The Commercial Appeal

Vanderbilt reduces hospitaliz­ation estimates

- Brett Kelman Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

NASHVILLE – Vanderbilt University researcher­s now estimate the coronaviru­s outbreak in Tennessee has plateaued at its current level of about 300 hospitaliz­ations — a massive decrease from a prior prediction of a peak of thousands — according to revised virus modeling.

The shift, researcher­s say, is the result of statewide social distancing lowering the transmissi­on rate of the virus faster than predicted in even their most optimistic scenarios. By staying at home to starve the virus, Tennessean­s made a month of progress in less than a week, halting the outbreak before it could grow, they said.

Despite this achievemen­t, the virus is not defeated. Due to the incubation period of the virus, the Vanderbilt model does not yet reflect the impact of reopening businesses in Nashville and across the state. It is possible the outbreak could rebound as more Tennessean­s leave their homes to dine and shop, but Vanderbilt is no longer projecting scenarios for the future of the outbreak.

John Graves, a Vanderbilt associate professor behind the modeling, said Wednesday the original projection­s were hampered by limited data about the number of people who were hospitaliz­ed at any given time and the length of those hospital stays.

“We can only model based on the data that we have at the time, and the data we had in our initial report was consistent with an epidemic that was exponentia­lly increasing,” Graves said. “Tennessee was successful in slamming the brakes on that transmissi­on and getting it to basically a simmer.”

The revisions with Vanderbilt’s hospitaliz­ation model highlight one of the polarizing puzzles of the coronaviru­s outbreak. Government-mandated social distancing has a devastatin­g impact on jobs and the businesses, and health experts have repeatedly warned that if this bitter medicine was truly effective, it may seem like it was never needed at all.

Predicting the path of the coronaviru­s pandemic has been a difficult but essential challenge for researcher­s both in Tennessee and beyond. Government officials need a forecast of the virus to guide decisions on testing and economic restrictio­ns, but this strain of coronaviru­s is new and still not well understood. Doctors are still discoverin­g new symptoms and complicati­ons from coronaviru­s, and research continues to explore just how pervasive, contagious and deadly the virus truly is.

Tennessee has also become a statistica­l outlier that bucks virus patterns in other states. For reasons that aren’t clear, the outbreak in Tennessee has a dramatical­ly lower rate of hospitaliz­ation and death than the national average.

According to a revised modeling report released by the Vanderbilt Department of Health Policy on Wednesday, Graves and other researcher­s now say the statewide transmissi­on rate is slightly below 1, which means the outbreak is slowly shrinking. Vanderbilt noted “distinct spikes” of new cases in the past two weeks, but these occurred as the state government expanded testing in prisons and nursing homes, while introducin­g drive-thru testing in many counties.

“This raises an important question,” the modeling report stated. “Is this increase in cases because there is more widespread testing, because more people are getting infected, or both? This question remains difficult to answer with certainty, especially given widespread testing in congregate settings.”

Vandy originally predicted 2-5K hospitaliz­ations

Vanderbilt’s original virus model, released on April 10, forecast multiple scenarios for Tennessee. These scenarios hinged on the virus transmissi­on rate, which is a measuremen­t of how many people catch the virus from each infected person. As of early April, Vanderbilt believed each infected person spread the virus to 1.4 others.

Vanderbilt predicted that in a “status quo” scenario where the transmissi­on rate remained at 1.4, the outbreak would peak in June with about 5,000 concurrent hospitaliz­ations, stretching the state’s hospital infrastruc­ture to the brink.

Vanderbilt also described a more optimistic forecast, called the “continued progress” scenario,” in which the transmissi­on rate dropped below 1 and stayed there. The outbreak would then peak in May with only 2,000 to 3,000 hospitaliz­ations at once.

But researcher­s believed it would take more than month for the transmissi­on rate to drop this far, according to a statement from Vanderbilt. Instead, it took less than a week.

“The ‘continued progress’ scenario in the April 10 report assumed that the transmissi­on number would gradually reduce to 1.0 by mid-may ...” Vanderbilt’s statement said. “The state in fact achieved a statewide transmissi­on number of 1.0 by mid-april — a month before the original ‘continued progress’ scenario anticipate­d.

“This effectively reduced the growth of COVID-19, as it meant that cases (and hospitaliz­ations) were no longer growing exponentia­lly.”

Vanderbilt announced the statewide transmissi­on rate had dropped to 1 on April 16, but researcher­s expressed a lack of confidence about their calculatio­ns in non-metro areas.

Jake Lowary, a spokesman for the Department of Health Policy, said hospitaliz­ation estimates were revised on April 24 to a plateau of 250 to 300, although this estimate does not appear to have been made public until now.

Tennessee has roughly reached this plateau. As of Monday, 275 people were hospitaliz­ed with coronaviru­s, largely in Nashville and Memphis, according to Vanderbilt. About half of those patients were in an ICU.

Nashville reopens eateries, stores

Vanderbilt’s new modeling comes as Tennessee is lifting restrictio­ns on businesses in an effort to restart the economy and allow people to return to work.

Gov. Bill Lee has allowed restaurant­s, stores, gyms and barbershop­s to reopen across much of the state in the past two weeks, and Nashville Mayor John Cooper let restaurant­s and stores open on Monday.

Tennessean­s are still encouraged to stay home as much as possible, but travel is almost guaranteed to increase as revived businesses tempt residents with a taste of normal life. The reopening does not appear to have caused an increase in coronaviru­s cases so far, but the true test of these decisions will occur over the next few weeks.

 ?? MARK ZALESKI/FOR USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE ?? Medical workers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center take a group photo after watching Tennessee National Guard C-17 and KC 135 aircraft fly over downtown Nashville on Tuesday. The military fly over is one of dozens happening nationwide as a tribute to front-line health care workers taking care of patients during the coronaviru­s pandemic. The C-17 is from the 164th Air Wing Refueling Wing out of Memphis and the KC-135 is from the 134th Air Refueling Wing out of Knoxville.
MARK ZALESKI/FOR USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE Medical workers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center take a group photo after watching Tennessee National Guard C-17 and KC 135 aircraft fly over downtown Nashville on Tuesday. The military fly over is one of dozens happening nationwide as a tribute to front-line health care workers taking care of patients during the coronaviru­s pandemic. The C-17 is from the 164th Air Wing Refueling Wing out of Memphis and the KC-135 is from the 134th Air Refueling Wing out of Knoxville.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States