Lumpy1106
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2010
- Messages
- 4,537
Not sure if this has been posted, but this seems like the right thread for this;
'Re' number by state
Obviously a lot less useful than at first glance - low population density states like Nebraska can have wild fluctuations in the Re number without really impacting the larger picture. Still, I like the comparison over time - shows things are changing and getting better overall if nothing else.
As an aside, IMHO, it's kinda silly arguing over data. Discussing it because it's interesting I'm all for. Here's a couple of data comparisons to mull over - neither here nor there;
'Re' number by state
Obviously a lot less useful than at first glance - low population density states like Nebraska can have wild fluctuations in the Re number without really impacting the larger picture. Still, I like the comparison over time - shows things are changing and getting better overall if nothing else.
As an aside, IMHO, it's kinda silly arguing over data. Discussing it because it's interesting I'm all for. Here's a couple of data comparisons to mull over - neither here nor there;
- In the main hospital in my city, there have been, for the duration of this, more births every day than people needing hospital beds for COVID for the entire city. Approx 60 births per day vs. 50 COVID hospital beds max needed at peak.
- If restrictions remain in place for a year (DEFINITELY not in favor of that!) and projections remain where they are at, COVID will save lives overall in CA. How? Car accident deaths are down 50% which is more than projected COVID deaths.