COVID-19 pandemic in Romania
The COVID-19 pandemic in Romania is part of the ongoing pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. The virus was confirmed to have reached Romania on 26 February 2020, when the first case in Gorj County was confirmed.
As of 1 August, the Romanian Government reports 4,342 people institutionalized, a further 20,852 at home under medical supervision, of which 4,742 have tested positive, and over one million tests having been processed.
Background
On 12 January, the World Health Organization confirmed that a novel coronavirus was the cause of a respiratory illness in a cluster of people in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China, who had initially come to the attention of the WHO on 31 December 2019.Unlike SARS of 2003, the case fatality ratio for COVID-19 has been much lower, but the transmission has been significantly greater, with a significant total death toll.
Timeline
21 February−2 March: First cases and early preventive measures
On 21 February, following a COVID-19 pandemic in Italy, the Romanian government announced a 14-day quarantine for citizens returning from the affected regions.On 22 February, the Romanian government announced several preventive measures including designation of five hospitals as isolation centres for new cases, purchase and placement of thermal scanners in international airports and specially designated lines for passengers coming from areas affected by COVID-19 outbreak.
On 25 February, new measures were imposed. Upon arrival on the Romanian territory, all asymptomatic travelers from the affected areas, respectively Hubei, the 11 localities in Italy, and any remaining passengers on the Diamond Princess cruise ship will go directly to the quarantine, for a period for 14 days. The other people coming from the Lombardy and Veneto regions will enter voluntary isolation at home for 14 days, upon arrival in Romania.
On 26 February, the Minister of Education and Research required schools to spread awareness about coronavirus.
On 28 February, the Romanian Orthodox Church suggested that followers use their own spoons and avoid the traditional kissing of icons in church.
On 2 March, more preventive measures were taken by the National Committee for Special Emergency Situations. Thus, citizens arriving from other provinces or cities in mainland China, other localities in Lombardy, Veneto or Emilia-Romagna regions of Italy, as well as areas and localities in South Korea and Iran not previously specified for institutionalised quarantine, enter 14 days of self-isolation at home immediately upon returning to Romania.
8−13 March: Ban on public gatherings, school and border closures
On 8 March, the Head of the Department for Emergency Situations, Raed Arafat, announced a ban on all indoor or outdoor activities involving the participation of more than 1,000 people. These restrictions are valid until 31 March, when a new assessment would be made. After Northern Italy was put under quarantine on March 8, low-cost airline Wizz Air suspended all flights to Treviso and Bergamo until 3 April. Likewise, Blue Air cancelled all flights to and from Milan for 8 and 9 March. In the same day, flights from and to Italy have been suspended. In a press conference, Interior Minister Marcel Vela stated that if a school reports even a case, courses will be suspended throughout the school.On 9 March, officials announced the cessation of flights to and from Italy, at all airports in the country, until 23 March. On the same day, the National Committee for Special Emergency Situations has decided to close all schools in Romania, from March 11 until 22, with the possibility of extending the measure. All bus rides and rail transport to and from Italy were suspended from 10 to 31 March. The committee also decided to establish a series of obligations for food units and for public and private providers of passenger transport, such as frequent disinfection of surfaces, avoiding crowds in commercial spaces, frequent disinfection of the passenger compartment in the means of transport, etc.
On 11 March, the Government published a list of fifteen guidelines regarding the "responsible social behavior in preventing the spread of coronavirus ". The authorities have imposed a ban on sports, scientific, religious, cultural or entertainment events with over 100 participants in closed spaces until March 31. Likewise, the public activities for museums were suspended until March 31.
On 12 March, Serbian authorities closed seven border points with Romania to prevent the spread of coronavirus. On the same day, the Romanian Ombudsman asked President Klaus Iohannis to declare the state of emergency and the Romanian Parliament to approve it. In a televised statement, the Secretary of State in the Ministry of Health,, said that the current situation does not impose such an extreme measure. The Romanian Football Federation decided to postpone all football matches in Romania until 31 March. Interior Minister Marcel Vela announced that the border crossing points with low traffic have been closed so that employees there to be directed to high traffic posts. Health Minister Victor Costache issued an order prohibiting the export of medicines and medical equipment for six months.
On 13 March,, former admiral, who acts as an independent in the PNL senators' group, was diagnosed with COVID-19. He isolated himself after finding out that a French parliamentarian, with whom he had been traveling to Brussels, was found with coronavirus. On March 9, Chițac attended a party meeting with over 100 people. Parliamentary sources claim that he was also present in the Senate on March 12, when he attended the group and plenary sessions. In these conditions, all members of the National Political Bureau of PNL self-isolated at home. Interim Prime-minister Ludovic Orban announced that all PNL senators have an obligation to isolate themselves and that he will self-isolate at Vila Lac 1. He also announced that all ministers will be tested for coronavirus and self-isolate.
14−21 March: State of emergency
On 14 March, after over 101 people had been diagnosed with coronavirus, Romania entered the third COVID-19 scenario. The third scenario goes from 101 to 2,000 cases. In the third scenario the doctors will perform epidemiological screening in the tents installed in the hospitals' yards, and the hospitals of infectious diseases will treat only cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Likewise, the authorities will be able to impose quarantine at home, not just in hospitals, as in many areas the capacities of medical units could be exceeded. At the same time, according to the plan in the third scenario, public gatherings with more than 50 people are banned. Three more liberals have been diagnosed with COVID-19, all contacts of senator Vergil Chițac. Marcel Ciolacu, President of the Chamber of Deputies, announced that the Parliament will suspend its activity for a week. However, the activities will be carried out online. The same day, President Klaus Iohannis announced his decision to decree the state of emergency in Romania starting March 16.On 16 March, Iohannis issued the decree establishing the state of emergency in Romania for a period of 30 days and insisted that the implementation of the measures included in the decree is being made gradually. The schools will be closed during the state of emergency. If necessary, prices may be capped on medicines and medical equipment, on strictly necessary foods and on public utility services. Also, gradual measures can be taken, if the situation gets worse, only after an evaluation of the National Committee for Special Emergency Situations. These include temporary closure of restaurants, hotels, cafes, clubs, gradual closure of borders, or limiting or prohibiting the movement of vehicles or people in/to certain areas. On 19 March, the Parliament convened a joint online session and unanimously adopted the decree issued by Iohannis.
Until 17 March, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs facilitated the return to the country for 137 Romanians who were abroad, either as tourists, in transit, or in medical emergency situations and who were directly affected by the measures adopted by the states in which they were. Later that same day, the government issued its first Military Ordinance, in response to the ongoing health crisis. Four days later, on 21 March, a second Military Ordinance was issued: no groups larger than 3 people on the streets. Curfew from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. All shopping centres were closed, except for the sale of food, veterinary or pharmaceutical products and cleaning services. It is forbidden for foreign citizens and stateless persons to enter Romanian territory, except through the specially organised transit corridor, further exceptions being made for other categories, such as residents, family members, and others.
22 March−2 April: First deaths, national lockdown, Suceava quarantine
On 22 March, the first three deaths were reported in Romania. All three had preexisting conditions: one was on dialysis, one had terminal lung cancer, and one had diabetes. The next day, on 23 March, :ro:Spitalul Judeţean de Urgenţă „Sfântul Ioan cel Nou” din Suceava|Suceava's main hospital, one of the largest in the country, reported at least seventy medical personnel infected with COVID-19, and 2 patients passing away. Over the following days, their numbers would increase. The hospital director was dismissed, shortly thereafter, for mismanagement.Following a surge in new confirmed cases, on 24 March, the government announced Military Ordinance No.3, instituting a national lockdown and calling in the military to support police and Gendarmerie personnel in enforcing the new restrictions. Movement outside the home or household is prohibited, with some exceptions. People over 65 were allowed to leave their homes only between 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Two days later, on March 26, the state airline Tarom suspended all internal flights.
A fourth Military Ordinance has been issued on 29 March, further strengthening previously imposed fines and restrictions. Two more would soon follow, issued close to the end of the next day; namely, a fifth, extending the ban on international travel, and a sixth, placing Suceava, along with eight adjacent communes, under total quarantine, the first Romanian city to be placed under complete lockdown since the start of the outbreak in late February, holding over a quarter of all infected cases, and about two thirds of all infected medical personnel. Some hospital staff have quit, others have signed a petition stating they "are sent to death barehanded".
On 2 April, Harghita reported its first case, becoming the last county in Romania to report at least one case.
4 April−14 May: Face masks, Easter Week
On 4 April, a seventh Military Ordinance was issued, further extending the national lockdown period, and imposing a second local quarantine on the town of Țăndărei, Ialomița County. On the same date, various counties and localities have started drafting local legislation requiring denizens to wear protection masks, whether professional or improvised. The next day, Raed Arafat posted an article on his official Facebook page, later picked up by the national media and other news outlets, encouraging citizens to wear protective masks, even if homemade. Prime minister Ludovic Orban, on the other hand, expressed doubts concerning not only the safety of homemade improvisations, but also about the necessary logistics for successfully implementing such a large scale operation, inasmuch as the demand would greatly outweigh the extant offer currently available on the market.On 7 April, a 53-year-old paramedic from Suceava became the first reported casualty among Romanian medical personnel. As of 18 April, there were over a thousand infected medical staff in the country.
On 9 April, an eighth Military Ordinance came into effect, reinforcing previously adopted measures, prohibiting the export of certain basic foods, banning the commerce of majority share packages in the :ro:Sistemul Energetic Naţional|National Energetic System, recommending that residential buildings be equipped with sanitary products and that their stairways and elevators be periodically disinfected, and making provisions for various professional categories, such as fishing, apiculture, car service and dealership, the food market, pharmaceuticals, cross-border workers, social services, medical staff etc. A week later, on 16 April, a ninth Military Ordinance was issued.
On 21 April, over 300 new cases, representing two thirds of the staff and patients of a local neuropsychiatric hospital, were reported in a village from Cornu Luncii commune in Suceava county, not belonging to those already placed under strict quarantine. On the previous day, :ro:Pimen Zainea|Pimen Zainea, the Romanian Orthodox archbishop of Suceava, was flown into the Matei Balș Institute for Infectious Diseases in Bucharest, after testing positive for CoVID-19, where he would pass away a month later. Saint John the New Monastery has been placed in lockdown, and an epidemiological investigation was initiated.
On 22 April, President Iohannis issued a press release, stating the government's intention to adopt, by mid-May, official legislation requiring citizens to wear surgical masks in public. That same day, Timișoara, Romania's third largest city, made the use of both facial masks and protection gloves mandatory in enclosed public spaces, including transportation. This decision came a week after Constanța, a major urban centre and one of the country's main tourist destinations, took similar measures on 15 April.
On 27 April, the tenth Military Ordinance came into effect. Except for work and medical emergency, people over 65 were only allowed to leave their homes between 7 a.m.-11 a.m. and 7 p.m-10 p.m. Two weeks later, on 11 May, an eleventh Military Ordinance lifted the Țăndărei quaratine. Two days later, a further Military Ordinance lifted the Suceava quarantine. On 14 May, a thirty-day state of alert was decreed, starting the following day, thus ending the stricter state of emergency, in force until that date.
15 May−present: State of alert and relaxation measures
Impact
Economics
During the second week of March, the Bucharest Stock Exchange recorded losses on all five trading sessions, the main index BET collapsing with 17.6%, the steepest decline since December 2018.On 16 March, the National Bank of Romania announced a reference rate of 4.8242 lei/euro, a historical maximum for the single European currency against the leu. The leu continued its depreciation, reaching a maximum of 4.8448 lei/euro on 17 March.
Education
On 9 March, interim Prime-minister Ludovic Orban announced the closure of all schools between 11 and 22 March. The measure targeted all kindergartens, primary, secondary and high schools in Romania, both public and private, according to Education Minister. The decision affects 3.5 million students. Likewise, several universities in the major student centres suspended their courses. These include the University of Bucharest, the Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies, the Politehnica University of Bucharest, the Babeș-Bolyai University, the West University of Timișoara, etc. Furthermore, Anisie announced that, as a measure of prevention and control of the illnesses with COVID-19 in schools, the Ministry of Education had decided to suspend all county and regional school olympiads, as well as sports competitions.The show Teleșcoală, announced by the Ministry of Education and dedicated to the students who stay at home during the period when the schools are closed, started on TVR 2 on 16 March, at 9 a.m. Students can follow, from Monday to Friday, mathematics, Romanian, biology, history and geography classes.
On 16 March, Anisie announced that schools would remain closed while the state of emergency was in place, at least until after the Easter holidays.
On 1 April, in response to a fake news story which had gained traction on social media and was being distributed on WhatsApp, saying that students would have to return to school in less than a week, Anisie and the Ministry of Education issued an official statement condemning the spread of false information and promised to provide in the next few days the date for the re-opening of schools, as well as the national examinations.
On 6 April, Anisie announced the cancellation of national exam simulations, as well as of all school competitions and olympiads. The ministry of education said that the Baccalaureate and the :ro:Evaluarea Națională a elevilor de clasa a VIII-a|National Evaluation would most likely be held in July, all of the examinations excluding the second semester curriculum.
Sport
The Romanian Football Federation and the Romanian Handball Federation decided to suspend all matches until 31 March. The rugby match between Romania and Belgium, to be held in Botoșani on 14 March, was postponed by Rugby Europe. The IWF Junior World Weightlifting Championships in Bucharest, scheduled for 14–21 March, were cancelled.Censorship
On 16 March, President Iohannis signed an emergency decree, giving authorities the power to remove, report or close websites spreading fake news about the COVID-19 pandemic, with no opportunity to appeal.Cases
On 14 March, 18 days after the diagnosis of the first case of infection with SARS-CoV-2, Romania surpassed the threshold of 100 confirmed cases. 49% of those diagnosed were outside the country prior to diagnosis. In 35% of cases, patients were previously in Italy, the country most affected by the pandemic in the European Union. These people were the main sources of transmission of the virus to the other 50%, in a single situation being unable to identify a suggestive epidemiological context for the diagnosed patient. Two diagnosed people were responsible for infecting 22% of the number of patients. This situation was possible because each of them hid from authorities, in the initial phase, the fact that they had previously travelled to an area at risk of infection, which delayed the initiation of the epidemiological investigation and exposed more people to the risk of infection. More than half of the cases were diagnosed in three counties: Bucharest, Timiș and Hunedoara. A patient out of three was diagnosed in Bucharest. Only six of the first 100 infected Romanian patients were older than 70, the age at which coronavirus often poses serious health problems, especially when the infected one also suffers from associated diseases. Of the first 100 patients, only one case was serious, requiring ICU admission, while nine patients recovered, and 90 had mild to moderate symptoms.On 15 March, the Ministry of Health stopped publishing data on sex, age, origin, contacts and other details of individual cases. The information about the new cases were communicated in two newsletters per day, one at 10 a.m., the other at 6 p.m. From 19 March onward, the reporting of the new confirmed cases was done only once a day, at 1 p.m.
On 24 March, prime minister Ludovic Orban stated the Government's goal to eventually increase the testing capacity to well over 2500 people a day, which seems to have been achieved by early April.
# | Date | Status | Source of infection | Origin of infection | Detection location | Sex | Age | Notes | Source |
1 | 26 Feb. | Local transmission | Gorj | Male | 20 | He came into contact with a 71-year-old man from Cattolica, Italy, diagnosed with coronavirus. The Italian visited his wife's family and had several business meetings in Romania between 18 and 22 February. | |||
2 | 28 Feb. | Imported case | Maramureș | Male | 45 | ||||
3 | 28 Feb. | Imported case | Timiș | Female | 38 | ||||
4 | 3 Mar. | Imported case | Timiș | Male | 47 | He travelled on the same plane with case #3. | |||
5 | 4 Mar. | Local transmission | Timiș | Male | 16 | Nephew of case #4. | |||
6 | 4 Mar. | Imported case | Suceava | Male | 71 | Moved to intensive care on 18 March; comorbid lymphoma. | |||
7 | 6 Mar. | Local transmission | Timiș | Female | 16 | Classmate of case #5. | |||
8 | 6 Mar. | Imported case | Olt | Male | 51 | He travelled on the same coach with case #6. | |||
9 | 6 Mar. | Imported case | Hunedoara | Male | 44 | ||||
10 | 7 Mar. | Local transmission | Timiș | Female | 15 | She is studying at the same high school with cases #5 and #7, but not in the same class. | |||
11 | 7 Mar. | Imported case | Hunedoara | Female | 16 | Daughter of case #9. | |||
12 | 7 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Male | 49 | ||||
13 | 7 Mar. | Imported case | Galați | Male | 72 | ||||
14 | 8 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 42 | Contact of case #12. | |||
15 | 8 Mar. | Imported case | Mureș | Female | 70 | ||||
16 | 9 Mar. | Imported case | Buzău | Female | 73 | ||||
17 | 9 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Male | 60 | A reserve police officer. He returned from Israel on 26 February and several days later was admitted to the Dimitrie Gerota Emergency Hospital with flu-like symptoms, but lied about having travelled. Because of this, a criminal case has been opened in his name. Israel's Minister of Tourism said he stayed in the Palestinian territories. Super-spreader; he infected at least 40 others. | |||
18 | 10 Mar. | Local transmission | Ilfov | Female | 31 | Contact of case #12's girlfriend. | |||
19 | 10 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 32 | Contact of case #17. | |||
20 | 10 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 30 | Contact of case #17. | |||
21 | 10 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 3 | Contact of case #17. | |||
22 | 10 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Female | 36 | ||||
23 | 10 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Female | 35 | ||||
24 | 10 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Male | 34 | ||||
25 | 10 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Female | 41 | ||||
26 | 10 Mar. | Imported case | Arad | Male | 57 | ||||
27 | 10 Mar. | Imported case | Hunedoara | Female | 26 | Fined 10,000 RON and subjected to penal case for breaking self-isolation after return from Italy on 1 March. Super-spreader; she infected at least 11 others. | |||
28 | 10 Mar. | Caraș-Severin | Male | 37 | |||||
29 | 10 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 47 | Contact of case #17. | |||
30 | 11 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 43 | She is a gastroenterologist at the Dimitrie Gerota Emergency Hospital and took care of case #17. | |||
31 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Iași | Male | 42 | ||||
32 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Iași | Male | 38 | ||||
33 | 11 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 55 | Contact of case #17. | |||
34 | 11 Mar. | Bucharest | Male | 31 | |||||
35 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Covasna | Female | 53 | ||||
36 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Male | 56 | First case placed in intensive care. Returned from Israel on February 29. | |||
37 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Male | 47 | ||||
38 | 11 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 54 | Contact of case #17. | |||
39 | 11 Mar. | Constanța | Male | 52 | Assistant chief at Constanța County Clinical Emergency Hospital. He claimed he did not travel and did not come into contact with an infected person. | ||||
40 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Arad | Male | 22 | Contact of case #26. | |||
41 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Arad | Male | 30 | Contact of case #26. | |||
42 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Arad | Male | 34 | Contact of case #26. | |||
43 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Arad | Male | 36 | Contact of case #26. | |||
44 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Arad | Male | 57 | Contact of case #26. | |||
45 | 11 Mar. | Imported case | Satu Mare | Male | 20 | An Iași native, he came from Italy, by car, on 10 March and was put under quarantine in Satu Mare. | |||
46 | 11 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 63 | Contact of case #23. | |||
47 | 11 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 48 | Contact of case #17's son. | |||
48 | 12 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 20 | Contact of case #17's driver. | |||
49 | 12 Mar. | Imported case | Arad | Female | 45 | A Cluj-Napoca native who was quarantined in Arad upon arrival from Italy. | |||
50 | 12 Mar. | Imported case | Neamț | Female | 54 | ||||
51 | 12 Mar. | Imported case | Mureș | Male | 21 | ||||
52 | 12 Mar. | Imported case | Cluj | Female | 33 | ||||
53 | 12 Mar. | Imported case | Covasna | Male | 53 | ||||
54 | 12 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 58 | Contact of case #27. | |||
55 | 12 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 74 | Contact of case #27. | |||
56 | 12 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 52 | Contact of case #27. | |||
57 | 12 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 45 | Contact of case #27. | |||
58 | 12 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 53 | Contact of case #27. | |||
59 | 12 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 45 | Contact of case #27. | |||
60 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 39 | Contact of a person who travelled to Germany. | |||
61 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 53 | Coworker of a family member of case #17. | |||
62 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 48 | Family member of case #61. | |||
63 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 22 | Family member of case #61. | |||
64 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 23 | Family contact of case #61. | |||
65 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Constanța | Male | 57 | , independent senator. | |||
66 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Constanța | Male | 51 | Personal assistant of case #65. | |||
67 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Constanța | Male | 34 | Son of case #65. | |||
68 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Constanța | Female | 56 | Wife of case #65. | |||
69 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Mehedinți | Male | 26 | ||||
70 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Mehedinți | Female | 52 | Mother of case #69. | |||
71 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Timiș | Female | 40 | ||||
72 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Timiș | Female | 50 | ||||
73 | 13 Mar. | Timiș | Female | 33 | |||||
74 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 50 | Manager of Dimitrie Gerota Emergency Hospital. | |||
75 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 62 | Patient, contact of case #30. | |||
76 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Brașov | Male | 44 | Returned from Boston. | |||
77 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Covasna | Female | 16 | Contact of case #78. | |||
78 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Covasna | Female | 77 | Contact of a family returned from Italy. | |||
79 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Brașov | Female | 51 | ||||
80 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Prahova | Male | 26 | ||||
81 | 13 Mar. | Bucharest | Female | 26 | |||||
82 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Male | 20 | ||||
83 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Timiș | Male | 32 | ||||
84 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Timiș | Female | 41 | ||||
85 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Timiș | Female | 33 | ||||
86 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Timiș | Male | 36 | ||||
87 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Caraș-Severin | Female | 32 | ||||
88 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Male | 45 | ||||
89 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Bihor | Female | 49 | ||||
90 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Neamț | Female | 64 | ||||
91 | 13 Mar. | Local transmission | Bacău | Male | 1 | Contact of an asymptomatic aunt who came from Italy on March 3. She was not tested yet. | |||
92 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Iași | Female | 41 | Employee of the Ministry of Health. | |||
93 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Iași | Female | 41 | ||||
94 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Dâmbovița | Female | 27 | A Caraș-Severin native who was quarantined in Dâmbovița upon arrival from Italy. | |||
95 | 13 Mar. | Imported case | Dâmbovița | Male | 55 | A Caraș-Severin native who was quarantined in Dâmbovița upon arrival from Italy. | |||
96 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 47 | Contact of case #45. | |||
97 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Dolj | Male | 39 | ||||
98 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | / | Constanța | Female | 53 | |||
99 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | / | Constanța | Male | 54 | Husband of case #98. | ||
100 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Male | 54 | , PNL deputy. Contact of case #65, senator Vergil Chițac. | |||
101 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Male | 52 | , Mayor of Deva. Contact of case #65, senator Vergil Chițac. | |||
102 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Male | 38 | Adrian Nicolae, public administrator of Deva. Contact of case #65, senator Vergil Chițac. | |||
103 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Brașov | Male | 51 | ||||
104 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Male | 19 | Contact of case #59, who was a contact of case #27. | |||
105 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Male | 4 | Contact of case #59, who was a contact of case #27. | |||
106 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 43 | Contact of case #27. | |||
107 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 44 | Contact of case #27. | |||
108 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 41 | Contact of case #27. | |||
109 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Timiș | Male | 55 | ||||
110 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Constanța | Male | 31 | Contact of cases #67 and #68, who were contacts of case #65, senator Vergil Chițac. | |||
111 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Brașov | Female | 53 | Contact of case #76. | |||
112 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Timiș | Female | 33 | ||||
113 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Timiș | Male | 36 | ||||
114 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 38 | Nurse, contact of case #27. | |||
115 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Hunedoara | Female | 45 | Nurse, contact of case #27. | |||
116 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Caraș-Severin | Male | 60 | ||||
117 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Arad | Female | 43 | ||||
118 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Constanța | Female | 33 | Contact of case #65. | |||
119 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Cluj | Female | 25 | ||||
120 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Satu Mare | Male | 46 | ||||
121 | 14 Mar. | Imported case | Bucharest | Male | 37 | ||||
122 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Female | 58 | Nurse at Dimitrie Gerota Emergency Hospital. Contact of case #30, who was a contact of case #17. | |||
123 | 14 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest | Male | 24 | Contact of case #17. | |||
124–139 | 15 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest, Arad, Brașov, Brăila, Constanța, Iași, Teleorman | 5–71 | |||||
140–158 | 16 Mar. | Imported case/Local transmission | ,, | Arad, Ilfov, Timiș, Vâlcea, Bucharest, Buzău, Cluj, Galați, Hunedoara, Ialomița, Sălaj, Suceava | 19–54 | ||||
159–168 | 16 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest, Ilfov, Constanța, Mureș, Neamț, Teleorman | 21–63 | |||||
169–184 | 17 Mar. | Local transmission | Iași, Neamț, Suceava, Bistrița-Năsăud, Ialomița, Mureș, Vrancea | 21–65 | One case is a UAIC student who attended classes just prior to the university closure. | ||||
185–217 | 17 Mar. | Imported case/Local transmission | , | Bucharest, Brașov, Constanța, Prahova | 26–64 | 22 of the new cases are contacts of case #17, a super-spreader. Another Bucharest case arrived from Spain on a chartered flight, knowingly infected, and had 40+ penal charges filed for endangering fellow passengers. | |||
218–246 | 18 Mar. | Imported case/Local transmission | ,,, | Bucharest, Iași, Ilfov, Hunedoara, Alba, Bihor, Maramureș, Olt, Suceava | 1–72 | Cases include a TAROM pilot who had been on holiday in Austria. | |||
247–260 | 18 Mar. | Local transmission | Bucharest, Brașov, Constanța, Dolj, Maramureș | 2–57 | |||||
261–277 | 19 Mar. | Local transmission | Suceava, Bucharest, Cluj, Bistrița Năsăud, Covasna, Iași, Dolj, Ilfov, Constanța, | 19–67 | |||||
278–308 | 20 Mar. | 17-89 | |||||||
309–367 | 21 Mar. | 1-74 | |||||||
368–433 | 22 Mar. | 9-74 | |||||||
434–576 | 23 Mar. | 5-76 | |||||||
577–762 | 24 Mar. | 4-85 | In the evening of this day, there was an announcement by Raed Arafat with the count going to 794 but, for statistics, the official report from the next day is taken into account. | ||||||
763–906 | 25 Mar. | 3-79 | |||||||
907–1,029 | 26 Mar. | 7-87 | |||||||
1,030–1,292 | 27 Mar. | 0-94 | |||||||
1,293–1,452 | 28 Mar. | 13-83 | |||||||
1,453–1,760 | 29 Mar. | 0-89 | |||||||
1,761–1,952 | 30 Mar. | 1-90 | |||||||
1,953–2,245 | 31 Mar. | ||||||||
2,246–2,460 | 1 Apr. | ||||||||
2,461–2,738 | 2 Apr. | ||||||||
2,739–3,183 | 3 Apr. | ||||||||
3,184–3,613 | 4 Apr. | ||||||||
3,614–3,864 | 5 Apr. | ||||||||
3,865–4,057 | 6 Apr. | ||||||||
4,058–4,417 | 7 Apr. | ||||||||
4,418–4,761 | 8 Apr. | ||||||||
4,762–5,202 | 9 Apr. | ||||||||
5,203–5,467 | 10 Apr. | ||||||||
5,468–5,990 | 11 Apr. | ||||||||
5,991–6,300 | 12 Apr. | ||||||||
6,301–6,633 | 13 Apr. | ||||||||
6,634–6,879 | 14 Apr. | ||||||||
6,880–7,216 | 15 Apr. | ||||||||
7,217–7,707 | 16 Apr. | ||||||||
7,708–8,067 | 17 Apr. | ||||||||
8,068–8,418 | 18 Apr. | ||||||||
8,419–8,746 | 19 Apr. | ||||||||
8,747–8,936 | 20 Apr. | ||||||||
8,937–9,242 | 21 Apr. | ||||||||
9,243–9,710 | 22 Apr. | ||||||||
9,711–10,096 | 23 Apr. | ||||||||
10,097–10,417 | 24 Apr. | ||||||||
10,418–10,635 | 25 Apr. | ||||||||
10,636–11,036 | 26 Apr. | ||||||||
11,037–11,339 | 27 Apr. | ||||||||
11,340–11,616 | 28 Apr. | ||||||||
11,617–11,978 | 29 Apr. | ||||||||
11,979–12,240 | 30 Apr. | ||||||||
12,241–12,567 | 1 May | ||||||||
12,568–12,732 | 2 May | ||||||||
12,733–13,163 | 3 May | ||||||||
13,164–13,512 | 4 May | ||||||||
13,513–13,837 | 5 May | ||||||||
13,838–14,107 | 6 May | ||||||||
14,108–14,499 | 7 May | ||||||||
14,500–14,811 | 8 May | ||||||||
14,812–15,131 | 9 May | ||||||||
15,132–15,362 | 10 May | ||||||||
15,363–15,588 | 11 May | ||||||||
15,589–15,778 | 12 May | ||||||||
15,779–16,002 | 13 May | ||||||||
16,003–16,247 | 14 May | ||||||||
16,248–16,437 | 15 May | ||||||||
16,438–16,704 | 16 May | ||||||||
16,705–16,871 | 17 May | ||||||||
16,872–17,036 | 18 May | ||||||||
17,037–17,191 | 19 May | ||||||||
17,192–17,387 | 20 May | ||||||||
17,388–17,585 | 21 May | ||||||||
17,586–17,712 | 22 May | ||||||||
17,713–17,857 | 23 May | ||||||||
17,858–18,070 | 24 May | ||||||||
18,071–18,283 | 25 May | ||||||||
18,284–18,429 | 26 May | ||||||||
18,430–18,594 | 27 May | ||||||||
18,595–18,791 | 28 May | ||||||||
18,792–18,982 | 29 May | ||||||||
18,983–19,133 | 30 May | ||||||||
19,134–19,257 | 31 May | ||||||||
19,258–19,398 | 1 June | ||||||||
19,399–19,517 | 2 June | ||||||||
19,518–19,669 | 3 June | ||||||||
19,670–19,907 | 4 June | ||||||||
19,908–20,103 | 5 June | ||||||||
20,104–20,290 | 6 June | ||||||||
20,291–20,479 | 7 June | ||||||||
20,480–20,604 | 8 June | ||||||||
20,605–20,749 | 9 June | ||||||||
20,750–20,945 | 10 June | ||||||||
20,946–21,182 | 11 June | ||||||||
21,183–21,404 | 12 June | ||||||||
21,405–21,679 | 13 June | ||||||||
21,680–21,999 | 14 June | ||||||||
22,000–22,165 | 15 June | ||||||||
22,166–22,415 | 16 June | ||||||||
22,416–22,760 | 17 June | ||||||||
22,761–23,080 | 18 June | ||||||||
23,081–23,400 | 19 June | ||||||||
23,401–23,730 | 20 June | ||||||||
23,731–24,045 | 21 June | ||||||||
24,046–24,291 | 22 June | ||||||||
24,292–24,505 | 23 June | ||||||||
24,506–24,826 | 24 June | ||||||||
24,827–25,286 | 25 June | ||||||||
25,287–25,697 | 26 June | ||||||||
25,698–26,022 | 27 June | ||||||||
26,023–26,313 | 28 June | ||||||||
26,314–26,582 | 29 June | ||||||||
26,583–26,970 | 30 June | ||||||||
26,971–27,296 | 1 July | ||||||||
27,297–27,746 | 2 July | ||||||||
27,747–28,166 | 3 July | ||||||||
28,167–28,582 | 4 July | ||||||||
28,583–28,973 | 5 July | ||||||||
28,974–29,223 | 6 July | ||||||||
29,224–29,620 | 7 July | ||||||||
29,621–30,175 | 8 July | ||||||||
30,176–30,789 | 9 July | ||||||||
30,790–31,381 | 10 July | ||||||||
31,382–32,079 | 11 July | ||||||||
32,080–32,535 | 12 July | ||||||||
32,536–32,948 | 13 July | ||||||||
32,949–33,535 | 14 July | ||||||||
33,536–34,226 | 15 July | ||||||||
34,227–35,003 | 16 July | ||||||||
35,004–35,802 | 17 July | ||||||||
35,803–36,691 | 18 July | ||||||||
36,692–37,458 | 19 July | ||||||||
37,459–38,139 | 20 July | ||||||||
38,140–39,133 | 21 July | ||||||||
39,134–40,163 | 22 July | ||||||||
40,164–41,275 | 23 July | ||||||||
41,276–42,394 | 24 July | ||||||||
42,395–43,678 | 25 July | ||||||||
43,679–44,798 | 26 July | ||||||||
44,799–45,902 | 27 July | ||||||||
45,903–47,053 | 28 July | ||||||||
47,054–48,235 | 29 July | ||||||||
48,236–49,591 | 30 July | ||||||||
49,592–50,886 | 31 July | ||||||||
50,887–52,111 | 1 August |
Statistics
Graphs
The official values, as reported daily at 13:00 EEST.No. of new confirmed cases per day
7-day average of new cases per day
No. of deaths per day
No. of new recoveries per day
No. of active cases in each day
Total number of tests
No. of new tested per day
7-day average of tests per day
Cases by region
As of March 18, a plurality of COVID-19 cases were people between the ages of 40 and 49. Of the patients, 51% are women, 44% are men, and children – 5%.