State growth rates for May 19, 2022. All information is based on reported information and actual results may be different.volvolugnut wrote: ↑19 May 2022, 07:22
More statistics on US states and COVID-19 growth rates. My raw information is from Worldometer. Any errors or misrepresentations are my own.
These tables show all available US states and territories and the COVID-19 data for the last 5 days. I have sorted the states alphabetically and added growth rates for last several days for all states with ranking of each day. Of course, this information changes daily. I have presented the table in two parts because of the screen shot, but it is actually one table in Excel.
Again, results change daily.
For your information, the top 5 states or territories yesterday in growth rate 7 day average (the worst containment) are: West Virginia (0.203) with 508,538 cases, Guam (0.136) with 48,666 cases, North Dakota (0.127) with 243,055 cases, Nebraska (0.118) with 483,783 cases, and Minnesota (0.117) with 1,490,445 cases. West Virginia has been in the top 5 states for 166 of the last 255 days. Guam has been in the top 5 states for 64 of the last 134 days. North Dakota has been in the top 5 states for 12 of the last 16 days. Minnesota has been in the top 5 states for 415 of the last 650 days.
Several states have stopped posting new case and new death numbers. I will back calculate where possible.
A column on the right shows the previous day growth rate divided by the 7 day moving average. Red highlight states were over 2.0 yesterday. Yellow highlight states were over 1.5 yesterday. This is an early warning of higher growth rate in states. Many of these states did not report the last several days making this measure more variable for those states.
My calculated growth rate for USA is 0.0396 for yesterday, down from previous day of 0.0503. This is not population or case number weighted. Yesterday, 7 states did not report new cases. It appears some states, particularly Wyoming, are deleting active cases from the count much earlier that others. These differences in the states reporting, makes the growth rate comparisons misleading.
Daily active case counts have started to rise in the last couple weeks. There have been 75 of last 108 days with decreasing active case numbers.
There have now been 84 million total cases of Covid-19 in the US. This is 25% of the total US population. Reinfections and under reporting will distort the total number of cases.
With new home tests widely available, new case counts are likely under counting the true number of active cases.
As the table has expanded, it has become harder to read. You may want to copy the image, paste to another screen. like Word, and increase the size.
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