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Also, a big issue is whether the blue curve states took advantage of the initial period of low cases/deaths to build up capacity so the eventual rise was manageable
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Presumably once the deaths start falling people will realize "oh I guess this won't be NYC again after all" but maybe I'm too optimistic.
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That's because the red one stops once everyone is infected and the total no. of new cases is zero. But here, the same population is represented by AUC in both the graphs. A slower rate of increase in new cases results in lesser chances of covid death.
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> That's because the red one stops once everyone is infected and the total no. of new cases is zero. so 3 > 2, but 3 is not > 0 ?
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Love a graph with no numbers too
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Now do area under the curve.
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Wish I could have whipped out this graph every time some damnyankee told me "New York handled this better than Florida!"
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