Sunday, February 7, 2021

Week by week: COVID-19 cases in North Dakota



Source: 
New York Times

Total people tested (positive and negative):  397,150
  • Jan 31-Feb 6:     3,825 
  • Jan 24-30:          3,604
  • Jan 17-23:          2,893
  • Jan 10-16:          4,979
  • Jan 3-9:              3,999
  • Dec 27-Jan 2:     4,463
  • Dec 20-26:         4,801
  • Dec 13-19:         6,049
  • Dec 6-12:           6,486
  • Nov 29-Dec 5:   9,341
  • Nov 22-28:       11,689
  • Nov 15-21:       13,460
  • Nov 8-14:         14.257
  • Nov 1-7:           13,907
  • Oct 25-31:        12,396
  • Oct 18-24:        12,996
  • Oct 11-17:        11,486
  • Oct 4-10:          11,180
  • Sep 27-Oct 3:     8,000
  • Sep 20-26:          9,727
  • Sep 13-19:          9,921
  • Sep 6-12:          18,784
  • Aug 30-Sep 5:    9,752
  • Aug 23-29:       10,709
  • Aug 16-22:       10,893
  • Aug 9-15:         10,778

New cases week by week:

  • Jan 31-Feb 6:         544 (down 35% from previous week) 
  • Jan 24-30:              842  (down 16%)
  • Jan 17-23:           1,006  (down 12 %)
  • Jan 10-16:           1,156  (down 31%)
  • Jan 3-9:               1,667  (up 9%)
  • Dec 27-Jan 2:     1,536  (down 2%)
  • Dec 20-26:         1,567  (down 29%)
  • Dec 13-19:         2,198  (down 35%) 
  • Dec 6-12:           3,371  (down 31%)
  • Nov 29-Dec 5:   4,860  (down 58%)
  • Nov 22-28:       11,689  (down 13%)
  • Nov 15-21:       13,460  (up 39%)
  • Nov 8-14:           9,668  (up 4%)
  • Nov 1-7:             9,288  (up 32%)
  • Oct 25-31:         7,042  (up 25%)
  • Oct 18-24:         5,613  (up 21%)
  • Oct 11-17:         4,633  (up 33%)
  • Oct 4-10:           3,494  (up 52%)
  • Sep 27-Oct 3:     2,304  (down 17%)
  • Sep 20-26:         2,773  (up 12%)
  • Sep 13-19:         2,456  (up 35%)
  • Sep 6-12:           1,817  (up less than 1%)
  • Aug 30-Sep 5:   1,812  (up 4%)
  • Aug 23-29:        1,748  (up 35%)
  • Aug 16-22:        1,292  (up 39%)
  • Aug 9-15:             936  (up 3%)
  • Aug 2-8:               906  (up 5%)
  • Jul 25-Aug 1:       866  (up 4%)
  • July 19-25:           829  (up 25%)
  • July 12-18:           664  (up 56%)
  • July 5-11:              427  (up 19%)
  • Jun 28-Jul 4:         358  (up 73%)
  • June 21-27:           207  (up 7%)
  • June 14-20:           193  (down 20%)
  • June 7-13:             242  (down 8%)
  • May 31-Jun 6:       262  (up 39%)
  • May 24-30:           189  (down 63%)
  • May 17-23:          517  (up 35%)
  • May 10-16:           384
  • May 3-9:               311
  • Apr 25-May 2:      350
  • April 18-24:          275 


More data found at North Dakota Dept. of Health

Related reading:
Pandemic scraps, stalls, scales back North Dakota summer fests.  (Bismarck Tribune, 5/31/2020)
Tourism is North Dakota's No. 3 industry, comprising $3 billion of visitor spending in 2018. Outdoor recreation is traditionally the No. 1 tourism driver for North Dakota, but events and festivals are close behind, state Tourism Division Director Sara Otte Coleman said. From March 15 to May 16, North Dakota lost $428 million in visitor spending, she said.
Watch now: North Dakota governor delivers plea against 'mask shaming'.  (Bismarck Tribune, /5/23/2020)
The Republican governor and ardent Donald Trump supporter said during his Friday briefing that people who choose to wear masks deserve “support and encouragement” because they may be protecting someone who is vulnerable to the virus. 
“I would really love to see in North Dakota that we could just skip this thing that other parts of the nation are going through where they’re trading a divide — either it’s ideological or political or something — around masks versus no mask,” Burgum said.

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

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