i doubt we are 24% of the world's infections, that is due to a number of nations that aren't reporting numbers with any sort of accuracy - including most Central and South American countries.
India does very little testing - mainly of its upper castes, so their numbers as bad as they are are way low and China way underreported its numbers.
none of that excuses the US for doing an incredibly poor job in fighting this.
When Europe is planning on excluding Americans from being able to travel there that is a bad thing. I read an article that talked to European scientists and they are just super worried about the US and don't understand why we haven't taken this as seriously as a nation as they did. The scientists mentioned almost every action they recommended to their political leaders came from US Scientist research and they are shocked that they could get their countries to follow what US Science research suggested but the US wouldn't follow it.
As has been pointed out testing increased alot in May which is why looking at positive test rate was so important. Things were clearly improving in May, it is clearly getting worse right now. Our 7 day avg of cases is at its highest level since late April, our daily number yesterday was the highest since April 22nd. Nationally the positive case % has increased over 20% in less than 2 weeks - so even with the offsetting declines in the NE and Midwest the outbreaks across the south, SW, Mountain States and some of the Pacific NW are so high they are now easily overtaking the declines. Our 7 day avg case rate as of yesterday is only down 8% from our absolute peak in April.
It also doesn't help that some states like FL are purposely undercounting to make things look better than they are. They already don't count deaths of non full-time residents in their numbers. Today they are going to change how they report ICU utilization in that they will not report an ICU bed as being used if someone is in it but not using ICU services. There are also allegations (not yet proven) that FL DoH is being asked to delete cases so that the numbers will look better heading into the July 4th Holiday.
Hospitalizations on a national level have started increasing in the last week and in some states the rates of increase have been huge. The CEO of Houston Baptist Hospitals says they are ok at the moment but getting close to a tipping point. Texas Childrens Hospitals in Houston are now taking adult patients in their ICU's as they fill up in the non-children's hopsitals.
AZ is currently at 85% capacity statewide in hospitals and have been told to expect to be in surge conditions by July 4th. I saw a report yesterday that they have almost 1,000 adults younger than 30 in their hopsitals right now. There are volunteer doctors and nurses starting to head there to help.
FL doesn't provide the numbers publicly but i have access to a tableau site that shows remaining ICU availability in FL has dropped from 26% to 19% just this week and in Orange county (Orlando) it is down to 16%.
It's also worth pointing out that most of the states with serious issues are among the worst testing states in the US with avg test rates well below the national avg. AZ and CA are exceptions to that. But TX, FL, SC, UT, OK, NV, MS are all in the bottom third with testing rates of roughly 1.2 per 1,000 citizens.
In SC the school superintendent said yesterday if cases don't start decreasing she doesn't see how they can have kids in schools this fall. in GA our cases and hospitalizations are at all time highs right now - higher than in April.
If you look at the numbers on a national level cases starting increasing 2 weeks ago, hospitalizations starting increasing a week ago. Deaths flattened out the last couple of days. Hopefully they don't start to trend up. they should stay lower than we saw in April/May as the avg age is lower, but I expect like some of the models showed, the deaths will likely climb slowly in July/August. There will likely be a larger lag as the deaths are still concentrated in older individuals so it is taking a little longer to spread to them, its starts first in younger adults and then it transmits to older individuals and then it takes off.
You have the governor of Texas telling Texans to stay home and if they have to go out to wear masks. You have the former Governor and current Senator from FL Rick Scott who said on Sqauwkbox on Monday that cases there are not going up due to testing (actually testing has decreased in FL over the last week), and that they needed to do alot better. That people need to wear masks and stay socially distant and that he believes they will need to do that when the Republican Convention comes to Jacksonville.
The State Epidemiologist for Utah said if they don't get it under control in the next 2 weeks they will be left with locking things down as the only option.
Right now the curve for cases looks almost identical to the curve at the beginning of April (which was just slightly flatter than the curve at the end of March). We need to find a way to flatten it down like we did in April.
Two weeks ago I was optimistic, last week I was nervous, this week I am more pessimistic. From the protests to the congregating in areas with no masks, we are doing this to ourselves.