I wish I had good news for you, Minnesota, but #COVID19 cases are growing rapidly — at basically the pace we saw this time last year.
Positivity rate is also rising, perhaps slightly less dramatically, but still at an aggressive pace. We’re now over 9%.
Hospitalizations are also surging upward, for you “cases don’t matter” people. (They do matter, because there’s clearly still a tight statistical relationship between cases and more serious metrics like hospitalizations and deaths.)
Hospitalizations are rising everywhere, but especially rapidly in metro-area hospitals.
Cases are rising everywhere in Minnesota. Overall case levels remain lowest in the most heavily vaccinated parts of the state.
#COVID19 deaths are also at their highest levels all year. Still far below the Fall 2020 peak — but we’re not that far off where we were at this time last year.
Minnesota’s death rate is below last year’s peak, but under the hood things are different. Last year’s #COVID19 death rates were driven by residents of nursing homes, where deaths are MUCH lower.
People outside of long-term care are dying at almost the same rate as last fall.
Newly eligible 5- to 11-year-olds have pushed Minnesota’s first-dose vaccination rate over 5,000 cases per day for the first time since August (when this was driven by 12-15-year-olds). Boosters at a new high ~20K/day.
Ignore the subzero “Final” line, that’s a data artifact.
So far 5- to 11-year-olds are being vaccinated at slightly less than the pace we saw when 12- to 15-year-olds first became eligible, but faster out of the gate than other age groups. (Many others had supply limitations at initial eligibility, though.)
Most of the Midwest is seeing cases rise, but Minnesota has the biggest surge:
There is one bit of good news in today’s data: we successfully bullied @mnhealth into releasing nominal case counts by vaccination status! (The bad news: they did this after I spent 8 hours trying to reverse-engineer this yesterday, mostly successfully.)
@mnhealth There’s now spreadsheets on their breakthrough page, updated on Mondays, with nominal as well as age-weighted counts of cases, hospitalizations and deaths by vax status. Weekly, but way better than what we had.
@mnhealth So here’s what we’ve got. Around 40% of MN’s current cases in people 12+ are in fully vaccinated people right now, a figure that has risen steadily.
BUT! This is not concerning — it’s exactly what we’d expect! 70%+ of Minnesotans 12+ are fully vaccinated; much higher among 65+.
@mnhealth If you’ve got a vaccine that significantly reduces the risk of infection, hospitalization or death, but doesn’t reduce it to 0, and a major share of the population is vaccinated, then by simple math you’d expect breakthroughs to be a large share of total incidents.
@mnhealth And based on this observational data — which isn’t as informative as a randomized control study — cases are about 4 times more prevalent among unvaccinated Minnesotans than the vaccinated.
Hospitalizations and deaths are about *16 times* more prevalent among the unvaxxed.
@mnhealth#COVID19 deaths are currently *16 times* less prevalent among vaccinated Minnesotans than unvaccinated Minnesotans.
Something like 75% of COVID deaths are among seniors right now. 92% of MN seniors are vaxxed. Those 8% who are unvaxxed are accounting for 60% of deaths.
@mnhealth Or, well, adjust these numbers for the 75% share. I’ll crunch this math later and write it up in my newsletter today. The general point still holds.
@mnhealth Another striking aspect of this data: the relative prevalence of #COVID19 cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Minnesota has been basically flat for months, even as all three have surged.
@mnhealth Some of you have asked for data on breakthrough prevalence by age. Here’s what we’ve got. Messy in places.
1) No significant drops in recent months. Some increases! 2) Interesting case split where breakthroughs are less common among both teenagers & the elderly than adults.
@mnhealth It’s technically true that MN's data doesn’t show a 95% reduction in hospitalizations or deaths among the vaccinated population.
We’re at 93.2% and 94%, respectively.
(That’s just what the ~16-fold reduction I graphed —
@mnhealth Here’s the data I presented earlier — showing a 16-fold reduction in #COVID19 hospitalizations and deaths among the vaccinated, and a 4-fold drop in cases, but inverted to show the same numbers as percent reductions:
@mnhealth I went into the raw age data, did a little dark magic, and came up with some slightly more precise estimates for this example.
The week of 10/3, where this data was from, saw about 120 senior deaths, 80 unvaccinated.
8% of seniors w/out vax accounted for 67% of deaths.
No one would think to condemn the genre of historical nonfiction just because there's a bunch of badly researched polemics on the shelf at Target or Barnes & Noble. The same is true for history podcasts — the problem isn't the medium, which has been used to good & ill effect.
"Ah, but some of the most popular history podcasts are of the worst historical quality," one might say. But so it has always been, in all mediums.
I've been revisiting "The Last Dance" as late-night viewing the past week, and am continually impressed by the quality of its writing as narrative nonfiction.
One key thing that struck me last night: how the documentary handles the BAD parts of Michael Jordan's story.
"The Last Dance" is overall extremely pro-Jordan — unsurprisingly since he was involved in its production. It's been criticized for how it slighted some of the NBA players Jordan came into conflict with.
But — and this is key — it's not purely hagiographic.
"The Last Dance" spawned a bunch of imitation documentaries as other athletes and celebrities tried to capture that magic for themselves. I've seen a few, and they're often not good — in part because they're TRYING to avoid controversy. TLD's director Jason Hehir knew better.
If Walz resigns as governor to become vice president, Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan will become governor.
It's what happens next that gets INTERESTING. The President of the MN Senate (currently Minneapolis Democrat Bobby Joe Champion) becomes Lt. Gov....
The Minnesota Senate is currently split 33-33 between Democrats and Republicans, with one vacancy on the ballot this fall that's probably Lean D. If Champion resigns, that could lead to either a temporary Republican majority, or extended 33-33 tie, until Champion's replaced.
But it turns out that it's a murky, unsettled legal question whether Champion will HAVE to resign. Minnesota went through this issue a few years ago, when Tina Smith resigned as LG to accept a U.S. Senate appointment, and Republican Michelle Fischbach became LG.
“No principles, any methods, but no flowery language — always Yes or No, though you could only count on him if it was No.” — Clement Attlee on Stalin
“Soviet biologists were instructed to adopt the theories of the charlatan Lysenko… to disastrous effect… It is significant that Stalin left his nuclear physicists alone & never presumed to second guess *their* calculations. Stalin may well have been mad, but he was not stupid.”
“Fortunately for the West, American popular culture had an appeal that American political ineptitude could do little to tarnish.”
I finally hit on why "Hazbin Hotel" is leaving me so cold. I love a stylized sitcom about depraved souls in the afterlife struggling toward redemption: It's called "The Good Place," & while it lacked raunch, songs & art deco animation, it had sophisticated multi-layered writing.
Partly this is a difference in execution — if you hired Michael Schur to script-doctor the dialogue on "Hazbin Hotel" you'd get a much better show — but in large part it's just intent. TGP was aiming at the border between middle- and high-brow; HH is aiming at middle-low.
I see everything "Hazbin Hotel" is trying to do, and can appreciate it in an abstract sense. It's not a terrible show, it's just, like, a C+. It's competently done and has a few interesting ideas, but (4-5 episodes in) doesn't display any real verve or finesse in its writing.
You BET we polled people about #Napoleon. On the eve of a new biopic, most Americans don't know very much about Bonaparte, and what they do know, they don't especially like.
The U.S. actually has the highest rates of considering Napoleon's legacy to be "negative" of any of 8 countries YouGov polled. That includes several other countries that Napoleon actually invaded, humiliated and occupied.
What DO Americans know — or think they know — about Napoleon? Well, I regret to inform you that one of the most popular descriptors was "short," with no real difference between people who said they knew a fair bit about Napoleon and those who didn't.