Posted on Aug 4, 2020
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Being a bit of a data science nerd I like to visualize data as it can often provide a clear "picture" of what the data represents. As such I wrote a python program that grabs John's Hopkins data on COVID and puts it into some graphs. One thing that is clear while yes this is a national problem, how states deal with the virus varies on a number of factors like population, demographics, policy and how people embrace such policies just to name a few. As such what are some of the pros and cons in your state. What's working and what is not?
Edited >1 y ago
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 5
I am going to make the strong assumption that states that experienced significant cases before the shutdown experienced a significant spikes because the guidelines were static when they reopened.
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SPC David S.
As well some states have major cities like New York city. The political dynamics in some cases are creating a power struggle like the infighting of Cuomo and De Blasio. I'm sure this caused some confusion in the public. While some states like California have had better working relationships between city and state leaders.
https://scroll.in/article/962891/how-andrew-cuomo-and-bill-de-blasios-failures-made-new-york-a-covid-19-epicentre
https://scroll.in/article/962891/how-andrew-cuomo-and-bill-de-blasios-failures-made-new-york-a-covid-19-epicentre
How Andrew Cuomo andBill de Blasio’s failures made New York a Covid-19 epicentre
In contrast, the California governor and San Francisco mayor were quick to step up to the challenge.
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New Hampshire is crushing it. Come check it out, join our guard, Live Free and Die.
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SPC David S.
Yes sir what ever you are doing there keep it up - under 7K cases in a 1.3 million population.
https://covidactnow.org/state/NH?s=821152
https://covidactnow.org/state/NH?s=821152
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