Two Years of COVID
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2022 1:12 am
Out of curiosity I looked up the data on deaths per million by state to see which states have been hit the hardest. Naturally you'd expect the most densely populated states to have a more difficult time fending off a contagious virus, so it was no surprise that the most densely populated state of New Jersey was ranked third. Rhode Island is the second state in density, and ranked 14th. Massachusetts is third and ranked 11th in deaths per million. Connecticut, Maryland and Delaware are the next three mostly dense states and they ranked in the bottom half of the country which is a testament to their success in responding to pandemic.
New York, Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania round out the rest of the top 10 in population density, and they ranked 6th, 18th, 23rd, and 13th. Florida is a mystery because we know the governor has been suppressing COVID deaths so it is likely ranked much higher than 18th.
In any event, the big surprise was the states that filled out the top ten but were not among those with dense populations.
Here are the states with the highest COVID deaths per million, rounding out the top half of the country:
Mississippi (3,639)
Arizona (3,572)
Alabama (3,477)
Louisiana (3,362)
Tennessee (3,288)
Michigan (3,224)
W. Virginia (3,205)
Arkansas (3,186)
Indiana (3,164)
Georgia (3,096)
New Mexico (3,060)
Oklahoma (3,044)
Florida (3,010)
S. Dakota (2,981)
S. Carolina (2,965)
Nevada (2,894)
Kentucky (2,885)
Ohio (2,829)
Wyoming (2,808)
Montana (2,800)
These are the ones with the highest success with COVID in terms of deaths per million:
Hawaii (822)
Vermont (853)
Puerto Rico (1,125)
Utah (1,281)
Maine (1,289)
Washington (1,414)
Alaska (1,438)
Oregon (1,443)
New Hampshire (1,622)
Washington D.C (1,819)
Obviously Hawaii is first because it is so far removed from the rest of the country, and Alaska is too but also has the lowest population density. What surprised me was Washington's handling of the pandemic, because from I remember that state was hit hard and early.
https://www.worldometers.information/coronavirus/country/us/
New York, Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania round out the rest of the top 10 in population density, and they ranked 6th, 18th, 23rd, and 13th. Florida is a mystery because we know the governor has been suppressing COVID deaths so it is likely ranked much higher than 18th.
In any event, the big surprise was the states that filled out the top ten but were not among those with dense populations.
Here are the states with the highest COVID deaths per million, rounding out the top half of the country:
Mississippi (3,639)
Arizona (3,572)
Alabama (3,477)
Louisiana (3,362)
Tennessee (3,288)
Michigan (3,224)
W. Virginia (3,205)
Arkansas (3,186)
Indiana (3,164)
Georgia (3,096)
New Mexico (3,060)
Oklahoma (3,044)
Florida (3,010)
S. Dakota (2,981)
S. Carolina (2,965)
Nevada (2,894)
Kentucky (2,885)
Ohio (2,829)
Wyoming (2,808)
Montana (2,800)
These are the ones with the highest success with COVID in terms of deaths per million:
Hawaii (822)
Vermont (853)
Puerto Rico (1,125)
Utah (1,281)
Maine (1,289)
Washington (1,414)
Alaska (1,438)
Oregon (1,443)
New Hampshire (1,622)
Washington D.C (1,819)
Obviously Hawaii is first because it is so far removed from the rest of the country, and Alaska is too but also has the lowest population density. What surprised me was Washington's handling of the pandemic, because from I remember that state was hit hard and early.
https://www.worldometers.information/coronavirus/country/us/