Tracking the COVID-19-Virus in Germany, the USA, Italy and other hot spots in the world

Discussion in 'Coronavirus (COVID-19) News' started by Statistikhengst, Mar 14, 2020.

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  1. Sallyally

    Sallyally Well-Known Member Donor

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    You must love Winter!
     
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  2. ronv

    ronv Well-Known Member

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    You just reminded me of why I moved to Arizona. :)
     
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  3. MrTLegal

    MrTLegal Well-Known Member

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    First off, kudos to @Sanskrit for putting on blast his previous failed predictions by quoting me and for raising the new mindblowing statistic that the most affected States are still the most affected States.

    But since he wants to focus in on Georgia by linking the official daily report, I thought I would actually delve into the data posted by my home state to evaluate his (once again) baseless claim that the virus is somehow over.

    This is the chart of the daily cases for Georgia.

    upload_2020-6-2_18-34-26.png

    First off, you will notice that bright yellow line is going up before it hits the 14 day window. But according to the GA DPH (who has been caught repeatedly making "mistakes" with the numbers) says that the next 14 days were the following:

    upload_2020-6-3_1-49-59.png

    Here are the numbers for the same days according to Covidtracking.com:

    upload_2020-6-3_1-50-54.png

    To make the difference easier to understand, that's an average of 257 cases missing from the government tracker, per day.
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2020
  4. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    HERE the entire posting for EOD the day before.

    During the run of the day on 2020-06-002, there was one analysis of size:
    USA EOD report for 2020-06-001, posted 2020-06-002, 10:47 GMT +2, #9703.

    NOTE: to confirm this quick analysis or to sort the date as you wish, use the following links to work the table on your own:
    - the WORLDOMETER website for today, or
    - the WAYBACK MACHINE when searching for today's date in the future. In order to to that, search for one day later than you want, then use the "yesterday" function at the top their large excel table. On some days, WORLDOMETER also provides a "2 days ago" function as well, which is the case today.

    COVID-19 worldwide statistics EOD Report for Tuesday, 2020-06-002 (GMT +0 - Greenwich = 20:00 EDT):

    ******6,441,282******
    +115,215 cases today over yesterday.
    There are 117 nations with at least 100 COVID-19 cases.

    We are now at 381,859 COVID-19 deaths worldwide.
    1,232 Brazilians, 1,134 Americans & 324 Brits died from COVID-19 on this day.
    The recovered vs. still active C19 cases are almost at parity, an important data-point!
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    STAT'S EXCEL-TABLE:
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 000.png

    We ended the 2nd day of month 6 of the year 2020 at 6.44 million C19 cases. In four days time since 2020-05-029, the world has jumped circa 425,000 C19 cases.

    There is a figures correction for Sunday, 2020-05-031, a downward correction, which means that the +100,000 cases or more streak ended on that day and started up again on 2020-06-001. That downward correction had nothing to do with the USA, Brazil or Russia, the three nations that I am individually tracking alongside the worldwide numbers. The drop happened in France:

    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 009 case drop in France.png

    This is why the total number of C19 cases in France dropped from 189,220 on 2020-06-001 to 151,325 on 2020-06-002, which you can see in today's report. However, that 37,895 drop is larger than reflected on the table as other smaller nations also added some cases after the fact. WorldOmeter simply reset the totals back to 2020-05-031, which is why they are reflected there. I've written here in PF more than once that with having to collect, sort, verify and re-track data from well over 200 countries across the earth, it's a wonder that WorldOMeter is not having to revise more often. Last time, it was the death totals from the autonomous regions of Spain.

    In terms of worldwide daily deaths, you can see that we are over the two Tuesdays before 2020-06-002 but behind the 3rd Tuesday in the past (2020-05-012).

    It's been a long time since the % of recovered cases was at parity with the % of still active cases. In fact, you have to go all the way back to 2020-03-014, 2.5 month ago to see this, which btw, was when this thead was created. Today, 2020-06-003, the probability is very high that the two may actually become perfectly tied at some point in the day and then, the % of recovered cases will exceed the % of still active cases, which is something we very much want to see happen. I've written about this theme relatively little for the simple reason that there is no way to know for sure if all nations are gauging "recovered" and "still active" in the same way, which, as the Germans say, means that the statistic "is on wobbly legs" whereas there is only one day to gauge death, with all respect: dead = dead = dead = dead. But I am of the strong opinon (not really backed up by scientific fact yet, but I am working on it) that when we get to over 80% recovered, leaving about 14-15% still ill, then we can maintain that the virus is either burning out of a vaccine has taken effect. So, in the run of the day today, as time allows, I will be noting this statistic.

    Total cases per country, descending (countries circa +25 C19 cases and above):
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 001.png
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 002.png
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 003.png
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 004.png
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 005.png
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 006.png
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 007.png

    In terms of total cases per country, there are now 117 nations in the "thousand club", with Nicaragua (+359) and Paraguay (+18 ) crossing over the 1000 line. Of those 117, 55 are in the "10,000 club" with Bolivia (+539) and Armenia (+517) easily crossing over that line . Currently at 9,626 and 9,364 respectively, Algeria and the Czech Republic are next up, but Moldova and Ghana may get there quicker.

    Finally,
    13 of those 55 are at 100,000 or more. Canada, Mexico and Saudi Arabia are not far behind. Soon, there will be at least 17 nations over the 100,000 line.

    In terms of the countries with the most new cases: Brazil lead the USA with the most new cases. Russia, India, Peru, Pakisatan, Chile, Iran and Bangaladesh took rankings 3-9 in daily C19 cases. The day before, Pakistan was rank 7. VERY DISTURBING is that Iran is once again, for a second day in a row, so high up on this list. We must now ask if Iran is starting to encounter a second wave.

    61 countries had +100 or more new cases, a little less than 1/3 of all nations in the world. The day before, it was 63. Of those 61, 16 countries had +1000 or more new cases, among them, among them, Quatar, Colombia and Saudi Arabia.

    In terms of total deaths per country, descending, there are
    SEVENTY-ONE nations with 100 total deaths or more. That is 1/3 of all nations on the Earth. Of those 71, TWENTY-NINE nations now have over +1,000 COVID-19 deaths to date, with Colombia having crossed over the 1,000 death line on 2020-06-002. There are 12 nations between 500-1000 total deaths and you can be guaranteed that by the end of this month, every single on of them will have gone over this gruesome marker.

    In terms of the countries with the most daily deaths, Brazil was at rank 1 (+1,232), the USA at rank 2 (+1,164), then the UK at rank 3 (+324).

    8 nations reported over +100 daily deaths (it was 7 the day before). 4 of those 8 countries are from the Americas.

    In terms of Total Tests administered per country, 13 nations have administered more than 1 million tests apiece.The USA has now performed
    18.6 million tests (400,000 more than the day before) while Russia has performed 11.2 million tests (200,000 more than the day before). Brazil, which is now rank 2 among all nations in terms of COVID-19 infections, is stuck at 930,000 tests. Just imagine how many more positives Brazil would now be showing were it to test on the scale of the USA or Russia.... and btw, Peru and Venezuela have performed more C19 tests than Brazil. Because so many other nations are starting to ramp up their testing, here the rankings for the top 27 countries:

    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD Worldwide 008 - total tests.png

    On this list are nine nations between 800,000-1,000,000 administered tests and I would wager to say that by the end of June, 2020, all nine of them will go over the 1,000,000 mark. This is also the reason why daily +125,000 positives, soon, maybe considerably more, is going to become the new normal. If you don't test, then you can't isolate, mitigate and contract-trace.


    Facit:
    on 2020-06-002, the world came in at 6.44 million total C19 cases. We are on our way to 10 million confirmed C19 cases by the end of June 2020.

    Now at +108,059 deaths, the USA has long surpassed a gruesome milestone in our world's history, one that no country should ever reach. At the USA analysis for 2020-05-026, I started a new extrapolation.... this means that 200,000 total US deaths may come upon us sooner than many may be thinking possible. Soon, I will be starting an extrapolation for the world as well.

    It should also be noted that at this rate of growth - an average of 22,000 new C19 cases per day, Brazil will join the USA and go over the 1,000,000 mark within 3 weeks. There is also the possiblity that the USA goes over 2 million on the same day that Brazil goes over 1 million, albeit a slim one.

    The world-wide curve has most definitely flattened, which was the primary goal of mitigation. The slight rise in the growth rate in total cases is, however, not a good sign. The question now is: how long will the plateau last? Let's see what the planned testing of the entire cities of Wuhan (China) and Los Angeles (USA) bring.

    Editorial comment (I am gonna leave this here for a while): my gut tells me that we are going to see one or more very unpleasant surprises in this month as concerns COVID-19: either a massive rise in cases and deaths where we were not looking, or something new about the illness itself that we had not known before, something that will make going into the summer of 2020 (in the Northern Hemisphere) even more difficult. I am feeling this deep down in my bones. I have a very, very bad feeling about this month.


    -Stat
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2020
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  5. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    HERE the COVID-19 USA numbers for the day before.

    And now:

    COVID-19 USA statistics EOD Report for Tuesday, 2020-06-002 in the USA (EOD = GMT +0):

    *1,881,205*
    +21,882 cases today over the day before.

    108,059 total COVID-19 deaths in the USA.
    1,134 Americans out of the total above died from COVID-19 on this day.
    645,974 people have recovered, 1,127,172 are, however, still sick.

    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD USA 004.png

    In order to confirm my quick analysis, please go directly to the WORLDOMETER website today or to the WAYBACK MACHINE after today. If you use the wayback machine after today, search for one day later than the date you want, then use the "yesterday" function at the top their large excel table. This way, you have more control over what you want to see and when you want to see it.

    The daily deaths from 2020-06-002 are higher than the Tuesday before (360 more) but lower than 2 Tuesdays ago (428 less), so this Tuesday is pretty much between those two statistics. In terms of daily C-19 cases, 2020-06-002 shows more new cases than either of those two previous Tuesdays. Assuming that the US maintains last week's average of 21,533 cases per day, then the USA will go over 2 million cases between this coming Sunday and Monday (2020-06-007 or 2020-06-008 ). I am sensing that psychologically, this will be an important yet unpleasant milestone. Brazil, which is growing considerably more cases per day than the USA, will probably go over the 1 million mark in 20 days. There is an extremely rare chance that the two events could even be simultaneous, but I doubt it.


    COVID-19 in the USA, by state, total confirmed cases, descending:
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD USA 001.png
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD USA 002.png
    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD USA 003.png

    Total confirmed C-19 cases:

    45 out of 50 states have over 1,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases. VT (988 ) is crawling slowly up to the 1,000 line. 33 of those 45, + "Veterans affairs" (14,496) and US military personel (10,133) now have more than 10,000 cases, with UT having crossed the 10,000-line on 2020-06-002, so actually, it's 35, and Veterans Affairs is really rank 31 and US military personnel is really rank 34. DE, DC, NV and NM will shortly also cross that gruesome line.

    Also, by the end of the year, the chances are close to 100% that every state and territory will have over 500 C19 cases and maybe 45 of them will have over 10,000. The point is: this this is long not over with. And here I am referring only to the year 2020. There will also be 2021 to consider.

    New daily cases:
    36 states reported more than +100 new cases; the day before, it was 34 (plus DC).

    5 of those 34 states reported over +1,000 new cases on 2020-05-029: CA, TX, IL, AZ, NY. That's a big jump for AZ.

    0 states reported no new cases.


    New daily deaths:

    I think this is the most important category when looking to see where other hotspots are emerging and since deaths lag behind new cases, the two rankings are often not the same.

    41 of 50 states reported at least one death. The day before, it was 38.

    Of those 41, 1 states reported more than 100 daily deaths: IL.

    As has been the case for weeks now, the daily death toll rose from Monday to Tuesday of the week.

    Total deaths:
    40 states have more than 100 total deaths. That's 4/5 of the nation in terms of numbers of US states. In terms of population, it's far more than that. At 94 and 83 total deaths respectively, ME and ID will soon cross over that marker.

    Of those 40, 19 states in the Union now have a total of more than +1,000 COVID-19 deaths. At 961 and 941 total deaths respectively, both NC and AZ will soon cross over that gruesome marker.


    FACIT: on 2020-06-001, we ended the day with 108,059 US deaths from COVID-19. Now, all that as raw numbers may not really be getting into peoples' heads quite yet, so here is the listing of US-American cities with a projected 2020 population of between roughly 107,000-111,000:

    [​IMG]

    This means that we have currently lost the equivalent of ALL of Everett, never to get it back again. Think about that.


    What happens if, on the average, instead of 1,400 dead per day (which was the extrapolation from 2020-04-028 through 2020-05-031), let's take 1/2 of that, "just" 700 dead per day every day from the beginning of June, 2020, until the end of this year?

    This extrapolation is now up and running, you can find it at the online excel table (you'll find the logistical tab easily). I will do a report on this once a month, on the first day of the month, but you can check in on the numbers as often as you like to see if we really are on our way to 266,000 total US COVID-19 deaths, or not.

    So, some dates to keep in mind. If this trends as I think it may, averaging at some point in time, +700 deaths per day, then we would likely reach the following milemarkers:

    150,000 deaths on or around 2020-08-002.
    200,000 deaths on or around 2020-10-013.
    250,000 deaths on or around 2020-12-023.

    Mitigate. Don't be fooled and don't be a fool: wear a mask. Wash your hands. Avoid large crowds. Get lots of good sunlight in open spaces. Respect the space of others. Stay healthy. We DON'T want the new extrapolation, which started on June 1st, 2020, to happen.


    -Stat
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2020
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  6. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    Ouch!!
     
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  7. Farnsworth

    Farnsworth Well-Known Member

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    dblpost
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2020
  8. Farnsworth

    Farnsworth Well-Known Member

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    Texas is doing the best of the 10 largest states.

    In any case, there was already a trend in people wearing masks and taking precautions before this virus hit, and now that I'm used to them I will keep practicing them long after this one is gone, especially re grocery carts and wiping off packaging. It isn't that hard, and if you're whining about them then you're probably just a spoiled brat and a sociopath.
     
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  9. Derideo_Te

    Derideo_Te Well-Known Member

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    https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/usa/texas/

    TX just had the 2nd largest one day growth of new cases (1944) in the state yesterday. The previous high was 2012 on May 15th so that makes it just over 2 weeks since phase 2 of reopening the economy began.
     
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  10. Farnsworth

    Farnsworth Well-Known Member

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    And how many new cases reported in New York? Last I checked, Texas had a '2.5% increase', while New York/New Jersey had a '0.004 % increase'; guess which number was the largest in actual new cases? Texas pop 29 million, New York 19 million. Texas is a very very long way from New York's numbers. Given Texas' high minority population, it should be doing a lot worse, but the number of new infections is still low in real numbers. Nobody has claimed numbers wouldn't go up with reopening, the question is how high, and those will be relatively low among those with the sense to take precautions, and the Darwin Award contestants will rely on luck.
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2020
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  11. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    Aaaand it happened: the number of recovered C19 cases now exceeds the number of those classified as "still sick". This is the first time since 2020-03-014 that we saw a statistic like this:

    2020-06-003 COVID-19 Worldwide recovered has a plurality.png
     
  12. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    Correct:

    2020-06-002 COVID-19 EOD USA focus on TX.png

    @Farnsworth - FYI. Greets and welcome to this thread.
     
  13. Farnsworth

    Farnsworth Well-Known Member

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    The lack of data numbers for those who test positive but never got sick and numbers for those who recovered but might get sick again is not going to be resolved soon.
     
  14. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    I understand your argument and yes, the raw numbers point far more toward NY, which just put a massive and deadly wave behind it, which is the big difference to TX.

    What Deri is trying to say to you, and I as well, is that the sudden uptick in daily cases in TX can very indicative that a similar, and perhaps just as deadly a wave, is about to hit Texas, because the massive uptick in cases means more hospitalizations and the whole nine yards, which is exactly what happened in NY, NJ, MA and is now happening in IL. THAT'S the point. And you would be amazed at how quickly the numbers can accumulate, which is actually a main reason for this thread.

    My hope is that this doesn't happen to TX or any other state in the Union. The carnage has already been horrifying.
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2020
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  15. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    Not quite, if you have been watching the numbers from the get go, but indeed, we don't have an exact breakdown of who was infected and never got sick, etc. And as I have written, there are no universal standards as to exactly what consititutes "recovered" and "still ill". The one thing we can take away from it is that those who are now listed as recovered were indeed once ill, otherwise, there would be no reason to move them from one category to the other.

    And as far as it not being resolved soon, I wholeheartedly agree with you about that.
     
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  16. Farnsworth

    Farnsworth Well-Known Member

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    I understand, and I'm not happy with the numbers either, but I think county and zip code numbers tell a more accurate story. For instance, my zip code has maybe 10 cases as of May 26, last numbers available to me so far, versus zip codes 5 miles away with 300-400.

    Yes. I'm in no hurry at all to end taking precautions regardless; those sniveling about having to wear masks at business peoples' requests are idiots. In other situations they're all about businesses serving whoever they want to, but then we see them assaulting kids in stores for telling them rules ... morons and hypocrites.
     
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  17. Derideo_Te

    Derideo_Te Well-Known Member

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    The point that I am trying to make is that when you dig down into that number for TX it is primarily concentrated in the Dallas-Ft Worth region and any sharp increase in a built up area is a cause for concern.

    Granted it might be small for an area that large but what tends to happen when we see spikes is that they are centered around a specific cause that is behind the appearance of the hotspot.

    Compare AZ, AR and TN then calculate their new cases as a percentage of existing cases. Those numbers are 5.3%, 4.8% and 3.4%. Granted all of those numbers are higher than TX at 2.9% but when you compare them to NY and NJ, which you just did, and you see their percentage increases right down around 0.3% then you realize that what is happening in TX and those other states is magnitudes greater.

    None of these are exponential increases but they are still areas of concern and while I am sure that rural TX is doing just fine if people start fleeing from a hoptspot like DFW they will bring the virus along with them.

    Hopefully the relevant authorities in TX have adequate tracking and tracing measures in place so that all of those potentially infected can be isolated and quarantined and the hotspot does not grow any bigger.
     
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  18. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    Indeed, that is an interesting idea.

    As to your second paragraph, as you, I am in agreement. Masks, handwashing, physical distancing - those things are medically speaking, not only common sense, they are also humane. Because if I do it, my positive action may end up saving someone's life without even knowing it. Positive butterfly effect.
     
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  19. MrTLegal

    MrTLegal Well-Known Member

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    You appear to be interested in how the States compare, so I am using your post as the vehicle to update my weekly State Ranking Project. Prepare yourself for the wall of text.

    You can review last week's post here: http://politicalforum.com/index.php...-in-the-world.569531/page-379#post-1071719226

    Note, this data runs from Sunday (5/24) to Sunday (5/31). I went on vacation this past weekend and got some well-needed R&R with my parents by the lake, so this update is a little late. Anyway, here is the data (there are no new data points) and the States are ranked, as always, based on Mortality (i.e. dividing the number of confirmed deaths by the number of confirmed infections and expressing that as a percentage). I did add an "Interesting Note" to several of the data point discussions to highlight something I saw in the data.

    upload_2020-6-3_10-2-1.png

    upload_2020-6-3_10-2-41.png

    upload_2020-6-3_10-3-24.png

    upload_2020-6-3_10-4-36.png

    upload_2020-6-3_10-5-16.png

    In terms of Mortality, the top 10 is almost virtually unchanged. The only difference from this week versus last is that Louisiana dropped back a couple of spots from 7th to 9th.
    Interesting Note: Arizona has led in this category for a while, but this is the first time in a while that it saw some significant improvement, dropping by roughly 0.75% in the course of a week.

    Cases (PC) Diff rankings show that the District of Columbia, Maryland, Nebraska, Virginia, and Wisconsin are the top five States in terms of seeing their Cases, per capita, grow the most. The range being 1319.115 to 923.117. The five slowest States are the same (and same order) as last week: Oregon, Vermont, Alaska, Montana, and Hawaii. The range being 75.4 to 5.63.
    Interesting Note: The District of Columbia, for the second week in a row, saw it's Cases, per capita, grow the most out of the entire country. This is a definite hotspot.

    Cases (PC) Growth Rankings show that Alabama, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Virginia, and Arkansas are the top five States in terms of seeing their Cases grow, as a percentage, the most. The range being 24.96% to 22.48%. On the opposite end are New Jersey, Vermont, New York, Montana, and Hawaii. The range being 4.08% to 1.24%.
    Interesting Note: Alabama continues to be another hot spot given that it's case count grew by 25% this week and that is actually faster than it's already high 21.7% increase during the previous week.

    Deaths (PC) Diff Rankings show that Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and the District of Columbia are the top five States (same grouping as last week, slightly different order) in terms of seeing their Deaths, per capita, grow the most. The range being 104.07 to 61.61. On the opposite end are Oregon, Montana, Puerto Rico, Alaska, and Hawaii. The range being 1.19 to 0.0 (Puerto Rico, Alaska, and Hawaii saw zero new deaths).
    Interesting Note: The top five States being the same as last week is truly unfortunate for the residents of these States. Rhode Island continues to claim the top spot after seeing its Deaths, per capita, increase by 104.07 this week and 103.12 last week.

    Deaths (PC) Growth Rankings show that Wyoming, South Dakota, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Rhode Island are the top five States in terms of seeing their Deaths, as a percentage, grow the most. The range being 33.33% to 18.09%. On the opposite end are New York, Vermont, Puerto Rico, Alaska, and Hawaii. The range being 2.2% to 0.0%.
    Interesting Note: For the second week in a row, Wyoming saw its Death rate grow at the highest relative percentage. But it still sits at a really low 27.68 deaths, per capita, overall. New York, saw it's deaths per capita grow at one of the lowest percentages in the country and it still gained about as many Deaths per capita as Wyoming has seen in total.

    Mortality Diff Rankings show that Rhode Island, Wyoming, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Missouri are the top five States to see their Mortality go up the most. The range being 0.487% to 0.191%. On the opposite end are California, Alabama, West Virginia, Arizona, and Puerto Rico. The range being -0.261% to -0.873%.
    Interesting Note: Alabama's mortality improving so much comes at the cost of seeing its confirmed case count increase by the largest, relative, amount.

    Testing (Positive %) Diff Rankings show that District of Columbia, Georgia, Alabama, Utah, and Arkansas are the top five States in terms of seeing their Percentage of Positive Test increase the most. The range being 3.31% to 0.13%. On the opposite end are Michigan, South Dakota, Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey. The range being -2.12% to -5.77%.
    Interesting Note: Georgia went from being one of the five States to improve it's positive testing percentage the most to being one of the five States to see its positive testing percentage worsen in the span of just one week. This is probably related to the downward adjustment Georgia made to its total test count.

    Tests Per 100K Diff show that Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Alaska, and Louisiana are the top five States to see their Tests Per 100K increase the most. The range being 2541.1 to 1654.4. On the opposite end are Idaho, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Georgia, and District of Columbia. The range being 383.5 to -677.7.
    Interesting Note: Hawaii, Georgia and the District of Columbia all adjusted their total tests counts down by such a degree during this week that their tests per 100K actually decreased over the course of that week.

    Tests Per 100K Growth show that Maine, Wisconsin, Nevada, Missouri, and New Jersey the top five States to see their tests, as a percentage, increase. The range being 41.23% to 35.42%. On the opposite end are Utah, North Dakota, Hawaii, Georgia, and District of Columbia. The range being 12.45% to -8.25%.
    Interesting Note: New Jersey was in the top five in terms of growing their testing numbers both in absolute and relative terms even while their relative case counts grows at one of the lowest rates in the country and their positive testing percentage decreased by the most. That is great news for New Jersey.
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2020
  20. LangleyMan

    LangleyMan Well-Known Member

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    You wouldn't like the conclusions drawn by "lurkers."
     
  21. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    Fascinating.

    Good work, btw. And thank you for the hard work you put into this.
     
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  22. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    The USA just crossed over 109,000 COVID-19 deaths.
     
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  23. MrTLegal

    MrTLegal Well-Known Member

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    And it is only 376 away from 1.9 Million cases in total.
     
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  24. crank

    crank Well-Known Member

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    Impressive amount of work! Even we don't have to do that much in winter. Mind you, we run an indoor day temp of 13-15c, and nights unheated, so that's probably why. We're frugal with wood, because we only use dead fall and salvage .. and they're not always available. We do the multiple layers though .. indoors, in the mornings! Sometimes it's difficult to squeeze another layer on to go outside :p

    109,000 :(
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2020
  25. Statistikhengst

    Statistikhengst Well-Known Member

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    Indeed, we will break over the 1.9 million mark today. And in 4-5 days, the USA will go over the 2.0 million mark.
     
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