Sweden, in the midst of finally moving to have mandated mitigation measures, has asked seniors to quit staying at home and to come out and join everyone else in their high-CoVid milieu.
Meanwhile, hospitals and mortuaries are beginning to overflow. El Paso mortuaries have had to rent refrigerator trucks.
Northern Idaho is starting negotiations
to send patients to Seattle and Portland.
If North Dakota were a nation, it would have one of the highest per capita CoVid rates in the world. The article is using the current 7 day rolling averages, not all time weekly rolling averages. So it should say "currently highest," I guess. The Czech Republic is red hot with new CoVid cases.
When an area hasn't had much or any CoVid, and CoVid is seeded by travelers/mobile residents all over the area, when it pops into view a week or two later, it usually leads to exponential cases at first. ND did know it had CoVid, however, since April.
There is a bit of good news for ND, though. It had fewer deaths yesterday than predicted by IMHE, so the runaway CoVid growth from mid-Sept to mid-Oct may be slowing down. It's really hard to tell at this point.
North Dakota Coronavirus: 35,939 Cases and 440 Deaths (COVID-19 ) - Worldometer
Wales has had a similar situation (CoVid didn't slam Wales early on - but it has arrived now). Wales is on lockdown, and grocery stores have been advised to limit sales to "essentials" (but the Guardian says stores don't know exactly what's meant by that):
Is a pumpkin an essential item in the Welsh Covid firebreak?
They're calling the Welsh measures a "firebreak," while England is calling theirs a '"circuit breaker." To me, this implies that the Welsh measures are designed to create a larger margin between themselves and England (where rates are of course soaring).