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Reason: None provided.

Check this out: http://ww11.doh.state.fl.us/comm/_partners/covid19_report_archive/state_reports_20200714.pdf

Page 29: Memorial Lee Hospital, then right below it Pancare of Florida. Same exact # of positive cases. Looks like a mistaken double-entry, unless they are testing same cases as part of redundancy. Btw, these two labs are 500 miles from each other.

Also, these high percentage positive cases go back to at least May (I got tired of looking).

I’ve identified four possible types of errors:

  1. Completely wrong data as admitted by Orlando Health (state report says 98% pos, OH says reality is 9.4% pos)
  2. Double entries: same data listed on adjacent rows (Memorial Lee vs Pancare)
  3. Labs with no negative results, only positive results: this messes up lots of other calculations and graphs. There are many medium-to-small sized labs not reporting neg results.
  4. Labs with only a handful of negs, much larger pos. Charitable explanation is these labs are only re-testing positive cases from another lab as a double check. I’d like that confirmed, and if true, are the results being double-counted in the final tally?

Edit: I want this place to be about honesty so aside from the double entry, FL Dept of Health is saying that rest of cases can be explained by sites not reporting negative results. Labs that have a small amt of negs and lots of positives is said to be because the lab reported negs for only a day or two, then stopped.

264 days ago
7 score
Reason: None provided.

Check this out: http://ww11.doh.state.fl.us/comm/_partners/covid19_report_archive/state_reports_20200714.pdf

Page 29: Memorial Lee Hospital, then right below it Pancare of Florida. Same exact # of positive cases. Looks like a mistaken double-entry, unless they are testing same cases as part of redundancy. Btw, these two labs are 500 miles from each other.

Also, these high percentage positive cases go back to at least May (I got tired of looking).

I’ve identified four possible types of errors:

  1. Completely wrong data as admitted by Orlando Health (state report says 98% pos, OH says reality is 9.4% pos)
  2. Double entries: same data listed on adjacent rows (Memorial Lee vs Pancare)
  3. Labs with no negative results, only positive results: this messes up lots of other calculations and graphs. There are many medium-to-small sized labs not reporting neg results.
  4. Labs with only a handful of negs, much larger pos. Charitable explanation is these labs are only re-testing positive cases from another lab as a double check. I’d like that confirmed, and if true, are the results being double-counted in the final tally?
265 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Check this out: http://ww11.doh.state.fl.us/comm/_partners/covid19_report_archive/state_reports_20200714.pdf

Page 29: Memorial Lee Hospital, then right below it Pancare of Florida. Same exact # of positive cases. Looks like a mistaken doible-entry, unless they are testing same cases. Btw, these two labs are 500 miles from each other.

Also, these high percentage positive cases go back to at least May (I got tired of looking). Some labs list no negative results, some list handful of negatives, much larger number of positives. Charitable explanation is low-neg/high-pos means a lab that verifies an already positive-tested case. But they’d need to prove that for me to believe the charitable explanation.

265 days ago
1 score