 118[2] (total) |
Fatality rate | 2.06% |
Government website | |
www.iss.sm |
The COVID-19 pandemic in San Marino was a part of the ongoing worldwide pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The virus was confirmed to have reached San Marino in February 2020.
As of 11 May 2023, with 21,083 confirmed cases out of a population of 33,600 (as of 2020[update]), it was the country with the fourth-highest percentage of confirmed cases per capita at 71.13% – 7 confirmed case per 10 inhabitants. Also, with 90 confirmed deaths, the country has one of the highest rate of confirmed deaths per capita at 0.268% of the total population – 1 death per 373 inhabitants.[3] The crude fatality rate is 2.63%.[4] It was once declared "Covid-free" on 26 June 2020,[5] although on 9 July it had another case, and while this had recovered by the end of the month, the epidemics has returned later and most of recorded covid-assigned fatalities had happened after that.
Covid free
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).