3/11 was the day when a whole crap-ton of stuff started happening to contain the spread. The good news is, that chart appears to indicate that it's working so far.
3/11 (Wed) was the first day of the Big 12 tournament (that’s how I measure time).
The first two games were played, and because the doors had already been opened, they played in front of a crowd. An announcement was made that the 3/12 games would be played in an empty arena. On 3/12 (Thursday) the tournament was canceled, as were all other NCAA league tournaments. By mid-day Thursday Kansas and Duke, maybe others, announced cancellation of all athletic department travel and pretty much took themselves out of the NCAA tournament. Later that same day the NCAA basketball tournament was canceled. Thursday 3/12 was when I noticed the run on grocery stores. Friday 3/13, our local schools closed a day early for spring break. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, 3/13-14-15, more places and events started shutting down. MLB, NBA, MLS, and pretty much all other pro sports started announcing postponing their schedules and seasons. By Monday 3/16 gyms started closing, schools started spring break early and spring breaks were extended.
I’ve been calling that “week 1”, it had a soft start, but I consider today, Monday 3/23, the beginning of week 2.
What I understand is that the infection takes approx 6 days, it’s a curve that seems to peak heavily at day 6, between infection and symptoms. If I take last Monday to be day 1, then today is either day 7 or 8 depending on how you count. Maybe the curve starts to slow this week because we’ve managed to slow the spread, or it doesn’t.
I’m not sure a lot of the charts we look
at are all that helpful. Someone upstream in this thread said they show data, not information. There is little context. Different localities have different testing methodologies so test and result numbers, in many cases, are just numbers.
Is there a graph, chart, table, or other source that shows “information”?