Today I return to covering the coronavirus in Tennessee after a much-needed vacation. This thread is will recap major outbreak trends over the past 10 days or so, just in case you need a refresher. (I did.) It's not pretty. 1/
After weeks of flattening, the coronavirus outbreak in Tennessee has begun to grow again. Since a low point on Oct. 3, active infections have risen 34% to about 18,000. This is bad. public.flourish.studio/visualisation/…
State officials insist active infections is not a great measurement for the virus. They prefer test positivity rate. Well, after weeks of decline, Tennessee's positivity rate has stopped falling and is ticking upwards.
The positivity rate in Nashville has remained low (about 3.5%) but these rates are surging in many rural counties. Some are reporting rates between 20% and 30%. You can check out your individual county here: tn.gov/health/cedep/n…
The number of Tennesseans actively hospitalized with the virus has risen about 15% since Oct. 3 – the biggest increase in weeks. This next part is a tricky but important: I normally measure hospitalizations by the average number of new admittances per day, but ...
that number remains relatively flat. If new admittances are flat but current hospitalizations is increasing… that means people are staying in the hospital longer. Unfortunately, this aligns with new, worrisome Vanderbilt research.
What about virus deaths? The reality is Tennessee’s outbreak decelerated a lot in August and September, deaths never really slowed to the same degree. More than two dozen Tennesseans still die every day. If the virus maintains its current trajectory, that number will likely rise.
The virus has continued to seep into our nursing homes too. As of Friday, the state detected 10,369 infections and 791 deaths in nursing homes and similar facilities. The state doesn't release a full list of the outbreaks, but I maintain a public database.
I’m especially concerned about Graceland Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Memphis, which reported 89 infections and 14 deaths in the span of just one week, according to state stats. That’s one of the worst weeks suffered by any facility in the state, ever.
Tennessee let nursing homes restart visitation on Oct. 1. Despite the efforts of staff, this introduced the virus into some facilities. As of Oct. 2, 56 facilities reported recent infections. On Oct. 9 – after one week of visitors, 149 facilities were reported recent infections.
That's it for now. Good to be back.
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Tennessee’s coronavirus stats went wonky today because both the Nashville and state governments separately changed how they present data. I know many of you attempt to follow this closely, so I’m going to try to explain it all. This is going to get weedy.
.@TNDeptofHealth made two major changes. First, they revised how they define “recovered” coronavirus patients, resulting in a big reduction in the count of active infections in every county. Second, they corrected about 1,700 cases that were listed in the wrong county. Whoopsie.
There is no one standard for what it means to be “recovered” from coronavirus. Previously, Tennessee classified you as recovered in one of two ways:
1. Infected people should have daily convos with contact tracers, who deem them recovered when symptoms are safely over.
In the past month, Tennessee has made incredible gains in the campaign against coronavirus. But we have so much to lose. This is a short thread about how it could all go wrong. tennessean.com/story/news/hea…
Today, I spent about an hour listening to health policy researchers at Vanderbilt University (@VUHealthPol). They’ve been quietly modeling the coronavirus in our state for a few weeks. I was anxious to see what they knew. There is a lot to unpack here. Here we go.
First, social distancing is working. In mid-March, an infected Tennessean was believed to spread the virus to 5 people. At that rate, the virus grows uncontrollably exponentially. Then we started the hard stuff. Staying home. Closing businesses. Missing our friends & families.
Yesterday, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (@GovBillLee) ordered Tennesseans to stay home, saying cell phone tracking data helped convince him to take stronger action to stop coronavirus. I dug into that data, wanting to understand what he saw. This is a thread. tennessean.com/story/news/hea…
First, it is important to know Lee did not want to do this. At every step of the virus outbreak, he has resisted ordering Tennesseans around. Lee, a small-government Republican, said he believed in advising, not mandating. But, as the outbreak grew, he had to change his tactics.
On Monday, Lee issued an executive order “strongly urging” Tennesseans to stay inside. Many people didn’t think this was enough. On Thursday, Lee changed his urging to a mandate. He said he was compelled by traffic and cell phone data showing too few people were moving too much.
The Tennessee government got 1,800+ public comments on its plan for a Medicaid block grant. I read them all so you don’t have to. This is a thread about health care, journalism and how a heap of public records dissolved my brain into soup. It will be more fun than it sounds. 1/
If you haven’t heard, @GovBillLee wants to convert TennCare to a block grant. The state would get more control over billions in federal money that funds insurance for poor families, kids and people with disabilities. It's complicated but important. 2/ tennessean.com/story/news/pol…
But lots of people are afraid the block grant will hurt, not help. They suspect state officials will use this new authority over TennCare to intentionally weaken or reduce coverage, cut costs and divert money elsewhere. 3/
For 4 years, Tennessee's state health agency investigated a nurse practitioner who dressed like a rock star and called himself a doctor. It found evidence he was doing bad things. Did it stop him from prescribing? From seeing patients? No. This is a thread. It’s gonna get weird.
For the last few months, @CStephenson731 and I have been researching "Rock Doc" Jeff Young. Our story publishes today in @Tennessean and @JSunNews. You need to be a subscriber to read it. Just in case you aren’t one yet, I’m going to tweet some highlights. tennessean.com/story/news/hea…
You may have heard of Jeff Young. The feds indicted him for drug trafficking in April. He’s accused of trading drugs for sex and notoriety for his “Rock Doc” brand. Prosecutors said he prescribed more than 1.4 M pills and 1500 fentanyl patches in just 3 years. (That’s a lot.)
For the past few months, I have been investigating Tennessee’s state Medicaid system, which most people know as TennCare. Today, the @Tennessean published this story, written by myself and @mreicher. It is a whopper. This is a thread. tennessean.com/story/news/inv…
We should start with this: TennCare is IMPORTANT. It insures about 1.4 million people, mostly low-income kids. TennCare is also our states’ most expensive program. It is easy to dismiss TennCare as too complex or too boring (and it is!) but it is our duty to care.
One of TennCare’s priorities is confirming it only insures people who are actually eligible. That is logical. You don’t want a program for the poor to benefit the rich. You don’t want a program for kids to benefit adults. But the devil is in the details.