Covid curve by region
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wrote on 24 Jun 2020, 03:01 last edited by
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wrote on 24 Jun 2020, 03:07 last edited by
Cool graph. Need to add cases/million for more context.
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wrote on 24 Jun 2020, 12:15 last edited by
I was wondering how similar they are in population. The Midwest is surely the smallest and would look better adjusted. The south and west would look worse.
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wrote on 24 Jun 2020, 14:02 last edited by
That is a very interesting graph.
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I was wondering how similar they are in population. The Midwest is surely the smallest and would look better adjusted. The south and west would look worse.
wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 18:30 last edited by jon-nyc@jon-nyc said in Covid curve by region:
I was wondering how similar they are in population. The Midwest is surely the smallest and would look better adjusted. The south and west would look worse.
I was curious so I added up the populations in the various regions. It turns out the Southeast is over 50% worse on a per capita basis than how it appears here, and all of the other regions are less bad than they look here. Interesting that the NE is the smallest region, as defined here at least.
These are the inflators/deflators you get when adjusting for population:
Midwest: 83%
Northeast: 68%
Southeast: 153%
West: 95% -
wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 18:32 last edited by
@jon-nyc What a nerd!
Kidding, good info. Why these COVID charts (even internationally) don't convert to per capita is beyond me.
Speaking of which, I almost wonder if the regions of the USA are on different paths to/from peaking the way countries around the world are. For example, many countries around the world are just now starting to peak.
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wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 18:37 last edited by
Imagine the right hand side of that graph with the green part half again the current size, while shrinking the other three.
Looks like the locus of US Covid went from NYC-area to Dixie.
Though the west is picking up too.
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wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 18:38 last edited by
That Dixie would become the epicenter as summer kicks off doesn't bode well for any significant seasonal effects. Also this is 'stay inside in the AC' season in much of the south and southwest.
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wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 18:46 last edited by
Hopefully they can be convinced to wear masks.
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wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 18:48 last edited by
Maybe have masks with the Confederate flag on the front. BOOM, problem solved. Flag everywhere, COVID nowhere.