Health & Fitness
Here’s How Well Ohio Complies With Stay-At-Home Order
Cellphone tracking data shows how Ohio is doing compared to the nation as a whole.
COLUMBUS, OH — As the spread of the coronavirus accelerated in recent weeks, more and more Americans have come under state or local stay-at-home orders and advisories, with Ohio being no exception. The order has directly impacted how much Buckeye State residents are venturing outside their homes.
The purpose of these orders and advisories is to minimize the spread of the virus, which is highly contagious, although the scope of the orders varies by state and locality. Compliance with them varies widely, too, as Google has demonstrated with its community mobility reports, and by the business data firm Cuebiq, which compiled its COVID-19 Mobility Insights. Both aggregate location data from cellphones to track the movements of large numbers of people.
The data is aggregated and anonymized, Google said, so that individuals are not tracked by identity.
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In Ohio, which has been under a stay-at-home order since March 12, compliance has been below the national average, but has still seen dramatic decreases in travel to stores and offices.
"Today is the day we have to batten down the hatches," said Dr. Amy Acton, director of Ohio Department of Health, said when he order was issued. "There is no time left. Listen to what Italy is telling us."
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Ohioans listened.
As of March 29, Google reports that statewide movement to retail and recreational locations, dropped 43 percent against the baseline. Travel to groceries and pharmacies fell 19 percent; to transport hubs and similar locations, 33 percent; and to workplaces 35percent. Mobility to places of residence increased 10 percent.
In Ohio, state officials have encouraged residents to visit parks, while social distancing. This has led to a dramatic spike in visitors at park areas, with Google reporting visitation is up 117 percent at Ohio parks, beaches and gardens.
In general, compliance is higher in urban areas of the Northeast, upper Midwest and West Coast than in rural areas, the South and the Great Plains.
National Averages
As of March 29, Google reports that nationwide movement to retail and recreational locations, including restaurants, shopping centers, movie theaters and the like, dropped 47 percent against a baseline set for the weeks Jan. 3 to Feb. 6.
Travel to groceries and pharmacies fell 22 percent; to parks, to beaches and gardens 19 percent; to transport hubs such as bus and train stations, 51 percent; and to workplaces 42 percent. Mobility to places of residence showed the only increase, of 16 percent.
The data comes with several important caveats:
- Tracking location does not show how often or how closely people come into contact with each other, and is not necessarily a predictor of infection.
- Rural residents often must travel farther to get groceries or other necessities, while city dwellers don’t have to move far to infect others.
- Higher-income residents often are able to comply more easily than low-income residents, whose jobs do not always allow them to work from home.
But public health experts agree that abiding by stay-at-home orders and advisories is critical to slowing the spread of the virus, or in “flattening the curve” of infection. Such measures are deemed so important that authorities have instructed police to break up large gatherings of people, and even begun arresting those who violate stay-at-home orders.
The methodology of the Google report can be found at the end of this document.
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