500K dead, but things are getting better
The pace of deaths and cases is declining rapidly. The numbers are still incredibly high, but they are going down. We haven’t had a day with over 200K cases in over month and we just had three straight days of cases under 100K. That has not happened since the first week of November. This upcoming week will probably be the first week where every day is under 100K cases since late October/ early November. However, since deaths lag cases, deaths will continue to surpass 3,000 a day, though we hit our peak two weeks ago. But these should begin to decline even further.
Deaths
10K: April 4th
20K: April 10th (6 days to reach total)
40K: April 19th (9 days)
60K: April 29th (10 days)
80K: May 9th (10 days)
100K: May 26 (17 days)
120K: June 18th (23 days)
140K: July 15th (27 days)
160K: August 4th ( 20 days)
180K: August 22nd (18 days)
200K: September 15th (24 days)
220K: October 12th ( 27 days)
240K: November 5th (24 days)
260K: November 20th (15 days)
280K: December 3rd (13 days)
300K: December 11th (8 days)
320K: December 18th (7 days)
340K: December 27th (9 days)
360K: January 3rd (7 days)
380K: January 9th (6 days)
400K: January 15th (6 days)
420K: January 21st (6 days)
440K: January 28th (7 days)
460K: February 3rd (6 days)
480K: February 10th (7 days)
500K: February 17th (7 days)
Currently averaging 20K deaths every 13.04 days (doesn’t include the time to reach first 20K). Death rate is increasing, though it appears we peaked a few weeks ago and are now declining. We are still at a record breaking pace of deaths. With cases staying at 60-100K cases a day, the death rate is going to stay elevated for a while. Monday was the first day we reported under 1,000 deaths since the end of November.
Total Cases:
100K: March 27th
1M: April 27th (31 days)
2M: June 7th (42 days)
3M: July 6th (29 days)
4M: July 21st (15 days)
5M: August 6th (16 days)
6M: August 27th (21 days)
7M: September 18th (22 days)
8M: October 11th (23 days)
9M: October 27th (16 days)
10M: November 6th (10 days)
11M: November 13th (7 days)
12M: November 19th (6 days)
13M: November 25th (6 days)
14M: December 1st (6 days)
15M: December 6th (5 days)
16M: December 10th (4 days)
17M: December 15th (5 days)
18M: December 19th (4 days)
19M: December 24th (5 days)
20M: December 29th (5 days)
21M: January 3rd (5 days)
22M: January 7th (4 days)
23M: January 11th (4 days)
24M: January 15th (4 days)
25M: January 20th (5 days)
26M: January 26th (6 days)
27M: February 2nd (7 days)
28M: February 11th (9 days)
Case growth is slowing down quickly. This is the first time in a very long time that it will take over a week to diagnose 1M cases. We haven’t seen that slowdown since first week of November. The big variable is, how do the variants impact case growth and will we be able to vaccinate enough people to mitigate the variant growth?
I use www.worldometers.info/…
Other sources:
Nytimes: 487,855
Washington Post: 486K
Covid Tracking project: 478,259
CNN: 488,103
NBC: 489,823
IHME: 484,827
Johns Hopkins: 488,100
CDC: 485,070
CDC Vaccine Tracker: covid.cdc.gov/...