I noticed that Santa Clara County's new cases had gone up 50% in a week (!!). Â That, plus 1000/day in L.A., and reports of overcrowded ICUs in the US Midwest, brought home that we are into a new wave of COVID, no matter what our %-vaccinated numbers are.
So, I went to look for R-numbers where I had seen them before. Â Seems bit-rot may have set in. Â But, I dug a little deeper.
Although the graphs at https://ca-covid-r.info/  are sadly out of date, the data collection is working for some areas.  Here are current R numbers from that site (for counties where data is current): Â
Alameda: 1.398 Â 7/1
Contra Costa: Â 1.397 Â 7/10
Los Angeles: Â 1.701 Â 7/9 Â (1st day of the three 1000+ cases)
Orange: 1.575 7/2
Ventura: 1.037 7/2
San Bernardino: 1.760 7/8
Those are very high rates of spread.
For L.A., if R=1.7 continues, and the cycle is once  a week, here are rough numbers for daily cases on Fridays for the next month:
July 9: Â 1,000
July 16: 1,700
July 23: 2,890
July 30: 4,913
Aug 6: 8,352 Â L.A. didn't hit this number until Dec. 4, 2020
  (i.e., August 2021 may look worse than Dec. 2020 -- R was only 1.26 then)
![[Image: LACo-R.png]](https://i.ibb.co/4gpDkS2/LACo-R.png)
I suspect we're in for some more NPI restrictions. Â (And, kudos to L.A. for advising about masks. Â That's the least intrusive restriction, but it seems unlikely that it is being effective.)
When and how CA restrictions are put in place will likely impact & be impacted by the recall election of the Governor in mid-September. Â If I were the Governor, I'd put something in place this week. Â If the state waits to August, it will likely still be bad in early September (and for the all-important school opening), which might influence voters on Sep. 14.
(Note that I am being careful NOT to express any opinion about the Governor or that election. Â Let's avoid political discussion.)
CovidActNow also gives R values (as "Infection Rate"), from week-old data.
So, I went to look for R-numbers where I had seen them before. Â Seems bit-rot may have set in. Â But, I dug a little deeper.
Although the graphs at https://ca-covid-r.info/  are sadly out of date, the data collection is working for some areas.  Here are current R numbers from that site (for counties where data is current): Â
Alameda: 1.398 Â 7/1
Contra Costa: Â 1.397 Â 7/10
Los Angeles: Â 1.701 Â 7/9 Â (1st day of the three 1000+ cases)
Orange: 1.575 7/2
Ventura: 1.037 7/2
San Bernardino: 1.760 7/8
Those are very high rates of spread.
For L.A., if R=1.7 continues, and the cycle is once  a week, here are rough numbers for daily cases on Fridays for the next month:
July 9: Â 1,000
July 16: 1,700
July 23: 2,890
July 30: 4,913
Aug 6: 8,352 Â L.A. didn't hit this number until Dec. 4, 2020
  (i.e., August 2021 may look worse than Dec. 2020 -- R was only 1.26 then)
![[Image: LACo-R.png]](https://i.ibb.co/4gpDkS2/LACo-R.png)
I suspect we're in for some more NPI restrictions. Â (And, kudos to L.A. for advising about masks. Â That's the least intrusive restriction, but it seems unlikely that it is being effective.)
When and how CA restrictions are put in place will likely impact & be impacted by the recall election of the Governor in mid-September. Â If I were the Governor, I'd put something in place this week. Â If the state waits to August, it will likely still be bad in early September (and for the all-important school opening), which might influence voters on Sep. 14.
(Note that I am being careful NOT to express any opinion about the Governor or that election. Â Let's avoid political discussion.)
CovidActNow also gives R values (as "Infection Rate"), from week-old data.