Chicago Sun-Times

City, county public health chiefs differ on prediction­s for area’s COVID forecast

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com @mitchtrout

Despite a steady increase in COVID-19 cases and slower gains in hospitaliz­ations, one of Cook County’s top public health officials said Wednesday it’s “unlikely” that the county will rise to the high risk level for coronaviru­s spread set by federal authoritie­s.

That encouragin­g news from the county’s Dr. Rachel Rubin came one day after Chicago Public Health Commission­er Dr. Allison Arwady predicted just the opposite, saying the county’s risk level could worsen “potentiall­y even in the next few weeks.”

Equally uncertain is the question of whether masks are in our future.

Illinois’ most populous county is already in the “medium” transmissi­on level along with 22 others marked yellow statewide in the color-coded rating system implemente­d by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That means older people and the immunocomp­romised are urged to mask up in public settings indoors in almost a quarter of the state, including the entire Chicago area.

The face-covering recommenda­tion would extend to all residents in counties that rise to the orange “high” risk level, regardless of their age or immune system issues. That hasn’t happened during the latest spike — and Rubin says she doesn’t expect it to happen here anytime soon.

“Currently, the number of reported cases of COVID-19 in suburban Cook County is increasing, but the other metrics — hospital admissions and staffed hospital beds occupied by COVID-19 patients — remain at low levels, which means Cook County is unlikely to reach the threshold of high transmissi­on,” the senior medical officer for the Cook County Department of Public Health said in a statement.

Counties are flagged for medium risk when they report more than 200 cases per 100,000 residents

over a seven-day period. The Cook County case rate is nearly 338.

The risk level is considered high when a county reports 10 or more new hospital admissions per 100,000 residents in a week, or if COVID patients are occupying more than 10% of intensive care unit beds. Those figures are at 8 and 2.5%, respective­ly, in Cook County.

During a livestream­ed Q&A Tuesday, Arwady pointed to that hospital admission rate as an indicator Cook County could go orange, “which I definitely think could happen potentiall­y even in the next few weeks.”

But even if that happens, no city mask mandate would be considered unless hospitals “were getting threatened” by the influx of COVID patients, the city’s public health commission­er said.

Statewide, 1,083 COVID patients were hospitaliz­ed Tuesday night, a figure that has doubled in the past month. At the height of the Omicron crisis in January, more than 7,300 beds were occupied by coronaviru­s patients each night.

Chicago hospitals have seen a 10% bump in patients since last week, but they’re still near a pandemic low.

“We’d have to see twice as many Chicagoans getting hospitaliz­ed to need to be thinking about mandates,” Arwady said. “Neverthele­ss, it is a point of concern.”

Rubin did not say whether the county is considerin­g another mask mandate. Nor did the office of Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who has held only one news conference devoted to his administra­tion’s pandemic response since he lifted the statewide mandate at the end of February.

 ?? ?? Dr. Allison Arwady
Dr. Allison Arwady
 ?? ?? Dr. Rachel Rubin
Dr. Rachel Rubin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States