Almost 70% of large counties in the US have elevated levels of COVID

Julian Fry
3 min readNov 12, 2020

There are over 3000 counties in America. Most of them are very small in size. There are, however, 594 with a population of 100,000 or larger. Of these 408 have elevated levels of COVID. Thats 69%.

We know from mainstream reporting that the US has crossed over 10 million cases, and that new new cases are well over 100,000 per day. But, unlike in the early states of this pandemic — don’t be lulled into a belief that this is happening somewhere else. Its happening everywhere.

Here’s the list of the 408 counties. But before we dive in — consider this.. when I ran this data on September 9th — there were only 75 counties on the list spread across 26 states. Today 45 states have counties that meet the criteria (population >100,000 and daily new cases >200 per million per day.

Ohio wasn’t even on the list in September. Today it is the #1 state for number of counties on the list (27 in total).

For the list of counties — check out my link: https://jf-insights.com/2020/11/12/almost-70-of-large-counties-in-the-us-have-elevated-levels-of-covid/

New York City

Even New York City, a city that suffered greatly and quickly got its act together is experiencing a worrying surge of cases:

El Paso Texas: the highest levels of COVID for a large county

We thought July was bad across the sun belt. In Octover — El Paso, Texas had about 3x the number of cases as in July. November is well on pace to exceed that.

North Dakota Invokes Crisis Management Playbook

The big news for me this week is that North Dakota issued an order to let medical workers who have COVID, but who are asymptomatic, continue to work. Think about that — the medical team that treats you may also have COVID at the same time. They explained this is part of the CDC Crisis Management playbook. Just that fact alone means we are in a full crisis.

North Dakota has a rapidly increasing fatality rate — over 20 fatalities per million per day — and a case load still growing rapidly.

Don’t think this is a problem in another county. Its rapidly spreading across all counties.

Don’t think we can take our time. Learn from El Paso — this can get out of line very rapidly.

Don’t assume we have the medical capacity to address this. In my City — ICU capacity is less than 10%. Learn from North Dakota which is running from the Crisis Management Playbook.

Heading into Thanksgiving — be especially cautious. Now is not the time to relax our vigilence.

Originally published at http://jf-insights.com on November 12, 2020.

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Julian Fry

I’ve always been logically driven. I like to think I look at things broadly and draw observations that may not be represented by main stream media.