Friday, February 5, 2021

Week by week: COVID-19 cases in South Carolina




New York Times

Total tests (positive and negative):  4,252,253
  • Jan 27-Feb 3:    222,831
  • Jan 20-26:         243,228
  • Jan 13-19:         270,272
  • Jan 6-12:           194,448
  • Dec 30-Jan 5:    162,165
  • Dec 23-29:        188,781
  • Dec 16-22:        170,107
  • Dec 9-15:          186,023
  • Dec 2-8:            162,217
  • Nov 25-Dec 1:  128,526
  • Nov 18-24:       163,641
  • Nov 11-17:       132,662
  • Nov 4-10:         132,256
  • Oct 28 -Nov 3: 108,784
  • Oct 21-27:        120,073
  • Oct 14-20:        107,615
  • Oct 7-13:          101,595
  • Sep 30-Oct 6:   101,687
  • Sep 23-29:        137,138 
  • Sep 16-22:          96,917
  • Sep 9-15:            50,140  
  • Sep 2-8:              59,572
  • Aug 26-Sep 1:    48,295  
  • Aug 19-25:         27,626
  • Aug 12-18:         82,130
  • Aug 5-11:           55,894

New cases week by week:

  • Jan 27-Feb 3:    23,563  (down 37% from previous week)
  • Jan 20-26:        37,388  (up 7%)
  • Jan 13-19:        34,961  (up 12%) 
  • Jan 6-12:          31,284  (up 14%)
  • Dec 30-Jan 5:  27,471  (up 22%)
  • Dec 23-29:       22,547  (up 9%
  • Dec 16-22:       20,685  (up 2%)
  • Dec 9-15:         20,366  (up 13%)
  • Dec 2-8:           18,042  (up 86%)
  • Nov 25-Dec 1:   9,682  (down 15%)
  • Nov 18-24:      11,330  (up 12%)
  • Nov 11-17:      10,162  (up 31%)
  • Nov 4-10:          7,786  (up 6%)
  • Oct 28 -Nov 3:  7,363  (up 4%)
  • Oct 21-27:         7,086  (up 7%)
  • Oct 14-20:         6,610  (up 16%)
  • Oct 7-13:           5,713  (up 7%)
  • Sep 30-Oct 6:    5,336  (down 22%)
  • Sep 23-29          6,845  (down 6%)
  • Sep 16-22:         7,319  (down 3%)
  • Sep 9-15:           7,562  (up 23%)
  • Sep 2-8:             6,162  (down 3%)
  • Aug 26-Sep 1:   6,358  (up 9%)
  • Aug 19-25:        5,816  (up 5%)
  • Aug 12-18:        5,542  (down %)
  • Aug 5-11:          7,940  (down %)
  • Jul 29-Aug 4   10,081  (down 6%) 
  • July 22-28:      10,742  (down 17%)
  • July 15-21:      12,948  (down 1%)
  • July 8-14:       13,037  (up 30%) 
  • July 1-7:          10,053  (down 21%)
  • June 24-30:     12,786  (up 93%)  
  • June 16-23:       6,623  (up 39%)
  • June 10-16:       4,762  (up 70%)
  • June 3-9:           2,813  (up 40%)
  • May 27-Jun 2:  1,999  (up 47%)
  • May 20-26:        1,360  (up 20%
  • May 13-19:        1,129  (up 14%)
  • May 6-12 :            989
  • Apr 29-May 5:   1,323
  • April 22-28:       1,174
  • April 15-21:          886
  • April 8-14:         1,136
  • April 1-7:           1,334
  • March 25-31:       785


COVID Tracking Project


Deaths reported:
  • As of March 17 -         1
  • As of March 24 -         5
  • As of March 31 -       22  (+  17)  
  • As of April     7 -       51  (+  29)
  • As of April   14 -       97  (+  46)
  • As of April   21 -     124  (+  27)
  • As of April   28 -     177  (+  53)
  • As of May      5 -     283  (+106)
  • As of May    12 -     355  (+  72)
  • As of May    19 -     399  (+  44)
  • As of May    26 -     446  (+  47)
  • As of June      2 -     501  (+  55) 
  • As of June      9-      568  (+  67)
  • As of June    16 -     607  (+  39)
  • As of June    23 -     673  (+  66)
  • As of June    30 -     739  (+  66)
  • As of July       7 -    846  (+107)
  • As of July     14 -    993  (+147)
  • As of July     21 - 1,221  (+228)
  • As of July     28 - 1,565  (+344)
  • As of Aug       4 -  1,847  (+282)
  • As of Aug     11 -  2,098  (+251)
  • As of Aug     18 -  2,343  (+245)
  • As of Aug     25 -  2,569  (+226)
  • As of Sep        2-   2,794  (+225)
  • As of Sep        9 -  2,942  (+148)
  • As of Sep      16-   3,132  (+190)
  • As of Sep      23 -  3,252  (+120)
  • As of Sep      30 -  3,378  (+126)
  • As of Oct        6-   3,471  (+  93)
  • As of Oct      13-   3,575  (+104)
  • As of Oct      20 -  3,606  (+  31)  
  • As of Oct      27 -  3,842  (+236)
  • As of Nov       3-   3,968  (+126)
  • As of Nov     10 -  4,062  (+  94)
  • As of Nov     17 -  4,156  (+  96)
  • As of Nov     24 -  4,313  (+157)
  • As of Dec       1 -  4,404  (+  91)
  • As of Dec       8 -  4,585  (+181)
  • As of Dec     15-   4,756  (+171)
  • As of Dec     22 -  4,976  (+220)
  • As of Dec     29 -  5,198  (+222)
  • As of  Jan       5 -  5,498  (+300)
  • As of Jan      12 - 5,860  (+362)
  • As of Jan      19 - 6,269  (+409)
  • As of Jan      26 -  6,673  (+404)
  • As of Feb       3 -  7,394  (+721)
Premature ejaculation:
WRAL INVESTIGATES,   Some states that have reopened during pandemic aren't seeing spike in coronavirus infections.  (WRAL, 5/13/2020)
Neighboring South Carolina started reopening retailers April 20. That week, the state tallied more than 1,100 new infections. With each subsequent week, the number of new cases has dropped, down to 990 projected cases this week.

Dear WRAL,

It's time for another investigation.  The number of weekly cases has increased from 989 to 1,129 to 1,360 to 1,999 to 2,813 since this article was written.  And then came July.

Best,

Retiring Guy


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.  (1/16/2021)
Iowa.  (1/16/2021)
Kansas.  (2/4/2021)
Kentucky.  (2/4/2021)
Louisiana.  (1/16/2021)
Maryland.  (1/27/2021)
Massachusetts.  (2/2/2021)
Michigan.  (2/2/2021)
Minnesota.  (2/4/2021)
Mississippi.  (2/1/2021)
Montana. (1/1/2021)
Nebraska.  (2/4/2021)
Nevada.  (2/3/2021)
New Jersey,  (2/2/2021)
New York.  (2/2/2021)
North Carolina.  (1/17/2021)
North Dakota.  (1/17/2021)
Ohio.  (1/16/2021)
Pennsylvania.  (2/2/2021)
South Carolina.  (2/5/2021)
South Dakota.  (2/4/2021)
Tennessee.  (2/5/2021)
Texas   (1/16/2021)
Utah.  (2/3/2021)
Virginia.  (1/22/2021)
Washington State.  (6/12/2020)
West Virginia.  (1/20/2021)

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