Do you think that Disney world will reclose its gates due to the rising number of COVID cases in Florida and around the country?

GoofGoof

Premium Member
Wasn't a major reported decline in average age directly correlated with the rise in cases? Won't that help keep deaths associated with that increase down?
That was the theory, but now who knows. Since the death numbers aren’t really by date of death it’s hard to say. Median age doesn‘t mean nobody older is sick. When you look at the reported deaths lots of older people still with a few 30s and 40s sprinkled in. The median age is also rising. It was in the low 30s each day a few weeks ago but was up to 40 as of a few days ago. Still younger than Mar/Apr peaks but seems to be trending up a little. Could be we are starting to see secondary infections from the younger crowd.
 

GoofGoof

Premium Member
Wasn't a major reported decline in average age directly correlated with the rise in cases? Won't that help keep deaths associated with that increase down?
In the other thread someone posted this which has the deaths reported in July. It looks like about 50/50 on over 65 or under 65.

Alright, I just wasted a few minutes and checked the PDF. Only the first 66 pages are deaths, so I converted those pages to an excel file. Sorted for newly identified deaths, confirming the total of 112 and 10 unknowns. Sorting those deaths for July gets us to, wait for it...

31 deaths in July. Perfectly in line with the graphic shown by @xdan0920. Here's a screenshot of the sheet sorted for July:

View attachment 482462
 

chrisvee

Well-Known Member
If I was a conspiracy theorist I would say FL deliberately held numbers to reinforce the narrative that deaths weren’t increasing.

I don’t actually believe that. I believe there is institutional government incompetence + overwhelmed people.
 

legwand77

Well-Known Member
We don’t know how many people died in the last 24 hours and won’t know for a few weeks apparently. It could be more than 120.

Do we know that the deaths were lower than what was reported each day? We know that some of what was reported each day was on a lag, but without going back to every day and assigning the reported deaths to the actual dates the people died we can’t really say whether what got reported is higher or lower than actual deaths. If the number of actual deaths is increasing than in theory the amount reported each day would be lower than the real deaths because of the lag. If the number of deaths is decreasing than the opposite would be true.
check the graph above your post
 

chrisvee

Well-Known Member
The median age is also rising. It was in the low 30s each day a few weeks ago but was up to 40 as of a few days ago. Still younger than Mar/Apr peaks but seems to be trending up a little. Could be we are starting to see secondary infections from the younger crowd.
and that may be the natural progression of an outbreak

we don’t have the early infection data from the NE for Feb/Mar bc we didn’t know the virus was here and weren’t testing
 

GoofGoof

Premium Member
I mean, this is only looking at July deaths so not surprising in my mind the average age is older.
Yeah, overall deaths have always skewed older and it holds true still. My point is just because the median age is low 30s doesn’t mean older people weren’t getting sick and also dying. Some younger people also died.
 

havoc315

Well-Known Member
True, but I also imagine there are a significant amount of people who think 120 people actually died in the last 24 hours. That is why day to day is pointless with all the data anomalies and catching up. For the past few months the actual deaths data per day has been lower than what has been reported on that date.

Yes, lots of people don’t understand the data.

but no... you can’t say that fewer died than reported. We don’t yet know how many died “yesterday” and we may not get a final number for months.
But we need to look at it as a lagged rolling average. Looking at the data... we can say that over the last few weeks, deaths have been increasing, up to an average of 70-80 per day. It might be significantly higher -today-.. but we won’t know for weeks.

It’s also why you can’t wait for the numbers to get bad before taking mitigation measures. If you wait for the numbers to get bad, then you’re probably reacting 2 weeks too late.
 

chrisvee

Well-Known Member
Yes, lots of people don’t understand the data.

but no... you can’t say that fewer died than reported. We don’t yet know how many died “yesterday” and we may not get a final number for months.
But we need to look at it as a lagged rolling average. Looking at the data... we can say that over the last few weeks, deaths have been increasing, up to an average of 70-80 per day. It might be significantly higher -today-.. but we won’t know for weeks.

It’s also why you can’t wait for the numbers to get bad before taking mitigation measures. If you wait for the numbers to get bad, then you’re probably reacting 2 weeks too late.
yes

plenty of experts warn that the biggest mistake is inaction
 

robhedin

Well-Known Member
But that doesn’t take into account the lag. Why would the CDC numbers not have the same lag if they get the numbers from the local governments?
I believe the CDC gets their death numbers once the death certificates are processed. The local data (I believe) is likely provided earlier before the certificate is completed/filed/registered/whatever. For example, person dies in hospital, hospital reports using COVID NET to get the data out and then, over the course of the next couple of weeks, the paper work is filed which makes its way to the CDC.
 

GoofGoof

Premium Member
I believe the CDC gets their death numbers once the death certificates are processed. The local data (I believe) is likely provided earlier before the certificate is completed/filed/registered/whatever. For example, person dies in hospital, hospital reports using COVID NET to get the data out and then, over the course of the next couple of weeks, the paper work is filed which makes its way to the CDC.
Isn’t the local data what is on a lag? The 120 deaths reported today for FL were actually deaths from weeks ago. I assumed that delay was due to the time it takes to establish a cause of death and issue a death certificate. It’s all very confusing.
 

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