By Allison Bell | December 02, 2020 at 05:24 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 3 maps showing what happened in
November…

1. Nov. 7-Nov. 13

2. Nov. 14-Nov. 20

3. Nov. 21-Nov. 27
The U.S. COVID-19 death rate continued to climb in the week
ending Nov. 27, according to public health specialists who are advising the
White House Coronavirus Task Force.
There are signs that the number of new cases of the virus that
causes COVID-19 might have started to level off, but the task force
advisors say they are worried about Thanksgiving gathering spikes.
“The COVID risk to all Americans is at a historic high,” the
advisors write in a list of recommendations for state officials. “If you are
under 40, you need to assume you became infected during the Thanksgiving period
if you gathered beyond your immediate household.”
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.
The COVID-19 advisory group said the threat to people over 65
and to other people with risk factors is grave.
“It must be made clear that if you are over 65 or have
significant health conditions, you should not enter any indoor public spaces
where anyone is unmasked, due to the immediate risk to your health,” the
advisors warned. “You should have groceries and medications delivered.”
Here’s what happened to key national COVID-19 indicators between
the week ending Nov. 27 and the previous week:
·
New Cases per 100,000
People: 349 (down from 356)
·
Percentage of People
Tested Who Had COVID-19: 9.7% (down from 10.5%)
·
COVID-19 Deaths per
100,000: 3.1 (up from 3)
·
Nursing Homes With 1
or More New Resident COVID-19 Deaths: 9% (up from 7%)
The White House advisors said that they are seeing clear
improvement in European countries with strong infection control efforts.
“In many areas of the USA, state mitigation efforts remain
inadequate, resulting in sustained transmission or a very prolonged time to
peak — over 7 weeks,” the advisors write.
There are different situation assessments and lists of
recommendations for each state developed by the advisory group.
In the report for Pennsylvania, for example, the advisors note
that local hospitals are facing shortages.
“Recent restrictions are warranted and commendable,” the
advisors say.
In the report for officials in Missouri, the advisors say
hospitals are reporting critical staffing shortages.
“The state is managing and is working on a staffing contract,”
the report states.
“The depth of viral spread across Missouri remains significant
and without public health orders in place compelling Missourians to act
differently, the spread will remain unyielding with significant impact on the
health care system,” officials say. “Mitigation and messaging need to be
further strengthened, as other states have done… Strong mitigation efforts by
neighboring states are showing early impact.”
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