Also a variable, although the relatively lighter numbers in Manhattan seem to be more correlated with shorter subway commutes rather than with lack of population density.https://twitter.com/presjpolk/status/1245417759778971648 …
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More on the mass transit vectorhttps://twitter.com/ClaytonGuse/status/1249763012958879744 …
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More on NYC subways as a vector for spreading the virus, though this is more common sense than hard data: “'rapid, exponential surge in infections' in the first two weeks of March — when the subways were still packed with up to 5 million riders per day”https://twitter.com/nypost/status/1250488145151492096 …
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I’d look at a population density overlay first though.
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Can only imagine.. Between public transportation and domestic and international travel, in those confined spaces. Yikes.
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Could that also mean lower population density in those areas?
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Shorter trips, maybe?
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Fewer people live in those parts of the city too. Less densely populated. Need a per capita metric
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