It is enormously tiring to keep track of so many states and manage so much data. In the last week, the COVID Tracking project (which is my preferred COVID data source) added even more metrics. They are now tracking tests (positive, negative, and pending), antibody tests, current and cumulative hospitalizations, ICU beds, and ventilator use, recoveries, deaths (confirmed and probable), and positive cases (one case = one person but one person might have taken a test multiple times).
I don't understand how Chris von Csefalvey reached the conclusion that we're not seeing a spike in cases after the protests. Here in Florida there is quite clearly a surge in cases...and looking at the underlying age data, college-aged youth appear to be leading the way. It may NOT be driven solely by the protests, of course, it could just be that youth are throwing caution to the wind at a higher rate. I just don't understand how von Csefalvey can ignore the clear spike since June 1. Please enlighten me.
I don't understand how Chris von Csefalvey reached the conclusion that we're not seeing a spike in cases after the protests. Here in Florida there is quite clearly a surge in cases...and looking at the underlying age data, college-aged youth appear to be leading the way. It may NOT be driven solely by the protests, of course, it could just be that youth are throwing caution to the wind at a higher rate. I just don't understand how von Csefalvey can ignore the clear spike since June 1. Please enlighten me.
https://blogs.wsj.com/metropolis/2010/07/13/how-steinbrenner-saved-his-heirs-a-600-million-tax-bill
A very real example of the potential financial implications of "when" someone dies