The United States House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Reform will issue a subpoena seeking information on Humica and Imbruvica. | Pixabay
The United States House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Reform will issue a subpoena seeking information on Humica and Imbruvica. | Pixabay
Florida finds itself at 776 deaths per million making it 41st in the country when it comes to COVID-related deaths, according to the COVID Tracking Project.
The project found that when it comes to COVID-19 data, people have been looking at decontextualized data, which is causing hysteria like children staying out of school and businesses shutting down.
Florida’s deaths and hospitalizations have not followed the same path as case increases and, instead, the state’s daily deaths peaked at 9 people per million.
“Florida, like Arizona, offers an example of the poor linkage between case increases, hospitalizations and deaths, particular, once a "surge" is declared, and the populace becomes hyper-vigilant about testing,” the commentary states. “Notice the increase in cases is nearly asymptotic, though the increase in deaths remains quite gradual. On September 28th, Florida's governor, Ron DeSantis, lifted all statewide COVID restrictions. We are now one month beyond that. Florida is registering similar hospital utilization as Massachusetts, and lower daily deaths/million (as of 10/28, the 7 day average for Florida was 2.4 deaths/million, and 2.8/million for Massachusetts).”
Since Sept. 15, there has been a significant increase in testing for COVID-19 at 55 percent, which has also led to an increase in positive cases, leading many to assume the country is heading into a third wave of infections and deaths.
Emily Burns with The Pragmatist writes that it’s important to put the new numbers into context so that people will make wise decisions regarding what to do about the pandemic. She writes that in May, cases were tracked at nearly the same as hospitalizations. She notes that deaths and hospitalizations are more reliable data when tracking than cases are.
With COVID-19 testing up 70 percent since the second wave, Burns points out that the surge in testing is responsible for the increased number of new cases seen across the nation, not an increased infection rate many have been led to believe.