HarthorneWingo wrote:ellobo wrote:Jethrobodine123 wrote:I haven't read everything on her site but she seems to have a lot of common sense and appears to be following the science first and foremost. She makes some good points.
Thanks for posting.
J
Yes, she has actual expertise in the field, she reads and analyzes all the latest research, and does a great job breaking it down for the intelligent and educated, but not expert, reader.
She seems very scrupulous about discussing the limitations of the science without discounting the substance of what we do know or what it strongly suggests, even if it isn't conclusive. Her agenda seems to be sincerely trying to understand the situation to the best of her scientific ability, based on the scientific evidence, and communicating it clearly, without spinning it to fit an agenda or narrative.
Beside the stats from the CDC and my state department of health, she's the first place I go for Covid info.
Which state?
I'm from NYC, but have lived in CT for quite a while.
The CT department of health has daily reports for the state as a whole, and weekly 7-day case averages by city (although the data is a week old when they post it).
The CDC website has 7-day rolling averages by county for a bunch of different metrics (cases, hospitalizations, deaths, positivity rate, etc.) that are usually up to date within a day or two.
To clarify, I look to these government sites for data, especially local data, but not necessarily for guidance. That's why I like Katelyn Jetelina's site, because she's a scientist analyzing, synthesizing and vetting research and data from many sources. It's not half-baked media reports of research and data, and not government guidance that is from a public health perspective (rather than an individual health perspective, which is what I care about) at best, and tainted by political and economic considerations at worst.
Edit: I just discovered that my city has a good dashboard with daily and 7-day average data. It's nice to have specific city data because that's where I live and work, and the situation in my specific city isn't necessarily the same as the county or state as a whole.
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