News
Early #Vaccine Doubters Now Show a Willingness to Roll Up Their Sleeves – NYThttps://t.co/5O00pYfVl1
— Macro Brief (@macroandfinance) December 27, 2020
Regional Data
Today's #COVID19 indicators:
• 180 new hospitalizations
• 3,203 new cases
• 6.78% positivity rate (7-day avg.)Don’t let up this weekend. Avoid holiday travel and social gatherings. Practice social distancing. Wear a mask.
— Mayor Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) December 26, 2020
Today's update on the numbers:
Total COVID hospitalizations are at 6,884.
Of the 201,442 tests reported yesterday, 10,806 were positive (5.36% of total).
Sadly, there were 122 fatalities. pic.twitter.com/NaE37vXe9U
— Andrew Cuomo (@NYGovCuomo) December 26, 2020
NEW JERSEY #COVID19 UPDATE:
➡️ 4,000 new positive cases
➡️ 458,901 cumulative total cases
➡️ 19 new confirmed deaths
➡️ 16,668 total confirmed deaths
➡️ 1,945 total probable deathsWe are still in the midst of a pandemic. Social distance. Mask up. https://t.co/JW1q8awGh7 pic.twitter.com/wLClE1lIpl
— Governor Phil Murphy (@GovMurphy) December 26, 2020
🇺🇸 Central and Southern #California have 0 percent I.C.U. capacity, in a state already low on hospital beds – NYThttps://t.co/wPfEPUEBLx
— Christophe Barraud🛢 (@C_Barraud) December 27, 2020
For the states without active hospitalizations figures for May 15, four-week rolling new COVID hospitalizations per 10k residents are shown here. Alabama leads with 15.2 new hospitalizations per 10k residents over four weeks. pic.twitter.com/Cg8NQcrBlb
— Exante Data (@ExanteData) December 27, 2020
National data (CDC, Covid Tracking Project, Johns Hopkins University, New York Times)
Our daily update is published. States reported 2.1 million tests, 189k cases, and 1,409 deaths. There are more than 117 thousand people hospitalized with COVID-19.
These numbers continue to be affected by disruptions to data pipelines caused by the holidays. pic.twitter.com/4qCPlX3KA2
— The COVID Tracking Project (@COVID19Tracking) December 27, 2020
Daily New Confirmed Cases
Daily New Confirmed Cases (7-day moving average)
Daily New Tests (7-day moving average)
Positivity Rates (7-day moving average)