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COVID Peak Dates For Each State

tiredretired

The Old Salt
SUPER Site Supporter
Here is the resource peak for each state. Resource details can be found here: https://covid19.healthdata.org/projections

Vermont: April 9
New York: April 9
New Jersey: April 9
Michigan: April 10
Connecticut: April 10
Louisiana: April 10
Idaho: April 12
Massachusetts: April 14
Iowa: April 15
Pennsylvania: April 15
Illinois: April 16
Oklahoma: April 17
Indiana: April 17
Colorado: April 17
Washington, DC: April 18
Rhode Island: April 19
Ohio: April 19
Delaware: April 20
Alabama: April 20
Arkansas: April 20
Nevada: April 20
Minnesota: April 21
Georgia: April 22
Mississippi: April 22
North Carolina: April 22
Arizona: April 24
South Carolina: April 24
Washington: April 24
Maine: April 25
Tennessee: April 26
California: April 26
Wisconsin: April 26
Utah: April 27
Kansas: April 28
New Hampshire: April 30
New Mexico: April 30
Alaska: April 30
Hawaii: April 30
Nebraska: April 30
Montana: April 30
West Virginia: May 1
North Dakota: May 1
South Dakota: May 1
Wyoming: May 1
Texas: May 2
Oregon: May 3
Florida: May 3
Missouri: May 11
Kentucky: May 12
Maryland: May 14
Virginia: May 17

Source: https://www.breitbart.com/politics/...when-the-coronavirus-will-peak-in-each-state/
 

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
GOLD Site Supporter
I like how you can use the drop down menu to pick your state and see.

Indiana looks like its doing a pretty good job, looks like we will run short of ICU rooms but we may not run short of ventilators like some of the other states. We started our shut downs a bit later than states like Illinois and New York if you look at the "dates" but based our governor shut down our state BEFORE the disease became too wide spread.

Most of the cases are in a few areas. Indianapolis is a hotspot for the state. My county is as well, but mostly those cases are on the northern side of the county which is urban/suburban and the rural southern part seems to be fairing better ... although it will not go untouched. The southeast part of the state seems to have another hotspot brewing, possibly because of proximity to Cincinnati? Not really sure, didn't investigate it too closely as its the opposite side of the state and I'm more concerned about the effect Chicagoland will have on where I live.
 
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