luchtschip schreef op 8 september 2020 23:44:
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Ik meldde :
South Dakota’s coronavirus positivity rate is the highest in the United States.
Jouw antwoord gaat over een curve in de grafieken van Minnesota, Frankrijk en Spanje.
Daarbij geef je een link van worldometers met diverse grafieken (met name daily new cases en daily new deaths) van Minnesota .
Hoewel jouw antwoord erg vaag is, neem ik aan dat je bedoelde te wijzen op de curve van het 7 daags gemiddelde van de daily new cases in Minnesota.
De highest positivity rate in the United States van South Dakota Is totaal iets anders dan het aantal new cases in South Dakota.
Jouw antwoord raakt kant noch wal, tenzij je jouw antwoord nader wilt nuanceren.
Misschien kun je wat onderzoek doen naar de positivity rates
hier een kleine hulp :
Coronavirus positivity rates reach ‘red zone’ territory in 13 states
The seven-day average positivity rate tops 10% in 13 states, including Alabama (24.5%), South Dakota (23.3%), North Dakota (18.9%), Iowa (17.8%), and Kansas (17.1%). The White House Coronavirus Task Force considers a positivity rate above 10% as one of the two factors that determine whether a state is a “red zone.” (The other is a case rate that is greater than 100 per 100,000 residents.) In general, these states have seen COVID infections spike with students returning to their college campuses.
The World Health Organization and other experts, meanwhile, consider a positivity rate of 5% as too high. (The WHO recommended governments not reopen until positivity rates were below that threshold for two weeks.) Another 21 U.S. states have experienced an average positivity rate between 5% and 10% for the past seven days. The CDC has suggested that it is safe to reopen schools when the positivity rate is below 5%.
Positivity rates are lowest in the Northeast. Vermont (0.3%), Maine (0.6%), Connecticut (0.8%), and New York (0.8%) all have seven-day averages below 1%.
fortune.com/2020/09/04/covid-positivi...