Coronavirus dashboard for March 22: crossing an important threshold, to the *good* side The US is on the verge of crossing an important threshold: as of today, the 7 day average of COVID 19 deaths in the US has declined to exactly 1000: The last time the US averaged less than 1000 deaths a week from the virus was the beginning of November, almost 5 months ago. Since the January peak, deaths have declined by 70%. The story is even more breathtaking in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities. For the week ending March 7, there were a total of 1,204 cases, a more than 96% decline from the peak. There were 492 deaths, a 92% decline from peak: Both numbers were the lowest weekly totals since data began to be kept 10 months
Topics:
NewDealdemocrat considers the following as important: Healthcare, US EConomics
This could be interesting, too:
Angry Bear writes Wages Have Not Caught Up with Previous Inflation
Bill Haskell writes Cannon ball don’t pay no mind . . .
NewDealdemocrat writes Economic Data
Bill Haskell writes Industrial Policy
Coronavirus dashboard for March 22: crossing an important threshold, to the *good* side
The US is on the verge of crossing an important threshold: as of today, the 7 day average of COVID 19 deaths in the US has declined to exactly 1000:
The last time the US averaged less than 1000 deaths a week from the virus was the beginning of November, almost 5 months ago. Since the January peak, deaths have declined by 70%.
The story is even more breathtaking in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities. For the week ending March 7, there were a total of 1,204 cases, a more than 96% decline from the peak. There were 492 deaths, a 92% decline from peak:
Both numbers were the lowest weekly totals since data began to be kept 10 months ago. Since deaths follow cases, I expect deaths to decline further in the next couple of weeks.
Even if the recklessly irresponsible spring breakers in Florida and Texas bring back to their home States the more infectious strains of the virus, causing new cases to increase, that over 17% of adults, and over 40% of the more vulnerable seniors, have *completed* their vaccinations causes me to think that deaths will nevertheless continue to decline.