The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio cases ‘cresting:’ COVID trends down, hospitaliz­ations high

- Jackie Borchardt

COLUMBUS – The latest COVID-19 surge in Ohio seems to have peaked or at least plateaued, based on recent data for cases and hospitaliz­ations.

The state’s new case rate for the past two weeks dropped this week for the first time since July, from 698.7 to 616.7 on Thursday. That figure is a fairly stable snapshot in time when it comes to cases, since it’s consistent­ly applied to the same timeframe each week and considers the number of cases by the date someone first felt ill or took a positive coronaviru­s test.

The number of new cases reported each day, averaged over seven days to account for fluctuations in reporting, was down to 5,814 Thursday from 6,648 one week prior.

The number of people currently hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 statewide has also stabilized, averaging about 3,600 a day for the past week, according to a USA TODAY Network Ohio analysis of Ohio Hospital Associatio­n data.

Those numbers suggest Ohio is “cresting,” Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff, director of the Ohio Department of Health, told reporters Friday.

“That’s encouragin­g but it’s certainly not a reason for us to declare victory over COVID and walk away,” he said. “There’s still a lot of cases we’re seeing every day and I will not feel confident this wave is declining and passing until we start seeing some more definite and consistent decreases in our hospitaliz­ations across the state.”

Thursday’s per capita case rate, based on a seven-day moving average, was the lowest since Sept. 4, according to the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 tracking project. But it still ranks ninth highest in the nation. While the number of COVID-19 tests administer­ed has dropped about 18% in the past two weeks, the number of new cases has dropped 31.7% during the same time, so less testing alone can’t account for the decrease.

Hospitaliz­ations tend to peak after infections, as it can take up to two weeks for someone to feel ill enough to seek medical care. There were 3,559 Covid-19-positive patients in Ohio hospitals on Friday, about the same number as in mid-january, on the back half of the last surge.

Deaths have also increased in recent weeks, with 453 being reported in the past week. That’s the largest number since the state switched in March to using only death certificate data to count deaths.

Deaths can be reported several months after someone dies because death certificates are first sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The number of deaths will likely continue to rise as Ohio makes its way to the other side of this wave.

“This wave, the delta wave, when it has hit portions of the world that have had low or negligible vaccine rates has caused a level of devastatio­n that we were spared,” Vanderhoff said.

Current hospitaliz­ations reached a low of 200 statewide on July 9. Cases had dropped down to about 211 per day. Then, the more contagious delta variant became the dominant strain in Ohio.

Jackie Borchardt is the bureau chief for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons across Ohio.

 ?? DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER LIZ ?? The number of new coronaviru­s cases reported in Ohio has declined in the past week, but state health leaders say they haven't seen enough evidence to declare the peak due to the delta variant has been reached.
DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER LIZ The number of new coronaviru­s cases reported in Ohio has declined in the past week, but state health leaders say they haven't seen enough evidence to declare the peak due to the delta variant has been reached.

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