People are bored with the virus but it’s not over or anywhere close!
Would like to read more on if there's a relationship between where COVID is spreading and people being indoors more because it's too hot out. Here are searches for "air conditioning", for instance. Note that AZ (very high COVID growth now) tops the list. https://t.co/EJFrdimrJX pic.twitter.com/AVImYydjXJ
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) June 17, 2020
Our daily update is published. We’ve now tracked 23.5 million tests, up 485k from yesterday.
— The COVID Tracking Project (@COVID19Tracking) June 14, 2020
Note that we can only track tests that a state reports.
For details, see: https://t.co/PZrmH4bl5Y pic.twitter.com/mA70UVXTCG
States seeing surge in coronavirus cases: pic.twitter.com/xVXVuHMf7F
— Alex Salvi (@alexsalvinews) June 14, 2020
New coronavirus cases and hospitalizations in record numbers swept through more U.S. states, including Florida and Texas, as most push ahead with reopening https://t.co/goWcgTDzP3 pic.twitter.com/xW4Sx8tYze
— Reuters (@Reuters) June 14, 2020
Kudlow to @jaketapper: “Hospitalizations may be going up but that’s because elected procedures are now permitted.”
— Bianna Golodryga (@biannagolodryga) June 14, 2020
Texas has reported the number of those hospitalized with Coronavirus is at an all-time high. Arizona warned that its ICU’s are filling up with COVID-19 cases.
Unreal.
— Greg Sargent (@ThePlumLineGS) June 14, 2020
"There is ample reason to tie the latest surge of infections to relatively early reopenings…Most of the 10 hardest-hit states that have seen rising case levels started reopening on or before May 8," NYT reports.
Exactly what experts predicted.https://t.co/cGMXrdijIY
Coronavirus cases are climbing now in 17 states via @CNN: Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Hawaii, Mississippi, North Carolina, North Dakota, Nevada, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wyoming. https://t.co/QT9fVo8OFK pic.twitter.com/Qq1FjOfmpJ
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) June 13, 2020
We don't know the impact mass outdoor demonstrations will have on the spread. But there will be a concerted effort in some corners to act as though things were going well or were on the right track before the protests began. According to the early numbers, that's not true.
— Susan Hennessey (@Susan_Hennessey) June 8, 2020
A single coronavirus update snapshot.
— (((Charles Fishman))) (@cfishman) June 7, 2020
Florida.
FL got a lot of praise for how it handled nursing home cases (very well).
Florida pushed opening amid sneering from people who didn't understand its case spread.
Now?
Last 4 days: Most new cases of any 4-days in the pandemic. pic.twitter.com/MWJYlWX0z9
FLORIDA is on fire – sets a new all time daily record – 2,581 new #covid19 cases on Saturday. Perfect time for a 15,000-person indoor GOP convention in Jacksonville + docked cruise ships as potential hotel rooms… what could go wrong? https://t.co/bsY9u2qB1t
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) June 14, 2020
My earlier worst fears confirmed: Younger adults were the main source of 61 different outbreak clusters in Japan. In this study (in a CDC journal), contact tracing isolated the primary source of 61 epidemic clusters to be mostly younger adults! 🧵 #COVID19 https://t.co/PbIQUnDXV0 pic.twitter.com/3uKvUuUaNZ
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) June 14, 2020
Coronavirus cases spike in Florida as President Trump prepares for the Republican convention in the state. https://t.co/ZkARYhS6di
— ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) June 14, 2020
White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow on Sunday downplayed the increase in coronavirus cases seen in many states and said the country “has got to open.”https://t.co/EAf2N4o8Hm
— MarketWatch (@MarketWatch) June 14, 2020
At least 18 U.S. states report increasing coronavirus cases after reopening https://t.co/lus2wA1Bfc
— Newsweek (@Newsweek) June 14, 2020
South Carolina reports highest one-day rise in coronavirus cases for fourth straight day https://t.co/lwBNwFr5af pic.twitter.com/e1WknrzQ57
— The Hill (@thehill) June 14, 2020
So, the actual peak of COVID-19 deaths may have been a bit earlier, higher and steeper than the official tally shows. A lot of deaths that happened early (before adequate testing) were missed. We're missing fewer deaths now that testing has improved. https://t.co/sxEzUo47DZ
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) May 30, 2020
One of these is not like the others. #Coronavirus pic.twitter.com/crFQUvDQn8
— Niles Edward Francis (@NilesGApol) June 14, 2020
The coronavirus won’t be loosening its grip on the U.S. any time soon, infectious disease experts said on Sunday. Experts have estimated that without a vaccine, about 70% of the population will need to be infected and develop immunity to stop the spread. https://t.co/fhFoSm8aG6
— The New York Times (@nytimes) June 14, 2020
Coronavirus
— Jesse Damiani (@JesseDamiani) June 14, 2020
Does
Not
Care
If
You’re
Over
It https://t.co/TQMtrKSZZm
Washington State sounds alarm over rising coronavirus cases https://t.co/iDR2LRbC8h pic.twitter.com/cDEQcIsoHw
— The Hill (@thehill) June 14, 2020
DC Detects New Peak in Coronavirus Cases: Health Officials. #coronavirus https://t.co/BxqDay2v2w
— Shomari Stone (@shomaristone) June 14, 2020
Are female leaders better at fighting a pandemic? @NickKristof compiled death rates from the coronavirus for 21 countries around the world, 13 led by men and 8 by women, and the difference was striking. https://t.co/R57tM7xzrN pic.twitter.com/8fkKc1mm7f
— New York Times Opinion (@nytopinion) June 14, 2020
See where in the U.S. the number of new coronavirus cases is rising and where it's falling in the last 14 days with our interactive map https://t.co/ZrLvDuUpkv
— The New York Times (@nytimes) June 14, 2020