tl;dr
* Case Rate: 11.6 per 100k, flat
* Postivity Rate: 4.9%, down
* Hospitalizations: ~140, flat
* Deaths: 11 this wk, down
* Vax: 32k new ppl vax'd, 266k total (28%)
* Vax: 29k new ppl fully vax'd, 150k total
1/
Case Rate
The Goal: < 10 daily cases per 100,000 ppl
The Data: 11.6 per 100k, holding steady
Right now, the variants & the vax are at a standstill.
2/
But the susceptible population is shrinking rapidly, as tens of thousands of people are vaccinated each week.
And the case rate of non-vax'd people is now up to 18.8 per 100k.
If you are not vax'd, please go get vax'd as soon as possible.
3/
Test Positivity Rate
Goal: < 5%
Data: 4.9%
This is promising. After rising from 4.1% to 5.3% over the past 3wks, it's good to see a drop here.
4/
Cases Vs Tests
1wk, -2% vs +9%
2wks, +4% vs +0%
4wks, +2% vs -11%
6wks, -28% vs +4%
As the more contagious variants spread, testing will be important to keep an eye on. Contact tracing, too, but we don't have the data for that.
5/
Covid Hospitalizations
As you can see, we're holding steady here. It's somewhat concerning that we're no longer dropping, but we're not rising either. We'll need to continue to keep an eye on this too.
6/
Covid Deaths
There were 11 reported this week. It's pretty incredible how dramatically deaths dropped once vaccinations started.
We had 7wks straight with 65+ deaths per week. But over the past 5wks, we've only had 62 deaths total.
7/
Vaccinations
Over 266k people have been vaccinated locally, with 150k fully vax'd.
This is exciting, but for context only 27% of people are vaccinated. That's not even halfway to our 70% goal.
So, while we're making good progress, we've still got quite a ways to go.
8/
Over 32k new people were vaccinated this week, down over 5k from last wk, but still higher than any other previous wk. Hopefully, this drop is related to the Easter holiday.
Meanwhile, 29k new ppl became fully vax'd, even with last wk.
9/
There's some evidence here that the Easter weekend did impact vaccinations.
We want to see this graph rising, so it will be important to see what happens over the next few wks.
The concern is twofold: On the one hand, access to vaccination. On the other, vaccine hesitancy.
10/
We see the same Easter Effect here for new people fully vaccinated, so I think we have sufficient evidence to support that theory.
This data should rise slightly over the next few wks, as 2nd doses for Pfizer & Moderna roll in, and as the J&J single-dose ramps up.
11/
We've heard a lot of talk about "herd immunity."
Estimates are that roughly 70% of the population needs immunity, either thru infection or vaccination, to essentially stop transmission.
We're at 28% vax'd & 10% infected (minus those who've been both).
About halfway there.
12/
However, @youyanggu estimates that local infections are 3x higher than reported (bc of lack of testing).
If so, then we're at 28% vax'd + 32% infected (minus those who've been both).
That's over half the population, which means we're getting close.
13/
Using the official data, at our current vaccination pace, we would reach "herd immunity" in June.
But...
14/
Using estimated infections, at our current rate of vaccination, we would reach "herd immunity" within the next month.
The question is whether we can continue this rate. Supply is no longer the issue. Now we need to work on demand.
15/
Any chance at reaching "herd immunity," though, will involve vaccinating kids and youth since 25% of the local population is under 18 yrs of age.
Youth aged 16+ can already get the vaccine. I would encourage parents & teens to go get it.
And 12+ is coming soon.
16/
The pandemic is not over, but we can see the light at the end of the tunnel.
This summer is going to be great...if we can get enough people vaccinated.
17/
In the meantime, we know what to do...
Mask.
Distance.
Outdoors.
And spread the gospel of covid vaccination.
This isn't hard. We just have to want it.
18/18
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tl;dr
* It's a race: Vax's Vs Variants
* Cases are up slightly this wk
* Positivity is up as well
* Hospitalizations are also up
* Deaths are up too
* Fortunately, vax's are up (though mainly 2nd dose)
1/
Case Rate
The Goal: < 10 daily cases per 100,000 ppl
The Data: 11.1 per 100k
We got down to 10.8 per 100k last wk, then cases ticked up slightly.
This is cause for concern, not alarm. We're holding at a relatively low case rate. But we need to get under 10 per 100k.
2/
Test Positivity Rate
Goal: < 5%
Data: 4.8%
We got down to 4.1% two wks ago, but have ticked upward since.
Again, cause for concern, not alarm. We're still at a low rate, lower than any wk before the last two. But we need to reverse this trend and keep it under 5%.
tl;dr
* We're 6wks from "normality"
* Case Rate: 10.8 per 100k
* Positivity Rate: 4.4%
* Active Cases: less than 1k
* Deaths: only 8 reported this wk
* Vaccinations: slowing down slightly, but should jump next wk
1/
I took the week off for Spring Break, so I'm just now catching up. Apologies if there's been some reporting that I've missed.
2/
Last year, we were set to go visit my parents and grandma on Mar14. But on Mar12, covid became real when schools closed early, so we decided to stay home.
And so, when we all got vaccinated, I wasted no time and went to visit my family ASAP.
tl;dr
* it. just. keeps. getting. worse.
* 844 new cases/day
* 5907 new cases this wk (previous high last wk, 3764)
* +57% over 1wk, +642% over 11wks
* 73 deaths this wk (previous high, 52)
* stay-at-home orders coming monday (maybe?)
1/
Let's actually start with the national picture.
We're avg'ing 2561 covid deaths per day.
That's 1 death every 16.9 seconds.
Let that sink in.
Count off 17 seconds.
That's not long.
That's how often a covid death happens.
And it's getting worse.
2/
"For the next 60 to 90 days, we’re going to have more deaths per day than we had on 9/11 or Pearl Harbor," said CDC Director Robert Redfield.
2605 Americans died on 9/11.
That's 156,300 over 60 days.
234,450 over 90 days.
There have been 312,636 total covid deaths this yr.
tl;dr
* we're up to 815 new cases/day, with 13.1%+
* and the growth rate is increasing
* we're on pace to avg 1,000 cases/day by xmas
* cases are +438% over 10wks, tests up +109%
* it's time to hibernate for the winter
1/
Cases vs Tests
1wk, +69% vs +76%
2wks, +72% vs +39%
4wks, +94% vs +48%
8wks, +261% vs 105%
10wks, +438% vs +109%
Positivity Rate
5.4%, wk of Oct1
13.5%, wk of Dec3
12.5%, wk of Dec10
Deaths
from 46 down to 11 in Oct
then up to 44 & 40 in Dec
2/
Case Rate
- summer peak: 45.3 daily cases per 100k
- today: 87.0 per 100k
In other words, we are nearly double the cases per capita from the worst of the summer.
tl;dr
* 538 cases/day this wk (record high)
* cases +102% over 6wks, +244% over 8wks
* tests +41%, +82%
* this was the worst wk yet
* last wk was 2nd worst
* next wk will be even worse
* but you can save lives
1/
Here are avg daily cases per wk, for every wk of the local pandemic since we reopened in May.
The past 5wks represent the #1, #2, #4, #5, & #6 highest wks yet.
Not only are we in the worst of it, but we've been in the worst of it for a month now.
And it's getting worse.
2/
But the past month is even worse than we knew.
We started experiencing significant reporting delays beginning Nov1.
Since then, avg daily cases reported have been 53 cases (13%) below actual cases once the testing gets processed and assigned to the date of the test.
tl;dr
* it's bad, y'all, and getting worse
* but they say it's darkest before the sun rises
* and we have a once in a lifetime opportunity to save literally thousands of lives, just here in Memphis
* read for details
1/
Let's start w/new cases by test date. There's a built-in lag here, so it only goes through Nov30.
But as you can see, the 4 days with the highest number of new cases were the past 4 Mondays, at 577, 610, 651, & 657. (And bc of reporting delays, that number is still rising.)
2/
Here are cases by report date.
We've avg'd over 435 cases/day for 8 days now. That's the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 9th, & 10th highest avg's on record. All in Dec.
The 7th, 8th, 11th, 13th, 14th, & 15th highest were all in Nov.