covid-testing-latest-data-source-details: 39
This data as json, copyable
rowid
|
ISO code
|
Entity
|
Date
|
Source URL
|
Source label
|
Notes
|
Number of observations
|
Cumulative total
|
Cumulative total per thousand
|
Daily change in cumulative total
|
Daily change in cumulative total per thousand
|
7-day smoothed daily change
|
7-day smoothed daily change per thousand
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Short-term positive rate
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Short-term tests per case
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General source label
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General source URL
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Short description
|
Detailed description
|
39 |
IND |
India - samples tested |
2020-10-28 |
https://github.com/datameet/covid19 |
Indian Council of Medical Research |
Made available by DataMeet on GitHub |
218 |
105487680 |
76.44 |
1066786 |
0.773 |
1183900 |
0.858 |
0.040999999999999995 |
24.430999999999997 |
Indian Council of Medical Research |
https://github.com/datameet/covid19 |
The number of samples tested. |
The ICMR reports separate figures for both “samples tested” and “people tested” at press conferences and in press releases (shown separately in the charts above). No other details are provided.
The press releases from ICMR do not always stay online for very long. The reason for this is unknown, but the releases are being backed up at this [GitHub repository](https://github.com/datameet/covid19).
On some occasions there appear to have been more than one update released per day. Where we are aware of multiple observations for the day, we show the number for the earlier release.
The ICMR website does not explicitly state whether the reported figures refer to PCR tests only. From contextual information, it appears that the reported figures may also include samples that were tested using a TrueNat non-PCR test. ICMR communications on [21 May 2020](https://www.icmr.gov.in/pdf/press_realease_files/ICMR_Press_Release_TruNat_21052020.pdf) and [19 April 2020](https://www.icmr.gov.in/pdf/covid/labs/Additional_guidance_on_TrueNat_based_COVID19_testing.pdf) indicate that TrueNat tests are being used in diagnostic testing. These TrueNat tests likely account for a small minority of all samples tested.
Our data for this series is sourced from a non-official repository of official data. As explained in our [FAQ here](https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-testing#do-you-rely-on-any-non-official-sources) we regularly audit the accuracy of this repository against direct official channels. Note that, due to the way the data is presented by the official source, the time series may be impacted by retrospective revisions made by the source – see our [FAQ here](https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-testing#does-your-data-reflect-retrospective-updates-made-by-the-source). |