Monday, February 15, 2021

Week by week: COVID-19 cases in Massachusetts



New York Times

Total tests (positive and negative):  4,768,631
  • Feb 9-15:             78,571
  • Feb 2-8:               85,236
  • Jan 26-Feb 1:     109,374
  • Jan 19-25:          126,586
  • Jan 12-18:          142,257
  • Jan 5-11:            151,403
  • Dec 29-Jan 4:    116,780 
  • Dec 22-28:        124,039
  • Dec 15-21:        160,861
  • Dec 8-14:          157,731
  • Dec 1-7:            176,250
  • Nov 24-30:       129,843
  • Nov 17-23:       161,647
  • Nov 10-16:       132,705
  • Nov 3-9:           139.365
  • Oct 27-Nov 2:  105,799
  • Oct 20-26:        119,961
  • Oct 13-19:        102,137
  • Oct 6-12:          112,279
  • Sep 29-Oct 5:   112,197
  • Sep 22-28:        109,641
  • Sep 15-21:        127,809
  • Sep 8-14:          100,700
  • Sep 1-7:            134,766
  • Aug 25-31:       150,135
  • Aug 18-24:       126,665
  • Aug 11-17:       133,368
  • Aug 4-10:           84,424
Week by week
  • Feb 9-15:            14,047  (down % from previous week) 
  • Feb 2-8:              18,880  (down %)
  • Jan 26-Feb 1:      22,735  (down 25%)
  • Jan 19-25:           30,237  (down 17%)
  • Jan 12-18:           36,399  (down 18%) 
  • Jan 5-11:            44,474  (up 25%)
  • Dec 29-Jan 4:    35,634  (up 21%)
  • Dec 22-28:          29,560  (down 11%)
  • Dec 15-21:          33,143  (down 5%)
  • Dec 8-14:            35,006  (up 5%)
  • Dec 1-7:              33,193  (up 90%)
  • Nov 24-30:         17,509  (down 4%)
  • Nov 17-23:         18,184  (up 3%)
  • Nov 10-16:         17,712  (up 45)  
  • Nov 3-9:             12,178  (up 39%)
  • Oct 20-26:            8,772  (up 20%)
  • Oct 13-19:            7,289  (up 51%)
  • Oct 13-19:            4,825  (up 15%)
  • Oct 6-12:              4,201  (down 4%)
  • Sep 29-Oct 5:       4,390  (up 25%)
  • Sep 22-28:            3,276  (up 20%)
  • Sep 15-21:            2,716  (up 19%)   
  • Sep 8-14:              2,289
  • Sep 1-7:               -5,917 
  • Aug 25-31:           2,411 (down 8%)
  • Aug 18-24:           2,609 (up 24%)
  • Aug 11-17:           2,098 (down 21%)
  • Aug 4-10:             2,658 (down 3%)
  • Jul 28-Aug 3:       2,731 (up 28%)
  • July 21-27:           2,137 (up 9%
  • July 14-20:           1,962 (up 16%)
  • July 7-13:             1,690 (up 15%)
  • Jun 30-Jul 6:        1,469 (down 6%)
  • June 23-29:          1,558  (up 2%)
  • June 16-22:          1,520  (down 35%)  
  • June 9-15:            2,327  (down 37% from 2 week ago)
  • June 2-8:              7,398  (includes probable cases)
  • May 26-June 1:   3,694  (down 49%)
  • May 19-25:         7,261
  • May 12-18:         7,652
  • May 5-11:           9,375
  • Apr 28-May 4:  12,625
  • April 21-27:     15,046
  • April 14-20:      14,442
  • April 7-13:        13,235
  • Mar 31-Apr 6:    8,086


COVID Tracking Project


Deaths reported:
  • As of March 16 -           0
  • As of March 23 -         17
  • As of March 30 -       124  (+   107)
  • As of April     6 -       448  (+   324)
  • As of April   13 -    1,211  (+   763)
  • As of April   20 -    2,303  (+1,092)
  • As of April   27 -    3,003  (+   700)
  • As of May      4 -    4,090  (+1,087)
  • As of May    11 -    5,108  (+1,118)
  • As of May    18 -    5,797  (+   689)
  • As of May    25 -    6,416  (+   619)
  • As of June      1 -    6,846  (+   430)
  • As of June      8 -    7,353  (+   507) 
  • As of June    15 -    7,647  (+   294)
  • As of June    22 -    7,874  (+   227)
  • As of June    29 -    8,095  (+   221)
  • As of July       6 -    8,198  (+  103)
  • As of July     13 -    8,330  (+  132)
  • As of July     20 -    8,433  (+  103) 
  • As of July     27 -    8,536  (+  103)
  • As of Aug       3 -    8,648  (+  112)
  • As of Aug     10 -    8,741  (+    93)
  • As of Aug     17 -    8,833  (+    92)
  • As of Aug     24 -    8,948  (+  115)
  • As of Aug     31-     9,060  (+  112)
  • As of Sep        7 -    9,133  (+    73)
  • As of Sep      14 -    9,219  (+    86)
  • As of Sep      21 -    9,317  (+    98)
  • As of Sep      28 -    9,415  (+    98)
  • As of Oct        5 -    9,530  (+   115)
  • As of Oct      12-     9,617  (+     87)
  • As of Oct      19 -    9,753  (+   136)     
  • As of Oct      26 -    9,888  (+   135)
  • As of Nov       2 -  10,023  (+   135)
  • As of Nov       9 -  10,163  (+   140)
  • As of Nov     16 -  10,340  (+   177)
  • As of Nov     23 -  10,531  (+   191)
  • As of Nov     30 -  10,768  (+   237) 
  • As of Dec       7 -  11,035  (+   367)  
  • As of Dec     14-   11,388  (+   353)
  • As of Dec     21 -  11,759  (+   371)
  • As of Dec     28 -  12,158  (+   399)
  • As of Jan        4 -  12,671  (+   513)
  • As of Jan      11 -  13,151  (+   480)
  • As of Jan      18 -  13,705  (+   554)
  • As of Jan      25 -  14,178  (+   473)
  • As of Feb       1 -  14,607  (+   429)
  • As of Feb       8 -  15,054  (+   447)
  • As of Feb     15 -  15,517  (+   463)


Related reading:
As temperatures and COVID-19 cases rise, is Mass. dropping its guard against the coronavirus?   (Boston Globe, 7/26/2020
The same day in South Boston, beachgoers crowded the M Street Beach, where few were seen following health guidelines. 
Esmerelda Oliveira, 51, watched the scene with concern from a nearby bench. 
“There are no masks, no social distancing, nothing,” she said. “I have worries.” 
The crowds grew on the South Boston beach as officials in Chatham registered people Saturday for a COVID-19 testing clinic after 13 people who had attended a house party there earlier this month tested positive for the coronavirus.

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.  (2/2/2021)
Minnesota.  (2/4/2021)
Mississippi.  (2/15/2021)
Montana. (2/5/2021)
Nebraska.  (2/4/2021)
Nevada.  (2/3/2021)
New Jersey,  (2/2/2021)
New York.  (2/16/2021)
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)







Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (5/4/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (5/2/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/29/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/27/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/25/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/23/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/22/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/20/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/19/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/17/2020)


Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/14/2020)


Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/12/2020)

Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/10/2020)





Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/8/2020)


Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/3/2020)
Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/3/2020)


Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (4/2/2020)
Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (3/31/2020)



Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (3/30/2020)




Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (3/29/2020)




Screenshot of top Boston Globe headlines (3/27/2020)


Related reading:
Massachusetts coronavirus tests conducted at faster clip.   (Boston Globe, 3/25/2020)
Massachusetts far surpassed Governor Charlie Baker’s daily goal of completing 3,500 coronavirus tests, propelled in recent days by a commercial laboratory in suburban Marlborough that accounted for much of the surge. 
Quest Diagnostics’s laboratory roared to life in recent days, reporting more than 7,800 new tests over a two-day period. A company spokeswoman attributed the spike to high-capacity testing machines that began running late last week. 

No comments: