103 new #covid19uk deaths reported today (07-Aug). This brings the rolling average by date of death (allowing 4 days for lag) to 79, an increase of 12 (17%) in the last week.
Closer look at the latest 45 days, with today's added numbers highlighted in orange. Individual nations and animated England charts further down the thread.
Separate charts for England (88) Scotland (9) Wales (0) and Northern Ireland (6). Note the different scales. Also on certain days the date-of-death data for Scotland/Wales/NI doesn't get updated so the orange bars may be mising or include multiple day's numbers.
Animated chart to show how the #covid19uk deaths by date of death have been contributed to by reports over the last 7 days. Note this just includes England numbers as other nations don't always publish their date-of-death data every day.
Updated (07-Aug) table of top 30 MSOAs (by rate) based on latest numbers in today's report.
This table often feels a bit out of date because by the time these local figures filter through, the LA has already peaked.
Bringing back the view of how many weeks the MSOAs have been in the suppressed 'less then 3 +ves in the last week' category. Since they don't allow us to distinguish between zero / 1 / 2, we generally consider it to mean zero. Link to full table in reply below.
#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. Starting with England regions:
Some of the more detailed content from this thread has been moved to an external page to try and make the twitter updates a bit more manageable. You can still see the full version here: …ddatashare.s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/Detail/Detail_…
#covid19uk - Tables thread. Starting with the 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 thread for England local authorities. This type of chart allows us to quickly visualise week on week changes by seeing if the points are above or below the dotted line. The size of the dot is the relative level of positives in the 60+ age range.