An open repository of real-time COVID-19 indicators.

Alex Reinhart,Logan Brooks,Maria Jahja,Aaron Rumack,Jingjing Tang, Sumit Agrawal, Wael Al Saeed, Taylor Arnold, Amartya Basu,Jacob Bien, Ángel A Cabrera,Andrew Chin, Eu Jing Chua,Brian Clark, Sarah Colquhoun, Nat DeFries,David C Farrow, Jodi Forlizzi, Jed Grabman, Samuel Gratzl,Alden Green, George Haff, Robin Han, Kate Harwood,Addison J Hu, Raphael Hyde, Sangwon Hyun,Ananya Joshi,Jimi Kim,Andrew Kuznetsov,Wichada La Motte-Kerr, Yeon Jin Lee, Kenneth Lee,Zachary C Lipton,Michael X Liu, Lester Mackey, Kathryn Mazaitis,Daniel J McDonald, Phillip McGuinness, Balasubramanian Narasimhan,Michael P O'Brien, Natalia L Oliveira,Pratik Patil,Adam Perer,Collin A Politsch,Samyak Rajanala, Dawn Rucker, Chris Scott,Nigam H Shah,Vishnu Shankar, James Sharpnack,Dmitry Shemetov, Noah Simon, Benjamin Y Smith, Vishakha Srivastava, Shuyi Tan, Robert Tibshirani,Elena Tuzhilina, Ana Karina Van Nortwick,Valérie Ventura,Larry Wasserman, Benjamin Weaver,Jeremy C Weiss, Spencer Whitman,Kristin Williams, Roni Rosenfeld,Ryan J Tibshirani

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America(2021)

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摘要
The COVID-19 pandemic presented enormous data challenges in the United States. Policy makers, epidemiological modelers, and health researchers all require up-to-date data on the pandemic and relevant public behavior, ideally at fine spatial and temporal resolution. The COVIDcast API is our attempt to fill this need: Operational since April 2020, it provides open access to both traditional public health surveillance signals (cases, deaths, and hospitalizations) and many auxiliary indicators of COVID-19 activity, such as signals extracted from deidentified medical claims data, massive online surveys, cell phone mobility data, and internet search trends. These are available at a fine geographic resolution (mostly at the county level) and are updated daily. The COVIDcast API also tracks all revisions to historical data, allowing modelers to account for the frequent revisions and backfill that are common for many public health data sources. All of the data are available in a common format through the API and accompanying R and Python software packages. This paper describes the data sources and signals, and provides examples demonstrating that the auxiliary signals in the COVIDcast API present information relevant to tracking COVID activity, augmenting traditional public health reporting and empowering research and decision-making.
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