OaktownBear said:
LunchTime said:
HighlandDutch said:
BearGoggles said:
OaktownBear said:
ducky23 said:
B.A. Bearacus said:
Oh great. OSU is now having a covid outbreak too? Cal won't even be able to play next week either.
I think you guys may need to come to grips with the fact that there is a possibility that the college football season is coming to a close. Covid is skyrocketing. We are already at more hospitalizations than we had last spring and the deaths are up 50% in a week. I agree with WIAF that you play whatever you can, but when half the conference has had issues within like a week, how long do you think this is going to keep going?
Not saying you're wrong, but can you please provide a cite and additional details for the idea hospitalizations are above spring levels. Is that nationwide or CA or a different area/metric?
Covid is clearly on the rise. But the reason I ask is that I have been told that cases are up but hospitalizations and deaths are still well below spring peak (at least for now). I can't find a clear link either way and, obviously, it depends on what areas you're looking at (e.g., NY v. North Dakota).
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2020/11/pandemic-coronavirus-hospitalizations-new-record/617061/
This article is exactly the problem with reporting. Technically correct, a giant clickbait scary headline, but with very little information. At least it shows region and some states data.
I like this source https://www.stlouisfed.org/publications/regional-economist/second-quarter-2020/hospital-capacity-covid19-pandemic or https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/covid19/report-14day-change.html But they are way out of date.
"somehow" it got hard to get reliable data around July. I will leave that up to guessing.
He posted it for one data point. The hospitalizations:
Quote:
Today, states reported that 61,964 people were hospitalized with COVID-19, more than at any other time in the pandemic.
That was reported on many sources and it is completely accurate, and it should be a big scary headline. Case numbers are all over the place because we didn't have the capability to test in the Spring that we have now. You cannot make that statement about hospitalizations. Hospitalizations are a good indicator of how With hospitalizations, deaths will follow. They already are.
Europe has skyrocketed before us. France for instance was at 12 deaths a day in mid August. They are now at 550. For a country with 20% of our population. UK, Spain, Italy, and Belgium are seeing similar spikes.
In September we were reporting about 30K cases a day. We are now at 135K cases a day. That is not due to testing. We are doing about the same number of tests as we were in September. Our hopitalizations are at an all time high and double what they were in September. Our deaths are up 50% in a week.
This is the third spike and through each spike we go through this same cycle of head in the sand behavior.
We are effed this winter. The only question is how effed we are going to be. This is pretty easy to see in the data.
Can you share your data?
EDIT to say, with a different audience (including some in this thread, ad especially in OT), I would be saying it is much worse than claimed. But I am talking you you :-/I'll take the time to respond because it seems you are interested in the data, and open to new information, but it isnt easy to pull together screenshots and sources, so all I ask is that you have you a real look. I'm arguing the ski isn't falling, yet. I am not arguing we aren't in a bad spot. I am certainly aware that dumping graphs is not as fun as making statements, so I wont get the stars, but it is important to be aware of what the data actually is, especially when comparing regions.
1. Hospitalization matters when hospitals run out of capacity to treat. I think we agree on that. If we can treat people, they die less.
2. Hospitalizations matter because a steady number of people who enter the hospital enter the ICU. A pretty stead percentage of those people die. I think we can agree on that.
While hospitalizations are UP, they are not up significantly, not the growth that you would see with a runaway infection, like we saw in March and April. Hospitalizations ARE growing like that in Europe, they are not here. They have been relatively steady through the summer, with highs and lows, like a wave.
To point #2, the outcome of hospitalizations is death. Always. But despite the growing infections, we dont see the same correlation with death that you would see in the European countries you mention.
This is what I see since October 1st for the US

7 Day Moving Average for the US.

Last week the MA was 911 deaths per day. It peaked a couple days ago at 1180 (1139, Nov12th, but peak is maybe what you saw?) 30% is not nothing, that's for sure. But its
not up 50% in a week. It IS up about 65% in the last two months. Growth, bu certainly not showing the exponential growth we would watch for. We have also seen this kind of shift before. We saw it in June, again in July, and again in September. It isnt new. The US tends to float between 1100 and 700. I am not seeing the accelerated growth that you seem to be seeing. If you provided your data maybe we could find what I am missing? Not an article summarizing what they think will get readers, the actual data.
I do ABSOLUTELY see the accelerated growth you see in various European countries.
Belgium

UK

Spain

Italy

They are not seeing similar spikes to the US, though. They all look very similar, while the US looks stable in comparison (note, though, that the US is "stable" at well above the current out of control numbers those European countries are hitting... FWIW)

A different way to look at it is, watching for large changes in growth:
Again, these are the nations in the EU you point to (they all show the deep drop of recovery, followed by a very sharp incline showing a significant resurgence of growth rate):

They look MUCH different than the US does (The US floats in a channel, without (yet) seeing significant change in rates.

I think if you argue we are starting out from a much worse spot, that would carry significant weight, but the argument that we are seeing spikes similar to Europe is not accurate, at least from the data I use.
Anyway, here are my sources that I use. Feel free to reach out and I can share how I compile them. I dont mind sharing a link to my Tableau, or the dataset, if you want it. It has a lot of interesting data, such as
* Female vs Male leadership (Female lead countries have better outcomes):

* And Democracy Index

Anyway, sources:
By US CountyBy US StateGlobal CasesGlobal DeathsGlobal RecoveredDemocracy IndexFemale Leadership