As of July 25, the Western Cape has 11 772 active cases of COVID-19, with a total of 89 600 confirmed cases and 74 987 recoveries. This is another small decline in active cases, as the Western Cape continues to have lower active cases by the day.
Total deaths now number 2841, 24 more than yesterday. Of the active cases, 1491 are in hospital with 276 in ICU or high care.
Cape Metro Sub-districts:
Western 7603 cases; 6445 recoveries
Southern 7878 cases; 6675 recoveries
Northern 5282 cases; 4525 recoveries
Tygerberg 11190 cases; 9610 recoveries
Eastern 8162 cases; 7011 recoveries
Klipfontein 8030 cases; 6905 recoveries
Mitchells Plain 7119 cases; 6048 recoveries
Khayelitsha 7636 cases; 6809 recoveries
Total 62900 cases; 54028 recoveries
Non-Metro Sub-districts:
Garden Route Bitou 349 cases;204 recoveries
Garden Route Knysna 850 cases; 492 recoveries
Garden Route George 2219 cases; 1459 recoveries
Garden Route Hessequa 122 cases; 68 recoveries
Garden Route Kannaland 47 cases; 33 recoveries
Garden Route Mossel Bay 1094 cases; 624 recoveries
Garden Route Oudsthoorn 373 cases; 214 recoveries
Cape Winelands Stellenbosch 1698 cases; 1442 recoveries
Cape Winelands Drakenstein 3686 cases; 3164 recoveries
Cape Winelands Breede Valley 2609 cases; 2183 recoveries
Cape Winelands Langeberg 903 cases; 733 recoveries
Cape Winelands Witzenberg 1166 cases; 910 recoveries
Overberg Overstrand 1290 cases; 1100 recoveries
Overberg Cape Agulhas 174 cases; 116 recoveries
Overberg Swellendam 232 cases; 163 recoveries
Overberg Theewaterskloof 900 cases; 727 recoveries
West Coast Bergrivier 338 cases; 242 recoveries
West Coast Cederberg 101 cases; 61 recoveries
West Coast Matzikama 204 cases; 122 recoveries
West Coast Saldanha Bay Municipality 1111 cases; 899 recoveries
West Coast Swartland 1086 cases; 829 recoveries
Central Karoo Beaufort West 199 cases; 85 recoveries
Central Karoo Laingsburg 20 cases; 9 recoveries
Central Karoo Prince Albert 1 case; 1 recovery
Unallocated: 5928 (5079 recovered)
It is not always possible to check and verify that the address data supplied for each new recorded case is correct, within the time frames required to provide regular and timely updates. This means that in some instances, cases could be allocated to the wrong sub-districts.
The provincial government say they are working with the sub-districts to clean and verify the data and where errors are picked up locally, cases will be re-allocated to the correct areas.
More data is available here.
Picture: Alan Winde/ Twitter