#covid19uk - Nations level positive tests thread. Starting with "spaghetti" chart based on today's 20-Jan data. This shows +ve's by specimen date (i.e. when person tested, not when reported) for all upper tier local authorities in England:
Longer view back to June
Breakdown by report day range to see how much each report contributes to a given day's total.
Breakdown of each day's report by what % of its most recent 7 specimen dates are covered by the positives. Helps show possible bottleknecks in reports (which may represent delays in testing). Gaps are days they didn't release the data.
Same as above but with actual counts instead of percentages.
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#covid19uk - Detailed positive tests thread. The majority of this thread is a set of views of rolling 7 day average positives per 100K by specimen date. I realise this thread has become rather bloated and it is on my list for some re-work. Starting with England regions:
UK nations:
Wales - Top and bottom 11 (i.e. all 22 of them). Note they may have different Y axis scales to each other.
#covid19uk - Tables thread. Re-ordered now to put the more popular rate sorted table at the top. So this is top 50 England Local Authorities by positives per 100K population in last 7 days, up to 3 days ago. Bright green means lower than previous period.
Bubble chart (Tiers / Sub-region) thread. This type of chart allows us to compare week on week changes by seeing if the points are above or below the dotted line. This version is grouped by "sub-regions" as were previously used for assigning tiers:
Table of sub-regions to act as key for the numbers on the above chart.
Dashboard for 20-Jan to explain where the #covid19uk total death increase figure of 1820 actually comes from. The PHE dataset merge resulted in a net of 635 additional deaths today. This moves the 7 day rolling average up by 36.6 to 1217.6.
Updated chart from 31-Oct lockdown press conference with latest England date-of-death data (latest 4 days faded out for lag):
England all settings age distribution charts in both actual and percentage views.