Because, actually, I do. And sometimes two.
Since I started tracking Alaska's COVID-19 cases, other posts aren't showing up so often. I started just doing COVID-19 posts here, like this post. But they were taking too much room and I was repeating the same charts over and over. So I switched to a "Page" - a tab in Blogger jargon. So now, unless you click on the tab above (just under the orange blog banner) it looks like I haven't done a new post.
But in addition to updating the table with the day's new numbers, I do a brief summary as well. Like this one from yesterday:
Monday, October 19, 2020 - Good signs, but not all good.
Today was the second day in a row with no new deaths or new hospitalizations. October 4 was the last time we had just one day with no deaths or hospitalizations. We have to go back to September 14 and 15 for two days in a row like that. And before that? June 27-30 when there were four days with no deaths or hospitalizations. This might just be a problem of not getting the hospitalization reports in over the weekend. But it's a glimmer of hope.
There were 208/200 new resident cases. It's four days in a row with 200 or more cases. That has never happened before in Alaska. Not so good. The more cases, the more eventual hospitalizations and deaths to follow.
27 reported recoveries and 175 MORE active cases - for another all time high of 5235.
11,012 new tests, one of the highest totals.[10/20/20 -Had typo in chart yesterday. Not sure how many new tests, yesterday. The updated past numbers are totally different from what I documented daily.] We're at [5]33,723 tests total. Our state population is about 730,000. But this number is NOT how many Alaskans have been tested, but how many tests have been given. Many essential workers get tested over and over again.The test positivity rate dropped slightly from 4.78 yesterday to 4.6 today. Under 5.0 is good.
The State keeps other numbers I don't keep track of on the chart above. I've been reporting Reproductive Number in the daily reports lately. Today down slightly to 1.07. Under 1 is the goal. We're close.
I haven't mentioned hospital capacity for a while, mainly because it hasn't been an issue. But when I looked today, The hospitals are getting a little more crowded.
57% of adult beds are occupied. There are 550 vacant. That's for everything, not just COVID-19.
68% of adult ICU beds are occupied. There are only 43 left. Again, not just COVID-19 patients.
Ventilators aren't an issue at this point. Only 9% being used with 324 left.
There are 41 COVID-19 patients in hospital beds and 24 more suspected COVID-19 cases.
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