Jens von Bergmann Profile picture
Mar 31, 2021 12 tweets 5 min read Read on X
New preprint with BC N501Y screening data is out! First time I have seen proper VOC data out in public. Data is old now, but let's take a look what we can learn about data up to week 9, so end of February. medrxiv.org/content/10.110…
Before we go there, the preprint also has this neat summary of the point-prevalence study that @PennyDaflos also wrote about. The data in the preprint is about the left branch, N501Y screening. Positive results are presumed to be VOC. In BC that will be B.1.1.7 in most cases.
There are also some (small) false positives. This shows 1% prevalence of VOC at the beginning of February. This is still news because our PHO has still not corrected this after repeatedly claiming prevalences was 0.1%, and did not correct this even when asked directly.
Our main interest in this preprint is the following table. It shows weekly N501Y screening data with proper dates and denominators. That's exactly what's needed to understand VOC growth. And how VOC and regular COVID have evolved.
Let's add this to our usual graph we have been using to guess at the BC VOC share using Ontario and Denmark as a guide. The trend derived from the data fits out guess trajectories pretty well, although it over-shoots a little. Data lags a lot, but what can you do?
Actually there is something we can do, there was a (public?) BCCDC presentation today where more recent data was presented. (And some older data got re-jigged a bit.) Let's make another curve with that newer data! That moves the curve down to the lower end of our estimates.
End result does not change much, the rise of VOC shares in BC follows the expected pattern. The virus apparently can't tell the difference between Ontario and BC after all. Let's check out the VOC cases derived from the (fitted) VOC share from above. OMG! Exponential Growth!
How exponential. Let's graph this on a log scale just to be sure. For good measure we should throw in points for the times when we had measures of the VOC shares and multiply that with that days case numbers. Yap, very exponential.
Let's look at all cases thus broken out into VOC and non-VOC. What's the story? Looks like the initial decline of regular covid slowed and turned (maybe) into a small increase in early February. And the explosive case growth we have seen? All due to VOCs!
The two grew at different rates. (Duh!) VOCs did not "replace" regular COVID, they added to it. If we had not failed to keep VOCs out, that red part would not have been replaced by the salmon colours regular COVID. It would not be there. At all.
Let's see how the official data in today's Situation Report is keeping up. It added data for week 11 and reports 861 extra VOC cases. At the same time N501Y screening found 1036 presumptive VOC in week 11. Sequencing is not keeping up, and it's just going to get worse.
I don't think the BCCDC presentation or the slides are publicly available (yet?). (And I haven't seen the whole thing either.) If others want the data I have seen, here is a link to the (limited) N501Y data I transcribed from the preprint and the talk. docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d…

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More from @vb_jens

Jan 19, 2023
Your regular reminder that Vancouver still has a long way to go to achieve their sewer separation goal. And because Vancouver likes to tack the costs onto new development, aka "growth pays for legacy costs", a lot of RS is still not separated. map of combined and separated sewer infrastructure in the ci
Which makes the staff argument to limit the missing middle initiative to 1FSR because of sewer capacity all the more curious. Those sewers will have to be upgraded either way.
The city has a plan how to go about separating the sewers, neighbourhood by neighbourhood. We could simply follow along and bump up the density to 1.2 or 1.5 FSR so we can have more six-plexes or simply larger units. City sewer separation plan.  Where we have separated the sew
Read 4 tweets
Jan 16, 2023
This is wild. Canadian cities tend to be better, but sometimes still have exclusionary enclaves cut out, e.g. Montréal.
But “give me all census tracts in this city” is common request in Canada too. And this request is more complex than many realize. Montreal city boundary
In Canada census tracts don’t necessarily respect municipal boundaries. The {cancensus} 📦 still allows such requests, if a census tract passes through multiple cities it gets assigned based on which city has the highest share of population in the tract. mountainmath.github.io/cancensus/
While this makes for intuitive data requests, it can sometimes lead to unexpected behaviour. Dissemination Areas respect municipal boundaries, it’s safer to request data at that geography.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 26, 2022
Data from today's census release is now imported into #CensusMapper and available for mapping as well as for download via the API or the {cancensus} package. Threading some quick maps. First up, ethnic diversity index. censusmapper.ca/maps/3601
Next, religion. Or better "No religion". This concept is only asked every other census. The share of Canadians saying they have no religion increased from 24% in 2011 to 34.6% of respondents in 2021. censusmapper.ca/maps/3602?b=1
And here is a breakdown by (very) broad religion, separating out no-religion, christian, and other. censusmapper.ca/maps/3603
Read 5 tweets
Aug 8, 2022
Demand at what price though? What's the purpose of zoning and when is it "overly restrictive"? Those are political questions. Let me count the ways, and give some examples for Vancouver.
First a comment about this being political. When do we know if we have enough housing? That depends on your perspective, as @LausterNa and I have outlined in an Appendix to the BC Expert Panel Report on Housing. engage.gov.bc.ca/app/uploads/si…
Above the question was about zoning being "overly restrictive". One way to think of this is if zoning only curbs the occasional outlier, it's probably not "overly restrictive". But if everyone builds to the maximum allowed it's an indication that zoning is binding.
Read 17 tweets
Oct 14, 2021
With stats on inheritance (and downpayment assistance) making the rounds it's a good idea to check what the 2019 SFS has to say on this. It's looking at economic family units, so families and unattached individuals. Here is what share of family units have received an inheritance.
How much are they inheriting on average? It ranges from a little under $100k for younger age groups to around $150k for older ones. (In 2016 dollars.) Quite a bit of variation in the data, resulting in sizeable uncertainties.
Looking at provinces there is some variation in share of the family units who received an inheritance. Some of that is likely due to differences in age distribution, but data is really not thick enough to cross by both age and province.
Read 7 tweets
Aug 12, 2021
Haven't posted the BC COVID graph for a while. Today's count was high at 530 plus 6 back-dated case. Adjusting for the weekly pattern drops it to 499, a bit above expectation with trend line at 488.
In case it needs to be said explicitly, we are in a sustained exponential growth scenario with faster growth than we have seen at any other point in this pandemic in BC as can easily be read off this log plot.
Interior is driving the case numbers, which is why we now had two rounds of restrictions that focus on (parts of) the Interior Health Authority. But by now we should have learned to base decisions not just on case levels but also on growth rates.
Read 7 tweets

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