All of them. It was a "true" pandemic.
As of May 5th, 2009, there have been no confirmed cases of the swine flu in Florida.
As of May 5th, 2009, France has no confirmed cases of the swine flu.
The continent with the most recorded cases of confirmed Swine Flu (A-H1N1/09) continues to the North American continent as of August 24, 2009. The countries in the North American continent that are driving that statistic are the United States with 43852 confirmed cases, Mexico with 19712 confirmed cases, and Canada with 11976 laboratory cases.
Yes. As of 3 July 2009, there were 1157 confirmed cases of Swine flu in NSW.
As of July 6, 2009# United States, 33,902 cases and 170 deaths# Mexico, 10,262 cases and 119 deaths# Canada, 7,983 cases and 25 deaths# United Kingdom, 7,447 cases and 3 deaths# Chile, 7,376 cases and 14 deaths# Australia, 5,298 cases and 10 deaths# Argentina, 2,485 cases and 60 deaths# Thailand, 2,076 cases and 7 deaths# China, 2,040 cases and 0 deaths# Japan, 1,790 cases and 0 deaths
As of November 22, 2009 there have been an estimated number of 4330 cases and 51 confirmed deaths from A-H1N1/09 Swine flu in Israel.
The 2009 Pandemic Flu "Swine Flu" A-H1N1/09 has spread in every state of the US and now to almost, if not all, countries of the world. For more information on the pandemic spread, see the related question "Which Cities States or Countries Have Deaths or Cases of Swine Flu- Current Situation". (Link is provided in the related question section below).
As of July 6, 2009, there were 1059 confirmed cases and 3 deaths.
As of April 27 2009 3 cases have been reported (from a total of 11 people returning from a trip to Mexico) Click on the link below for the latest updates on swine flu from the CDC:
So far there is around 88 - uncomfired cases in Australia...meaning these people are being tested for the swine flu. So far, they haven't found a single person in Australia comfired to have swine flu. 1 May 2009
There may still be some isolated cases or outbreaks in limited locations around the world, including in Australia. However, the specifics and counts of cases are no longer being tracked now that the pandemic has been declared over. Influenza cases are still monitored as they always have been, but specific H1N1/09 counts aren't available separately from other influenza reporting any longer. Australia had thousands of cases of Swine Flu in 2009, with the greatest number in the state of Victoria. The first swine flu death was recorded in June 2009, Australia's winter, around the same time that over 1000 cases of swine flu were noted.
Yes. On July 6, 2009 the World Health Organization reported 24 confirmed cases, but thankfully no deaths.