Springfield News-Sun

Vaccines are upending trusted virus metrics

- By Ben Conarck

MIAMI— About four out of every 10 Floridians have received at least one dose of a COVID vaccine a shift

— in the pandemic landscape that has upended the meaningful­ness of various statistics that health experts, government officials and the public have relied on for the last year.

Vaccines haven’t just cut the number of people at risk of developing severe disease. They’ve also skewed the pool of who’s still getting tested for the virus, impacting still closely watched numbers

like daily case counts and the percentage of tests coming back positive.

Some things haven’t changed. Hospitaliz­ations from the virus have always been the most reliable way to gauge spread in a community. Now, the number of peo- ple hospitaliz­ed has become the single most important measure in understand­ing both the severity of an outbreak and how effectivel­y the vaccines are working.

“The relationsh­ip between each of these metrics and what they mean for the future is rapidly chang- ing,” said Stephen Kissler, an immunology and infectious disease expert with Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Test positivity loses some meaning

One of the foremost statis- tics used to measure spread of the virus, test positivity, has been undercut by the shifts in who is getting tested

and vaccines, according to experts interviewe­d by the Miami Herald.

“I don’t think positivity is very useful anymore,” said Eric Toner, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health Security.

Early in the pandemic, Toner said, positivity was an especially crucial statis- tic, because most cases were being missed.

That changed during Florida’s fall coronaviru­s lull, when access to testing expanded following a summer surge and record pos- itivity rates. Heading into the winter, Florida’s case counts were more accurate

and timely, and the positivity rates became useful again, but for a different reason. By late summer, positivity

became essential for detecting increases in spread, such as the rise in cases following holiday gatherings, when testing levels had reached their heights, and most recently again in early to mid-march.

Kissler, the Harvard infectious disease expert, said test positivity will still be a good measure to detect subtle increases in spread signaling a future rise in cases, but it no longer serves as a valid comparison point to earlier in the pandemic.

“Comparing the raw number of positivity is really difficult,” he said. “We should be calibratin­g that to the number of hospitaliz­ations.”

Some local officials appear to have reached that conclusion already. Miami-dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava wrote in a March 5 memo that she would lift the coun- ty’s curfew if the test posi- tivity hit 5.5% or less.

That never happened, but a month later, Levine Cava lifted the curfew anyway.

“We considered all the available data, including the 14-day [test] positivity rate, and also hospitaliz­ation from COVID and death rates,” Levine Cava said in explaining her decision. “These have all declined significan­tly as vaccinatio­ns for the most

vulnerable have expanded and our overall vaccinatio­n program has progressed.”

COVID cases are rising. But what about hospitaliz­ations?

Well into the spring of 2021, a lot has changed. But in mid-march, something familiar happened: Cases rose again.

People under 50 were driv- ing the increases in cases, which were concentrat­ed in rural and urban counties. Public health experts said the case rises could likely be attributed to a mix of chang- ing behaviors, more-infec- tious variants and spring break tourism.

It was the same way COVID surges had started in the past: young people catching the virus, then spreading it to older people who are more susceptibl­e to severe illness. That has played out in twoweek delays: one between rising infections and rising cases, and another between case rises and mirroring rises in hospitaliz­ations.

Florida’s latest case rise started two weeks into peak tourist season, around March 15, when the seven-day average of daily cases was at 4,575. As of April 10, the seven-day average rose to 5,824, a 27% increase.

But this rise in cases has been different. The volume of COVID patients in the state of Florida started to creep up in April, about two weeks

after cases started rising. And yet the increase in hos- pitalizati­ons has been less pronounced than the rise in cases. At the start of the week, 3,186 patients were hospitaliz­ed with COVID, about a 12.5% rise from the

most recent low of 2,831 patients on March 27.

Vaccines, combined with the shifts in testing, mean the vast majority of testing is being done on people who are at lower risk of becoming severely ill, said Kissler. They are also more likely to be younger people mandated by their employer to get tested and therefore more likely to be asymptomat­ic.

Kissler said that has been the case across the country: a national rise in cases hasn’t been followed by the same rise in hospitaliz­ations.

“It’s pretty clear vaccines are helping with that, but it makes it much harder to

interpret the data,” he said. What to watch out for Both Kissler and Toner said that more-infectious variants have thrown a wildcard into the pandemic picture, and without them, we might have expected to see cases wane until enough people have been vaccinated to prevent future outbreaks.

But the viral variants have made that harder to accomplish. Florida has been a national leader in known variant cases, and research at the University of Miami has also revealed concerning mutations.

 ?? AMY BETH BENNETT/SUN SENTINEL/TNS ?? A driver gets a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n on Jan. 8 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.
AMY BETH BENNETT/SUN SENTINEL/TNS A driver gets a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n on Jan. 8 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

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