New covid deaths yesterday in the US: 3,538
— Brian Klaas (@brianklaas) December 17, 2020
Total covid deaths since the pandemic began:
Japan: 2,688
Australia: 908
South Korea: 612
Norway: 402
New Zealand: 25
Taiwan: 7
Total covid deaths in the US: 314,629 (and counting)
Shocking COVID stat:
— Steven Dennis (@StevenTDennis) December 13, 2020
~1 out of every 500 residents in New Jersey dead.
US coronavirus cases via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) December 12, 2020
0M-1M: 98 days
1M-2M: 44 days
2M-3M: 27 days
3M-4M: 15 days
4M-5M: 17 days
5M-6M: 22 days
6M-7M: 25 days
7M-8M: 21 days
8M-9M: 14 days
9M-10M: 9 days
10M-11M: 7 days
11M-12M: 6 days
12M-13M: 6 days
13M-14M: 6 days
14M-15M: 5 days
15M-16M: 4 days
As of Thursday, coronavirus has killed a higher percentage of Gove County, Kansas, residents than any other county in the United States: One out of every 132 people has died. https://t.co/dhdst6sp5G
— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) December 12, 2020
If the ratio of new deaths to new cases over time holds, we'll be averaging 3,500 deaths a day by the new year and pass 300,000 dead early next week.
— Philip Bump (@pbump) December 11, 2020
Many Americans and elected leaders chose to let the virus spread. This was the inevitable result.https://t.co/AnXgsDuurs pic.twitter.com/JgFyTV6sKe
At least 356,000 more people than normal have died in the U.S. between March 15 and Nov. 21 according to our analysis of data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
— The New York Times (@nytimes) December 10, 2020
That is nearly 20% higher than what would be expected in a normal year. https://t.co/MikvQt4yqb