According to Johns Hopkins University's tally of cases in the US, there are at least 486,490 cases of coronavirus in the U.S.; at least 18,002 people have died in the US from coronavirus.
— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) April 10, 2020
So far on Friday, Johns Hopkins has reported 20,740 new cases and 1,318 reported deaths.
The undercount of COVID-19 mortality is likely staggering. This are the numbers from NYC over just 5 days in April. https://t.co/CgfTMBqQVW pic.twitter.com/0OFFwp5xa9
— Nikhil Pal Singh (@nikhil_palsingh) April 10, 2020
The real number of deaths is higher—but no one knows by how much. https://t.co/8zxevnXBRJ
— ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) April 10, 2020
Columns extending below the midpoint indicate racial/ethnic groups that are underrepresented in coronavirus cases and deaths.
— Philip Bump (@pbump) April 8, 2020
Those extending above, like almost all of the blue ones, are overrepresented. https://t.co/z8MLh3MnVF pic.twitter.com/aancAQaCGi
Reported US coronavirus cases via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) April 7, 2020
Feb. 6: 12
Mar. 6: 332
April 6: 367,507
This is interesting (though preliminary). Density is predictive but not *that* predictive of COVID-19 deaths. Socioeconomic status seems to matter more, with areas with more minorities and fewer college graduates suffering a lot more deaths per capita. https://t.co/QD3HWhsiag
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) April 5, 2020
Reported US coronavirus cases via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) April 5, 2020
5 weeks ago: 69 cases
4 weeks ago: 444 cases
3 weeks ago: 2,826 cases
2 weeks ago: 25,740 cases
1 week ago: 121,285 cases
Right now: 311,544 cases
In order to be on track for an estimated ~100,000 deaths from coronavirus in the United States, and a peak of ~2,500 deaths per day, the University of Washington model cited by the White House would expect 8.363 total deaths today.
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) April 5, 2020
The latest @CNN number is 8,488 deaths.
The U.S. death toll from the novel coronavirus has jumped to over 8,400 this eveninghttps://t.co/H8OWoXoWIC
— Axios (@axios) April 5, 2020
NEW: Sat 4 April update of coronavirus trajectories
— John Burn-Murdoch (@jburnmurdoch) April 4, 2020
Daily new deaths:
• US about to go clear of Spain for most daily deaths of any country in the world
• UK on steeper trajectory than Italy, which was seen as hardest-hit country worldwide
Live charts: https://t.co/JxVd2cG7KI pic.twitter.com/7chcsW6bYO
The growth rate of new US cases is declining a bit, even as test volume has started to increase again. It's pretty decent news and a sign that the impact of social distancing may be starting to show up in the data. https://t.co/b2Ca9NnA76
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) April 4, 2020
Coronavirus death toll: Americans are almost certainly dying of covid-19 but being left out of the official count https://t.co/9FNs08d4Vb
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 5, 2020