Georgia¶

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In [1]:
import datetime
import time

start = datetime.datetime.now()
print(f"Notebook executed on: {start.strftime('%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S%Z')} {time.tzname[time.daylight]}")
Notebook executed on: 07/03/2023 09:34:24 CEST
In [2]:
%config InlineBackend.figure_formats = ['svg']
from oscovida import *
In [3]:
overview("Georgia", weeks=5);
2023-03-07T09:34:28.813984 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.7.1, https://matplotlib.org/ 30 Jan 06 Feb 13 Feb 20 Feb 27 Feb 06 Mar 0 0 50 50 100 100 7-day incidence rate (per 100K people) 0.0 Georgia, last 5 weeks, last data point from 2023-03-06 30 Jan 06 Feb 13 Feb 20 Feb 27 Feb 06 Mar 0 20 40 60 80 daily change normalised per 100K 30 Jan 06 Feb 13 Feb 20 Feb 27 Feb 06 Mar 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 daily change normalised per 100K 30 Jan 06 Feb 13 Feb 20 Feb 27 Feb 06 Mar 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.5 1.0 1.0 R & growth factor (based on cases) Georgia cases daily growth factor Georgia cases daily growth factor (rolling mean) Georgia estimated R (using cases) 30 Jan 06 Feb 13 Feb 20 Feb 27 Feb 06 Mar 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.5 1.0 1.0 1.5 1.5 R & growth factor (based on deaths) Georgia deaths daily growth factor Georgia deaths daily growth factor (rolling mean) Georgia estimated R (using deaths) 30 Jan 06 Feb 13 Feb 20 Feb 27 Feb 06 Mar 0 2000 4000 cases doubling time [days] Georgia doubling time cases (rolling mean) Georgia doubling time deaths (rolling mean) 0 798 1596 2394 3191 daily change Georgia new cases (rolling 7d mean) Georgia new cases 0.00 3.99 7.98 11.97 daily change Georgia new deaths (rolling 7d mean) Georgia new deaths 0 5196 10392 deaths doubling time [days]
In [4]:
overview("Georgia");
2023-03-07T09:34:37.233346 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.7.1, https://matplotlib.org/ Jan 20 May 20 Sep 20 Jan 21 May 21 Sep 21 Jan 22 May 22 Sep 22 Jan 23 May 23 0 0 1000 1000 2000 2000 3000 3000 7-day incidence rate (per 100K people) 0.0 Georgia, last data point from 2023-03-06 Jan 20 May 20 Sep 20 Jan 21 May 21 Sep 21 Jan 22 May 22 Sep 22 Jan 23 May 23 0 200 400 600 daily change normalised per 100K Jan 20 May 20 Sep 20 Jan 21 May 21 Sep 21 Jan 22 May 22 Sep 22 Jan 23 May 23 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 daily change normalised per 100K Jan 20 May 20 Sep 20 Jan 21 May 21 Sep 21 Jan 22 May 22 Sep 22 Jan 23 May 23 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.5 1.0 1.0 R & growth factor (based on cases) Georgia cases daily growth factor Georgia cases daily growth factor (rolling mean) Georgia estimated R (using cases) Jan 20 May 20 Sep 20 Jan 21 May 21 Sep 21 Jan 22 May 22 Sep 22 Jan 23 May 23 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.5 1.0 1.0 1.5 1.5 R & growth factor (based on deaths) Georgia deaths daily growth factor Georgia deaths daily growth factor (rolling mean) Georgia estimated R (using deaths) Jan 20 May 20 Sep 20 Jan 21 May 21 Sep 21 Jan 22 May 22 Sep 22 Jan 23 May 23 0 50000 100000 cases doubling time [days] Georgia doubling time cases (rolling mean) Georgia doubling time deaths (rolling mean) 0 7978 15957 23935 daily change Georgia new cases (rolling 7d mean) Georgia new cases 0.00 19.95 39.89 59.84 79.78 daily change Georgia new deaths (rolling 7d mean) Georgia new deaths 0 8353 16706 deaths doubling time [days]
In [5]:
compare_plot("Georgia", normalise=True);
2023-03-07T09:34:41.313515 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.7.1, https://matplotlib.org/ 2020-01 2020-05 2020-09 2021-01 2021-05 2021-09 2022-01 2022-05 2022-09 2023-01 2023-05 0.001 0.001 0.1 0.1 10 10 1000 1000 daily new cases per 100K people (rolling 7-day mean) Daily cases (top) and deaths (below) for Georgia Georgia Germany Australia Poland Korea, South Belarus Switzerland US 2020-01 2020-05 2020-09 2021-01 2021-05 2021-09 2022-01 2022-05 2022-09 2023-01 2023-05 0.0001 0.0001 0.001 0.001 0.01 0.01 0.1 0.1 1 1 daily new deaths per 100K people (rolling 7-day mean) Georgia Germany Australia Poland Korea, South Belarus Switzerland US
In [6]:
# load the data
cases, deaths = get_country_data("Georgia")

# get population of the region for future normalisation:
inhabitants = population("Georgia")
print(f'Population of "Georgia": {inhabitants} people')

# compose into one table
table = compose_dataframe_summary(cases, deaths)

# show tables with up to 1000 rows
pd.set_option("display.max_rows", 1000)

# display the table
table
Population of "Georgia": 3989175 people
Out[6]:
total cases daily new cases total deaths daily new deaths
2023-03-06 1825598 0 16965 0
2023-03-05 1825598 0 16965 0
2023-03-04 1825598 0 16965 0
2023-03-03 1825598 0 16965 0
2023-03-02 1825598 0 16965 0
... ... ... ... ...
2020-01-27 0 0 0 0
2020-01-26 0 0 0 0
2020-01-25 0 0 0 0
2020-01-24 0 0 0 0
2020-01-23 0 0 0 0

1139 rows × 4 columns

Explore the data in your web browser¶

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Acknowledgements:¶

  • Johns Hopkins University provides data for countries
  • Robert Koch Institute provides data for within Germany
  • Atlo Team for gathering and providing data from Hungary (https://atlo.team/koronamonitor/)
  • Open source and scientific computing community for the data tools
  • Github for hosting repository and html files
  • Project Jupyter for the Notebook and binder service
  • The H2020 project Photon and Neutron Open Science Cloud (PaNOSC)

In [7]:
print(f"Download of data from Johns Hopkins university: cases at {fetch_cases_last_execution()} and "
      f"deaths at {fetch_deaths_last_execution()}.")
Download of data from Johns Hopkins university: cases at 07/03/2023 09:31:22 and deaths at 07/03/2023 09:31:21.
In [8]:
# to force a fresh download of data, run "clear_cache()"
In [9]:
print(f"Notebook execution took: {datetime.datetime.now()-start}")
Notebook execution took: 0:00:16.861393