You continue to post articles that make my points for me----Here is something directly from your article-- "Young Texans are driving the rise in hospitalizations, a population less likely to develop severe cases of the coronavirus, said David Lakey, vice chancellor for health affairs and chief medical officer at the University of Texas System. The number of deaths remains stable,"
Seeing that deaths lag three weeks behind hospitalizations.... or five weeks behind hospitalizations in some states due to deliberately delayed data..... once the hospitalizations increase then it is just a matter of time before the COVID deaths increase. While the population in texas being hospitalized may be younger and less prone to death as the outcome.... statistically it is just a matter of time until the COVID death trend increases rather than being flat. Noting that flat deaths is not a good sign either in a state's public health response... they need to be declining.
I think that you need to understand that most deaths are delayed at least 14 days in their reporting. Come back in two weeks and look at the actual number of deaths for these three days.
what result? Deaths are declining and the rate of increase of new cases is declining. ----pretty good results.
You don't seem to understand that the proper total deaths from yesterday, the day before, and the day before that will be delayed until at least July 7th. Go back and check the totals on July 7th and then respond to this post with the numbers.
Here are the numbers of deaths in Texas from the beginning of June. I chose this because it would allow5 or 6 weeks after reopening for your cases to occur and then lead to death according to your timeframes. Please show me where deaths/rate of increase has occurred. In addition, please enlighten me as to the current trend--