New York Post

COV REPORTS OVERHAULED

NY hosps must separate peripheral cases

- By BERNADETTE HOGAN and BRUCE GOLDING

New York state hospitals will have to start reporting the numbers of patients being treated for symptoms of COVID-19 separately from those who test positive after being admitted for other reasons, Gov. Hochul said Monday.

Hochul said that amid a surge in hospitaliz­ations tied to the spread of the highly contagious Omicron variant, she was “disappoint­ed to see that at least a certain percentage overall are not related to being treated for COVID.”

The governor said she’d “been doing a random call around to some of the hospital leaders that I touch base with” and was “seeing numbers from 20- to sometimes 50%.”

“But we don’t have clear data right now. That’s anecdotal,” she said at a news conference in Rochester.

“Beginning tomorrow, we’re going to be asking all hospitals to break out for us how many people are being hospitaliz­ed because of COVID symptoms [and] how many people happen to be testing positive, just while they’re in there for other treatments.”

Hochul made the remarks while announcing that the state’s latest seven-day hospitaliz­ation rate had spiked to 37.3 per 100,000 people, continuing “straight up” a chart that plots the surge amid the spread of the Omicron variant of the virus.

The latest statewide rate represents a nearly 50% increase over the 25.3 per 100,000 that the state Health Department reported on Dec. 27.

The highest regional rate announced Monday, 43.4 per 100,000, was recorded on Long Island, while the Finger Lakes and New York City were close behind at 42.1 and 42, respective­ly.

Hochul also said the latest number of new COVID cases had dropped from “nearly 90,000” to around 51,000, but called that figure “misleading” due to the New Year’s Day holiday on Saturday and “people not getting tested over the weekend.”

“So, we’re looking at a critical moment but we also want to — we’re gonna start asking some questions,” she said.

“I have always wondered . . . is that person in the hospital because of COVID? Or did they show up there and are routinely tested and showing positive and they may have been asymptomat­ic or even just had the sniffles?

“I just want to always be honest with New Yorkers about how bad this is,” she added of pandemic data.

“Yes, the numbers, the sheer numbers of people infected, are high.

“But I want to see whether or not the hospitaliz­ations correlate with that.”

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