Während New York City von einer neuen Version des Coronavirus (COVID) heimgesucht wird, erfahren Sie hier, wie Sie den Anstieg des Schulanfangs verfolgen können
A late-summer COVID surge is adding even more stress to an already busy time of year.
Next week, undervaccinated kids will return to New York City classrooms without many of the precautions that marked previous pandemic-era school years. And the city health commissioner warned this week that the new BA.2.86 variant has arrived and may be more likely to sidestep people’s pre-existing immunity, making people vulnerable to reinfection.
It’s also hard to know exactly how bad the surge will be. Because of changes in how officials and clinics test for and track the virus, old data standbys — cases, test positivity and community transmission levels — don’t mean as much as they once did.
“It really is hard to look at cases and conclude much beyond whether community transmission is on the rise or not,” said Denis Nash, an epidemiology professor at the CUNY Graduate School of Public Health. “It doesn’t really help us quantify what really is a surge.”
So what’s a COVID-conscious New Yorker to do this fall? Nash and another expert suggested consulting more robust measures of COVID transmission, like hospitalizations and the concentration of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus in sewage samples. (Gothamist has retooled its own COVID stats page to reflect this advice. You can check it out here.)
Testing trends
The number of COVID cases reported by the New York City Department of Health used to be the barometer for community transmission. Case counts and case rates led city, state and federal data dashboards in the early years of the pandemic. But the popularity of at-home tests has made those metrics less and less reliable, said Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health and principal investigator at the city’s Pandemic Response Institute.
“We can watch the numbers of cases, but we have to keep in mind that those are largely undercounting,” she said.
The end of the federal public health emergency for COVID-19 has a impacted the accuracy of case counts and test positivity, experts and city health officials said, because many labs have stopped reporting positive tests. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention dropped the case collection requirement along with the resulting rates for its data dashboard, opting instead to focus on hospitalizations and deaths. El-Sadr said that these measures of severe disease are more important and accurate measures of the pandemic’s influence over time.
As of late August, 524 people in New York City were hospitalized with COVID-19, according to data from the state health department. That’s more than triple the number of COVID-positive hospital patients at the end of June, but still well below last winter’s peak. (It’s also important to note that many of those patients aren’t hospitalized for COVID specifically — they were admitted for another reason but then tested positive.)
Waste-watchers
El-Sadr, Nash and other experts are urging New Yorkers to look to the sewers for another useful source of outbreak data. The concentration of the virus in NYC’s wastewater provides a vital glimpse into the pandemic’s spread, but Gothamist and MuckRock reported earlier this year that city health officials may not be using the information to its fullest potential.
„Böser Kaffee-Nerd. Analyst. Unheilbarer Speckpraktiker. Totaler Twitter-Fan. Typischer Essensliebhaber.“