Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Moving in the wrong direction: 7-day average of new COVID-19 cases in Michigan continues to rise



The inflammation of the thumb of has spread through much of Michigan's Lower Peninsula.  The state is approaching its November 30 peak.



But as Bridge Michigan reports, the worst might be over, even as hospitalization reached a new peak.





4/1/2021 update starts here


The thumb of Michigan's Lower Peninsula is inflamed.  All of the counties located here would also be shown in red on maps showing the results of the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections.   The inflamed counties in the northern Lower Peninsula are all Trumpier than they were in 2016.



Bridge Michigan, 3/31/2021

Bridge Michigan,. 3/31/2021

As of March 7, the Covid Tracking Project is no longer collecting new data.



3/11/2021 update starts here

Bridge Michigan, 3/10/2021
Cases are rising most among those 10 to 29 years old, comprising 35 percent of all cases last week, but they are far less likely to be hospitalized or die. 
With cases overall up over 60 percent in the last three weeks — an average of 847 daily cases to 1,362 — experts said the increase in senior vaccinations could avoid waves of death that have typically followed pikes. 
“You’re going to start to see a significant drop in hospitalizations and deaths even if you have an increase in cases,” Vail said.

Two counites -- Huron and Otsego -- are leading the way.



2/16/2021 update starts here

Total tests (positive and negative):  9,989,965
  • Feb 9-15:           228,861
  • Feb 2-8:             246,048 
  • Jan 26-Feb 1:     272,665 
  • Jan 19-25:          274,046
  • Jan 12-18:          285,125
  • Jan 5-11:            296,853
  • Dec 29-Jan 4:    253,678
  • Dec 22-28:        261,390
  • Dec 15-21:        359,013
  • Dec 8-14:          377,268
  • Dec 1-7:            388,246
  • Nov 24-30:        421,241
  • Nov 17-23:        463,435       
  • Nov 10-16:        440,168
  • Nov 3-9:            364,460
  • Oct 27-Nov 2:   357,949
  • Oct 20-26:         318,744
  • Oct 13-19:         274,926
  • Oct 6-12:           242,903
  • Sep 29-Oct 5:    225,203
  • Sep 22-28:         223,129
  • Sep 15-21:         209,647
  • Sep 8-14:           200,241
  • Sep 1-7:             198,247
  • Aug 25-31         209,537
  • Aug 18-24:        214,687
  • Aug 11-17:        217,678
  • Aug 4-10 :         195,766 

Week by week:
Nov 24-30:  
  • Feb 9-15:               7,595  (down 25% from previous week)
  • Feb 2-8:               10,103  (down 20%) 
  • Jan 26-Feb 1:      12,617  (down 16%)
  • Jan 19-25:           14,965  (down 14%)
  • Jan 12-18:           17,446  (down 28% )
  • Jan 5-11:             24,071  (up 1%)
  • Dec 29-Jan 4:     23,735  (up 27%)
  • Dec 22-28:         18,671  (down 34%)
  • Dec 15-21:         28,335  (down 22%)
  • Dec 8-14:           36,380  (down 32%)
  • Dec 1-7:             47,958  (down) 
  • Nov 24-30:        47,978  (down 8%)
  • Nov 17-23:        52,010  (up 2%)
  • Nov 10-16:        50,916 (up 51%)
  • Nov 3-9:            33,712 (up 37%)
  • Oct 27-Nov 2:   24,657 (up 59%) 
  • Oct 20-26:        15,546 (up 22%)
  • Oct 13-19:        12,725 (up 47%) 
  • Oct 6-12:            8,650 (up 23%)
  • Sep 29-Oct 5:     7,024 (up 16%)
  • Sep 22-28:          6,040 (up 12%)
  • Sep 15-21:          5,375 (down 9%)
  • Sep 8-14:            5,884 (up 9%)
  • Sep 1-7:              5,378 (up 1%)
  • Aug 25-31:         5,339  (up 8%)
  • Aug 18-24:         4,937  (down 9%)
  • Aug 11-17:         5,443  (up 13%)
  • Aug 4-10:           4,832  (down 7%)
  • Jul 28-Aug 3:     5,201  (up 16%)
  • July 21-27:         4,478  (down 14%)
  • July 14-20:         5,198  (up 32%)
  • July 7-13:           3,929 (up 29%)
  • Jun 30-Jul 6:      3.046  (up 34%)
  • June 22-29:        2,266  (up 21%)
  • June 16-22:        1,872   (up 12%)
  • June 9-15:          1,672   (down 37%)
  • June 2-8:            6,881* (probable cases included)
  • May 26-Jun 1:   2,649  (down 11%)
  • May 19-25:        2,966 
  • May 12-18:        4,363
  • May 5-11:          4,345
  • Apr 28-May 4:   4,997
  • April 21-27:       6,210
  • April 14-20:       6,365
  • April 7-13:         6,785
  • Mar 31-Apr 6   7,949
  • March 24-30:     5,112



COVID Tracking Project

Deaths reported:
  • As of March 16 -          0
  • As of March 23 -        15
  • As of March 30 -      184  (+169)
  • As of April     6 -      727  (+543)
  • As of April   13 -   1,602  (+875)
  • As of April   20 -    2,468  (+866)
  • As of April   27 -   3,407  (+959)
  • As of May      4 -   4,049  (+642)
  • As of May    11 -   4,584  (+545)
  • As of May    18 -   4,915  (+331)
  • As of May    25 -   5,240  (+325)
  • As of June      1 -   5,516  (+276) 
  • As of June      8 -   5,912  (+398)
  • As of June    15 -   6,017  (+105)
  • As of June    22 -   6,097  (+  80)
  • As of June    29 -   6,161  (+  64)
  • As of July       6 -   6,221  (+  60)
  • As of July     13 -   6,321  (+100)
  • As of July     20 -   6,373  (+  52)
  • As of July     27 -   6,405  (+  28)
  • As of Aug       3 -   6,463  (+  58)
  • As of Aug     10 -   6,526  (+  63)
  • As of Aug     17 -   6,592  (+  66)
  • As of Aug     24 -   6,663  (+  71)
  • As of Aug     31 -   6,753  (+  90)
  • As of Sep        7 -   6,810  (+  57)
  • As of Sep      14 -   6,921  (+111)
  • As of Sep      21-    6,981  (+  60)
  • As of Sep      28 -   7,051  (+  70)
  • As of Oct        5 -   7,139  (+   88)
  • As of Oct      12 -   7,225  (+   86) 
  • As of Oct      19 -   7,363  (+ 138)
  • As of Oct      26 -   7,552  (+ 189) 
  • As of Nov       2 -   7,714  (+ 162) 
  • As of Nov       9 -   8,008  (+ 294)
  • As of Nov     16 -   8,431  (+ 423)
  • As of Nov     23-    8,940  (+ 509)
  • As of Nov     30 -   9,564  (+ 624)
  • As of Dec       7 - 10,422  (+  858)
  • As of Dec     14 - 11,289  (+  867)
  • As of Dec     21 - 12,153  (+  864)
  • As of Dec     28 - 12,754  (+  601)
  • As of Jan        4 - 13,391  (+  637)   
  • As of Jan      11 - 14,145  (+  754)
  • As of Jan      18 - 14,686  (+  541)
  • As of Jan      25 - 15,219  (+  533)
  • As of Feb       1 - 15,536  (+  317)
  • As of Feb       8 - 15,863  (+  327)
  • As of Feb     15 - 16,130  (+  267)


Related posts:
Alabama.  (2/15/2021)
Arizona.  (2/15/2021)
Arkansas.  (2/4/2021)
California.  (2/7/2021)
Connecticut.  (8/21/2020)
Florida.  (2/15/2021)
Georgia.  (2/15/2021)
Idaho.  (2/7/2021)
Illinois.  (2/2/2021)
Indiana.  (2/6/2021)
Iowa.  (2/6/2021)
Kansas.  (2/4/2021)
Kentucky.  (2/4/2021)
Louisiana.  (2/6/2021)
Maryland.  (1/27/2021)
Massachusetts.  (2/16/2021)
Michigan.  (3/11//2021)
Minnesota.  (2/4/2021)
Mississippi.  (2/15/2021)
Montana. (2/5/2021)
Nebraska.  (2/4/2021)
Nevada.  (2/17/2021)
New Jersey,  (2/16/2021)
New York.  (2/16/2021)
North Carolina.  (2/7/2021)
North Dakota.  (2/7/2021)
Ohio.  (2/6/2021)
Pennsylvania.  (2/16/2021)
South Carolina.  (2/5/2021)
South Dakota.  (2/18/2021)
Tennessee.  (2/5/2021)
Texas   (2/6/2021)
Utah.  (2/17/2021)
Virginia.  (1/22/2021)
Washington State.  (6/12/2020)
West Virginia.  (2/3/2021)


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Screenshot of Detroit Free Press top headlines (3/31/2020)





The average age of coronavirus deaths is 68.1 years old. The state median age of those deceased as of Saturday is 70. The age range of those who have died due to the virus is 36 to 97, according to state data. 
While the number of cases is split 50-50 according to gender, males account for 68% of the deceased. 
The state says 24% of more than 15,000 tests have come back positive.




3/27/2020.  Here's the type of leadership our president with the emotional development of a 6 year old is demonstrating;

'We've had a big problem with the young — a woman governor,' Trump says of Whitmer.  (Detroit News, 3/26/2020)
She is a new governor, and it's not been pleasant," Trump told Sean Hannity. "We've had a big problem with the young — a woman governor. You know who I'm talking about — from Michigan. We don't like to see the complaints."

As you would expect, the president with the emotional development of a 6 year old, doubles down.  Think about what that means for all of us.





The good news is that Trump lost Michigan today.

First elected to public office when she was 29.



Beaumont nears capacity: 635 hospitalized for COVID-19 with limited ventilators. (Detroit News, 3/25/2020)
The health system has been transferring patients between hospitals to find space and is beginning to convert some operating rooms into intensive care units, Beaumont Health Chief Operating Officer Carolyn Wilson said.

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