The Global SARS-CoV-2 Surveillance Project provides not only daily surveillance rates for ~217 countries but also signals which countries have alarming growth and are at risk for an outbreak without corrective action by public health leaders. By clicking on the map below, the end-user has a vista of countries that turn blue as they report the index SARS-CoV-2 cases identified within a given country. The countries remain blue when the number of cases is stable and not escalating. Orange signals where outbreaks are likely to occur if the pandemic continues unabated. Orange is the square root of the speed of the pandemic per 100,000 population X the acceleration of the speed. Orange signals alarming growth in daily cases that have not yet reached an official outbreak. Orange will shift into red when explosive growth breaches the threshold of an outbreak, as measured by 10 new daily cases of SARS-CoV-2 per 100,000 population. Orange countries that act quickly and implement policies to reverse the course of the pandemic do not turn red when successful. For example, you will note that early in the pandemic, America is blue because cases of SARS-CoV-2 were identified. Blue soon shifts to orange because America experienced increases in daily speed of new cases concomitant with increases in the acceleration of speed. The USA implemented a quarantine, social distancing, and other policies to prevent the spread of the pandemic after the first spike in cases in Spring of 2020. Even though the USA nearly surpassed the threshold of an outbreak, at 10 cases per 100,000 population, the policies reversed the spike in cases after reaching 9.9 cases per 100,000 population, demonstrating that health policy in fact is effective at controlling the pandemic. The quarantine, masking, social distancing, hand hygiene and masking effectively reversed the course of the outbreak. Unfortunately, when policies were relaxed, we observe America change from orange to red when it developed into an outbreak. We see multiple waves of SARS-CoV-2 sweep through the globe driven by migration, relaxing policies, holiday gatherings, a dearth of vaccinations, and the novel Delta variant, which is more contagious than prior variants, driving outbreaks up again.