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Posted On: 09/08/2020 11:29:11 PM
Post# of 148903
Hi Cycl2R - I check this site daily. I'm sure we all have a favorite tracker.
https://www.bing.com/covid/local/unitedstates?form=msntrk
Hope this link works for you. It does validate your stats for yesterday (25,000 cases and 250 deaths). Please note that the weekend reporting figures always drop. Mid-week is always higher. On a holiday weekend, we might get three low days instead of the normal two. It doesn't add much value to quote one days' stats.
I'm not sure what you will get when you click the link. I get a web page with a box overlay. The box has a button that says "expand." When you click that, you get a daily count for cases and can also change to a daily count for deaths.
As mentioned, it will confirm my "weekend dip" and also your contention that cases and deaths are down. They are down over the past four weeks (from all time highs). It is important to note that they are still above the levels we saw last April when things were terrible in New York and New Jersey (for cases, not deaths). Deaths are still running 5,000++ per week, which is 250,000 annualized.
https://www.bing.com/covid/local/unitedstates?form=msntrk
Hope this link works for you. It does validate your stats for yesterday (25,000 cases and 250 deaths). Please note that the weekend reporting figures always drop. Mid-week is always higher. On a holiday weekend, we might get three low days instead of the normal two. It doesn't add much value to quote one days' stats.
I'm not sure what you will get when you click the link. I get a web page with a box overlay. The box has a button that says "expand." When you click that, you get a daily count for cases and can also change to a daily count for deaths.
As mentioned, it will confirm my "weekend dip" and also your contention that cases and deaths are down. They are down over the past four weeks (from all time highs). It is important to note that they are still above the levels we saw last April when things were terrible in New York and New Jersey (for cases, not deaths). Deaths are still running 5,000++ per week, which is 250,000 annualized.
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