Peter Walker

@PeterJ_Walker

Head of Growth // Views my own // visit for the latest data graphics on our national crisis

Inscrit en mars 2020

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  1. Tweet épinglé
    9 mai

    Another great story from . If there’s one thing we should all be able to align on, it’s the imperative of testing. More testing = more knowledge = faster economic and civic recovery. Honored to have built some graphics for this as well.

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  2. a retweeté
    il y a 8 heures

    They're at it again. Once more, the White House is using a bar chart to plot cumulative test numbers — without even labeling the numbers as cumulative.

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  3. il y a 11 heures

    Appreciate all new followers - seems the Rt of data is well over 1...(sorry). To pay it forward - check out 's Tableau site as well. Some very clever animated views: The more people in this viz game, the better! Stay healthy out there.

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  4. il y a 13 heures

    But if you only read one piece tonight, make it this one. Our understanding of the path of this virus can only be as good as the data we have to track it. h/t to | | | all at for the invaluable work.

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  5. il y a 13 heures

    Minnesota to end the day. Tests rising, but positives and deaths are spiking. Will today's testing climb hold? Reminder : states have different criteria / availability of tests. So % pos is not a 1:1 comparison b/t states. H/t to for keeping my transparency high!

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  6. il y a 13 heures

    Illinois - reopening in 5 stages near the end of the month. % pos slowly ramping down. Good progress on testing, but deaths have been climbing for awhile and show no sign of dropping. In other states, even as positives climb (w/ more testing) deaths have not kept pace.

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  7. il y a 13 heures

    Ohio, here we go. Reopen to begin tmrw. Good trend on % positive, driven by that steady rise in testing. Slightly weird positive count (one day with zero positives). Deaths starting to fall slightly. Two more today - IL and MN as examples of how the data can get weird.

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  8. il y a 16 heures

    State snapshot - New York. Reopen to begin...tmrw! Aside from the one backlog report day for deaths, great trends. The data is more comprehensive from NY, (see the smooth % pos decline). Crazy - this time last month 1 in 3 tests were positive. Pause for now, more states soon :)

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  9. il y a 17 heures

    Massachusetts: reopen to begin May 18. Cases declining, but tests also dropped over the past week. % positive headed in the wrong direction after some progress. Would be very cautious about moving too fast here. Next up - the NY, NJ, and CT trio.

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  10. il y a 17 heures

    Here's Florida. Reopen (dashed lines) was May 4 - only 10 days ago. Tests gaping up higher, positive cases on the down-slope for a few weeks. data: more visuals:

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  11. il y a 18 heures

    Ok! Big response, let's dive in. I'll keep these in a thread. Data fr. (they are wonderful). First up - Texas. Cases up, tests up. Things are a bit skewed by a giant day yesterday (reporting backlog?). Basically - "wait-and-see"

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  12. il y a 20 heures

    Note - if you'd like to see your state in this format, give me a shout.

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  13. il y a 20 heures

    GA trends since reopen (dashed lines below). The takeaway - things are going in the right direction. % positive continues to drop as testing ramps up! Let's hope other reopened states have data that follows this pattern.

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  14. il y a 20 heures

    Apologies -previous tweet on GA was using old data without new entries. My mistake!

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  15. il y a 20 heures
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  16. 14 mai

    Complications layered on murkiness on top of ambiguity. With so much attention on data, it’s a tragedy that we can’t get concrete, comparable numbers from state and federal governments. Stay on the case, and !

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  17. 14 mai

    My two cents on Maryland (yes, I know major counties are staying shut). It's too early. Deaths = flat, positives = slightly down, tests = down. % positive = still almost 20% (7-day avg) At least get testing up beforehand!

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  18. 13 mai

    Another regional view - total US deaths. NY has suffered 28.5% of all deaths, tho one or two states in each region stand out. Population density does seem to be the most predictive underlying factor (with some outliers like WA).

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  19. 13 mai

    Interesting that ppl raise the "false sense of security" point. Even if that were true, which I don't believe it is - so what? More ppl willing to go out = more rapid recovery. Isn't that the goal? I'm happy to wear a mask if it means my local restaurants might see more patrons.

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  20. 13 mai

    No idea why mask wearing is still a debate. If the outcomes are so radically different, why not just wear a mask? This is not an impingement of personal freedom - it's civic courtesy. And it will help us reopen more quickly and safely.

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  21. 13 mai

    Updates complete! No major shifts, but if you're checking the site every day (thank you, thank you), you may notice a few differences. Also - isn't it wild this is the same chart? Both show daily positive cases in USA. Axis labels and gridlines = your friend

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