ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZAA
1
Please use this data! Feel free to download or use anything in this workbook for your own analysis and visualizations.
Created by Molly -- @zmotoly on Twitter for questions or feedback.
2
Date of dataInteractive maps
Detailed graphic (pdf)
> See all graphics in this folder
3
As of mid-June, DC's COVID situation has fortunately stabilized. I'm pausing updates until there are any notable new trends.Other links:
4
> See interactive positivity rate trend chart at http://zmotoly.net/covid-19/
PoPville, May 11: “I spent some hours correlating the census tract data against the ‘neighborhood’ COVID map”
5
June 1114-day positivity rate
PoPville, May 18: A deeper dive into DC neighborhoods and COVID
6
June 10
Neighborhood-level testing and case data is identical to June 9
PoPville, May 25: Another dive into DC neighborhoods and COVID
7
June 9
Neighborhood-level testing data is identical to June 8
Detailed DC "neighborhood" + census tract basemap
8
June 8
Neighborhood-level case data is identical to June 7
Look up an address to find out its census tract code
9
June 613-day positivity rate
Shapefiles for DC "health neighborhoods"
10
June 415-day positivity rate
Poverty rate by "neighborhood" (interactive map)
11
June 214-day positivity rate
Age 65+ by "neighborhood" (interactive map)
12
May 3112-day positivity rateHover here for note on maps from May 31 onwards
Race and ethnicity in DC "neighborhoods" (interactive map)
13
May 30https://bit.ly/2AnuSqehttps://bit.ly/3eDY9fa
DC Coronavirus Data
14
May 29https://bit.ly/2XEdyoM
Open Data DC (for ACS & census data)
15
May 27
Neighborhood-level data is identical to May 26
data.census.gov (for additional ACS data, notably 5-year estimates on employment and demographic variables)
16
May 26https://bit.ly/2X5WCIF
Deeba Yavrom's DC COVID data dashboard
17
May 25https://bit.ly/3gp1hxa
Jeremy Kittredge's DC Jail COVID tracker
18
May 24https://bit.ly/3gmiozt
Ian Buller's animated graphic
+ GitHub repository
19
May 23https://bit.ly/36sBvTXhttps://bit.ly/3cVMp78
May 16-23 weekly snapshot
20
May 22
The ciy did not post any neighborhood-level data for this date
21
May 21https://bit.ly/2zYYg5Nhttps://bit.ly/2XvqxJc
22
May 20https://bit.ly/2zaU7Mf
23
May 19https://bit.ly/36kaNN7
24
May 18https://bit.ly/36dsVsd
25
May 17https://bit.ly/2WFE3Lb
26
May 16https://bit.ly/3dS33o9https://bit.ly/2WDt5WC
May 9-16 weekly snapshot
27
May 15https://bit.ly/3cDvB4L
28
May 14https://bit.ly/2Wzz6U1
29
May 13https://bit.ly/3bzECuh
30
May 12https://bit.ly/3fHKjtohttps://bit.ly/3buhkpy
31
May 11https://bit.ly/2zAOSW0
32
May 10https://bit.ly/35SFxVthttps://bit.ly/2YUXrpeHover here for note on maps older than May 10
33
May 9https://bit.ly/2WH9un7https://bit.ly/3clMvEV
34
May 8https://bit.ly/3dpqN2Whttps://bit.ly/3bmzolv
35
May 7https://bit.ly/2Lfr2l1
36
37
NOTES: These graphics and stats reflect the cumulative positive rate per 1,000 residents in each neighborhood from the start of the outbreak through that day's date. In other words, they tell you the proportion of people who have tested positive at some point in a neighborhood, not necessarily how many people are sick right now. Expect to see each neighborhood's number increasing over time as more positive cases are reported. It's the differences between neighborhoods on a given day, as well as the rate of change for one neighborhood, that provide insight into how the outbreak is evolving in different parts of the city.

SOURCES: All DC census tract population and demographic information used in this analysis comes from the 2018 American Community Survey 1-year and 5-year datasets available via opendata.dc.gov and data.census.gov. DC coronavirus data via coronavirus.dc.gov (links in list to right).
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100