tl;dr
* 176 cases/day (highest in 9wks)
* 5.4% positive (highest in 8wks)
* testing is up, but cases are up more
* 82 deaths so far in Dec (vs 68 all of Nov)
* hospitalizations are up, but only slightly
1/
After falling down to 8.4 avg daily cases per 100,000 people in early November, our case rate has climbed up to 18.8 per 100k, more than doubling in just 5wks.
2/
At this point last year, though, we were avg'ing nearly 3x more cases per day (482) than we are now (176).
But our Summer surge this year started later than it did last year - and it peaked far higher.
Will the same will happen with Winter? (Who knows?)
3/
Even though cases are much lower than they were last year at this time, deaths are actually higher. We're avg'ing nearly 6/day.
This is a big concern, especially considering that cases are rising quickly. Does that mean we'll see even more deaths in the coming wks & months?
4/
Less than 2wks into the month, we've already had more deaths (82) than we did all of November (68).
Some have asked, but this spike doesn't seem to be connected to Thanksgiving. It's too soon for that. It usually takes at least a month from exposure to death.
5/
Cases dropped...but they didn't stay down for long. And they were already rising before Thanksgiving.
There were 1,235 cases reported this week.
+33% over 1wk
+73% over 2wks
+101% over 6wks
6/
And while pediatric cases are way down from the beginning of the school year, they're on the rise, though not much.
And pediatric cases are only 21% of total cases now, down from 34% just 4wks ago.
7/
Of course, kids 5-12 were just made eligible to be vax'd in that time. So that's a factor, but not a huge one - not that many kids have been vax'd yet.
My thinking is that school, with masks, is a relatively safe environment.
8/
We saw pediatric cases extremely high after kids were home all Summer Break.
And then cases spiked, nearly doubling, in the 2wks after just 1wk home for Fall Break.
Now we see cases rising again after 1wk home for Thanksgiving.
9/
If I'm correct here, then we'll see increased pediatric exposure over the 2wks of Winter Break - especially given that cases are rising overall.
And so the concern would be that we might see pediatric cases spike in January.
10/
It's essential that we get kids vax'd.
And since it takes 3wks to get fully vax'd, there's no time to wait.
11/
As you think about end-of-year giving, consider Rachel's Kids.
My family - and our church - have been supporting Rachel for over a decade now. And everything you give goes to kids and families in Binghampton, so give generously.
Today is Veterans Day, but it used to be called Armistice Day. And it was a mistake to change the name. We should celebrate peace, we should celebrate the end of war, not war itself.
Kurt Vonnegut, born on this day, would agree.
Vonnegut was himself a veteran. He dropped out of college to enlist & serve in WWII. Taken prisoner by the Germans, he survived the bombing of Dresden.
In Breakfast of Champions, he wrote about the name-change from Armistice Day to Veterans Day. It's worth reading today.
"When I was a boy...all the people of all the nations which had fought in the First World War were silent during the eleventh minute of the eleventh hour of Armistice Day, which was the eleventh day of the eleventh month.
tl;dr
* The positive trends in the data continue
* And now kids are vax eligible!
* But vax locations are problematic
* Also, we appear to be plateauing
* What's in store for the Winter?
1/
Since October just ended, let's look back at monthly trends.
* Avg daily cases dropped 73%, from 554 to 149
* Positivity dropped from 16.0% to 5.1%
* Deaths were up slightly to 194 (remember, this is a lagging indicator)
* New vax's dropped to record-lows
2/
Here, you can see this year compared to last year.
At this time last year, cases were about 3x higher than they are now.
But the summer peak happened later this year, as did the fall drop. At this point last year, cases had already been rising for a month.
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.
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.