I am hoping someone at @jimmyjohns can help. On May 11, I ordered lunch online for myself and a colleague for a lunch meeting in Norman OK. After an hour, the food had not arrived, and so I started calling the location. For 2 hours I called 8 times and there was no answer (1/)
The nice sounding worker said to keep trying, but right now it just sounds like a business that is hoping to drag this out and hope I eventually drop it. (6/)
@kbanas I was stupid this morning and clicked on something that turned out to be a twitter hack. It spammed an ad to a bunch of people. Sorry! The hack was clever because it waited a few hours, and I just happened to be at my desk when the spam storm hit.
@chriswcotner When looking at Active Cases, Mask Mandate cases have risen ever so slightly in the last two months, while Active Cases in non-Mandate Cities continue to spike.
@JonathanCOnP@Navarp mask mandate cities as a whole continue to look good. Active cases have mostly plateaued there, while non mandate cities continue to see an increase.
@JonathanCOnP@Navarp I am not a health researcher, so I don't keep up with that. I have a script that updates the mask mandate graphs on my site, but still need to update the text. Despite huge spikes in the mask mandate college cities of Norman and Stillwater, 1/
@MichaelESmith @DrKillgrove @aejolene @benmarwick The American Psychological Association has a fairly detailed JARS-Quant https://t.co/hm8DJb6CED as well as updated recommendations https://t.co/p389R5I25r
I realized today that I made a big mistake in producing the graphs and values I shared on Aug 9. I had neglected to notice that the source data table I used for population used metropolitan population instead of city population.
The trends on mask mandates in Oklahoma are increasingly clear, and the lack of mandates for half the state over the last 23 days is probably associated with ~3200 unnecessary cases and will likely contribute to 24 more deaths.
@rogman99 @SoonerReporter @deeporfunny I thought you might be interested in seeing the divergence between mask-mandate and non-mandate cities in Oklahoma
I realized today that I made a big mistake in producing the graphs and values I shared on Aug 9. I had neglected to notice that the source data table I used for population used metropolitan population instead of city population.
Based on a case fatality rate in Oklahoma since June 1 of .76, this would be associated with 13.5 deaths. Updated report and graphs at https://t.co/kkWbcizk7W