By Allison
Bell | December 08, 2020 at 05:55 PM

Here’s what the U.S. COVID-19 mortality map
looked like one month, two months and three months ago, according to White
House Coronavirus Task Force. And here are maps showing what’s happened since
then…

1. Nov. 7-Nov. 13

2. Nov. 14-Nov. 20

3. Nov. 21-Nov. 27

4. Nov. 28-Dec. 4
The United States must act quickly and aggressively to control
the current COVID-19 wave, or many more people will die, according to the
public health specialists who are advising the White House Coronavirus Task
Force.
The public health advisors warn in their latest weekly report
that new COVID-19 wave is the largest, fastest and longest-waving that they
have seen.
Resources
·
A
copy of a state-level version of the White House Coronavirus Task Force weekly
report is available here.
·
The
CDC’s weekly COVID-19 report is available here.
·
An
earlier article about COVID-19 data is available here.
“This current fall to winter surge continues to spread to every
corner of the U.S., from small towns to large cities, from farms to beach
communities,” the public health advisors say in the report, which
includes a list of recommendations .
Here’s what happened to key national COVID-19
indicators between the week ending Nov. 27 and the week ending Dec. 4:
·
New Cases per 100,000
People: 385 (up from 349)
·
Percentage of People
Tested Who Had COVID-19: 11.5% (up from 9.7%)
·
COVID-19 Deaths per
100,000: 4.2 (up from 3.1)
·
Nursing Homes With 1
or More New Resident COVID-19 Deaths: 11% (up from 9%)
The public health advisors say many European countries were
facing new problems with COVID-19 outbreaks but have done a good job of keeping
the outbreaks under control.
In the United States, “despite the severity of this surge and
the threat to the hospital systems, many state and local governments are not
implementing the same mitigation policies that stemmed the tide of the summer
surge,” officials say. “That must happen now.”
State and local governments must focus on promoting “uniform
behavioral change,” including wearing masks, washing hands, avoiding indoor
gatherings with people who are not immediate members of the household, and
using aggressive testing to find people who have severe acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) — the virus that causes COVID-19 — but
who have no COVID-19 symptoms, officials say.
Health agencies are preparing to begin a massive COVID-19
vaccination campaign.
“The current vaccine implementation will not substantially
reduce viral spread, hospitalizations, or fatalities until the 100 million
Americans with comorbidities can be fully immunized, which will take until the
late spring,” officials say. “Behavioral change and aggressive mitigation
policies are the only widespread prevention tools that we have to address this
winter surge.”
The White House task force has not been releasing the public
health advisors’ weekly COVID-19 reports. Several states, including Kentucky
and Pennsylvania, have started publishing the single-state versions of the
reports for their states on the web. At least one nonprofit organization, the
Center for Public Integrity, has started to publish the full, 50-state
versions of the weekly reports.
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