Here's this week's #COVID19 data for New York City, the United States and the world.

In New York, hospitalizations are up a bit.

Nationwide hospitalizations continue to fall, and are well below the 2018-2019 flu peak.

Worldwide deaths may be plateauing.

Cause for optimism, but #CovidIsNotOver! It's important to:

* Keep wearing masks in medical settings and confined spaces
* Keep current with vaccinations
* Stay home if sick
* Be prepared to resume precautions if hospitalizations rise

COVID-19: Latest Data - NYC Health

Here are this week's #COVID19 indicators:

New York deaths average 0 per day. With 5 days with 1 death per day and 2 days with 0 deaths (May 21 and 22), I don't understand how that averages to 0, but it's the best so far this year!

New York hospitalizations are possibly at a plateau. Nationwide hospitalizations are well below the peak of flu hospitalizations in 2018-2019.

New York wastewater is low, last measured on April 11.

Worldwide deaths are also at their lowest since the beginning!

I haven't updated the NYC #COVID19 indicators for a couple of months, since they've been at a fairly low plateau!

First I wanted to focus on RESP-NET, since it's seasonal and I probably won't be referencing it regularly, at least until we get another wave.

It shows that the COVID-19 hospitalization rate has continued to decline, but at a much slower rate than the flu hospitalization rate did in any of the years in the study. It's now at about 1.0. #CovidIsNotOver

https://www.cdc.gov/surveillance/resp-net/dashboard.html

RESP-NET Interactive Dashboard | CDC

The Respiratory Virus Hospitalization Surveillance Network (RESP-NET) comprises three networks that conduct population-based surveillance for laboratory-confirmed COVID-19, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), and influenza-associated hospitalizations among children and adults.

Next up: #COVID19 wastewater data. It turns out that the dataset I was using hasn't been updated since May 1. But there's a SUNY professor who's been getting wastewater data from the NYC DEP.

That data is about a week old, but it's separated by sewage treatment plant. Levels are increasing at some treatment plants, but decreasing at others, including Bowery Bay, the plant that receives wastewater from western Queens. #CovidIsNotOver

https://data.cityofnewyork.us/Health/SARS-CoV-2-concentrations-measured-in-NYC-Wastewat/f7dc-2q9f
https://mbcolli.shinyapps.io/SARS2EWSP/_w_e1a64648/

SARS-CoV-2 concentrations measured in NYC Wastewater | NYC Open Data

Results of sampling to determine the SARS-CoV-2 N gene levels in NYC DEP Wastewater Resource Recovery Facility (WRRF) influent, disaggregated by the WRRF where the sample was collected, date sample was collected, and date sample was tested RT-qPCR was changed to digital PCR in April of 2023, resulting values are about 10-20 times higher than those of RT-qPCR Data may be used to track trends in SARS-CoV-2 concentrations in NYC WRRF influent. Dataset does not include COVID-19 case rates.

NYC Open Data

So what about the charts I've been following for months? There are still too many #COVID19 deaths in New York City, but they do seem to be gradually decreasing; 11 deaths were reported for the first 17 days of July.

Hospitalizations were on a plateau for May, then declined in late June, but seem to have risen again in July. I'm wondering if that could be the heat and wildfire smoke - I've been seeing a lot more closed doors in shops and restaurants, and people eating inside.

#CovidIsNotOver

Case counts are my least favorite #COVID19 indicator, since so few of us are testing regularly. But the recent rise in positive cases here in New York City does concern me a bit, and suggests that we should be on the lookout for resulting increases in hospitalizations and deaths. #CovidIsNotOver

Damn, I messed up the threading! Sorry about that:

https://toot.cat/@grvsmth/110761870476521711

Angus Andrea Grieve-Smith (@[email protected])

Attached: 1 image Case counts are my least favorite #COVID19 indicator, since so few of us are testing regularly. But the recent rise in positive cases here in New York City does concern me a bit, and suggests that we should be on the lookout for resulting increases in hospitalizations and deaths. #CovidIsNotOver

Toot.Cat
COVID-19: Latest Data - NYC Health

In NYC we went five days without a #COVID19 death - but then we had five deaths in three days! Hospitalizations, cases and wastewater samples are all up. #WearAMask in confined spaces and be prepared to cut back on your indoor activities! #CovidIsNotOver

#CovidIsNotOver and according to the CDC, US hospitalizations are back up to 2.4 per 100,000 residents. It's 3.3 in New York City.

We still eat outdoors and #WearAMask in confined spaces, doctors' offices and transit. If the rate rises above the peak combined flu/RSV rate of 6.2 in March 2019, we're cancelling karaoke, masking everywhere and working from home every day.

Also, the NYC hospitalization total is literally off the chart. Did the Dept. of Health really not expect another wave?

It's been a while since I looked at a nationwide #COVID19 map! Some of the counties are not looking good, especially Albany County here in New York, Brazos County, Texas (home of Texas A&M) and Palm Beach County, Florida. #CovidIsNotOver

https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#maps_new-admissions-rate-county

COVID Data Tracker

CDC’s home for COVID-19 data. Visualizations, graphs, and data in one easy-to-use website.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
The fall #COVID19 wave has hit New York City! I still #WearAMask on trains and in elevators, doctors' offices, pharmacies and grocery stores, and avoid eating indoors. If the citywide hospitalization rate goes above 6, I'll stop singing karaoke and wear a mask in all shops and restaurants, and in the office! #CovidIsNotOver
In other metrics this week:
* Wastewater totals have risen to 75-100% of whatever
* Statewide hospitalization rate is 5.39
* Nationwide hospitalizations are also rising
* Global deaths (as reported) are still extremely low

I don't really understand this week's NYC #COVID19 summary. The 7-day average is 48 hospitalizations citywide, but that seems to be based on data that they acknowledge are incomplete. The 7-day average ending August 23 is 66.

Similarly, the 7-day average citywide death rate ending August 28 is 1, but if you go back a few days it's 2.

Since I'm settling on hospitalizations per lakh population as a comparable rate, I'm now looking at the third chart in this toot: as of August 19 it was 4.36.

Skipping NYC's #COVID19 summary this week and going directly to data that is now more than a week old, so more reliable: the citywide hospitalization rate is still 4.62 per lakh residents per day, the death rate is 3 people per day, the wastewater samples are high and increasing.

The statewide hospitalization rate was 5.95, but current estimates have it over 7. Still nowhere near where we were in January (22.3) or January 2022 (62.5), but cause for concern.

#CovidIsNotOver

The United States nationwide #COVID19 hospitalization rate is trending upward, but again, 3.1 per lakh residents per day as of August 19, nowhere near as bad as the peak of the 2018-2019 flu season.

Worldwide deaths are trending upward, after hitting a low of 368 per day on August 7. Still "only" 597 as of August 21.

#CovidIsNotOver but I'm hoping as the weather cools off in the US, people will eat outdoors more and the wave will taper off. That did happen in September-October 2021 and 2022!

Since the #COVID19 case, hospitalization, death and wastewater detection rates are going up in NYC, be careful to #WearAMask on trains and even platforms - and maybe avoid very crowded trains where most people are unmasked!

Today I recorded one of the highest readings I've ever seen on my PTH-8: 3208ppm CO2, in an R46 car on a crowded downtown A train.

I also recorded over 2000ppm CO2 on the south end of the uptown platform at 42nd and Eighth, and in the Times Square tunnel.

#CovidIsNotOver

Thinking about when it's appropriate to use preliminary #covid19 data.

Hospitalization rates are a lagging indicator and are rarely revised down, so when you're climbing a wave and trying to figure out whether it's time to reinstate precautions, you should probably go by the highest rate in recent weeks.

At the end of the wave, when you're trying to figure out when to relax precautions, you should probably also go by the highest rate. #CovidIsNotOver

This evening just before 6pm, the CO2 concentration at the checkout at my local supermarket was 979ppm.

Not the worst I've seen, but this is why I still wear my KN95 in the supermarket, even when #COVID19 hospitalization rates are low and I may not #WearAMask in my sparsely populated office, and even sometimes sing karaoke in public.

#CovidIsNotOver and I want my neighbors to feel safe going to the supermarket!

We will most likely have a winter #COVID19 wave in New York City, but is the late summer wave cresting? The hospitalization rates from two weeks ago have risen, but it has not gone above 6, and the wastewater rate seems to be declining.

#CovidIsNotOver, so #WearAMask in confined spaces, #GetBoosted and test regularly!

Across New York State and the United States, #COVID19 hospitalizations were continuing to rise as of two weeks ago, with statewide hospitalizations above 7 per lakh. Worldwide deaths may be falling, but it could just be a lag in reporting.

The NYC #covid data posted as of September 28 suggests that we had a mini-peak in early September and another in late September. Early September is towards the end of a heat wave, and late September is when we had a lot of rain.

It seems to me that there's a clear pattern of hospitalizations going up when people spend more time inside, which is why I'm frustrated that the City is discouraging outdoor dining during cold months!

#COVIDisAirborne #CovidIsNotOver

The New York State, United States and worldwide hospitalization data also point to a #covid mini-peak in early September. Let's hope it goes down for the rest of the fall!

#CovidIsNotOver

Okay, here's something to be concerned about for NYC: with updated data, the citywide #COVID hospitalization rate for New York is now 6.44 for the week ending September 23, and 6.05 for the week ending September 30. 6.44 is higher than the 2019 peak of 6.2 for flu+RSV.

The rate appears to be going down the past two weeks, but is that just an artifact of incomplete data?

In any case, I'm going to move my karaoke meetup to Zoom and #WearAMask in more places!

#covid19 #CovidIsNotOver

The updated NYC #COVID hospitalization rate for September 30 is 6.26. Again, that's higher than the 2019 peak of 6.2 for flu+RSV.

#COVID19 hospitalizations seems to have plateaued and may be going down, but it may take a couple of weeks to see.

I moved the New York Tech Karaoke Meetup online last night. Will we be able to sing in person later in the month?

#CovidIsNotOver

NYC #COVID wastewater may be on a slight rise, but hospitalizations seem to be going down! The current 7-day average will probably be revised up, but 1.6 hospitalizations per 100,000 is the lowest rate I've seen since July. The more reliable rate from October 7 is 5.39, below the max rate of 5.5 for flu in 2019.

#CovidIsNotOver and #COVIDisAirborne but if #covid19 hospitalizations stay below 6 per lakh next year, I'll schedule an in-person New York Tech Karaoke Meetup for the following week!

NYC #Covid hospitalizations appear to be stabilizing below 6 per lakh, so I will continue cautiously participating in in-person karaoke meetups.

#CovidIsNotOver and the weather is nice, so I will keep eating outdoors as much as possible, and #WearAMask in doctors' offices, pharmacies, elevators, trains and grocery stores!

This week, NYC #COVID hospitalizations and wastewater both appear to be stable or declining, and hospitalizations have remained under 6 per lakh!

I feel better about attending two in-person karaoke events and an in-person support group this past week, but #COVIDIsNotOver, so I'm not going to push it!

I still eat outdoors as much as possible and #WearAMask in doctors' offices, pharmacies, elevators and grocery stores!

#COVID19 #COVIDIsAirborne

NYC #COVID hospitalizations remain below 5 per lakh over the past month, and wastewater samples at Bowery Bay are below 75% and dropping!

With rates so low, I felt relatively safe eating indoors at a restaurant last night, and I'm planning to attend a support group and karaoke.

But #COVIDIsNotOver and we're still expecting a winter surge, so I'll continue to #WearAMask in doctors' offices, pharmacies, elevators, trains and grocery stores and be prepared to take further precautions! #covid19

NYC #covid hospitalizations appear to be leveling off below 4 per lakh, and wastewater samples continue to drop. I've been singing karaoke!

But #CovidIsNotOver and I've heard about several people getting sick. If this is like previous years we'll get an increase after Thanksgiving.

I still #WearAMask in doctors' offices, pharmacies, elevators, trains and grocery stores, and eat outdoors whenever possible. If hospitalizations rise again I'm prepared to take further precautions!

#COVID19

Yeah, I get it, it's a holiday week, but New York City is paying tons of employees overtime, and I think it's worth paying the people who update the #COVID19 stats website - because #CovidIsNotOver !

https://www.nyc.gov/site/doh/covid/covid-19-data.page

COVID-19: Latest Data - NYC Health

The NYC #Covid19 data is out after a two-week gap. The good news is that hospitalizations are low - lower than they've been since July!

But #CovidIsNotOver and millions people have been traveling all over the world the past few weeks, going to conferences and visiting relatives, and spending time in airplanes, trains, restaurants and terminals on the way.

I'm expecting a winter wave to start soon, but hospitalizations are a trailing indicator. I'll look at leading indicators in the next post!

Just knowing that #CovidIsNotOver and millions of people have been visiting family and traveling is enough for me to be more cautious this week.

I don't trust leading indicators as much as hospitalizations, but they can indicate that a new wave may be starting.

NYC #covid19 case counts and wastewater samples indicate a recent rise in observations of the virus, so I scheduled a booster for my mom and will get mine soon.

And I #WearAMask in doctors' offices, pharmacies, trains and elevators!

And just like that, #covid hospitalizations have risen in NYC after Thanksgiving travel and visits. And this is still preliminary data - will the final numbers be higher? Is this just the beginning of the winter #COVID19 wave?

Glad my spouse, my mom and I all got boosted! I'm going to avoid in-person karaoke until I see these hospitalizations go down, and continue to #WearAMask in doctors' offices, pharmacies, supermarkets, and in confined spaces like trains and elevators!

#CovidIsNotOver

Even before Thanksgiving, nationwide hospitalizations for #COVID were more than half what they were last year; flu is low for the season, but #RSV is also half what it was last year, so they're all sending 7.4 people per lakh to the hospital. The NY state and worldwide #COVID19 pictures are similar.

The good news is that you can protect yourself from all three: #WearAMask in crowded spaces and doctors' offices, try to eat in well-ventilated spaces, and stay home if you're not feeling well!

This week's #covid hospitalizations for NYC are only revised up slightly, which suggests that this winter's #covid19 wave might be lower than last year's, and hopefully not last as long!

Wastewater was decreasing as of December 3, but #CovidIsNotOver so I'm expecting we'll see it rise again over the next few weeks...

New York, the winter #COVID wave is upon us! In the week ending December 16, 6.37 people were hospitalized with #COVID19 per lakh residents.

The current hospitalization rate is slightly lower, but it's incomplete, so it may be revised higher. Wastewater is trending up as well on December 12!

I'm currently home with a sore throat, aches and a negative rapid test. Even when I don't feel sick I #WearAMask in trains, elevators and doctors' offices. #CovidIsNotOver and the flu and RSV kill too!

As I recover from what's probably the flu, I realize how much the CDC's RESP-NET dashboard has contributed to my understanding of respiratory diseases.

Comparing one season to another, combining rates for multiple viruses and normalizing per lakh were all huge eye-openers.

This week, preliminary #covid hospitalizations in the US are only 3.4, but combined hospitalizations are 7.5!

Now I want something like this for NYC, for NY State, and for the world!

#dataviz

https://www.cdc.gov/surveillance/resp-net/dashboard.html

RESP-NET Interactive Dashboard | CDC

The Respiratory Virus Hospitalization Surveillance Network (RESP-NET) comprises three networks that conduct population-based surveillance for laboratory-confirmed COVID-19, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), and influenza-associated hospitalizations among children and adults.

In NYC we do have reports of #COVID19 hospitalizations per lakh, and raw #COVID hospitalization totals. As I understand it, this refers to the total number of people in the hospital with a positive COVID test on a given day.

But for #influenza and #RSV what we get are the number of positive *specimens* from any lab. And we get emergency room visits and admissions with flu-like symptoms (just a graph, no numbers). Which are not comparable to hospitalizations, right?

https://www.nyc.gov/site/doh/providers/health-topics/flu-alerts.page

Influenza Surveillance - NYC Health

The data for Emergency Department Visits and Admissions for #Influenza-like Illness and/or Pneumonia was posted on NYC's open data portal for a little more than a month - and then not since January 19, 2023...

cc @noneck

https://data.cityofnewyork.us/Health/Emergency-Department-Visits-and-Admissions-for-Inf/2nwg-uqyg

Emergency Department Visits and Admissions for Influenza-like Illness and/or Pneumonia | NYC Open Data

NYC is in the middle of the winter #COVID wave: 6.55 people hospitalized per lakh residents, and for the first time in a while I'm including death rates, because 5 people a day are dying of #COVID19 in this city!

And that doesn't even include flu or RSV!

I'm recovering from my own COVID infection. #CovidIsNotOver and #COVIDisAirborne and that means #WearAMask in doctors' offices, grocery stores, crowds and confined spaces. No more in-person karaoke or parties for me until this wave is over!

Meanwhile, this is what we get for #influenza and #RSV for NYC: counts with no denomenator.

How many patients are they testing for these diseases? Are these inpatient or outpatient, hospital or clinic? How bad are their symptoms?

We have no way of converting these positive test counts to hospitalization counts to compare with the #COVID counts and get a sense of the overall risk from infectious respiratory diseases.

https://www.nyc.gov/site/doh/providers/health-topics/flu-alerts.page

Influenza Surveillance - NYC Health

Across NY State, the US and the Northern Hemisphere, this winter's #COVID wave is looking better than last year's, but still pretty bad.

The statewide NY hospitalization rate for COVID was 13.49 in the week ending December 27. CDC RESP-NET shows a decline in recent weeks, but that's preliminary data; for the week ending December 9, they show
combined hospitalizations at 11.4 per lakh, over half what it was in 2022. The WHO is reporting 4,000 dead from #COVID19 in December. #CovidIsNotOver

NYC's winter #COVID wave continues: over 10 people hospitalized per lakh residents, which is half the peak from last year. Five people dying every day. And that's just #COVID19, not RSV or the flu!

I'm pretty much recovered from the symptoms of my COVID infection that started in late December. I #WearAMask in elevators, trains, doctors' offices, pharmacies and supermarkets, and eat outdoors whenever I can. No more in-person karaoke until this wave is over!

#COVIDisAirborne #CovidIsNotOver

The #COVID hospitalization rates in New York State and the United States are high, more than half what they were last year.

The World Health Organization has changed its dashboard around and now shows lots of #COVID19 deaths in Europe, but none in the Americas! Why is the US not sending our death data to the WHO?

https://coronavirus.health.ny.gov/daily-hospitalization-summary
https://www.cdc.gov/surveillance/resp-net/dashboard.html
https://data.who.int/dashboards/covid19/deaths

#CovidIsNotOver

Daily Hospitalization Summary

New admissions and total hospitalizations, by region

Department of Health

Remember when we were all sad about the first #covid19 death? In NYC this week, six people are dying every day, just from #COVID never mind flu and RSV!

No end in sight for this winter wave, but I hope it ends soon because there's a cool live karaoke event in Brooklyn on February 16, and I don't want to have to skip it!

And tonight we're keeping the windows open in the very spacious room for the trans support group, and eating dinner outdoors!

#CovidIsNotOver #COVIDisAirborne

Here in NYC, this winter's #covid wave may have peaked at 153 people hospitalized per day, only 68% of last year's peak. But 153 people is a lot, and 8 people a day are dying. That's not even counting flu or RSV!

These days I #WearAMask in elevators, trains and buses and #MaskUp in doctors' offices, pharmacies and supermarkets. And until this wave is over I'm also skipping all in-person karaoke and concerts, and avoiding indoor restaurants!

#COVID19 #COVIDisAirborne #CovidIsNotOver

Did #COVID infections in Queens peak in late December, as wastewater suggests? Did statewide #COVID19 hospitalizations peak in early January?

Maybe, but there's way too much suffering and death. Not as much as last winter's wave, but the CDC reports around 1700 deaths nationwide per week since the beginning of December.

We were too slow to increase precautions this winter. I didn't travel, but I ate in restaurants and went to a party, after wastewater counts started to rise!

#CovidIsNotOver

Looks like #COVID hospitalizations peaked a couple of weeks ago in New York, and are now on the decline!

I'm going to wait until they've been below 6 hospitalizations per lakh for a couple of weeks before I plan any karaoke or long bus trips. But I'm glad this #COVID19 wave has crested, higher than the fall wave, but apparently at a lower level than last year's!

And of course, I'm still going to #WearAMask in trains, elevators, doctors' offices, pharmacies and grocery stores.
#CovidIsNotOver

@grvsmth at least NYC still has a COVID data page. :-/ https://www.monroecounty.gov/health-covid-flu-rsv
Monroe County, NY - COVID-19, Flu, & RSV Resources

@jtwcornell91 Well, Monroe County DOES share hospitalization data with the CDC - and you can find it by following the link on their page!

But the CDC bureaucrats decided to foreground vaccination data, so you have to poke around to get new hospital admissions (NOT total hospitalizations). And then futz with your mouse until you find the unlabeled county and see the uncopyable info.

Also, the CDC has decided that below 10 per lakh is "Low"? 🙄

#COVID19 #CovidIsNotOver

https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#maps_new-admissions-rate-county

COVID Data Tracker

CDC’s home for COVID-19 data. Visualizations, graphs, and data in one easy-to-use website.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Statewide #COVID hospitalizations in New York dropped below 6 per lakh in the fall wave on November 2.

Across the US, as of October 1 we are now officially in the 2023-2024 respiratory disease season, so we have wrapped on the RESP-NET chart. And it's reassuring to see that #COVID19 and flu hospitalizations are less than half what they were this time last year!

#COVIDIsNotOver and weekly deaths reported to the WHO peaked at 2,210 in September; now there are around 500 people a week dying.