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Organization:
Alexa Crawls
Starting in 1996,
Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to the
Wayback Machine after an embargo period.
Crawl EG from Alexa Internet. This data is currently not publicly accessible.
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/all/20051219065727/http://wonder.cdc.gov:80/mmwr/about.asp
MMWR Query Table System
About These Tables
Data for nationally notifiable diseases reported by the 50 states, New York City, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. territories are collated and published weekly in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR). Cases reported by state health departments to CDC for weekly publication are provisional because of ongoing revision of information and delayed reporting.
Case counts in these query tables are presented as they were published in the MMWR issues. Therefore, numbers listed in later MMWR weeks may reflect changes made to these counts as additional information becomes available.
Table II lists cases of selected notifiable diseases by publication week and location within the United States. The following diseases are included:
Part 1
| Part 2
|
AIDS
Chlamydia
E. coli O157:H7
Gonorrhea
Hepatitis C/non-A, non-B
|
Legionellosis*
Lyme disease
Malaria
Syphilis (primary & secondary)
Tuberculosis
Rabies, Animal
|
Table III lists cases of selected notifiable vaccine-preventable diseases by publication week and location within the United States. The following diseases are included:
Part 1
| Part 2
|
H. influenzae, invasive
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B
Measles, indigenous
Measles, imported
Measles, total counts**
|
Meningococcal disease***
Mumps
Pertussis
Rubella
|
* Legionellosis is listed under Table II, part 1 during 1996.
** Measles (total counts) is listed under Table III, part 2 during 1996.
*** Meningococcal disease is listed under Table II, part 2 during 1996.
As part of its national influenza surveillance effort, CDC receives weekly mortality reports from 122 cities and metropolitan areas in the United States within 2-3 weeks from the date of death. These reports summarize the total number of deaths occurring in these cities/areas each week, as well as the number due to pneumonia and influenza. Data are published weekly in Table IV of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR).