Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

DOUBTS raised about Texas case data.

Thousands of virus cases overlooked, reported weeks later

- AMY SCHOENFELD WALKER AND LISA WAANANEN JONES

Inconsiste­ncies and problems with covid-19 data collection in Texas have clouded the picture of the pandemic’s trajectory in the state to the point that some residents and officials say they cannot rely on the numbers to tell them what is really going on.

The state has overlooked thousands of cases, only to report them weeks after infection. It has made major adjustment­s to its case and death counts, defining them one way and then another, suddenly reporting figures for some counties that were vastly different from those posted by the local health department.

The state has faced these data problems as infections surged in the summer and schools and colleges began to reopen for the fall. Changes in the state’s figures have been large enough to affect national trends and have sown confusion and distrust at a time when the state says it needs public support to avoid another surge.

“If everyone was counted in a timely way, then maybe people would be more careful, and maybe people would understand that this is real,” said Debra Zukonik of Rockwall County, where the deaths of her brother and a friend did not appear to be reflected in state and local figures for weeks afterward.

Cases and deaths peaked over the summer in Texas and have been trending downward since then, according to a New York Times database that uses both state and county figures. But the virus is still spreading rapidly in many areas of the state, with an average of more than 3,500 new cases a day in September.

Public health officials and researcher­s place the blame for the state’s data problems on Texas’ antiquated data systems and a reliance on faxed test results, which limit the state’s ability to track every infection and death in many of its 254 counties. They also say that the vast state’s decentrali­zed structure — with many local government­s, some of them tiny, running their own public health operations — is ill-suited to coping with the crush of covid-19.

“It’s a colossal undertakin­g, and because it’s happening in real time, there will inevitably be situations where we have to update or correct something,” said Chris Van Deusen, spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

CASES LOST, FOUND

In August, after upgrading one of its reporting systems, Texas discovered backlogs of thousands of positive test results that the state and its laboratori­es had overlooked or miscoded from late spring and summer. That meant case counts in some counties had been artificial­ly low for months — and would be artificial­ly high in the final weeks of August and into September as the omitted cases were belatedly added.

Dallas County reported 5,361 confirmed cases on a day in mid-August when the county had just 166 actual new cases; the rest were from the state’s backlog. The state has added a few thousand more backlogged cases since then, many dating from June or July.

“It’s definitely very frustratin­g for all of us,” said Dr. Philip Huang, director of Dallas County Health and Human Services. “If there’s a big backlog or delay, it doesn’t reflect the actual number of people who test positive today, or even two days ago.”

Public health experts and local officials say the backlogs represent thousands of missed chances to perform timely contact tracing and have given the public reason to be skeptical of the data.

But state officials said that knowing about the backlogged cases earlier would not have changed the overall trend in the state or the guidance given to the public. And they say the reporting system upgrade, despite its flaws, shows that Texas is moving in the right direction.

“The data that we have now is far more accurate than what we had last month and maybe even a couple of weeks ago,” Gov. Greg Abbott said last month after the backlog issue came to light. “That data should be very close to being perfectly accurate in the coming weeks and coming months.”

Even as the backlogs subside, confusion about cases persists because state and local health department­s do not report them uniformly. While the state includes confirmed cases based on a molecular test, at least 17 counties also report probable cases based on antigen testing, symptoms or exposure to an infected person, as recommende­d by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The case-count difference­s raise doubts among the public, said Annette Rodriguez, health director for the Corpus Christi Nueces County Public Health District, which reported 4,000 more cumulative cases than the state on Friday. “It makes them question: ‘Who’s right? Who isn’t? Who’s credible?’”

In late July, Texas changed the way it tallies coronaviru­s deaths. It started basing its counts on death certificat­es filed with the state instead of gathering figures from local health department websites, which often rely on reports from hospitals and physicians. The change was intended to make the tallies for all 254 counties consistent and comparable, but it has distorted data for several locations, confusing residents and local officials alike.

The change led the state to add 675 deaths to its tally in a single day — a jump plainly visible on the national death curve.

Then, the next day, the state lowered its new figure by more than 200, citing an “automation error.”

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