tl;dr: Good News
* Cases continue to drop, down to 340/day
* Positivity rate, down to 9.3%
* Hospitalizations continue to drop
* Deaths, way up to 76
* Vax's remain low
1/
Here are avg daily cases by report date and test date. And what this says to me is that we finally caught up with the backlog (notice that the big discrepancy b/t the two a few wks back is gone). As a result, reported cases are now back to being accurate.
2/
In mid-Aug, cases were artificially low bc of the backlog. Then, as they caught up with the backlog, cases were artificially high.
But there's reason to believe that the 340 cases/day this week is accurate. It's the lowest since the wk of July 18.
3/
Our case rate is down to 36.3 per 100k.
4/
But the truth is that most cases are coming from the shrinking group of people who are not vax'd and who have never had covid.
Since 52% have been vax'd & an estimated 45% have had covid, when you subtract the overlap, at least 85% of people have some type of immunity.
5/
And so the case rate of that "susceptible" population (those with no immunity) is over 900 per 100k.
6/
Testing is up.
But the dip we saw a couple weeks ago makes me wonder if they are still processing the backlog. Maybe they prioritized tests more likely to be positive and are now getting to those more likely to be negative. I don't know, it just looks off.
7/
With testing up and cases down, the positivity rate has fallen dramatically to 9.3%.
This is the first time we've been under 10% since the wk of July 4.
8/
Covid hospitalizations continue to decline, which is great news.
But there are still an extremely high number of covid patients, so much so that "elective" surgeries are still limited.
9/
After a couple weeks with declining covid deaths, we saw a spike this week.
But it's important to remember that these deaths are likely the result of cases from at least a month ago. There's a lag between infection, hospitalization, and death.
10/
We're now avg'ing 104 pediatric covid cases/day, down from 199 a wk ago & 265 two wks ago.
Part of that is related to the backlog. Also, we don't know how many kids are being tested, so we don't know the pediatric positivity rate. So it's hard to know what the data mean.
11/
SCS student cases are down as well.
This is great news, but I still wonder how many tests and what the positivity rate is.
I also wonder what the data look like by school. As a parent, district-level data don't help me make informed decisions about my kids.
12/
Just like last Fall, cases are dropping.
But they are dropping from much higher levels that lasted about a month longer.
And that makes me worried about the Winter.
The good news is that we have a lot of immunity in our community. But how long does it last?
13/
That's all for this week.
Let's enjoy this wonderful weather and get outside while we can. We know outdoors is nearly 20 times less risky. I think this is a big reason cases drop in the Fall. (And why cases rise when the hot/cold weather push us indoors.)
14/14
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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.
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.