Kit Yates Profile picture
Apr 2, 2021 8 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Despite the good news in cases over all (see thread below), looking at the data unsegregated by age masks what is happening for different age groups.

We are almost seeing two different epidemic trajectories by age across the UK.

A short🧵
Case rates for ages 20-59 and over 60s remain stable or have reduced slights in most regions.
But case per 100K per week for the under 20s have risen week on week in most regions (with the exception of the North East).
However, the trends in under 20s in the last few days have looked flatter or even down slightly in most regions.
Aggregated across the country there have been clear rises in the under 20 cohort since schools (slightly before) reopened although that seems to be starting to flatten off. These rises do not yet seem to have bled through into the older age groups when viewed at this coarse level
The biggest rises seem to have been in the 10-14 and 15-19 age ranges (largely corresponding to secondary school students) while 5-9s (most of primary aged- children) saw increases initially which have now levelled off and started to fall.
Lateral flow testing has been level or fallen for the last couple of weeks so it seems unlikely that recent rises are a result of increased testing.
Testing changes may explain some of the rises seen before schools went back as testing ramped up and some of the recent falls too.
As always, it's going to be important to keep an eye on what happens in different age cohorts.

We might expect to see falls in cases in younger age groups as the effect of the Easter break kicks in.

Thanks to Bob Hawkins with his help preparing the data.

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More from @Kit_Yates_Maths

Jun 25
As the UK’s general election campaign enters its final few weeks, we’ve already seen numerous examples of dodgy declarations, substandard stats and graph gaffs.

So I thought I'd write about the importance of numeracy to the functioning of democracy.
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We can expect to see more questionable claims in the run up to polling day.
The factor that all these all these missteps have in common is that they involve the manipulation or misrepresentation of numerical quantities.
One of the most hotly disputed figures of the campaign so far has been the Conservatives’ claim that Labour’s policies will, as Rishi Sunak put it, “amount to a £2,000 tax rise for everyone”. Labour have rebuffed this figure, arguing that...
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Jun 13
Politicians will get away with the things we forget, so here is a list of things to remember about the government's record on covid:
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...
3. They were too late taking action in spring 2020.
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5. They waited until they had no other choice in winter of 2020/2021.
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9. The promised a protective ring around care homes and instead sent infected patients to them from hospitals.
There are many more, these are just the most egregious.
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A water company released sewage into the stream that runs into the beach where we were holidaying. I didn’t like the idea of swimming in the sea after that, so I tried to sue to water company for spoiling our holiday. This is what happened…
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First up, cards on the table, I am a keen outdoor swimmer. I swim with a group of friends most weeks in our local stretch of the Thames. Come rain or shine, winter or summer, there are usually at least two of our number bracing the river waters north of Oxford.
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We do so cautiously, however, especially in winter when it has been raining heavily and it is almost guaranteed that sewage will have been pumped into the river a few miles upstream.
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Mar 14
It's π-day (3/14 in US date format) - the international day of mathematics.
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Well, here is the answer...
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3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510...
The number of digits after the decimal place in pi extend off into the distance (these are the first 50).
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With 11 digits of π we can calculate the circumference of the Earth from its radius with an error of just a mm.
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Feb 29
It's leap day - February 29th.

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Dec 21, 2023
Main points from the ONS/UKHSA Winter Infection survey.
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1/8
gov.uk/government/sta…
In England and Scotland, the estimated prevalence on 13 December was 4.2% (95% Credible intervals (CrI): 3.3%, 5.4%), equivalent to around 2,549,000 individuals (95% CrI: 1,996,000 to 3,236,000) being infected or around 1 in 24 people (95% CrI: 1 in 30 to 1 in 19).
2/8 Image
In England, the estimated prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 on 13 December was 4.3% (95% CrI: 3.3%, 5.4%), equivalent to 2,333,000 individuals (95% CrI: 1,825,000 to 2,953,000) being infected with SARS-CoV-2. This corresponds to around 1 in 24 people (95% CrI: 1 in 30 to 1 in 19).
3/8 Image
Read 8 tweets

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