Lots of confusion possible, and I was confused.
At https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker...rendscases
If you click on Daily Trends, the site explains "Blue bars show daily cases. The red line is the sum of cases over the last 7 days, divided by 7. Averages are used to reduce reporting differences." Currently the "7-day moving average" is 60,425 daily new cases. (At roughly 300M people, that's 60,425/300,000,000 or about 20/100,000 per day)
If you click on Total and Rate and 7-day rate, the site explains "Blue bars show daily cases. The red line represents cases in the last 7 days per 100,000, allowing for comparisons between areas with different population sizes." Currently 127.41 per week per 100K)
Currently, California's 7-day rate is 43.7 while NYC is 425. (NYC previous peaks were 455 on Apr 12 and 520 on Jan 12).
In NYC, 26.3% have at least one dose, and 14.5% have completed their vaccine series.
At https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker...rendscases
If you click on Daily Trends, the site explains "Blue bars show daily cases. The red line is the sum of cases over the last 7 days, divided by 7. Averages are used to reduce reporting differences." Currently the "7-day moving average" is 60,425 daily new cases. (At roughly 300M people, that's 60,425/300,000,000 or about 20/100,000 per day)
If you click on Total and Rate and 7-day rate, the site explains "Blue bars show daily cases. The red line represents cases in the last 7 days per 100,000, allowing for comparisons between areas with different population sizes." Currently 127.41 per week per 100K)
Currently, California's 7-day rate is 43.7 while NYC is 425. (NYC previous peaks were 455 on Apr 12 and 520 on Jan 12).
In NYC, 26.3% have at least one dose, and 14.5% have completed their vaccine series.