Not much new in today’s #COVID19 data — the same disquieting trends are continuing, without meaningful slowing or acceleration. Cases are up to about 730/day, positivity 4.3%.
Hospital admissions are still rising, though not at levels like what we saw in past waves (as one would expect with most vulnerable people vaccinated).
It was about this time in the Spring 2021 wave that case growth started to peak.
The 2020 waves peaked about a week later.
So it wouldn’t be surprising if we’re within a week of peaking. But past trends are not guaranteed to continue!
Vaccination rates are also still marching slowly upward.
Vaccination rates are rising most among teenagers, though this group also has the largest share of unvaccinated people to begin with.
Deaths are rising slowly, but remain quite low compared to what we’ve seen for most of the pandemic.
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2/ Here’s the big picture: #COVID19 cases are up everywhere, but in Minnesota they’re up like 1.5x, while the hardest-hit states are up 10x or more.
The biggest Q: is MN going to belatedly follow these hard-hit states with time? Or is our wave qualitatively different?
3/ So far MN’s current wave looks a lot like our Spring 2021 wave (a relatively slow climb) rather than the exponential spikes of the 2020 waves (and of many southern states now).
But that’s no guarantee it’ll STAY gradual. Maybe delta will find another gear?
Minnesota’s #COVID19 outbreak continues to grow, up to an average of nearly 700 confirmed cases per day, and a 4.2% positivity rate.
Here’s how the Summer 2021 compares to past waves in terms of positivity rate. If — IF — this wave takes more than 6 weeks to peak, we’ve got a decent chance of surpassing the Spring 2021 wave.
Every day someone replies two or three tweets in to my daily thread asking if I’m going to share some basic stat that I share almost every day.
Three of today’s five newly reported #COVID19 deaths date from February, raising some skeptics’ red flags.
Unfortunately we only have a month or so of data to examine this, but what I see doesn’t raise MY red flags. 1/
2/ First: we know in general that many death certificates are filed promptly, but others can take many weeks or months to file. The data has what’s called a “long tail” — it’s not super weird for there to be OCCASIONAL months-old death certificates filed.
3/ In general, when working with death data, it’s often best to exclude the most recent 3-4 weeks of data *at a minumum*.
For example, here’s CDC death data. You can see the 2021 line plunge at the end, but that’s not a real decline. It’s just data slowly trickling in.
Today’s #COVID19 data is not good — not only are cases continuing to grow, as expected, but there are signs that that growth is accelerating. Too early to say for sure, but the last two days of reports suggest the fourth wave may have found another gear…
Today reported 625 newly confirmed cases. That’s more than double last Wednesday’s 278.
The weekly average is up to 400/day, from 233/day a week ago.
Over the last two weeks, positivity rates have nearly tripled; cases have nearly quadrupled; hospitalizations nearly doubled.
It’s just a few days of data so far, but you can see the trajectory change in our current positivity line — eerily mirroring, at a lower base, the shape of the fall wave. (Again: too early to make conclusive judgments!)
I've always been a little bit confused by the Google Reader nostalgia, but maybe that's because I just immediately exported my RSS feeds to Feedly, and continue to subscribe to dozens of feeds today.
But GR's demise probably did make it harder for new people to get into RSS...
I think this piece by @katiebakes gets into some of that — the demise of Google Reader was perhaps more symptom than cause of the death of the old blogosphere and surrounding “good internet.”
@katiebakes Here’s what I wonder: how much of the demise of Internet 2.0 was supply-side (companies like Google changing their offerings toward walled gardens) and how much was demand side (lots of new people spending more time online)