case numbers are irrelevant, many are asymptomatic. Its deaths that matters.
Not to mention testing across the US has drastically increased.
But if you die it’s because you were a case no? Therefore, the higher the cases, the higher chances of death? Maybe I’m totally wrong but somehow my theory adds up
But if you die it’s because you were a case no? Therefore, the higher the cases, the higher chances of death? Maybe I’m totally wrong but somehow my theory adds up
A healthy person under the age of 65 has less than 1% chance of dying from CV-19. Florida has 22 million residents. 61k cases 2610 deaths. 85% of the deaths are people over 65 with medical problems. Live your life
I think the point made was that positive test numbers have gone up since testing has gone up. What becomes more concerning is both hospitalizations going up (indicating serious cases) and when the negative result rate on testing goes down, which indicates that the level of testing isn't adequate.
There is a seasonality to this, most likely, and summer will be the safest time to resume outdoor activities. Fall-winter, we don't know yet. But either way, AL says it still isn't safe and we are United for Tampa Bay.
A healthy person under the age of 65 has less than 1% chance of dying from CV-19. Florida has 22 million residents. 61k cases 2610 deaths. 85% of the deaths are people over 65 with medical problems. Live your life
Comment