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Complete study of COVID-19 in India (Part II) – Laboratory and Testing

Complete study of COVID-19 in India  (Part II) – Laboratory and Testing

The first case of the 2019-2020 Coronavirus pandemic in India was reported on January 30, 2020, originating in China. Experts suggest the number of infections could be much higher as India’s testing rates are among the lowest in the world. The infection rate of COVID-19 in India is 1.7, significantly lower than in the worst affected countries.

The World Health Organisation chief executive director of health emergencies program Michael Ryan said that India has “tremendous capacity” to deal with the coronavirus outbreak, and as the second most populous country, will have enormous impact on the world’s ability to deal with it.

DexLab Analytics, in the first part of this blog series, studied the statewise breakup of COVID-19 cases in India through a Jupyter Notebook. Libraries were called, maps were drawnand data was taken from Kaggle.

The data and code sheet can be found below.

 

In this part of the blog series we will study how states are performing with regard to laboratories and testing. First we make three data sets – that of confirmed cases, recovered cases and cases of deaths.

We first plot this data on a graph and study it carefully. Then we make a pivot table and study the data. We then also study which state is performing how many tests on people. Kerala is found to have done the maximum number of tests (Fig.1.).

Fig. 1.

Complete study of COVID-19 in India (Part II) – Laboratory and Testing

The purpose of this video is to teach you how to use visual graphs in Python. Now we aim to find why testing is underdone in states. Is there a possibility of a lesser number of labs in the first place? We get a graph (Fig. 2.) that shows us how many labs each state has for testing COVID-19 samples.

Fig. 2.

Complete study of COVID-19 in India (Part II) – Laboratory and Testing

For the complete study watch the video attached herewith. This study was brought to you by DexLab Analytics. DexLab Analytics is a premiere Artificial Intelligence training institute in Gurgaon.


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Complete Statewise Study on COVID-19 in India (Part I)

Complete Statewise Study on COVID-19 in India (Part I)

The first case of the 2019-2020 Coronavirus pandemic in India was reported on January 30, 2020, originating in China. Experts suggest the number of infections could be much higher as India’s testing rates are among the lowest in the world. The infection rate of COVID-19 in India is 1.7, significantly lower than in the worst affected countries.

The World Health Organisation chief executive director of health emergencies program Michael Ryan said that India has “tremendous capacity” to deal with the coronavirus outbreak, and as the second most populous country, will have enormous impact on the world’s ability to deal with it.

Other commentators worried about the economic devastation caused by the lockdown that has huge effects on informal workers, micro and small enterprises and farmers and self employed people who are left without a livelihood in the absence of transportation and access to markets.

The lockdown was justified by the government and other agencies for being pre-emptive to prevent India from entering a higher stage which could make handling very difficult and cause even more losses thereafter. According to a study by Shiv Nadar University, India could have witnesses a surge of 31,000 cases between March 24 and April 14 without lockdown.

So we call a Jupyter Notebook in Python to study India’s COVID-19 story.

The data and code sheet used in this study can be found below.

 

We will first import all libraries like pandas and numpy. All the data has been taken from kaggle. We then take the data and work a dataframe on it. And then we generate an India map to study the spread of SARS-CoV-2.

Fig. 1.

Complete Study of COVID-19 in India (Part 1)

For more on this, please watch the complete video attached herewith. This study was brought to you by DexLab Analytics. DexLab Analytics is a premiere Artificial Intelligence training institute in Gurgaon.

 


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Covid-19 – Key Insights through Exploration of Data (Part – II)

Covid-19 - Key Insights through Exploration of Data (Part - II)

This video tutorial is on exploratory data analysis. The data is on COVID-19 cases and it has been taken from Kaggle. This tutorial is based on simple visualization of COVID-19 cases.

For code sheet and data click below.

 

Firstly, we must call whatever libraries we need in Python. Then we must import the data we will be working on onto our platform.

Now, we must explore PANDAS. For this it is important to know that there are three types of data structures – Series, Data Frame and Panel Data. In our tutorial we will be using data frames. 

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Now we will plot the data we have onto a graph. When we run the program, we get a graph that shows total hospital beds, potentially available hospital beds and available hospital beds.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

While visualizing data we must remember to keep the data as simple as possible and not make it complex. If there are too many data columns the interpretation will be a very complex one, something we do not want.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

A scatter plot (Fig. 3.) is also generated to show the reading of the data available.  We study the behaviour of the data on the plot.

For more on this, view the video attached herewith. And practise more and more with data from Kaggle. This tutorial was brought to you by DexLab Analytics. DexLab Analytics is a premiere data analyst training institute in Gurgaon.


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The Impact of latitude on The Spread of COVID-19 (Part-I)

The Impact of latitude on The Spread of COVID-19 (Part-I)

The COVID-19 pandemic has hit us hard as a people and forced us to bow down to the vagaries of nature. As of April 29, 2020, the number of persons infected stands at 31,39,523 while the number of persons dead stands at 2,18,024 globally.

This essay is on the phenomenon of detecting geographical variations in the mortality rate of the COVID-19 epidemic. This essay explores a specific range of latitudes along which a rapid spread of the infection has been detected with the help of data sets on Kaggle. The findings are Dexlab Analytics’ own. Dexlab Analytics is a premiere institute that trains professionals in python for data analysis.

For the code sheet and data used in this study, click below.


 

The instructor has imported all Python libraries and the visualisation of data hosted on Kaggle has been done through a heat map. The data is listed on the basis of country codes and their latitudes and there is a separate data set based on the figures from the USA alone.

Fig. 1.

The instructor has compared data from amongst the countries in one scenario and among states in the USA in another scenario. Data has been prepared and structured under these two heads.

Fig. 2.

The instructor has prepared the data according to the mortality rate of each country and it is updated to the very day of working on the data, i.e. the latest updated figures are presented in the study. When the instructor runs the program, a heat map is produced.

For more on this, do go through the half-an-hour long program video attached herewith. The rest of the essay will be featured in subsequent parts of this series of articles.

 

 


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