covid-19-the-economist-global-excess-deaths-model
covid-19-data
Our great sponsors
covid-19-the-economist-global-excess-deaths-model | covid-19-data | |
---|---|---|
544 | 347 | |
457 | 6,987 | |
0.9% | 0.0% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | 24 days ago | |
R | ||
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
covid-19-the-economist-global-excess-deaths-model
- 15 states seeing 'high' or 'very high' levels of respiratory illness: CDC
- “‘Natural” Disasters
-
#1999 - Robert Kennedy Jr.
It doesn’t have to be just a ‘coincidence’ though; seems bizarre to completely ignore something else that was occurring during this time—the Covid pandemic? If we look at the excess mortality, it showed a temporal correlation with Covid waves/mortality, and no temporal correlation with vaccine uptake. Same USA plot for age 18-64. The UK data also showed lower excess mortality in 2021 (all-cause, non-Covid, and Covid). On Euromomo you can plot z-scores for evidence of excess mortality over time by country, here are the plots for 15-44, and all ages. It doesn’t seem like there was excess mortality in the 15-44 age bracket (maybe except Hungary), or vaccine-related excess mortality, but it does appear there was pandemic-related excess. There are also data from many other countries you can check, e.g. https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/coronavirus-excess-deaths-estimates, and the latest plots with Covid mortality and vaccine uptake available for 100 countries. In various countries it doesn’t look like there’s a temporal correlation with excess. Various countries like Australia, NZ, Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Hong Kong, Norway and more (mostly countries that were Zero/low-Covid and highly vaccinated) had little to no (or even negative) excess mortality. That doesn’t really reconcile with the possibility of vaccine-related excess, but it’s compatible with pandemic-related excess. The claim/narrative that the excess mortality may somehow be related to or driven by vaccination just seems really difficult to reconcile with the data.
- TIL after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the USS West Virginia battleship was salvaged six months later. During the salvage operation, a calendar was discovered in an airtight room indicating three sailors survived for another 16 days after the event.
-
The Explosive Legacy of the Pandemic Hand Sanitizer Boom
> The obvious fearmongering and irrationality, especially from so-called "experts", was quite intense and prolific in Canada, too.
So much death and suffering and bereavement and sorrow the scale of which I have never witnessed in my entire life and I still read comments like these. Baffling!
A more serious take: excess deaths worldwide put us at 20+ millions deaths [1].
[1] https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/coronavirus-excess-...
- PhD Looks into Avian Flu and is "really scared".
-
Our model suggests that global deaths remain 5% above pre-Covid forecasts
It might be worth generating a version that excludes Russia and Ukraine.
https://github.com/TheEconomist/covid-19-the-economist-globa...
-
Illinois man was a Covid skeptic from the beginning and reposted all anti-Fauci posts he received. Because he beat Covid in October 2021, he thought he was immune. Unfortunately he caught Covid again in December 2022, and was in and out of the hospital until he passed in May 2023.
The official numbers in Russia are pure bullshit. https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/coronavirus-excess-deaths-estimates is a better estimate.
-
WHO downgrades COVID pandemic, says it's no longer emergency
Btw if we look at the excess mortality data, it showed a pretty good temporal correlation with Covid waves/mortality. Similar with UK data. There are also data from many other countries available, e.g. Economist, and latest plots for 100 countries. This would seem to reconcile with bodies like the USA CDC, UK ONS etc. claiming that the vast majority (>85%) of C19 deaths has C19 as the underlying cause.
-
I know the vaccinated lurk here all day long hoping for a gotcha moment that’ll never come, but I have a question for the vaccinated.
There are also data from many other countries you can check, e.g. https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/coronavirus-excess-deaths-estimates. Here are the latest plots with Covid mortality and vaccine uptake for 100 countries. In various countries it doesn’t look like there’s a temporal correlation with excess. Various countries like Australia, NZ, Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Hong Kong, Norway and more (mostly countries that were Zero-Covid/low-Covid, highly vaccinated, and relatively less affected by the pandemic) that had little to no (or even negative) excess mortality. This doesn’t really reconcile with the possibility of vaccine-related excess, but it’s compatible with pandemic-related excess. The claim/narrative that the excess mortality may somehow be related to or driven by vaccination seems a really difficult one to reconcile with the data.
covid-19-data
-
Week 6 [Practice Problems] seven-day-average OUTPUT verification
The NY-Times github repository says that the data will no longer be updated after March 24, 2023. (https://github.com/nytimes/covid-19-data)
-
CS50 Week 6 Practice Problems: Seven Day Averages
I am trying to do practice problems about 7 day averages according New York Times repository
-
Where to Find Sources of Data for Analysis Purposes?
NYTimes Covid Data
-
Fastest way to learn
Find blog articles and tutorials. Find sample datasets, like COVID data from NYT or order data from Instacart
-
Pre-market brief
Latest Map and Case Count
-
Brain has been effectively washed
Covid-19 wasn’t 1% mortality at the start of the pandemic, it was much higher, and today’s daily remains at a .85% mortality rate for today’s US cases only [1] [2]. As for your comparison, it remains today 9 times deadlier than the flu.
-
Event-Driven Python on AWS
New York Times repository updated daily
- Pfizer's COVID-19 mRNA Product is 13-Times Less Effective at Preventing Infection With SARS-CoV-2 than Naturally Acquired Immunity! [Byram Bridle, Jul 20]
-
[July 12] 535 Estimated Active Cases, Vaccinations per 100k
All data comes from the NYTimes COVID-19 github.
-
Best method for relationship that changes over time?
I am looking at state level data in the USA and my dependent variable is a running COVID case tally at the state level (you can find it here: https://github.com/nytimes/covid-19-data/blob/master/us-states.csv).
What are some alternatives?
covid-19-excess-deaths-tracker - Source code and data for The Economist's covid-19 excess deaths tracker
MaternalBound-Redux - A new version of MaternalBound, complete with New Controls and MSU-1 integration... And a lot more features!
coronavirus-dashboard - Dashboard for tracking Coronavirus (COVID-19) across the UK
nl-covid19-data-dashboard - The dashboard provides information on the outbreak and prevalence of COVID-19 in The Netherlands
covid-pass-verifier - The COVID Pass Verifier app is the official NHS COVID Pass Verifier for England and Wales. NHS COVID Pass Verifier app is a secure way to scan an individual’s NHS COVID Pass and check that they have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, had a negative test, or have recovered from COVID-19.
Cartopy - Cartopy - a cartographic python library with matplotlib support
duckduckgo-locales - Translation files for <a href="https://duckduckgo.com"> </a>
stata-scheme-modern - Better default plots in Stata
COVID-19 - Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Cases, provided by JHU CSSE
covariants - Real-time updates and information about key SARS-CoV-2 variants, plus the scripts that generate this information.
covid19-event-risk-planner - COVID19 risk planner R-Shiny application