Let me give you a brief summary of all pieces of #COVID19 data I'm looking forward to seeing today, and what they could tell us.
It will also double as a little window into my daily struggles in compiling charts for all you fine folks.
At some point this late morning or early afternoon, the BCCDC situation report will be released.
We don't know when, so it's a game of refreshing things.
From that, we'll be able to figure out hospitalization and positivity rates by age, both of which will be interesting.
Next, sometime between 3 and 4:30pm, we'll get The Daily Numbers.
You all know what's included there, and the wonderful game we play in learning when the information comes out.
After that, the BCCDC dashboard will be updated — this happens fairly consistently between 4 and 4:30pm.
The new information we get from there includes the ages of new cases, and active cases/hospitalizations by health regions, both of which are key for tracking this surge.
And finally! Because it's Wednesday, at some point, probably in the evening, we will get the weekly number of cases for all 89 local health regions across the province.
This is a static map — again playing the refresh game — and Prince Rupert's numbers will be worth watching.
Four different documents, at different times of the day, with different information, only one of which has data provided in a way that allows for automation, each shining a light on different aspects of the pandemic.
or as i call it, wednesday
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Let's do a thread, with a couple of new charts, looking at where B.C. is at in the pandemic, and what we can say is very concerning, decently concerning, and not too concerning.
one might wonder who this will help at this point, but i follow the advice of the teens
What's very concerning?
Overall transmission.
It continues to go up, and the rolling average/active case trendline is not slowing down one bit right now.
Until it does, there's lots of worry of this getting out of control, in a way B.C. has avoided to this point.
Here are the daily numbers from B.C. to Quebec today, adjusted if they all had B.C.'s population:
997 new cases of #COVID19 announced in B.C. today — but for the first time in three weeks, the rolling average has gone down.
However, active cases still up, people in critical care at a record 105, and two new deaths.
Today's chart.
After a slow long weekend, B.C. is back to its previous pace on vaccinations, with 34,040 done yesterday, as we reach the 20% mark of eligible people getting at least one shot.
The daily number can go up by a little bit with current supply, but not by too much.
The numbers today are somewhat encouraging, within the the context of the last three weeks of #OperationDontBlowThis
But a rise in hospitalizations is inevitable for a bit because of the lag from cases.
The Canucks are a good example on how an intense focus on variants instead of the broader picture of a virus that has killed millions of people can make things more confusing for the general public
A group of 20 incredibly fit young people were quickly infected by a virus that has put them out of commission, in a province where transmission is quickly on the rise!
That's a straightforward story that's easy to understand and communicate to the public.
But a lot of that got obscured, partly because the Canucks weren't particularly transparent (leading to anecdotal and sometimes clashing reports by journalists), and partly because of the intense interest right now in some quarters to talk about the P1 variant.
This was a question from @CBCtanya that the two of us put together, we told the government we would be asking about it, and it is disappointing for Dr. Henry to say things in response that are not true.
we got through the last week without any official in british columbia saying "the easter bunny's travel is essential and they have been vaccinated" and let's get our wins where we can right now
honestly feel bad for people who are incredibly angry, can't handle reporters having personalities, and have missed my reporting for months and months
Lot of valid frustration out there, 14 months of COVID fatigue makes everyone on edge, third wave full of new questions, journalists can be a proxy for anger towards politicians.
We all need to find healthy ways to get through the next couple months.