edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-06-29 06:23 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Newly confirmed deaths doubled compared to last week - but at ten, it's still a tiny number for a full week, even compared to the July 2021 calm before the delta and omicron storms. Confirmed cases and tests are also down (no surprise there), as are hospitalizations. Three of the four seven-day averages are down compared to last week; the seven-day deaths average ticked up slightly, from the all-time lowest observed value recorded last week. Massachusetts Water Resources Authority wastewater levels on the north side ticked up slightly and ticked down a bit more on the south side; both are still above one hundred, though, and thus far above the all-time lows.

Not horrible numbers overall, but not really supporting a local "COVID is over!" celebration, either.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-06-22 06:02 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Confirmed deaths are down from last week, as are all four of the seven-day averages. In fact, the seven-day deaths average (0.4 deaths per day) is the lowest it's ever been reported. Hospitalizations held steady. Cases continued to drop, but with testing continuing to crater, that's neither surprising nor encouraging.

The wastewater levels at the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority Deer Island plant are a bit encouraging, though, as both the north-side and south-side levels are down compared to last week. They're still far above their levels two years ago, let alone their record-low levels. Oh, for those wonderful days of June 2021, when there was still plentiful testing, the delta variant was just beginning to rear its ugly head, and the omicron variants had yet to appear ...
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-06-15 06:16 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Headline numbers are mixed; one fewer confirmed death, 22 more confirmed cases, and 13 fewer COVID patients in hospital, along with a slight decrease in percent-positive ratio. Tests, of course, dropped yet again; this week's average of 2,474 tests per day is the lowest since March 20, 2020 (2,466.86). The Massachusetts Water Resources Authority wastewater levels are, alas, up from last week; on the other hand, they've been hovering around a seven-day average of two hundred copies per milliliter or so since mid-April, so it's hard to read very much into one week's changes.

Meanwhile, the Food and Drug Administration is considering rolling out an omicron-variant-only COVID vaccine this fall:, according to the Associated Press:
Read more... )
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-06-13 09:57 am
Entry tags:

Stuck in the hospital

Front-page story in today's Boston Globe: Patients 'stuck' in hospitals complicate care
Read more... )
It's worth noting that COVID isn't responsible for the overcrowding; however, hospital capacity is part of the state's COVID data, and the impact of the discharge backlog is visible. Last week's report showed that only around 6.4% of the state's 8,715 non-ICU hospital beds were available for new patients. Actually discharging all the folks who are stuck in hospital waiting for discharge would nearly quadruple the number of available beds. Alas, there's no single easy fix.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-06-08 07:02 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Newly reported deaths (both confirmed and probable) are unchanged from last week. Newly reported confirmed cases are down while newly reported probable cases are up, with a net effect of a slight increase in newly reported cases. Newly reported tests continue to drop, driving the percent-positive ratio up again; today's reported 4.15% is the highest since March 16. Hospitalization counts are up again, as are patients in ICUs. Wastewater levels on both sides of the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority sewershed are down a bit compared to last week, but are mixed compared to two weeks ago and are way, way higher than the levels two years ago during the summer 2021 valley.

All in all, not horrible numbers statewide, but not (IMNSHO) great numbers either.

Meanwhile, Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House COVID-19 Coordinator, is leaving the post next week:
Read more... )
No word on who - if anyone - will replace him.
edschweppe: Submarine warfare qualification badge, aka "dolphins" (submarine insignia)
2023-06-05 04:28 pm
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Yet another COVID outbreak at a Massachusetts veteran's home

Just in case anyone still thought the pandemic was over, we get another COVID outbreak at a veteran's home:

Read more... )

The "good" news, I suppose, is that nobody has died in this outbreak. Yet. On the other hand, the state's two veteran's homes (in Chelsea and Holyoke) have been mismanaged for years, with over a hundred deaths between them over the course of the pandemic, so I can't say I'm completely surprised at this.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-06-01 05:46 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Newly confirmed deaths are down, and current hospitalizations are down slightly. However, newly confirmed cases are up even as tests continue to plummet to levels not seen since March 20, 2020, thus driving another increase in percent-positivity. MRWA wastewater levels are also up - a big jump on the northside, a small one on the southside - with both being over two hundred copies/milliliter again.

I would really like to have one of these updates be purely good news. I'm not getting my desire this week.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-25 07:53 pm
Entry tags:

Long COVID odds "only" one in ten with Omicron?

The Associated Press reports that about ten percent of folks with an Omicron-variant coronavirus infection develop long COVID, according to early data from the NIH RECOVER study:
Read more... )
I suppose the good news is that one in ten is a lot less than one in three. But those are still terrible odds.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-25 06:07 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Rather less than great news in today's Massachusetts numbers, as both confirmed and probable deaths more than doubled compared to last week. Confirmed and probable cases actually rose again even as tests continued to decay away; the seven-day percent-positive rate is up to 3.46%. The only good news is the (slight) decline in patients currently hospitalized for COVID. Reported wastewater levels at the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority are a mixed bag, with northside levels down thirteen percent from last week but southside levels jumping to over double last week's numbers. These numbers don't look too bad in absolute terms, but the trends aren't good.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-18 07:26 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Newly reported deaths are down compared to last week, which is certainly good news; in fact, we're now setting new lowest observed values for the seven-day average of confirmed deaths. Newly reported cases are down as well, but that can be easily explained by the fact that newly reported tests are also down; the reported percent-positive ratio is actually up, which isn't encouraging. The current hospitalization count is down, but the ICU and intubation counts are up a bunch; hopefully, that's more statistical noise than a bad trend. In further good news, the MWRA wastewater levels are dropping again. They're still well above their all-time lows, but downward trends are good to see here.

I haven't been able to find any available data sources for the CDC's new United States COVID-19 Hospitalizations, Deaths, and Emergency Visits by Geographic Area page, which I gather is what the CDC is now using as their main tool for deciding when (if ever) to recommend either individual or community-level prevention strategies. If I can find a data feed for that, I'll incorporate it.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-11 09:40 pm
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End of Exposure Notifications, as well?

Surprise! My iPhone just notified me that it had turned off Exposure Notifications. Apparently, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts just shut down their notification system:
MassNotify, the official COVID-19 exposure notification system for Massachusetts, was discontinued with the end of the federal COVID-19 public health emergency on May 11, 2023.
Of course, the death, case and hospitalization counts all went up this week. But the emergency is officially over, and that's all that counts. Right?

Feh.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-11 05:36 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Newly confirmed deaths and cases up compared to last week? Hospitalizations and percent-positive also up over last week? Even as tests continued to drop (now to levels last seen in March of 2020)?

This is not good news, especially as the public health emergencies are officially ending. At least the MWRA wastewater counts are basically the same as last week.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-11 11:16 am
Entry tags:

As the emergencies sputter to an end ...

Today's the day that the federal and state COVID-19 public health emergencies end. That doesn't mean the pandemic is over, as three different items (one article and two opinion pieces) in today's Boston Globe show.
First off, if you look at excess deaths, the threat is still not over:
Read more... )

Meanwhile, the Globe's Editorial Board likes the state lifting its health care mask mandate, assuming that hospitals know best:
Read more... )
The Globe editorial doesn't address the danger of persons who are asymptomatic but infections.

Nor does that editorial address the danger of long COVID. Kimberly Atkins Stohr, a Globe columnist who herself has long COVID, reminds readers that the nation shouldn't leave the long haulers behind:
Read more... )

To sum up: declaring the emergencies to be over doesn't mean people aren't dying, or that survivors aren't running into serious problems obtaining long-term care. It just means most folks (including the Globe editorial board, apparently) can now stop pretending to give a damn. Until they are individually affected, I guess.

Feh.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-10 10:54 am
Entry tags:

"Grounded in science and data"

The decision by the state to drop hospital mask mandates when the official public health emergency ends "was grounded in science and data", according to the new commissioner for public health:
Read more... )
I would really like to see the data behind Goldstein's claim that the risk of transmission is currently "extremely low". Yes, the current official case rates are dropping, but that's clearly tied to the drop in official test rates.

OTOH, it's nice to see that the state dashboard will continue, especially since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are dropping so much of their reporting once the federal public health emergency ends on Thursday.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-05 05:44 pm
Entry tags:

Miscellaneous COVID News

A fair bit of news today on the COVID front, with local, national and global stories.
The local story, on the front page of today's Boston Globe: Most major health care systems in Massachusetts will lift their mask requirements next week:
Mask on, mask off )
The idea that declining rates of reported cases is a good reason to drop mask requirements strikes me as silly, since the drop in reported cases is directly tied to the drop in reported tests. Color me cynical, but I rather suspect the real reason for dropping mask requirements is an epidemic of the Dont-Wannas, as in "I don't wanna wear a mask anymore!".

Nationally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will lose their test and case count data once the federal public health emergency declaration expires next Thursday. so their plan is to track weekly hospitals and deaths instead:
No more case tracking )
Frankly, dropping the "COVID Community Level" isn't much of a loss. On the other hand, hospitalizations and deaths are very much trailing indicators of new surges; those numbers only go up once a whole lot of people are infected.

And, in global news, the World Health Organization is officially declaring that COVID-19 is no longer a global health emergency:
No longer an emergency, honest! )
Well, okay, then.

One thing I didn't see in any of the above stories: any mention at all about dealing with long COVID and its potentially crippling effects. The WHO did recommend that nations "continue to support research ... to understand the full spectrum, incidence and impact of post COVID-19 condition", which I suppose is better than nothing. But, for those with long COVID and those who develop it in the future, it's not much better than nothing.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-04 06:34 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Newly confirmed cases continue to drop - unsurprisingly, since newly reported tests are dropping as well. Today's reported seven-day average of 4,746.1 is the lowest that number has been since April 1, 2020. Hospital patient counts are also dropping, but the number of deaths (14 confirmed and 2 probable) is up from last week.

Also concerning: the levels of COVID in the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority wastewater are ticking upward over the last couple of weeks - and the sampling frequency has dropped from daily to three times a week. According to the MWRA's COVID Tracking page:
As of Monday April 10th, wastewater testing for SARS-COV-2 RNA will occur three times per week on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Samples are analyzed by Biobot Analytics, a wastewater epidemiology company. Sample results will generally be posted 2-3 working days after they are collected. Please refer to the Mass DPH website for information regarding current cases of COVID-19 in your community.
Yeah, reducing the reporting frequency for wastewater is exactly the thing I want to see as case counts become useless for predicting what's going on.

Not to mention that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have yet to update their national cases and deaths datasets for this week. No idea when - or even if - they'll be updated. Nor what they'll be providing once the Federal public health emergency expires next Thursday.

Meanwhile, the CDC now says COVID-19 is now only the fourth leading cause of death in the US:
Read more... )
Yay.

(Edited 10:20pm to include the CDC results in the wall-o-text, as they finally posted this week's data.)
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-05-02 08:51 pm
Entry tags:

Momentary good news on the COVID front

Okay, this is good news. In a happy milestone, a Boston hospital reports zero inpatients with COVID-19:
Read more... )
I'm not super excited; looking at the state's latest raw data (8.9Mb .xlsx file), Tufts only had two COVID patients on April 25, while twenty-four other (mostly small) hospitals statewide reported zero. The problem is the places like Baystate Medical Center out in Springfield, which reported forty-one patients ...
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-04-27 07:13 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

Wall-o-text )

Newly confirmed deaths and cases are both down compared to last week, as are hospitalizations and percent-positive. All those are great numbers, but the continued drop in testing greatly limits my confidence in the reported case counts; this week's seven-day average of 5,027.57 tests per day is the lowest that number has been since the state reported an average of 4,793.29 tests per day on April 2, 2020. If the state was testing at the same rate as April 2021, the state would be reporting a seven-day case average of over thirteen hundred, rather than the barely one hundred reported today.

There are two other items that aren't terribly encouraging. First off, based on the state's wastewater report, the virus levels in the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority sewersheds are up compared to last week (just under seventeen percent on the north side, nearly twenty-three percent on the south side). Granted, the levels are still way, way below the January 2023 peaks, but they're still way above the summer 2021 lows.

Also discouraging: the total number of hospital beds available statewide has been trending downward for a couple of weeks, now. Granted, the number of COVID hospitalizations is dropping, but overloaded hospitals are a problem whether or not the overload is due to COVID.

I suspect I need to tweak the wall-o-text builder some more to get better visibility into the wastewater trends. And perhaps the hospital bed totals as well.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-04-20 07:10 pm
Entry tags:

Local COVID-19 updates

I have been able to find a source for the levels of COVID-19 virus in (some of) Massachusetts' wastewater (the raw data for the COVID-19 Wastewater Report), so I've added that to the new wall-o-text.

Any good news?

Wall-o-text, now including MWRA wastewater levels )

The good news is that confirmed deaths, confirmed cases, hospitalizations, and percent-positive are all continuing to drop statewide. The not-so-good news is that tests also continue to drop; today's reported seven-day average of 5,086.4 is the lowest since 5,043.1 were reported on April 3, 2020.

The MWRA wastewater numbers are down from last week on both the north and south sides; however, the south side numbers are actually higher than two weeks ago. I don't have a good feel yet for how changes in wastewater levels affect cases, hospitalizations or deaths, so I'm hesitant to leap to conclusions. But I do note that the wastewater levels are far, far higher today than they were during the summer 2021 low point of the pandemic. The seven-day case average bottommed out at 64.1 cases/day on June 25, 2021 and today's average of 136.9 is just over double that; on the other hand, the MWRA northside average for 6/25/2021 was 20.4 copies/mL and the currently most recent average is 225.4, well over ten times higher. There is a lot more COVID floating around than is showing up in the official case figures.

I'm also hesitant to put too much stock in the current data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Case counts are down nationwide, but it looks to me as though testing is also way down. Unfortunately, I haven't found any CDC data feed that specifically shows tests per county or state, so I can't confirm that hunch. And I have a bad feeling that, once the national public health emergency ends on May 11, the CDC's data tracking capabilities are going to be significantly changed - and not for the better.

Hopefully, Massachusetts will keep making its data available, at least.
edschweppe: Myself in a black suit and black bow tie (Default)
2023-04-18 06:05 pm
Entry tags:

No second bivalent for me. At least, not for now...

There will be a new round of COVID booster vaccines available - for "certain" Americans, that is:
Read more... )
Unfortunately for me personally, it does not appear that I'll be authorized another booster, as I'm not old enough, nor am I immunocompromised. I still have whole bunches of the official medical conditions that put me at higher risk of getting "very sick" (the CDC's phrase, not mine) from any COVID infection - but, at least as far as the Food and Drug Administration is concerned, it's not enough of a risk for me to get a second bivalent booster.

Gee, thanks, guys.