So nine new cases is just over 1% positive of those tested. This Atlantic article says the US has, overall, a 20% "test positivity rate." Here's an short excerpt:
According to the Tracking Project’s figures, nearly one in five people who get tested for the coronavirus in the United States is found to have it. In other words, the country has what is called a “test-positivity rate” of nearly 20 percent.
That is “very high,” Jason Andrews, an infectious-disease professor at Stanford, told us. Such a high test-positivity rate almost certainly means that the U.S. is not testing everyone who has been infected with the pathogen, because it implies that doctors are testing only people with a very high probability of having the infection. People with milder symptoms, to say nothing of those with none at all, are going undercounted. Countries that test broadly should encounter far more people who are not infected than people who are, so their test-positivity rate should be lower.Now, that 1% was just based on the number of tests and number of new cases reported yesterday. Those numbers don't necessarily get reported on the days the actually happened, so that doesn't really mean much. If we take our total number of positives - 309 - and divide by the number of tests - 9450 - we get 3.2%, which is still comfortably low. The article says South Korea has a 2% test positivity rate, because they have tested so many people. Australia and New Zealand are also at 2% according to the article.
So far then, we're doing pretty well.
CONFIRMED COVID-19 CASES ALASKA MARCH/APRIL 2020
| ||||||
Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
new/total | hos=hospital | 12th = 0/0 | 13th = 1/1 | 14th = 0/1 | 15th = 0/1 | |
16th = 0/1 | 17th = 2/3 | 18th = 3/6 | 19th = 3/9 | 20th = 3/12 | 21st= 2/14 | 22nd= 8/22 |
23rd=14/36 | 24th =6/42 1 hos 1 dead | 25th = 17/59 3 hos 1 dead | 26th = 10/69 3 hos 1 dead | 27th =16/89 5 hos 2 dead | 28th = 13/102 6 hos 2 dead | 29th=12/114 7 hos 3 dead |
30th=5/119 7 hos 3 dead | 31st= 14/133 9 hos 3 dead | |||||
April 2020 | 1st= 10/143 9 hos 3 dead | 2nd=8(6)/149 13 hos 3 dead | 3rd=8(11)157 15 hos 3 dead | 4th=15/171 16 hos 5 dead | 5th=14/185 20 hos 6 dead | |
6th=6/191 23 hosp 6 dead | 7th= 22/213 23 hosp 6 Dead29 recovered | 8th= 13/226 27 hosp 7 dead 32 recovered | 9th= 9/235 27 hosp 7 dead 49 recovered | 10th=11/246 28 hosp 7 dead 55 recovered | 11th=11/257 31 hosp 8 dead 63 recovered | 12th= 15/272 31 hosp 8 dead 66 recovered |
13th= 5/277 32 Hosp 8 dead 85 Recovered | 14th = 8/285 32 Hosp 9 dead 98 Recovered | 15th= 8/293 34 Hosp 9 dead 106 Recovered | 16th= 7/300 35 hosp 9 dead 110 recovered | 17th= 9/309 36 hosp 9 dead 128 recovered | ||
Hospital and dead figures are total to date, not new on that date |
State Charts
Above is a screenshot. You can enlarge and focus it by clicking on it, but you have to go to the actual interactive chart below if you want to play with it. You need to scroll right to see it all, but don't forget to scroll back to see the rest of the post.
Yesterday, with my technical difficulties, I forgot to mention that they've added a new category of tests. They've had State Labs, Private Labs, and now they've added Hospitals. It's in red on that chart on testing. Like all the boxes in these charts, there are tabs that allow you to see the info differently, so play with them a bit.
Cases depicted above represent permanent residency of the infected person, and may not reflect where the person is located currently, or was located when exposed or diagnosed.
My day-by-day chart
Alaska Covid-19 Data NewFor... by Steve on Scribd
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