Wisconsin out of control.
Covid-19: weekly new cases per 100,000 people, as reported by Johns Hopkins University, last updated at 10:50 a.m. today, October 25, 2020. North Dakota is #1 in the nation for new cases per 100,000 followed a bit further back by South Dakota and even further back, #3, Wisconsin:
- The leaders:
- #1: North Dakota; 643 new cases per 100,000
- #2: South Dakota: 551 new cases per 100,000
- #3: Wisconsin: 487 new cases per 100,000
- #4: Montana: 404 new cases per 100,000 (which raises the question -- just how good is social distancing?)
- What about the big states?
- New York: 298
- New Jersey: 234
- Florida: 316
- Louisiana: 259
The big story tomorrow -- until something bigger comes along -- will be the Chinese flu pandemic, surging yet again, and the White House throwing in the towel on attempts to control it.
My primary source of numerical data is this site. At that site, you can click on "USA" and get data for individual states.
The US population: 330 million.
Number of Covid-19 cases to date, in the US: approaching 9 million.
9 / 330 = 3%.
Herd immunity: 65% to 70%, with or without a vaccine.
Spanish flu: the meme -- one-third of the world's population became infected with the virus, back in 1918 - 1920. One-third is 33.3%. That's a long way from 3%.
At a million new cases in the US each month, the current rate:
- 0.7*330 million = 230 million
- 230 / 1 = 230 months = about 20 years
- the vaccine would speed things up .... assuming ... a lot of assumptions
- note: we have not eradicated seasonal flu despite...
- vaccination against influenza began in the 1930s with large-scale availability in the United States beginning in 1945
- note: only one human viral pathogen had been eliminated: smallpox
- despite widespread vaccination several pathogens have not been eliminated: chickenpox; measles, mumps, rubella, dipththeria, H. flu, meningococcus, etc.;
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