Quick Covid data update. Cases heading higher, so too admissions. But the link between them is weaker than in previous waves.
In short, the coming months will be nerve-wracking.
Cases will get v v high. This will feel like a wave in that respect. But in other respects v different
Same data but on a log axis - now you can see that hospital admissions are now growing at almost the same rate as cases.
Roughly doubling every 11 days.
V unsettling. Especially given cases have further to rise. So what next?
Here’s a simple extrapolation of cases and hospitalisations (second chart is same data with log axes).
Extrapolate current growth rates and you’re talking abt 100k cases by late July.
Hospital admissions up to 1000 by 19 July, possibly touching 2000 by end July.
The question is where and when that growth rate runs out of steam. It has to at some point, but no-one really knows where. Was struck by how wide the uncertainty bands in today’s SPI-M models were. No-one knows! But presumably opening up will mean an acceleration in cases
Consider what happened when the Netherlands opened up nightclubs late last month. After that there was a MASSIVE increase in cases, to the extent that it had to reverse the reopening less than two weeks later. Will that happen in the UK too?
Quite hard to be sure. On one hand, Delta variant has already established itself in UK (whereas it’s only now getting a foothold in much of Europe). Plus UK has higher vaccination levels than most other countries. And school holidays will help too (less classroom transmission)
However, because UK has prioritised vaccinating older, more vulnerable people, upshot is Covid could spread more freely among younger age groups than in other countries where vaccinations were distributed more evenly among age groups. Eg: high case growth, slower hospitalisations
Every other time cases were rising like this govt response was to put foot on brake. Now it’s putting its foot on the accelerator.
& even if you assume lower hospitalisations, still big questions abt other consequences, eg Long Covid.
But (big but) something important has shifted
Even after u account for the usual lag, the link between cases & deaths seems to have weakened considerably.
Thank goodness.
There are many consequences of Covid that shouldn’t be taken lightly. But fact that far fewer people are dying is some welcome good news.
In coming weeks cases will mount further.
So will hospitalisations & deaths.
There will be lots of shouting (esp here on Twitter).
But this is a nuanced situation.
We at @skynews will try to help you navigate this.
Because we take data seriously skygroup.sky/skynews

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More from @EdConwaySky

7 Jul
Been a week and a bit since I did a COVID data update. Tbh the pattern is broadly the same as it was then: cases & hospitalisations growing. Both a bit faster than two weeks ago. But the link between them remains much weaker than in previous waves
Last time around we looked at the growth rate in cases and saw that if that continued it would mean 40k plus daily cases by “Freedom Day” July 19.
As you can see, that line is steeper. Points towards a higher level.
Current extrapolation suggests maybe 80/90k…
But hospitalisations are still broadly in line with that extrapolated line from a couple of weeks back. Ie heading up but less rapidly than cases. Where are they by 19 July? On basis of past fortnight’s daily growth rate, still 500-600. On basis of past week, 600-700.
Read 9 tweets
25 Jun
Few thoughts on UK COVID data.
There’s good news and bad news.
But the good news is that the good news outweighs the bad IMHO.
Let’s start with cases. They’re growing in the UK at a decent snap, albeit not as fast as winter. You can see this better in the log chart (2)
But the real question is not just about cases but whether they’re turning into deaths.
That was the case for most of the pandemic: look at how correlated these lines are.
But now look bottom right. Do they seem to be diverging? Looks like it (albeit still quite early days)
That brings me to the most encouraging bit of data out recently: the case fatality rate of the Delta/Indian variant vs Alpha/Kent and others.
Look! While 2% of those catching Alpha died, the CFR for Delta is only 0.3%. Massive improvement.
Read 17 tweets
15 Jun
What kind of impact will the Australia-UK trade deal have? Short answer is we don’t know, in part because we still have scant detail abt it, in part cos it generally takes a LONG time for these deals to be felt in our lives.
Even so, I think this is a big deal, for a few reasons:
The first thing to remember is the historical context. There are two lazy assumptions knocking around: 1. That the UK could never trade much with Aus given how far away it is and 2. Our trade with them really collapsed when we joined the EU and started imposing their tariffs…
Actually look at Australian trade as % of UK total, it’s clear it used to be REALLY high. Yes, this was partly because of war and partly because it was part of the sterling zone, thus locked into UK economy. But even in ‘50s/60s Aus accounted for 1 in 8 of all imports/exports
Read 18 tweets
14 Jun
There we have it. According to @borisjohnson the UK hasn’t passed the four tests laid out in Feb when the reopening timetable was announced.
A pretty clear pass on tests one and two (vaccines) and a pretty clear fail on test four (variants). Test three unclear.
Reopening delayed.
Here’s the q: what changed between the PM saying 12 days ago that he could see “nothing in the data” to change re-opening timetable and today?
Variant growth rate v similar.
Case growth rate v similar.
Not sure there’s any data we have now that we didn’t on June 2.
What changed?
The point of basing policy on DATA is that you actually follow the data.
Better still, you make it clear what levels of data will trigger what kind of action.
Why? That kind of transparency means people can use that data to plan their lives rather than hoping for leaks from No10
Read 6 tweets
6 Jun
"I don't recognise those figures".
This is odd given the figs @TrevorPTweets quoted to @MattHancock are govt's own figs from its NHS Test & Trace spreadsheets. They show it waited far longer to put India on the red list than Pakistan after its Covid positivity hit a certain level
Let me take you (& @matthancock) through it.
This may seem like water under the bridge but it MATTERS because:
1 we now have more of this Delta/Indian variant than almost any other country outside Asia
2 we still have little clarity on how govt decides on red/amber/green lists
It's worth saying at the outset that @MattHancock is absolutely right about one thing: when taking these decisions it's far better to focus on data collected through our testing system on incoming travellers than data you get from, for instance @OurWorldInData. So let's do that.
Read 12 tweets
5 Jun
Breaking: G7 has now agreed a deal on tackling corporate tax avoidance by the tech giants. "It's a proud moment" says Chancellor @RishiSunak. More on @skynews soon
Full details to come in a communique soon but my understanding of main points:
1: new tax rules for firms with 10pc profit margins. Above that, 20pc of profits to be reallocated based on a formula involving sales. Will affect abt 100 firms.
2: global minimum corp tax rate of 15%
While the deal is certainly less ambitious than many wanted (eg 15% not 21%, only 100 companies covered by new rules) there’s no disputing this is a big moment. Global biz tax rules date back a century to the League of Nations. This is the most meaningful step to reform them yet
Read 6 tweets

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