Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Protesters. That’s why.
You can’t have hundreds of people together in a riotous, violent mob and not expect transmissions. It’s the perfect environment for it.
Protesters were told to get tested and every one I know was negative. Masks + outdoors helps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Repeating the question for the PP in case it got lost:
Where can I find the data on new cases, per county, per day?
I haven't been able to find that information on the MD Covid website. Just cumulative cases per county.
I am a data scientist so Its a bit of a hobby that I track the data manually each day from the md gov site for state and Moco so I see the trends. When I saw things were changing for MD at state level, but Moco was not bad I started to look at what was driving it and started tracking the other big counties.
However if you go to the MD gis system you can download the data in spreadsheet for most of metrics by date including county cases
https://data.imap.maryland.gov/search?q=COVID-19
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
A day later:
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This doesn't seem good to me. Could someone tell me what we are doing in MD to make the trend go in the reverse direction?
Seriously? You opened up casinos, indoor dining, gyms, and bars. Pretty much every state that opened up the bars is seeing cases rise. It's not actually rocket science. Anytime you have an indoor space where a group of people is spending more than 15 minutes without masks -- so any place where people are eating and drinking -- you could have substantial transmission.
+1000000
In NYC, where their positivity rate is much lower they still won't be opening indoor restaurants, bars or malls. They're being smart and Hogan is stupidly gambling with the cases here to try to make some businesses happy. It might help in the short term but will ultimately cause more $ problems for all businesses if we have to shut down. MD needs to backtrack just a bit now to prevent us from having to shut down everything in a few weeks.
Cases are going up among young people in NYC, as well. It's happening everywhere.
https://www.politico.com/states/new-york/albany/story/2020/07/14/new-coronavirus-cases-shift-to-manhattan-and-brooklyn-neighborhoods-1300663
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
A day later:
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This doesn't seem good to me. Could someone tell me what we are doing in MD to make the trend go in the reverse direction?
Seriously? You opened up casinos, indoor dining, gyms, and bars. Pretty much every state that opened up the bars is seeing cases rise. It's not actually rocket science. Anytime you have an indoor space where a group of people is spending more than 15 minutes without masks -- so any place where people are eating and drinking -- you could have substantial transmission.
+1000000
In NYC, where their positivity rate is much lower they still won't be opening indoor restaurants, bars or malls. They're being smart and Hogan is stupidly gambling with the cases here to try to make some businesses happy. It might help in the short term but will ultimately cause more $ problems for all businesses if we have to shut down. MD needs to backtrack just a bit now to prevent us from having to shut down everything in a few weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Repeating the question for the PP in case it got lost:
Where can I find the data on new cases, per county, per day?
I haven't been able to find that information on the MD Covid website. Just cumulative cases per county.
Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced that three additional states meet the metrics to qualify for the travel advisory requiring individuals who have traveled to New York from those states, all of which have significant community spread, to quarantine for 14 days. The newly-added states are Delaware, Kansas and Oklahoma. The quarantine applies to any person arriving from a state with a positive test rate higher than 10 per 100,000 residents over a 7-day rolling average or a state with a 10 percent or higher positivity rate over a 7-day rolling average.
Anonymous wrote:The main issues are in Baltimore County, Baltimore City, and PG. Also counties like Anne Arundel, while small counties, trending up. These counties have percent daily increases above the state daily increases. Given population (except Anne Arundel) have big impact on state number. Today's increase in case numbers are B Country - 141 + case, B City 143+, PG 123+. For small county, AA +89 cases. Been consistent the past few weeks, The likely more troubling issue are the demographics of some of counties are likely riskier populations - but have not searched that data.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Protesters. That’s why.
You can’t have hundreds of people together in a riotous, violent mob and not expect transmissions. It’s the perfect environment for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are beginning to see the results of all the July 4th holiday weekend parties, gatherings, and beach vacations.
Not too mention 5 straight weeks of daily protests in our area.
Think THAT might have a little more to do with the numbers than the people who went to watch fireworks, hmmmm?
Depends on how much masking was going on at each.
The daily ones I saw with teens - while only about 75-100 and no masks. Not one.