Study specifically references Jefferson, Weld, and Adams counties where 1.) lots of residents went to Sturgis and 2.)saw a notable increase in COVID cases. So, I looked at each county's data... Adams, for example, experienced NO marked increase. https://t.co/IdsqoEWuh2— Chris Vanderveen (@chrisvanderveen) September 8, 2020
Study specifically references Jefferson, Weld, and Adams counties where 1.) lots of residents went to Sturgis and 2.)saw a notable increase in COVID cases. So, I looked at each county's data... Adams, for example, experienced NO marked increase. https://t.co/IdsqoEWuh2
The study suggests Sturgis was a superspreader event that could be tied to a quarter of a million casesWith a cost of $12.2 BILLION to the health care system Yet in the three Colorado counties that saw a high number of people go... the Colorado data shows no sustained growth— Chris Vanderveen (@chrisvanderveen) September 8, 2020
The study suggests Sturgis was a superspreader event that could be tied to a quarter of a million casesWith a cost of $12.2 BILLION to the health care system Yet in the three Colorado counties that saw a high number of people go... the Colorado data shows no sustained growth
If you look at this map, there's a lot of attendance from rural counties in the Upper Midwest/Great Plains/Rocky Mountains. These places generally hadn't been hit hard by COVID before and for various reasons may therefore be more prone to case growth now, especially on a % basis. pic.twitter.com/su560n5OIk— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) September 8, 2020
If you look at this map, there's a lot of attendance from rural counties in the Upper Midwest/Great Plains/Rocky Mountains. These places generally hadn't been hit hard by COVID before and for various reasons may therefore be more prone to case growth now, especially on a % basis. pic.twitter.com/su560n5OIk