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Bad news and *relatively* “good” news about the Delta Wave

Summary:
Coronavirus dashboard for July 6: bad news and *relatively* “good” news about the Delta Wave  In the near future, there appears to be bad news and *relatively* “good” news for the US. The bad news is that the “delta wave” is spreading, and we should expect a real outbreak on the order of last summer’s by early August. The *relatively* “good” news is that the death rate is likely not to be nearly so bad, if the experience in the UK is any guide.First, here’s the bad news, graphically. Of the 25 US States with the highest rate of infections, only 5 do not show an increase: declines in CO, NM, OR, and WA, and steady cases in DE: Of the 25 States + DC with the lowest rate of infections, 5 have started to trend significantly higher: In

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Coronavirus dashboard for July 6: bad news and *relatively* “good” news about the Delta Wave

 In the near future, there appears to be bad news and *relatively* “good” news for the US. The bad news is that the “delta wave” is spreading, and we should expect a real outbreak on the order of last summer’s by early August. The *relatively* “good” news is that the death rate is likely not to be nearly so bad, if the experience in the UK is any guide.
First, here’s the bad news, graphically. Of the 25 US States with the highest rate of infections, only 5 do not show an increase: declines in CO, NM, OR, and WA, and steady cases in DE:


Bad news and *relatively* “good” news about the Delta Wave

Of the 25 States + DC with the lowest rate of infections, 5 have started to trend significantly higher:


Bad news and *relatively* “good” news about the Delta Wave

In other words, the uptrend in new cases has spread to 1/2 of all US States so far.


The *relatively* “good” news is founded on the experience of the UK with its “delta wave.” The U.K. experience is a bellwether for where the US is going to be in about 4 weeks. There, the outbreak is now the worst except for last winter’s, and has quintupled in that time. BUT, while deaths typically lag cases by 4 weeks, even a quintupling in the rate of deaths in the UK would put it at perhaps only 10% (!!!) of the level during the first wave of spring 2020:


Bad news and *relatively* “good” news about the Delta Wave

Here is the same graph for the US as a whole:


Bad news and *relatively* “good” news about the Delta Wave

If the US follows the same trajectory as the UK, the daily death count might “only” go up to about 600 or 700 cases by Labor Day or so, compared with 1000 or more during most of 2020.

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