james aycock is hopeful Profile picture
Apr 24, 2021 24 tweets 9 min read Read on X
Memphis/Shelby County
Covid Wk-In-Review

tl;dr: I'm Concerned
* Vax: 13k new ppl (-45%)
* Vax: 300k total (32% of pop)
* Case Rate: 15.0 per 100k (-19%)
* Positivity Rate: 6.5%+ (down from 6.5%)
* Hospitalizations: ~150 (up slightly)
* Deaths: 14 this wk (up slightly)

1/
Fortunately, cases fell this week, but we need cases to fall much more - and much more rapidly. As you can see, the curve is still bent upwards.

We've proven, multiple times, that we can flatten the curve. Let's do it again before things get out of control.

2/
Case Rate

The Goal: < 10 daily cases per 100,000 ppl
The Data: 15.0 per 100k & falling

It's a race of the vaccines vs the variants. It's been back-and-forth now for a few weeks, but fortunately the variants stumbled this week.

3/
The susceptible population is shrinking, as thousands of people are vaccinated each week.

And the case rate of non-vax'd people, while still very high, fell to 28.0 per 100k.

If you are not vax'd, please go get vax'd as soon as possible.

4/
Test Positivity Rate

Goal: < 5%
Data: 6.5%

Fortunately, we dropped from 7.3% last week. But this is still the highest positivity rate we've seen in 2 months.

We're not testing enough. We're missing cases, which means more spread.

5/
Cases Vs Tests

1wk, -19% vs -3%
2wks, +30% vs -2%
4wks, +35% vs -2%
6wks, +32% vs -12%

Cases fell this week, but at 141 new cases per day, we're at a level higher than anytime in the past 2 months.

And we're not testing enough, which means we can't trace + isolate.

6/
Covid Hospitalizations

As you can see, we're mostly holding steady here. We're up slightly, but the rise is so slight that you have to look hard to see it. This is likely bc cases are spreading in younger populations. But this is definitely something to keep an eye on.

7/
Covid Deaths

There were 14 reported this week, up from 11 last wk.

It's pretty incredible how dramatically deaths dropped once vaccinations started. This is likely due to high vax rates in elderly populations. But it's definitely a high point to celebrate.

Vaccines work!

8/
Vaccinations

Over 300k people have been vaccinated locally, with nearly 200k fully vax'd.

But only 32% of people are vaccinated, which is not even halfway to our 70% goal.

And the vax rate has slowed. A lot. This is a big problem.

9/
Only 13k new ppl were vaccinated this wk, down from 23k last wk, 32k the previous wk & 37k the wk before.

In fact, it's the lowest new vax levels on record, except for the snow wk.

This is a huge problem. The pandemic will never end unless we reverse this trend.

10/
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 32% vax'd & 10% infected (minus those who've been both).

Halfway there.

11/
However, @youyanggu estimates that local infections are 3x higher than reported (bc of lack of testing).

If so, then we're at 32% vax'd + 33% infected (minus those who've been both).

And if so, it means we're getting pretty close.

12/
I don't think anyone knows how many people were infected & then later were vax'd, so it's hard to say exactly where we stand.

But it's a problem that our vax rate is slowing down.

Mass vax sites were good when demand was high, but now we have to go out & create demand.

13/
Yesterday, @TennesseeStand did just that with a vaccination outreach canvassing event in Raleigh.

Today, ShotRx901 is canvassing Hickory Hill for a pop-up vax event at Limit Breaker Church.

They'll be doing the same in Hyde Park for an event at Promise Academy next wk.

14/
And then ShotRx901 will be canvassing Binghampton for a pop-up vax event at First Baptist (Poplar & E Pkwy) the following week.

There may be some anti-vaxxers out there, but most just need a personal connection. We have to go to them. We can't expect them to just show up.

15/
What we're seeing is that one-size-fits-all public health doesn't work.

Mass vax events are great, but as we've seen, that only works for about 1/3 of people.

The other 2/3 need something else. And the only way to figure that out is to go talk to them.

16/
I've been talking to my students and their families. Most don't even know that vaccines are available to anyone now.

None are anti-vax, but they are all just very hesitant. Even those who have lost loved ones to covid, those with health conditions, those staying home.

17/
In short, these are people who understand the threat covid poses very well...and yet they are still very hesitant to get vaccinated.

The only thing overcoming that hesitancy is talking to people they know & trust.

It's a relationship thing.

18/
Unfortunately, most of our leaders have not built relationships outside the Poplar Corridor.

(Shout-out to my reps, @tamisawyer & @MEasterThomas, who are exceptions here!)

And so the infrastructure for this doesn't exist. But let's build it now.

19/
That kind of infrastructure would create jobs, build trust, and establish networks of communication.

And, once built, this human infrastructure could be used in the future for any number of things, public health and beyond.

20/
Our vax rate has falling from over 5k newly vax'd per day to under 2k per day.

It should be obvious that our current strategy is no longer working. It worked...until it didn't.

But you never put all your eggs in one basket. So it's time to try some new strategies.

21/
It's easy to say that everyone has had an opportunity to be vaccinated, that those not yet vax'd just don't want to be vax'd, and that their choice means that we can move on w/o worrying about them.

But that's just not a fair assessment.

Not yet at least.

22/
Once we make some good-faith efforts to get out into communities and talk to people, if they still refuse, then you can say that they've made their choice.

But you can't say that now.

23/
Soon, hopefully, we can relax.

In the meantime, we know what to do...
Mask.
Distance.
Outdoors.

And spread the gospel of covid vaccination.

24/24

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More from @firstresponses

May 29, 2022
Memphis/Shelby County
Covid Wk-In-Review

tl;dr
* we're up to 334 cases per day
* this is way higher than this same time the past two years (4x & 3.5x higher)
* this summer is going to be BAD, y'all

1/
Cases
+25% over 1wk
+62%, 2wks
+431%, 4wks
+1052%, 6wks

Tests
+7%, 1wk, but since cases grew more, the positivity rate continues to increase (up to 11.5%)...
...but also, tests are -6% over 6wks

2/
So far, deaths remain "low."

But they're increasing...from 1 to 5 to 10 over the past month.

3/
Read 4 tweets
May 21, 2022
Memphis/Shelby County
Covid Wk-In-Review

tl;dr
--> 268 new cases/day (+30% over 1wk, +137% 2wks, +544% 4wks, and +1310% 8wks)
--> 10.1% positivity rate (was 9.3% last wk, 4wks ago it was 2.7%, and 6wks ago it was 1.0%)

1/
If we keep growing at 30% per wk,
which is not a stretch
(the last 4wks have been +51%, +80, +83, +30),
we'll be over 500 cases per day in 3wks
& up to 1,000 cases per day just 2wks later.

2/
If cases continue to grow 30% per wk,
we'll set new records by mid-July.

This summer will be bad,
maybe even worse than this.

There is no will
to do anything
to slow
the spread.

3/
Read 5 tweets
May 21, 2022
I missed the game last night, but I was curious how GSW came back in the 3rd, so I'm watching it now.

A few things I've noticed...

1) DAL stopped attacking. Maybe bc they shot so well in the 1st half?
2) That said, DAL has had a lot of open looks, at least in the first half of Q3, but just couldn't make anything.

3) And then they changed their strategy. They were successful going after Steph. And they got him in foul trouble. Then they just stopped.
4) The refs seemed super hesitant to give Draymond his second tech. He should have got it on at least three separate occasions.

5) That said, GSW didn't make their run until Draymond got his 5th foul and had to sit. Looney replacing Green was the key.
Read 4 tweets
May 1, 2022
Memphis/Shelby County
Covid Wk-In-Review

tl;dr
* 63 new cases/day
--> +51% over 1wk, +117% 2wks, +177% 6wks
* 5.8% positivity rate
--> up from 2.7% last wk, 1.1% the wk before (mainly bc testing is -30% over 1wk, -65% 2wks)

1/ Image
I've not put out a covid report
since Mar19.

I've been super busy -
the first two wks,
I was out of town
chaperoning
scout & youth trips,
then there was
Holy Week
& Easter.

But, also,
the past 6wks
have been
the safest
of the entire pandemic.

2/
And it's just been nice
to not worry
about covid.

But cases are
rising
quickly,
plus testing is
way
down,
which means
we're catching fewer cases,
which in turn means
those people are more likely to infect others.

3/
Read 6 tweets
Feb 5, 2022
Memphis/Shelby County
Covid Wk-In-Review

tl;dr: better but still not good
* 706 new cases/day
* 257 pediatric cases/day
* 13.5% positivity rate
* 67 deaths

1/
Since we just started a new month, let's begin by stepping back to look at monthly data.

As you can see, with nearly 55,000cases, January more than doubled the previous high of 20,000 back in August.

Likewise, the positivity rate of 31% topped the 21% from August.

2/
Pediatric cases weren't being tracked - or at least weren't shared publicly - until the last wk of August.

But the total number of pediatric cases from September thru December - 122 days - was just 11,000.

And then January saw more than 15,000 pediatric cases in 31 days.

3/
Read 20 tweets
Jan 8, 2022
Memphis/Shelby County
Covid Wk-In-Review

tl;dr
* case rate, 255 per 100k
* 2,396 new cases/day (26,328 active cases)
* 475 pediatric cases/day (5,098 active)
* 41.7% positivity rate
* hospitalizations, nearly doubled
* but deaths are staying low, at least for now

1/
Let's start with case rate.

I had to adjust the limits of the vertical axis - again - bc cases have continued to explode.

Before this wave, the previous high was right at 90 avg daily cases per 100,000 people.

Last wk: 181 per 100k.

Now: 255 per 100k.

2/
Remember back when Harvard's Global Health Institute said that stay-at-home orders were necessary to control the spread once we reached 25 per 100k?

And now we're 10x that, at 255 per 100k.

3/
Read 15 tweets

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