Your morning briefing of news, data, opinion pieces, videos, and other resources to help you through the Covid-19 pandemic
Every morning, Coronavirus Watch gives you one single, well-organized page of links to the best journalism, analysis, and practical resources to help you navigate the current global crisis. This site is updated every night by the curation team at AccuRadio. If you find it valuable, we hope you’ll make a visit a key part of your morning routine!
What you’ll find on this website:
For new, searchable and sortable tables of data from all countries with at least 6,000 Covid-19 cases to date all 50 U.S. states and, using through Tuesday, April 10th, click the link in the table above (“Data by country and U.S. state”) or simply scroll to the bottom of this page. (Data source: Worldovision.info)
Various data-tracking websites:
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EXCLUSIVE
Here are some ways you could be of service to others during this shared time of crisis:
- Sew cloth face masks to donate to your friends and neighbors.
- Track down N95 face masks and deliver them to local hospitals.
- Check in with neighbors who are living alone — even if you don’t know them well! — to see how they’re doing and if they need any help.
- Organize a Teddy Bear Hunt (click link for details) for local children.
- Call or write your elected representatives in Congress and urge them to speed up stimulus payments to the most-needy.
- Order a take-out or delivery meal from one of your favorite local restaurants to help them stay in business.
- Buy a gift card, for future use, from one of your favorite local shops.
- Teach a senior citizen or a person suffering from loneliness how to use video chat (e.g., FaceTime, Alexa, Zoom, or Skype video).
- If you have an RV (recreational vehicle), lend it to a medical professional who fears sleeping at home because he or she might expose their family to the virus.
- Donate blood. The need is high, and blood donation centers are open throughout the country, practicing safe distancing and sanitized donation practices.
Also, see some excellent suggestions (including non-profits that need donations) from The Washington Post here. Have other suggestions? Please share them here! (Reader suggestions so far have included teaching the non-tech-savvy how to order groceries online and how to pay bills online…)
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TOP 10 READER QUESTIONS:
- How can I tell coronavirus symptoms from a cold or the flu?
- Should I wear a protective mask?
- What’s an appropriate supply of emergency food & beverages?
- How long is this crisis likely to last?
- What’s the recipe for homemade hand sanitizer?
- Is outdoor exercise okay?
- Is it safe to eat takeout and delivery food?
- What can I do to best help the elderly, sick, and/or unemployed?
- What does “COVID-19” stand for?
- If I’m sick, how can I stay at home without putting my family members at risk?
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Many of the world’s top newspaper, magazines, websites, and broadcasters have consolidated their coronavirus coverage on a single page of their website. Visit any of those topic homepages by clicking on a logo above.
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EXCLUSIVE
The following table shows U.S. states and territories shown in descending order of total diagnosed cases cases to date, with data through Tuesday (4/21). Note that although California has the nation’s 5th-highest number of cases, that is mainly due to the fact that it has a huge population (39.1 million residents). On a population-adjusted basis, it ranks well below the national average in both cases and deaths per million residents. (Similarly, Louisiana has a very high number of cases and deaths on a population-adjusted basis.) This chart is now sortable –– just click a column header once or twice to sort the table in ascending or descending order by that column. It is also searchable — just use the search field at the top right corner of the table. (Data source Worldometers.info/coronavirus.)
Top findings for Tuesday’s data included: (1) Yesterday, in the U.S., cases and deaths grew 3% (down from 4% the day before) and 7% (up from 5% the day before). (2) New York State’s cases and deaths grew 2% (flat) and 4% (up from 3%) respectively yesterday. (3) The percentage of the U.S. population that has been tested for Covid-19 is at 1.27%, which is in 20th place among countries shown. (The leaders in Europe are Portugal and Norway at 2.8 and 2.7%; Canada is up to 1.5%.) (4) U.S. states with a double-digit % increase in cases yesterday were Iowa, Nebraska, Arkansas, and Connecticut; In yesterday’s report there were seven states with double-digit % increase in deaths (North Dakota, Maryland, West Virginia, Connecticut, Nebraska, and Georgia); in today’s report, there are 17 such states. See them by clicking once or twice on the header at the top of the” Deaths % increase yesterday” column.
How countries rank
This table of world countries, with data through Tuesday (4/21), is sorted in descending order of Covid-19 cases identified to date. Note that while the U.S. ranks #1 in total cases, it only ranks #6 in terms of total cases per million population. (Conclusion: It isn’t fair to say, as some have been saying, that the U.S. has “the world’s worst outbreak” of Covid-19 — at least not on a population-adjusted basis. Also note that in terms of the number of tests that have been conducted to date, as a percentage of the population the U.S. ranks behind several other countries, with only 1.3% of its population having been tested so far. Note that the data columns are sortable — just click once or twice in the header at the top of the column to sort the table by that column in ascending or descending order. Data source: Worldometers.info. Countries included in this table are all countries with at least 6,000 reported Covid-19 cases.