Note: Averages have a *; Comparative Analysis and Pneumonia are highlighted in blue; COVID-19 is highlighted in Yellow
Annual
Analysis, Benchmarks, and Factor Analysis
As of the end of Week 9:
- COVID is around 8.4 times more deadly than the High Flu peak weekly deaths benchmark
- COVID is the most prevalent form of death in the US based on averaged benchmarks
- COVID deaths have decreased by 11% since Week 8.
- COVID deaths exceed the benchmarked High Flu deaths.
Numbers which COVID does not exceed will be presented as X%. This denotes that the COVID mortality rate equals X% of the higher number.
Numbers that COVID does exceed will be presented as N. This denotes that the COVID mortality rate is N times higher than the benchmark number. A one (1) means that the numbers are equal, a two (2) that COVID is twice as deadly on an annual basis, etc.
All numbers are rounded to the nearest decimal.
Factor Analysis
Charts
State Variability
Corrections
*Stealth change* - so I looked at the wrong date for annual. That was the reason for the large reconcile. In fact there was another reduction in the Annual total which means the Raw Annual that I have in my charts is just about matching 1:1 with the data source (this is a good thing). Sorry...
Next Update: May 9th by 6 PM Pacific
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