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For the tri-state.
https://aws1.discourse-cdn.com/busin...b0b1ddfd1.jpeg Edit: Deaths I believe are new ones today. |
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Also, wasn't New York (or New Rochelle) technically the first to be infected but unnoticed for a while until the nursing home in Kirkland WA? |
Can someone run a quick regression model comparing the number of nonstop flights to Asia at every major airport in the US, with their respective feeder states' per capita COVID cases? k thx
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As of today, the Tosh hasidic community, a small town of 4,000 north of Montreal is under quarantine. They seem to be hit pretty hard, and have a lot of back and forthing between Brooklyn and other hasidim in NY state. https://montrealgazette.com/news/loc...-2c4b727b2d92/ |
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Big companies here (Nike, Intel) put the kibosh on international travel right away, before anyone else (or anyone told them to) and that may be one of the reasons Oregon's numbers are so low despite being adjacent to Washington. |
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Even with essential personnel it poses problems. Detroit's health care system relies on 100s of staff who trek across the border from Windsor, Ontario each day. Windsor behaves like a bedroom community of Detroit rather than an independent city in another country. Philadelphia draws staff from 4 different states. |
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Canada - 5,538 tests / 1 million people - 210,435 tests in total (as of March 29, 2020) https://www.statista.com/statistics/...-tests-canada/ |
9 out of 61 post office employees showed up — so now no mail:
https://nypost.com/2020/03/30/corona...age-residents/ |
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The statistic that most correlates with peoples' perception of being able to get tested--and not coincidentally the one the media focuses on--is tests/population (usually 1 million people). But the ability to do tests may be more correlated with total done. At some point, you run short of reagents and all sorts of testing supplies as well as technicians to run them and so on. In addition, it was reported on TV tonight (ABC News) that testing was being inhibited by lack of PPE for testing personnel and simple lack of those testing personnel because everybody with medical training (you need some to stick a swab into somebody's nasopharynx without hurting them) is so busy inside the hospital. Much of the necessary paraphenalia is not necessarily stocked in quantities that are a function of population. In fact, the PCR test that's being done became widely known as the confrimatory test for HIV and new HIV cases have been declining so the equipment and supplies to run the test may have been allowed to attrit. |
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In other words, we had something nice to look forward to for a daily respite, and now we don't because people are people. Meanwhile, I've been mostly scared to even venture out. I have a large terrace that I can walk out on to, which is a great luxury. And from that terrace, I can see down on the streets people still milling about, and even some people hanging out. It's not as much as people as normally, but considering that almost nobody wears even a basic surgical mask, those are all potential COVID-19 spreaders out there, even if they don't realize it. I have two friends in their 20s-30s who had moderately severe symptoms that got to the point that they needed to be tested. They are still riding it out in their apartments, and their symptoms vary from day to day. I also have an previous boss who was hospitalized with the swine flu in 2016 and was near death - he contracted COVID-19 (even after I told him to be careful a few weeks ago) and is currently hospitalized in an induced coma while being intubated. It's boring as sh#t to stay inside all the time, but considering the alternative, we just need to ride it out and not stress the medical community more than we are already doing now. |
US Metro Areas with most deaths per 1 million inhabitants (Metro Areas with 15+ deaths only)
114.1 New Orleans 68.6 New York City 47.5 Seattle 37.0 Detroit 22.2 Stamford-Bridgeport 20.4 Baton Rouge 18.8 Poughkeepsie-Middleton 14.5 San Jose 9.8 Indianapolis 8.7 Atlanta Looks like Detroit might be emerging as a new epicentre in addition to the existing ones in New Orleans/Louisiana and the greater NYC area... Its deaths have been increasing significantly faster than in Seattle lately so Detroit will likely overtake it this week. Indianapolis and Atlanta are also cities to keep an eye on because they're in states that don't seem to be testing that much... |
We are late to the game in South Florida but it seems we are starting to catch up. We went from 300 cases in Miami-Dade and Broward 3 or 4 days ago to 2838 today. 16 deaths now, most of them in the last 2 days. 26 deaths now in the whole metro (Palm Beach County has had 10 deaths).
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