I guess this is for resource planning. Mapped down to our subdivision. We are in the lowest risk category but about a mile away, we see highest risk category.
1 posted on
04/03/2020 7:53:38 AM PDT by
vespa300
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To: vespa300
This is the dumbest thing I’ve ever seen. They are showing huge areas where almost no one lives as “very high” and extreme”? Give me a break.
42 posted on
04/03/2020 8:52:47 AM PDT by
SaxxonWoods
(Epstein pulled a Carradine, the bozo.)
To: vespa300
Seems pretty random. My neighborhood was low
43 posted on
04/03/2020 8:55:04 AM PDT by
AppyPappy
(How many fingers am I holding up, Winston?)
To: vespa300
The field across the road and the woods beyond are a higher risk than my side which is low. Stupid infected deer and bears!
47 posted on
04/03/2020 9:03:38 AM PDT by
Sirius Lee
(They are openly stating that they intend to murder us. Prep if you want to live.)
To: vespa300
This thing uses "socioeconomic factors driving risk" to make the map. There are a whole bunch of these listed when you click on an area and most of them make absolutely zero sense with relation to COVID. I pulled many of their socioeconomic factors from maybe 50 different areas I clicked on in several states and grouped them into these categories (this is probably not comprehensive):
- Income level
- Poverty level
- Transportation availability
- Transportation cost
- Unemployment rate
- Access to employment
- Labor market engagement
- Industrial & Commercial job density
- Environmental health hazard
- Housing instability
- Retail job density
- Commercial retail availability
- Frequency of prolonged commute (60+ min)
- School performance
Just off the top of my head I threw together the following list of the most important and biggest factors I would use in such a model. There's almost zero overlap with what Jvion chose. But what do I know? I'm not a pro. AND I'm not cowed by PC and Wokeness:
- International airport with lots of traffic from China and Italy.
- High concentration of Chinese and Italian communities with lots of family members traveling to and from China and Italy.
- Democrat Governor and Mayor.
- Politicians urging "Hug a Chinese" a month ago.
- Local population density (at the zip code level).
- Fraction of population using public transportation.
- Prevalence of known health factors by zip code (BMI, hypertension, diabetes).
- Per capita general hospital and ICU beds.
- High density of older people and nursing homes.
- Known existing hotspot.
- Demographics and age distribution.
- Fraction of population with health insurance
This thing is ridiculously and hopelessly useless, IMHO. Just zoom into Seattle and look at Marysville, one of the hottest of hot spots because of the introduction of the disease by ONE Chinaman and the prevalence of nursing homes in the area. Their map shows low susceptibility in Marysville.
About Jvion: Jvion enables healthcare organizations to prevent avoidable patient harm and lower costs through its AI-enabled prescriptive analytics solution. An industry first, the Jvion Machine goes beyond simple predictive analytics and machine learning to identify patients on a trajectory to becoming high risk and for whom intervention will likely be successful. Jvion determines the interventions that will more effectively reduce risk and enable clinical action. And it accelerates time to value by leveraging established patient-level intelligence to drive engagement across hospitals, populations, and patients. To date,
the Jvion Machine has been deployed across about 50 hospital systems and 300 hospitals, who report average reductions of 30% for preventable harm incidents and annual cost savings of $6.3 million.
Data Sources: Jvion analyzed de-identified data on 30 million Americans. Data analyzed includes de-identified claims, USDA, EPA, Transportation and other third-party data sources like food and retail access, length of job commute, and transportation. [POF comment - would ANY of us amateur FR sleuths choose ANY of these factors to model COVID susceptibility?]
To: vespa300
I'm surprised at how low New York City is, generally, on this map.
-PJ
51 posted on
04/03/2020 9:25:01 AM PDT by
Political Junkie Too
(Freedom of the press is the People's right to publish, not CNN's right to the 1st question.)
To: vespa300
Don’t see age anywhere. Too important to exclude.
52 posted on
04/03/2020 9:25:55 AM PDT by
pacpam
(action=consequence and applies in all cases - friend of victory)
To: vespa300
I’m having trouble understanding why in my region, so many of the rural areas/counties are considered extremely high risk, while all the nasty, crowded urban areas are low.
54 posted on
04/03/2020 9:41:52 AM PDT by
AAABEST
(NY/DC/LA media/political/military industrial complex DELENDA EST)
To: vespa300
BS. They have national forest behind our house as “very high risk”. The SF Bay Area is lower risk than Boise? I think they based this solely on per-capita income stats.
To: vespa300; rodguy911
Please check out Monroe County. How accurate is the map. My area seems pretty accurate.
Please stay well and safe!
62 posted on
04/03/2020 10:10:36 AM PDT by
Chgogal
(Wuhan Virus, Chinese Virus, Kung Fu Virus - Wuhan Chinese Kung Fu Virus aka CCP virus.)
To: vespa300
LMAO, I scrolled in to find my neighborhood in Chicago, and noticed that Graceland Cemetery is all labeled “very high” vulnerability.
I am not sure the residents of the cemetery are aware they are at such risk.
To: vespa300
Pretty useless but thanks.
65 posted on
04/03/2020 10:53:15 AM PDT by
old-ager
(anti-new-ager)
To: vespa300
71 posted on
04/03/2020 11:34:41 AM PDT by
GOPJ
( Words are cheap... Actions matter. tinyurl.com/cvirusmap)
To: vespa300
I was looking at my area and found a section mapped as Very High Risk that lays entirely within a National Forest boundary and is only sparsely populated on its edges.
To: vespa300
Great find....
Also since this virus’ highest load is spread slightly before or at the unset of symptoms - having large fans (or keeping fans on in an HVAC system ) in businesses and communal spaces might dilute the virus load people encounter...
74 posted on
04/03/2020 12:42:32 PM PDT by
GOPJ
( Words are cheap... Actions matter. tinyurl.com/cvirusmap)
To: vespa300
I looked at the map for our area. Biased in many respects. The area contains a strip center and a few apartment? OMG, too many retail jobs, they’re all going to die! The airport is arguably a risk given how many travel through it, but no one LIVES there.
80 posted on
04/04/2020 9:27:53 AM PDT by
tbw2
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