Johns Hopkins University: Individuals Physically Distanced Before State Mandates, Slowing COVID-19 Spread
July 02, 2020
July 02, 2020
BALTIMORE, Maryland, July 2 -- Johns Hopkins University issued the following news release:
Residents in all 25 of the U.S. counties hardest hit by COVID-19 began to limit their public movements six to 29 days before states implemented stay-at-home orders, according to Johns Hopkins University researchers.
The decline in the number of daily trips people made as tracked by mobile phone data helped slow the spread of the virus, according to findings published today in The . . .
Residents in all 25 of the U.S. counties hardest hit by COVID-19 began to limit their public movements six to 29 days before states implemented stay-at-home orders, according to Johns Hopkins University researchers.
The decline in the number of daily trips people made as tracked by mobile phone data helped slow the spread of the virus, according to findings published today in The . . .