Minnesota is clearly seeing cases and positivity rise.
What’s not clear is the degree to which this is an omicron explosion like other states have seen, vs. a more temporary holiday bump. (Some of both to be sure.)
Note that a 2022 line won’t show until we’ve got 2 data points.
Note: Today’s #COVID19 report in MN is actually what we would have gotten last Friday if not for the holiday; most of today’s newly reported cases were from last Monday and Tuesday.
All our data is affected by the holidays now and should be taken with a big grain of salt.
Fortunately, new #COVID19 hospital admisions are still falling. (Remember this data is through the end of last week, no 2022 yet.)
Hospitalization data lags behind cases, so we might not necessarily expect this to rise yet — though some evidence omicron is milder. Wait & see.
The share of MN’s #COVID19 cases that are confirmed reinfections continues to spike — just as it did in June/July when delta was becoming dominant in MN.
My earlier caveats aside, I think the evidence is growing pretty strong that Minnesota IS seeing an omicron spike of some degree. Why?
After Thanksgiving, case counts spiked everywhere. Holiday spike.
Right now, cases are mostly spiking in one part of the state — the metro.
Another week of lagged breakthrough data takes us to the beginning of December. Adjusting for age, the unvaccinated that week were more than 12 times more likely to be hospitalized and more than 15 times more likely to die from #COVID19 than the vaccinated.
The lag means our breakthrough data is pre-omicron, so don’t draw any conclusions about the new variant from this.
Note the trends, though: a slight gradual decline in observed relative protection vs. cases, but a gradual INCREASE in relative protection against serious illness.
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Today’s #COVID19 report in MN reflects 4 days of data, important context for the record 16K cases reported.
BUT STILL: Today’s report is eye-popping. The omicron spike is *here*. And this is just one part of the state, the Twin Cities metro, being hit. Greater MN still flat-ish
This surge in cases is being led by 20-something adults, but we’re seeing spikes in every age group except seniors.
Hospitalizations lag behind case counts a bit, but there are some suggstions that MN’s decline in #COVID19 bed use may have leveled off.
1/ This can be somewhat counterintuitive, so it's not surprising many people are confused.
First, numbers: For the period where we've got data (May-Nov.) MN has 1,868 COVID deaths, of which 718 were fully vaccinated & 1,150 not; most of these deaths were in the past few months.
2/ Over this period, the share of MN's population that's fully vaccinated has grown from about 40% up to about 60% (with, again, more of the deaths happening in these later period where vax rates were higher).
3/ But remember 96.5% of MN's #COVID19 deaths have been over 50, and nearly 85% were 65+. So when estimating deaths, we REALLY need to adjust for age.
The good news in today’s #COVID19 report for MN: as I said yesterday, data issues had artificially inflated our positivity rate; today’s data sorted that out.
The bad news: we’re still (just) north of 10% and much higher than the 9.2% we were at last last week.
You can see this spike and fall as a near mirror-image of last year — off by one day, in fact. This isn’t so much seasonal patterns in Thanksgiving *infection* as seasonal patterns in Thanksgiving *reporting*.
The rest of this week will be key to figuring out where we’re headed.
That said, seasonal patterns in infections are playing a role here, too. Here’s our sample-date positivity chart (which lags by a week), also closely matching last year.
Remember we’re still being impacted by Thanksgiving’s aftershocks on #COVID19 reporting. Last Monday, for example, had an abnormally low positivity due to the holiday, so today’s 7-day averages will spike. But last Tuesday had a really high positivity, so they’ll fall tomorrow.
So by report date, MN’s 7-day average positivity rate spiked to over 11% today, the highest all year.
This is to a significant degree artificial, and will fall tomorrow. But even setting aside reporting issues we’re clearly in an upturn right now.
Here, for example, is positivity rate by sample date. This has a lag of up to a week, but all indications are we’re heading upward, driven by post-Thanksgiving infections.
Note this is a near-mirror of a brief spike we had LAST year right after Thanksgiving.
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