tl;dr
* Cases up 28% over 1wk to 50/day (5.3 per 100k), infection rate over 1.0, as the Delta variant spreads
* Positivity steady at 3.6%+
* Only 1 death, the lowest since March 2020
* Vaccinations up from last wk, even w/prior 2wks
1/
Here's the infection rate, which has risen from 0.76 at the end of May to 0.98 as of a week ago and are likely up to 1.09 now.
Remember, spread takes off once it passes the 1.0 bar. And we've seen big spikes each time 1.1 is surpassed. So this is definitely concerning.
2/
Cases are up to 50/day, up 28% from last week and 11% from the week before.
3/
The case rate is 5.3 per 100k, so it's still low, but that's a pretty sharp increase from the 4.2 per 100k last week.
4/
The case rate for non-vaccinated people, though, has spiked from 6.9 to 9.0 per 100k, a 30% increase.
5/
The positivity rate dropped from 3.6% a week ago down to 2.9% on Tuesday, then spiked up to 4.0% yesterday, before ending back at 3.6% today.
6/
What I worry about, though, is who's getting tested. My guess is that only those whose employers make them get tested are being tested. And my guess is that this group is weighted heavily toward the medical community, which has a higher vax rate.
7/
The point being that my guess is that we're missing a lot of cases.
Now, a good indication would be hospitalization data, but that's not been updated in over a week, so it's hard to say.
8/
We do, however, know that deaths remain low.
About a month after Easter, we saw deaths spike. But we've now been under 5/wk for 3wks, the lowest 3wks on record, including a record-low 1 death this week.
This is largely due to a high senior adult vax rate.
9/
Now, with vaccinations, the data reporting has been a little sketchy.
There was a huge vax data dump on Jun5 (Sat), then no vax data Jun6-7. No data were reported again on Jun12 (Sat). And then there was another data dump Jun16.
10/
I mention that bc it looks like vaccinations spiked this week, when the data suggest that last week's data were questionable.
As you can see, this week is in line with the previous 2wks.
11/
According to our official data, we finally surpassed 50% immunity (40% vax'd + 11% infected).
But we know the official count of infection is artificially low bc of testing.
12/
In reality, around 32% of the population has probably been infected. Add the 40% vax'd, then subtract the overlap, and we're near 70% immunity.
13/
Now, 70% would have been great for the original strain of the virus. We'd have herd immunity, and the virus would be crushed.
So why are we seeing cases spike?
14/
Cases are spiking, despite high levels of community immunity, bc the variants - particularly the new Delta variant - are more infectious.
We'll probably need to reach at least 80% immunity to crush the spread of Delta. And that's not happening anytime soon.
So I'm worried.
15/
It's worth observing that the variants have consistently arisen in hotspots (e.g., UK, India).
The point here is that we aren't safe until and unless everywhere is safe. There's no wall to protect us from infectious disease.
And so we have to help others.
16/
This is why the effort to share vaccines with the rest of the world.
At 95 doses per 100k ppl, with 53% of the pop vax'd, the US ranks near the top of the world.
But globally, only 20% of ppl are vax'd.
17/
So, while we struggle to get Memphians - & Americans in general - vaccinated, we have a higher vax rate than most of the world.
And if we don't help them for their own sakes, we should help them for our sakes. If we don't, more variants will arise. And they will come here.
18/
Remember, our children are still not vaccinated. And the covid hospitalization rate in England, where the Delta variant is already widespread, has risen in recent weeks.
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.
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.
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/
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/
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?