South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

As states limit info, the state of the pandemic is not clear

- The New York Times

A growing number of U.S. states have stopped giving daily updates of the number of new coronaviru­s cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths, which, combined with the rise of at-home testing whose results are often not officially registered, is creating a more uneven realtime look at the state of the pandemic.

Although most states still report each weekday, more than a dozen have cut back to once or twice a week, according to a New York Times database. Arizona, Hawaii, Kentucky, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma and South Carolina have moved to weekly reports, as has the District of Columbia. Wyoming has moved to twice-a-week reports. More reductions are expected to come, public health officials have said.

Nationally, the declines in new cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths are tapering off, and some experts are concerned that the drop in reporting could create blind spots if the pandemic begins a resurgence.

Many states have recently dropped pandemic restrictio­ns, even as cases surge again in Europe, which has often served as a bellwether for the pandemic’s U.S. trajectory. Although testing has fallen in some countries, detected cases are up globally about 20% over the past two weeks, according to the Center for Systems Science and Engineerin­g at Johns Hopkins University.

A few states also scaled back their data reporting frequency last summer, just as a wave of new cases from the delta variant hit. But there are key difference­s this time, health officials said.

“We’ve moved to a place where we don’t need to know the absolute numbers,” said Dr. Marcus Plescia, chief medical officer for the Associatio­n of State and Territoria­l Health Officials, which represents the public health agencies of all 50 states, Washington D.C., and U.S. territorie­s. “We can still monitor trends for people who are getting tests in public settings. We still have a good sense of where the absolute numbers are going.”

He said the reduction in reporting would not necessaril­y mean that states would be less prepared for new waves. Past spikes have come from variants that were discovered and sequenced internatio­nally, including delta and omicron. “It was a matter of waiting until they got here,” Plescia said.

The benefits of the daily data reporting has also shifted, according to Dr. Gigi Gronvall, a testing expert and a senior scholar at the Center for Health Security at Johns Hopkins University.

“We did see this in June, the attempt to report it more like flu, and it was warranted then,” she said. “In June, cases had dropped, and we did not yet have delta. We didn’t have much demand for, and didn’t have, rapid antigen tests. Now, the government has literally given everyone tests. People who are getting tested who are testing positive are almost certainly not telling their health department­s. So the data is pretty wonky.”

She said other indicators are more valuable at this point, such as hospitaliz­ation and vaccinatio­n numbers and wastewater surveillan­ce.

Plescia agreed, saying it was the right time to bring COVID-19 reporting more in line with how public health agencies track other infectious diseases. He said the result would be a more complete picture of the coronaviru­s’ trajectory because there would be more time to iron out the fluctuatio­ns of daily data. In fact, the daily data “does not necessaril­y influence the interventi­ons that we’re considerin­g,” he said.

However, some researcher­s warned that the drawdown of state reporting on pandemic metrics presented a threat to response times.

“Infectious diseases like SARS-CoV-2 move very quickly, and therefore we need to respond quickly to early signals of rising cases or a new variant,” said Dr. Sam Scarpino, managing director of virus surveillan­ce at the Rockefelle­r Foundation’s Pandemic Prevention Institute.

 ?? ?? A nurse works in a drive-thru COVID-19 testing site Feb. 18 in Hagerstown, Md.
A nurse works in a drive-thru COVID-19 testing site Feb. 18 in Hagerstown, Md.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States