At least 174,455 new cases were reported between August 19 and August 25, up from 169,217 the week before (+3%) and the highest since March 3. Those figures were collected from state health departments and, where necessary, estimated based on hospital admissions.

Actual case numbers are higher because many hospitals and states are no longer reporting detailed COVID data. Laboratory testing is also low as most people and doctors are using at-home tests which are not included in official statistics.

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1,075 new COVID deaths were reported during the week, the second week in a row with more than 1,000 new deaths. It’s also the seventh week in a row with more than 500 new deaths and the 232nd week with more than 400 new deaths.

So far this year, nearly 4.8 million COVID cases have been reported across the U.S., causing at least 340,153 hospitalizations (limited data) and 37,301 deaths, according to BNO’s COVID data tracker.

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We couldn't even normalize mask use while sick.

  • ClimateChangeAnxiety [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    9/11 every 3 days covid-cool 9/11 biden-harbinger

    Genuinely among the harms the Biden Regime has done when it comes to COVID, I think the push to at home testing was one of the worse. How about instead of free, effective tests that get good nationwide data, we used expensive, ineffective tests that only tell the person in the room. Genius!

    Joe Biden riding in on a pale horse, the bringer of pestilence

    They are a walking pestilence Jack, a living plague of destruction and horror. They heavy tread heralds the end of hope and the damnation of all who oppose them. Their touch withers all, be it flesh, metal or faith, and spreads seething corruption that swallows worlds. They are the Democrsts, the sons of Mortarion, the chosen warriors of Nurgle. Fear them, and despair. why-angel

    Edit: I can’t read, that says 1000 a week not a day

    • Owl [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      Still a 9/11 a month.

      Counting only reported deaths.

      Counting the US only.

    • Chronicon [they/them]
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      edit-2
      2 months ago

      yeah having to go to a place to get tested was mildly annoying but near me they were actually super effective and convenient.

      And much like the vaccine not providing full or permanent immunity, the vast majority of people don't understand nor care that rapid tests are fallible and getting them to even follow the box instructions is a stretch let alone accepting that the rapid test isn't definitive

      I finally am pulling the trigger on an at home NAAT testing machine. Hoping I can help my self, my friends and orgs stay safer that way since covid is never going away apparently.

      • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
        ·
        2 months ago

        I finally am pulling the trigger on an at home NAAT testing machine. Hoping I can help my self, my friends and orgs stay safer that way since covid is never going away apparently.

        What machine you thinking?

        • Chronicon [they/them]
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          edit-2
          2 months ago

          the pluslife

          its not FDA approved or whatever (but is approved in EU and seems to have good science behind it) and kinda spendy, but iirc its the lowest cost per test once you're up and running, and being able to do tests for other things like flu/strep/mpox/rsv seems like it could be super useful. plus being able to read the raw curves with the virus.sucks analyzer app soothes a certain nerd part of my brain

          • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
            ·
            2 months ago

            Nice. Been trying to convince my family of doing the same. I was looking at the virus.sucks website the other day and surprised they recommended their own app over the manufacturer's for the non-covid tests.