The new top ten
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wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 17:25 last edited by
It seems like over time this list should approach the list by population. Maybe discounted by differences in density.
Top 10 population list, with it's current covid rank:
CA - 1
TX - 4
FL - 3
NY - 2
PA - 10
IL - 6
OH - 17
GA - 7
NC - 11
MI - 14 -
wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 17:25 last edited by
So...not affected by warm weather?
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wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 17:26 last edited by
Maybe affected the wrong way. Seems like the sunbelt is getting hit hard, seems like AC could be a factor.
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wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 17:36 last edited by
Texas's 7 day average of new cases is over 9k. FL is over 10k. NY is less than 700.
I'd guess TX will pass NY as well, in the next week.
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wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 17:39 last edited by
Can these numbers be disentangled coherently from increased testing?
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wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 17:42 last edited by
Yes. Completely.
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wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 17:42 last edited by jon-nyc
j/k
These are relative rankings, not sure if there are vast disparities in testing capacity state to state. Could be, I guess, but much of the testing is done by private actors.
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wrote on 28 Sept 2020, 14:16 last edited by jon-nyc
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wrote on 12 Nov 2020, 22:11 last edited by
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wrote on 12 Nov 2020, 22:13 last edited by
As a reminder, the population rankings are as follows. Number afterward indicates its Covid ranking:
CA - 2
TX - 1
FL - 3
NY - 4
PA - 14
IL - 5
OH - 10
GA - 6
NC - 7
MI - 13 -
wrote on 12 Nov 2020, 22:18 last edited by
For those who like to look at state-by-state hospitalizations and haven't seen this before:
https://public.tableau.com/profile/peter.james.walker#!/vizhome/COVID-19SeeYourState/YourStateKeys
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Top ten. And it looks like FL will pass NY this weekend.
1 month ago this was the top ten:
NY
CA
NJ
IL
TX
MA
FL
PA
MI
MD -
wrote on 12 Nov 2020, 23:57 last edited by jon-nyc 11 Dec 2020, 23:57
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wrote on 13 Nov 2020, 01:35 last edited by