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Troubadawg

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Oct 10, 2009
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Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
 
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Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
We had 122 additional deaths reported today. Of today’s reported deaths, 28 were from July 25 or earlier, and one went back to March.

Also the PCR is 8.1.

Try harder.
 
Last edited:
Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
Deaths lag cases. Cases are going down. Give us these stats again in 3 weeks.
 
Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
They will begin to fall shortly. Death reports are always Higher on Tuesday than Monday and Sunday.
 
Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
and yet the positive test have been on a downtrend.
 
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Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
Deaths lag.....
 

Go play outside, the adults are talking.

To OP's point, the deaths today and yesterday from the GA DPH are pretty striking, but using the GA DPH data it does seem they cleared through a backlog of reported deaths today, date of death doesn't paint the same picture which is positive.

Cases remain plateaued to slightly down it seems, time of onset number look even better and consistent with the exponential growth / linear decline we've seen elsewhere. The downside of this trend is that there won't be a massive difference before the SEC is really up against the clock in terms of making a decision.

If I was a president of a college, and truly wanted what was best for the country and not my job, I'd be holding off any decisions as long as possible to get some data on highschools opening back up, and how that affects community spread.

Many students are already back on campus across the country so we should know soon enough what effect that will have.
 
I think the entire decision revolves around how UGA and other schools do with students back on campus
 
Others addressed the death lag.

To be more specific, cases peaked on 11 JUL. The 28 day point was 8 AUG (this past Saturday). Given the weekend delay in reporting, and that a few days either side of that would be a reasonable margin, this *ought* to be the highest week of deaths.

If deaths were to continue this high for two more weeks then GA would be breaking the virus curve in a very unusual way.
 
Go play outside, the adults are talking.

To OP's point, the deaths today and yesterday from the GA DPH are pretty striking, but using the GA DPH data it does seem they cleared through a backlog of reported deaths today, date of death doesn't paint the same picture which is positive.

Cases remain plateaued to slightly down it seems, time of onset number look even better and consistent with the exponential growth / linear decline we've seen elsewhere. The downside of this trend is that there won't be a massive difference before the SEC is really up against the clock in terms of making a decision.

If I was a president of a college, and truly wanted what was best for the country and not my job, I'd be holding off any decisions as long as possible to get some data on highschools opening back up, and how that affects community spread.

Many students are already back on campus across the country so we should know soon enough what effect that will have.

Do you like telling lies and living in fear? We haven’t averaged anywhere near 1000 deaths a day since May. You coronabros are pathetic and weak.

Two more weeks.
 
Others addressed the death lag.

To be more specific, cases peaked on 11 JUL. The 28 day point was 8 AUG (this past Saturday). Given the weekend delay in reporting, and that a few days either side of that would be a reasonable margin, this *ought* to be the highest week of deaths.

If deaths were to continue this high for two more weeks then GA would be breaking the virus curve in a very unusual way.
Thank you
 
Do you like telling lies and living in fear? We haven’t averaged anywhere near 1000 deaths a day since May. You coronabros are pathetic and weak.

Two more weeks.

You're slowly catching up, but not quite there. We're discussing the numbers from the state of Georgia right now.
 
Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.

Did we overhaul our roster with people with pre-existing serious medical conditions, who are obese, or are 70+ years old?
 
Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
And to be clear...

Cases are down both in Georgia and nationwide.

All types of hospitalization are down nationwide.

Deaths are beginning to fall again nationwide (again with Georgia certainly soon to follow).

I realize this is not reflected in media coverage, but that should be a given at this point.
 
And to be clear...

Cases are down both in Georgia and nationwide.

All types of hospitalization are down nationwide.

Deaths are beginning to fall again nationwide (again with Georgia certainly soon to follow).

I realize this is not reflected in media coverage, but that should be a given at this point.
Maybe you should get “Brian” to get you in touch with the Texas governor so you can spread some of your “COVID-19 insight”. Here is some of the media coverage you say isn’t being covered, seems he isn’t as impressed by a 20% drop in average daily cases or hospitalizations as you are, I wonder why?

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/11/world/coronavirus-covid-19.html?referringSource=articleShare
 
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Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
And not a one of those was a college football player......
 
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Maybe you should get “Brian” to get you in touch with the Texas governor so you can spread some of your “COVID-19 insight”. Here is some of the media coverage you say isn’t being covered, seems he isn’t as impressed by a 20% drop in average daily cases or hospitalizations as you are, I wonder why?

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/11/world/coronavirus-covid-19.html?referringSource=articleShare

I’m not sure that article contradicts BDDB’s point...
 
Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.

How many of those who died were 6’2 235 with minimal body fat, run a 4.5 forty, and bench 375 though??
 
How many of those who died were 6’2 235 with minimal body fat, run a 4.5 forty, and bench 375 though??
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We had 122 additional deaths reported today. Of today’s reported deaths, 28 were from July 25 or earlier, and one went back to March.

Also the PCR is 8.1.

Try harder.

Where do you find this information on which days the deaths were attributed to? Not that I doubt you. I've noticed the death counts on particular days back in April growing so I know they are finding new deaths now that occurred back then. But I've wondered if there is some site that tabulates this rather than having to monitor it myself each day that new deaths are released.
 
Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
Man, just go sit down.
 
On
Coronavirus-related deaths in the United States topped 1,000 Tuesday after a weekend lag, suggesting that the trend of four-digit single-day death tolls will continue for a fourth week.

Of the 1,282 deaths reported Tuesday, Florida and Georgia recorded their highest single-day death tolls since the start of the pandemic, respectively with 277 and 122 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a data analysis by The Post.

Tuesday marked the first time Georgia has exceeded 100 deaths in a day and its highest reported 7-day average.
My response is I don't trust the Covid death numbers. I know of to many false Covid death reports. How many 18 - 22 year old have died?
Why don't you here more about the number of people that have had it and got over it? Why don't hear more about what the Doctors that are treating patients and keeping them out the hospitals ? Why don't we hear more about the zinc protocol with tonic water? Why don't we hear more about the PH of the virus and how eating foods with a higher Ph than the virus might protect us? What don't we hear more about Vitamin D levels and our immune system? Why aren't we following the Lupus patients and see how many of them have come down with the virus? I can tell you is because the Democrats and their media buddies only want things shut down in hopes of regaining control of the Government and put their full socialist plan in place
 
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