Variation in COVID-19 Outbreaks at U.S. State and County Levels
Abstract
Background
The COVID-19 pandemic poses an unprecedented threat to the health and economic prosperity of the world’s population. Yet, some countries or regions within a country appear to be affected in different ways.
Objectives
This research aims to understand whether the outbreak varies significantly between U.S. states and counties.
Methods
A statistical model is estimated using publicly available outbreak data in the U.S., and regional differences are statistically analyzed.
Results
There is significant variance in outbreak data between U.S. states and counties. At the state level, the outbreak rate follows a normal distribution with an average relative growth rate of 0.197 (doubling time 3.518 days). But there is a low degree of reliability between state-wide and county-specific data reported (ICC = 0.169, p < 0.001), with a bias of 0.070 (standard deviation 0.062) as shown with a Bland-Altman plot.
Conclusions
The results emphasize the need for policy makers to look at the pandemic from the smallest population subdivision possible, so that countermeasures can be implemented, and critical resources provided effectively. Further research is needed to understand the reasons for these regional differences.
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