There is no “all clear” signal yet: Covid-19 Weekly Review 11May20

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The weekly statistics are in, and statewide reports show Mississippi’s percentage increase of new cases is trending  generally downward. Whether those trends are enough to withstand the reopening of the economy depends on how well Mississippians continue to practice all possible precautions.

Where are we statewide?

As of today, the 404 new cases reported on May 8th appear to have been our peak. Those numbers were as of the evening of May 7th. The peak is the day with the most new cases, and should be followed by continuously decreasing reports of new case numbers. MS has had a couple of false peaks, low reports that were not continuously followed by lower reports. So far, the current downward trend has lasted 4 days. This is far short of the two weeks’ trend originally proposed necessary before communities “reopened.”

Statewide, the weekly increase of 1797 new cases was a 23% increase, down from the previous week’s 29% increase. There was a 40%  state wide increase in deaths ( to 435); this was an increase over the previous weeks increase (35%), and is to be expected. Deaths may go up for a while, though new cases continue downward.

Where are we in Northeast Mississippi?

In Northeast MS three counties had higher percentage increases of new cases than the state’s average of 23%. Some are trending up, some down:

  • On 5-11 Union County increased by 67%, up to 50 total cases from the 30 case total on 5-4. There had been a 50% increase from April 27 to May 4th, 15 cases to 30 cases. Trending up.
  •  Clay County on 5-11 had 66 cases, up 27% from the 52 cases present on 5-4. Clay saw a 67% increase between 4-27 and 5-4, from 31 to 52 cases. Trending down.
  • Tishomingo County was up 25% this week to 10 cases, compared to a 0% increase  on 5-4, which had the same number of cases (8) for two weeks. Trending up.

Three Northeast MS counties, which have had the highest raw number of cases, are seeing their percentages drop below that of the state average.

  • Though Monroe County has the area’s highest number of cases in Northeast MS (199) as of 5-11, that is only a 14% increase from the week of 4-11. This makes 4 weeks of downward trends in the weekly percent of increase.
  • LaFayette County, with 101 total cases had a less than 9% increase since May 4, but that is up from the 6% from 4-27 to 5-4
  • Lee County, with 80 cases total as of 5-11 was below the state’s average with an 11% increase, but this was trending upward from the week of May 4, which only had a 3% increase.

What is the take-away from current weekly trends?

One can see that these trends, while generally optimistic, are far from being an “all clear” notice. Traveling the area gives  evidence that many, many Mississippians do not understand this, or do not believe it.  The governor and many community government entities have emphasized that it remains important for us to observe precautions against contracting coronavirus. Congregating in large groups, failure to use some sort of mask, sharing food and drinks are still dangerous behaviors. They endanger not only the immediate participants, but all those who may later come into contact with them.

In Mississippi the nursing homes are being singled out as hot spots for the coronavirus, and they are, to a large degree. The fact is that 112  nursing homes and other long term care facilities, as of today’s reports, account for 1,223 total Covid-19 cases and 193 deaths. However, that is less than 13% of the state’s cases and about 44% of its deaths. There is certainly no basis in these figures to discount the danger throughout the state as a whole.

Further details of these statistics are available at https://msdh.ms.gov/msdhsite/_static/14,0,420.html

Weekly Covid-19 trending*: National, Mississippi, NE Miss.

Data file 3-30-20 4-6-20 4-13-20 4-20-20 4-27-20 5-4-20 5-11-20
USA        Cases 122,653 352,160 565,231 770,076 993,852  1,207,552 1,385,834
     Deaths 2112 10,369 22,875 41,316 56,009  69,374 81,795
MS            Cases 847 1738 +105% 2942  +69% 4512 +53% 6094 +35%  7877 +29%  9674 +23%
                 Deaths 16 51   +219% 98     +92% 169    +72% 229  +36%  310  +35%  435 +40%
NE MS        Cases 116 204  +76% 325   +59% 502    +54% 679   +35%  810 +19%  930  +15%
Deaths 3 11   +267% 19     +73% 32      +68% 41    +28%  59  +44%  73  +24%
Alcorn       Cases 1 6 7 7 8 10 10
        Deaths  1
Benton       Cases 4 5 5 8 9  12  13
Deaths  0
Calhoun     Cases 3 9 24 42 50  56  58
Deaths 2 3  4  4
Chickasaw  Cases 12 15 30 45 64  78  93
         Deaths 2 2 4 5  8  10
Clay            Cases 4 9 20 26 31  52  66
Deaths 1 2  2  3
Itawamba   Cases 3 4 9 26 49  64  69
Deaths 1 2  4  7
LaFayette   Cases 14 22 30 67 88  93  101
Deaths 1 1 3 3  3  3
Lee             Cases 23 30 46 63 70  72  80
Deaths 1 2 4 4 4  4  4
Marshall    Cases 13 23 34 38 41  48  56
Deaths 1 2 2 2  2  2
Monroe    Cases 5 16 37 75 144  175  199
Deaths 1 2 5 9  16  21
Pontotoc  Cases 4 12 15 18 18  22  23
Deaths 1 1 2 2  2  2
Prentiss    Cases 4 10 14 25 32  32  36
Deaths 1  1  2
Tippah       Cases 23 36 45 47 52 58  66
Deaths 2 3 6 7 7  10  11
Tishomingo  Cases 0 1 2 4 8  8  10
Deaths  0
Union         Cases 3 6 7 11 15  30  50
Deaths 1 1 1  2  3

*All state data is from MS State Department of Health and is as of 6 PM on the day prior to reporting National data is from World-O-Meter and is current as of date of our report.

PDF of Chart: Covid-19 2 5-11-20

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