tl;dr: Bad.
* Cases, +1207% over 5wks, from 27 to 349/day (37.2 per 100k)
* Positivity, from 2.4% to a record-high 16.9%+
* Infection rate, 1.32-1.46
* Hospitalizations rising quickly, +72% in 1wk, +142% in 2wks
* Deaths are up too
1/
Perspective.
We are a week away from surpassing our peak from last summer. And that's *with* more than 400k ppl vaccinated.
This is a complete disaster. And the worst part is that it was completely preventable. We have vaccines.
2/
Also, deaths are rising pretty quickly, so much so that they will likely surpass last summer in the next week.
And, again, almost all of these deaths were preventable. Just 3wks ago, we were avg'ing 0.1 death per day. As close to zero as you can get. Now we're up to 2.1/day.
3/
Here we have monthly data for the pandemic.
The big thing here is to compare the data to last summer.
And also notice how sharply everything spiked. We went from the lowest numbers of the entire pandemic in June to some of the highest in July. August will be bad. Real bad.
4/
Here are daily cases over the past month.
Cases are up an astronomical 1486%.
We were avg'ing 22 new cases/day on June 30. Today, July 31, we're up to 349/day.
5/
Zooming out, we can see that the peak from last summer was slightly higher than where we're at now.
But we can also see that there are no signs things will slow down anytime soon. Next week will be worse than any point last summer.
The only question is how high will it go?
6/
According to CovidActNow, our infection rate is currently at 1.32, which for context is higher than any point last summer - and higher than any point over the winter.
And in the task force briefing on Thursday, they actually pegged the rate even higher, at a scary 1.46.
7/
To explain what that means - and this is how they explained it at the briefing - we're essentially seeing every 2 cases lead to an additional 3 new cases.
If you do the math, those 2 cases would become 10 new cases after two weeks.
8/
But we're not starting with 2 cases. Just today, there were 475 new cases reported. So let's play that out.
With an infection rate of 1.46, those 475 cases create another 645 new cases after 5 days. After 10 days, this grows to over 1,190. And over 2,200 after just 15 days.
9/
But that 2,200 additional cases are just the 475 new cases from today.
Yesterday, there were 465 new cases reported. And in 15 days, they'll also create 2,200 additional cases.
That's over 4,000 cases, 2wks out, created just from the new cases from the past 2 days.
10/
NOTE: The above is not a prediction. But it should be a warning. Because that's what will happen if we don't get the infection rate down.
Remember, the only way to stop the spread is to get the infection rate below 1.
11/
There are ways to get the infection rate down. In fact, the best way is to get people vaccinated.
And while we are seeing an increase in new ppl vax'd, it's not happening fast enough. In fact, slightly fewer (-1416) new ppl were vax'd in July than in June.
12/
Other ways to drive down the infection rate...
* keep distance
* wear masks
* increase ventilation
* improve air quality
* gather outdoors
* test, trace, & isolate cases/contacts
13/
But by far the best and easiest way to fight the virus, even delta, is vaccinations...
Our overall case rate has climbed to a very dangerous 37.2 per 100k.
But almost all cases are coming from those who are not vax'd & have never had covid. And when you look at just that group, the case rate 153 per 100k.
For context, 90 per 100k was our winter peak.
17/
By the way, we just set a new record-high for positivity rate, 5wks after setting a record-low.
The last full week of June, we were at 2.4%+, then we spiked to 16.9%+ this last week of July.
18/
That means we're missing a significant number of cases. In fact, with positivity rates that high, true case numbers are likely at least 3x higher.
And so the 350 avg daily cases we're seeing right now are really more like 1,050 new cases/day.
19/
And hospitalizations are skyrocketing.
After dropping to 52 on June 22, covid patients are up to 279 now and are on pace to exceed our peak from last summer in the next week.
20/
Deaths are rising as well and are on pace to exceed most of last summer next week. And there are no indications that we'll see fewer deaths anytime soon.
Remember, deaths lag about 3-4 wks behind cases. And cases are still climbing.
21/
I'm glad we're starting to see vaccine mandates.
We should have seen those sooner. And hopefully we'll see more in the coming weeks.
22/
I'm very worried about kids, by the way.
Those younger than 12 (e.g., my daughter) are not yet eligible for vaccines.
Just under 15% of those ages 12-15 are fully vax'd. And only 25% of those ages 16-20 are fully vax'd.
23/
We should be holding vaccine events at schools for registration days and back-to-school events. For kids and for their families.
Seriously, why aren't we doing this?
This is pretty simple. But we're not even doing the east stuff.
24/
And with $500M of critical deferred maintenance in our schools, they have poor air quality and HVAC systems that can't keep the heat out.
Kids are pretty good about masks, teens less so. But when it's so hot, it's hard to keep your mask on.
And masks off = covid spread.
25/25
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tl;dr: Hold On Tight!
* Cases, +671% over 4wks, from 27 to 206/day (22.0 per 100k)
* Positivity, from 2.4% to 12.8%+
* Infection rate, 1.34
* Hospitalizations & Deaths on the rise
1/
Just look at how daily cases have spiked over the past month. And notice that we've had 3 days straight over 200 cases.
For context, we've only had 1 day total over 200 since March. And the last time with 3 days straight over 200 was Feb6-8.
2/
We were avg'ing just 22 new cases/day on June 30. Today, July 24, we're up to 206/day.
tl;dr: Yikes!
* Cases, +51% over 1wk, +342% over 2wks, from 32 to 94 to 141/day
* Positivity, from 3.8% to 7.8% to 10.1%
* Infection rate, 1.46, highest since March 2020
* Hospitalizations, rising quickly
* Deaths, starting to rise
1/
Look at how sharply daily cases have spiked over the past two weeks, up to levels not seen since the first week of May.
We've now had 9 straight days with over 100 cases, well over 100 in fact.
tl;dr: We're In Trouble
* Cases, +193% over 1wk, to 94/day (10/100k)
* Positivity, more than doubled, from 3.8% to 7.8%
* Infection rate, 1.22, highest since June 2020
* Hospitalizations are on the rise
* Vax, record-lows
1/
Look at this huge spike: avg daily cases are up 193% in just 1wk!
Meanwhile, tests are -26% and are under 1k/day for the first time since April 2020.
2/
Look at how daily cases have spiked to levels we've not seen since May.
There were 155 new cases reported today, after 142 yesterday. The last time we even hit 100 was May 20. The last time we topped 155 was 159 on May 14.
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.
tl;dr
* The Good: Record-lows for infection rate, case rate, & positivity rate. Also, hospitalizations & deaths are down after a brief post-Easter spike. Could we be at herd immunity?
*The Bad: Vaccinations are nearly at record-lows.
1/
Monthly Overview
* Cases: 111/day in May, lowest in the past yr apart from the 106/day in March
* Positivity: 6.0%, lowest in the past yr except the 4.6% in March
* Deaths: 56, lowest in the past yr except 50 in Apr
* Vax: 1523/day, the lowest on record (Feb has fewer days)
2/
Case Rate
We're down to 4.8 per 100k ppl.
And we've been under 10 per 100k for 4wks now.
This is the first time we've had sustained success. Not just progress, but actual success over time.