US is approaching 3.9 million cases and 144,000
deaths. The recovery rate is 93%. We need immediate test results and immediate
treatment of symptoms.
As of 7/20/20 at 10 am ET, US case gain remains
at 1.7% and %deaths/cases remain at 3.7%. Most deaths on 6/26/20 were in New
Jersey and most deaths on 7/1/20 were in New York.
US
Cases Gain %
Deaths % Deaths/Day
7/20/20
3899358 65642 1.7%
143310 3.7 429
7/19/20
3833716 62615 1.7% 142881
3.7 801
7/18/20
3771101 72709 2.0%
142080 3.8 930
7/17/20
3698392 79049 2.2%
141150 3.8 950
7/16/20
3619343 73065 2.1%
140200 3.9 1038
7/15/20
3546278 65819 1.9%
139162 3.9 889
7/14/20
3480459 66354 1.9%
138273 4.0 486
7/13/20
3414105 57863 1.7%
137787 4.0 373
7/12/20
3356242 63561 1.9%
137414 4.1 698
7/11/20
3292681 71686 2.2%
136716 4.2 878
7/10/20
3220995 60711 1.9%
135838 4.2 978
7/9/20
3160284 62746 2.0%
134920 4.3 929
7/8/20
3097538 55588 1.8%
133991 4.3 950
7/7/20
3041950 56460
1.9% 133041 4.4
431
7/6/20
2985490 49239 1.7%
132610 4.4 283
7/5/20
2936251 38384 1.3%
132327 4.5 215
7/4/20
2891267 53586 1.9%
132112 4.6 609
7/3/20
2837681 56596 2.0%
131503 4.6 690
7/2/20
2781085 51237 1.9%
130813 4.7 679
7/1/20
2729848 46547 1.7%
130134 4.8 1315 NY
6/30/20
2683301 45862 1.7%
128819 4.8 376
6/29/20
2637439 19592 0.7%
128443 4.9 200
6/28/20
2617847 61779 2.4%
128243 4.9 603
6/27/20
2553068 48392 1.9%
127640 5.0 855
6/26/20
2504676 41238 1.7%
126785 5.1 2491 NJ
6/25/20
2463438 38945 1.6%
124294 5.0 818
6/24/20
2424493 34641 1.4%
123476 5.1 815
6/23/20
2389852 33011 1.4%
122661 5.1 411
6/22/20
2356841 25291 1.1%
122250 5.2 247
6/21/20
2331550 33908 1.5%
122003 5.2 589
6/20/20
2297642 33576 1.5%
121414 5.3 726
6/19/20
2264066 29212 1.3%
120688 5.3 745
6/18/20
2234854 26368 1.2%
119943 5.4 810
6/17/20
2208486 24888 1.0%
119133 5.4 794
6/16/20
2183598 21114 1.0%
118339 5.4 480
6/15/20
2162484 20260 0.9%
117859 5.5 332
6/14/20
2142224 24891 1.2%
117527 5.5 687
6/13/20
2117333 27508 1.3%
116840 5.5 805
6/12/20
2089825 22965 1.1% 116035 5.6
878
6/11/20
2066860 20346 1.0%
115157 5.6 972
6/10/20
2046514 19076 0.9%
114185 5.6 1060
6/9/20
2027438 19742 1.0%
113125 5.6 653
6/8/20
2007696 17094 0.9%
112472 5.6 344
6/7/20
1990602 24336 1.2%
112128 5.6 730
6/6/20
1966266 40999 2.1%
111398 5.7 1180
6/5/20
1925267 21399 1.2%
110218 5.7 1042
6/4/20
1903868 22386 1.2%
109176 5.7 1093
6/3/20
1881482 20856
1.1% 108083 5.7
1138
6/2/20
1860626 22796
1.2% 106945 5.7
737
6/1/20
1837830 18042 1.0%
106208 5.8 574
5/31/20
1819788 22556 1.3%
105634 5.8 1001
5/30/20
1797232 28624 1.6%
104633 5.8 1289
5/29/20
1768608 22672 1.3% 103344 5.8
1230
5/28/20 1745936
102114 5.8
US % Deaths/Case by State 7/20/20. The asterisk * indicates no change from
yesterday in cases and deaths.
State Cases
Deaths %
New York
434164 32570 7.5% flat
California 391084 7713
2.0% flat
Florida 350047 4985
1.4% down
Texas 339210 4063
1.2% flat
New Jersey 182983
15781 8.6% flat
Illinois 162750 7488
4.6% flat
Arizona 143624 2761
1.9% flat
Georgia 143123 3173
2.2% down
Massachusetts 113534 8431 7.4% flat
Pennsylvania 105384
7084 6.7% down
N Carolina 99816
1667 1.7% flat
Louisiana 91706 3545
3.9% down
Michigan 81868 6366 7.8% flat
Maryland 78131 3377
4.3% down
Tennessee 78115
843 1.1% flat
Virginia 77430 2027
2.6% down
Ohio 74966 3178 4.2% flat
S Carolina 69986 1155
1.7% flat
Alabama 67011 1287
1.9% down
Indiana 56571 2822 5.0%
down
Washington 48131 1454
3.0% down
Connecticut 47893
4396 9.2%
flat*
Minnesota 46204 1581
3.4% down
Mississippi 42638 1355
3.2% flat
Wisconsin 42315 844
2.0% flat
Colorado 40142 1752
4.4% flat
Iowa 38878 794 2.0% down
Nevada 35765 647
1.8% down
Missouri 35218 1165
3.3% down
Utah 34117 243 0.7% flat
Arkansas 33228 357
1.1% flat
Oklahoma 25265 451
1.8% flat
Kentucky 23161 670
2.9% down
Nebraska 22583 301 1.3% flat
Kansas 22356 307
1.4% flat
Rhode Island 17793
990 5.6% flat*
New Mexico 16971 571 3.4% flat
Idaho 14873 119
0.8% flat
Oregon 14579 260
1.8% flat
Delaware 13519
523 3.9% flat
DC 11261
578 5.1% down
S Dakota 7906
118 1.5% flat
N Hampshire 6203 398
6.4% flat
W Virginia 5042 100 2.0% flat
N Dakota 5019
92 1.8%
flat
Maine 3687 117
3.2% flat
Montana 2533 37 1.5% flat
Wyoming 2126 25
1.2% up
Alaska 1874 18 1.0% flat
Hawaii
1381 24 1.7% down
Vermont 1350 56 4.1% down
US Territories and Federal Facilities
Guam 319 5 1.6% flat
N Mariana 37 2 5.4% flat*
Puerto Rico 12461
180 1.4% down
Virgin Islands 297 6 2.0% down
Veterans 32635 1889
5.8% flat
US Military 29047
46
0.2% flat*
Fed Prisons 10303 98 1.0% flat
Navajo 8593 422 4.9% up
Travel Groups 152 3 2.0% flat*
US Totals 3899358
143310 3.7% flat
Comments
US %Deaths/Cases continue to decline due
to increases in testing. This also tracks treatment learning-curve and patient
outcome improvement. States with over 7% did the worst job, including New York,
New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Connecticut. Higher %Deaths/Cases also reflects patient pre-existing
health issues, population density, public transit, international travel and
economic activity.
The increase in new cases is driven by the
increase in testing. It is the denominator in the %deaths/cases, so increases
in cases lowers the % of deaths. Deaths have resulted in 7% of the cases and
80% of deaths occur with patients who are age 65 and older.
Time spent out-of-doors might help.
California and Florida fared better than average. Developing immunity and
eliminating pre-existing conditions should be pursued. Weight loss will help
reverse and avoid Diabetes II. Taking
vitamins A, C, D, E, magnesium and zinc will strengthen immunity.
Medicine is a “trial and error” endeavor
aimed at improving outcomes. The important work is being done by practicing
physicians and their staffs to prevent deaths.
The 1918-1919 Spanish Flu was a virus that
reached 500 million cases requiring treatment and 50 million deaths worldwide.
675,000 deaths were in the US. It affected all age groups and lasted for 2
years.
The 2019-2020 Wuhan Covid19 virus is
approaching 15 million cases and 610,000 deaths worldwide. During the first 6
months of this virus, tests were given to patients with symptoms that required treatment. Now most cases are asymptomatic carriers and
this testing is driving down death counts. The value of testing is tracking to
avoid spreading the virus. We are also
curious about how asymptomatic carriers avoid becoming ill. Immediate test
results and immediate early treatment are necessary.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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