Thursday Throughput: Missing COVID Deaths Edition
[ThTh1] Over the last few weeks, we have a seen sudden and alarming rise in confirmed COVID-19 infections, to the point where many states are instituting mask requirements, pulling back on reopening plans and considering new stay-at home orders. I’m not particularly interested, at this point, in figuring out who is to blame for this. I suspect, like most things surrounding the virus, there are many factors at play. But there seems little doubt that we are now in the grips of a resurgence, with 38 states or territories seeing an increase in cases over the last two weeks, 16 seeing a stable case load, and none seeing a decrease.
Or are we? Proponents of keeping the economy open are countering that the recent rise in cases is due to increased testing, not an actual resurgence of the virus. President Trump has been particularly vocal on this point. This belief has faded as the number of cases has skyrocketed and the percentage of positive tests has grown. But one point the diehards keep hitting is that there has been, so far, no corresponding rise in COVID-related deaths. The number of COVID deaths should be relatively insensitive to testing, so why aren’t they rising if the virus is really surging?
Well, first of all, people don’t die the second they are diagnosed with Coronavirus. The typical time between when a case is diagnosed and when a death is reported is about three weeks. And we are just about at three weeks since the new surge began. Moreover, that delay between confirmed test and confirmed death may be increasing right now because of increased testing. We are diagnosing cases faster and earlier than ever. That leads to a problem called lead-time bias, in which you mistake earlier detection for better outcomes.
The second reason is that the new surge — so far — is hitting a younger demographic. The first hit older Americans hard — nursing homes in New Jersey and New York were literally decimated. Older people are far more likely to die from Coronavirus than younger people. So while we may be seeing a rise in deaths from the new surge, it is being countered by a decline in deaths from the first surge, at least for the moment.
The third reason we are not seeing a rise in deaths (yet) is that COVID-19 is probably less lethal than it was three months ago. In the early days of the pandemic, we had no idea what we were dealing with. Since then we have discovered that the antiviral remdesivir has a positive effect if given early in the disease. The cheap steroid dexamethasone may cut the fatality rate by as much as a third for the most desperately ill patients. We’ve also learned that we were overusing ventilators during the early months. The use of a ventilator, as Andrew can tell you in detail, comes with risks and potential complications. The air pressure can be high enough to damage the lungs. Doctors are now being a lot more cautious in using them (which is why we don’t have a ventilator shortage right now). I’ve heard from several critical care doctors and nurses that they are now only being used if a patient is in critical danger, with supplemental oxygen and Non-Invasive Positive Pressure being favored if possible.
This is part of the bigger issue which is that we know have thousands of doctors and nurses that have seen dozens or hundreds of COVID cases. My father is a surgeon and he likes to say that medicine is as much art as science. You can know all the textbooks just fine. But a lot of the time, you have to rely on instinct and experience to know what’s wrong with a patient and how to treat them. Four months ago, that experience did not exist for COVID-19. Now it does. And thus our medical personnel are much better equipped to handle COVID cases and keep patients alive. They have the instincts to know when a patient is in serious trouble and when they’re not; when they need a ventilator and when they don’t; when to use steroids and how much to use. All of this adds up to better overall outcomes.
But there’s one other factor: we are still seriously estimating just how bad things were in March and April.
Everyone with a spreadsheet program and a little knowledge is producing COVID graphs these days, so I thought I’d give it a whirl, using data from the COVID tracking project.1 The problem with tracking the progress of COVID-19 is that, even now, we don’t detect all the infections or even the majority of them. And this was especially true in the early months of the disease when testing was woefully inadequate. So on any particular day, the number of new COVID infections is some convolution of the number of new infections and the number of tests we’re doing.
There is, however, a much more solid number: deaths. While there are reasons to believe we are undercounting the number killed by COVID, the number is much more stable since a death is a recorded event while a test is a maybe thing. So what I did was take the number of deaths on any particular day and calculate how many infections led to those deaths, assuming that it takes three weeks from infection to a recorded death and that the fatality rate is 0.7%.2 Here is what the infection curve looks like, back-projecting from deaths.
The data go through mid-June and they show just how bad the initial wave of infections was. At its worst, we may have been getting as many as 200-300,000 infections a day. But because testing was so inadequate, we didn’t see it very clearly. We knew it was bad; but we didn’t quite know how bad.
Here is another plot comparing the number of projected infections against the number of confirmed ones. This is basically the percentage of cases we were detecting.
It’s certainly no secret that we weren’t detecting most COVID-19 infections early on. But the sheer scale of the problem is hard to grasp. For several weeks, the epidemic was raging invisibly, infecting millions while only thousands of cases were being confirmed. We are now detecting about a third of cases, possibly higher. That might be as good as it gets since many people have no symptoms or mild symptoms and never get tested.
Let’s use the deaths as a measure of the number of infections up to three weeks ago. Then we’ll switch to the number of actual confirmed cases, assuming a 30% detection rate. This hybrid plot looks like so:
Now I would not take this plot to the bank. It is rife with assumptions, many of which are known and are throwing the analysis off. The age demographic has changed, which makes the use of deaths to back-project infections increasingly inaccurate. But then again, our treatments have improved so we’re likely getting more infections for every recorded death.
In the end, however, with a large helping of salt, I think that curve gives an accurate if blurry picture of what has happened: the initial wave of infections was massive, much worse than it looks if you only use confirmed detections. But the resurgence is bad and getting worse. This is not just testing; this is an actual resurgence of the virus. Ignore the numbers on the Y-axis; the shape is what we need to be thinking about. 3
So, to bring it all home: should we expect deaths to start rising? Maybe. They are already leveling off, indicating that the pandemic is still going. If I had to guess, I think we will see a rise to about 1000-2000 deaths a day. Not as bad as the initial outbreak, but still bad. However, this will be short-lived if we enact the right policies — banning mass gatherings, wearing masks and social distancing with stay-at-home orders where the outbreak is at its worst.
By then, however, we’re getting into fall and winter. And that’s the time everyone’s afraid of: when we may get a real second wave that will make the first one look mild.
Of course, by the time this post goes live, the point may be moot. The first two days of this week saw a sudden and sharp uptick in reported COVID deaths. It’s only two days worth of data so far, so I would be reluctant to interpret it too aggressively. But it may indicate that the honeymoon is over and the carnage about to get worse.
And it always bears mentioning that even if we have brought deaths down, COVID is still a serious and possibly debilitating disease. For every person who dies, another dozen have a potentially life-altering course of the illness and another few dozen get seriously ill for weeks. When the 1918 flu pandemic hit, the survivors, including those in utero, had shorter lifespans because of the long-term health impact. So while the lag in deaths is interesting, let’s not lose sight of what’s really going on: hundreds of thousands of people getting very very sick. And in a way that might have been preventable.
It didn’t have to be this way. Other countries have managed to beat this down to a hundred confirmed infections and single-digit deaths every day. The United States produces unique challenges, of course, since we’re a far-flung country of fifty states. But I can’t help but think that with better leadership, better testing and less politicizing…I might not have had to write this post.
[ThTh2] Speaking of COVID-19 … this video uses an engineering technique to show why masks are so effective in slowing the spread of the virus. Wear them. Please.
[ThTh3] And continuing on our theme of disease…we now know that malaria is spread by mosquitos. But in the 19th century, that belief was regarded as mistaking correlation for causation.
While researching my book, I was struck by this quote by British geographer Richard Burton. Written in 1856, it dismissed suggestions that mosquitoes were linked with malarial fevers.
It would be several decades before European researchers finally made the same connection. pic.twitter.com/VBDuRttMDl
— Adam Kucharski (@AdamJKucharski) July 1, 2020
[ThTh4] Some months ago, we talked about Betelgeuse fading and whether it meant an explosion was imminent. We now have a possible explanation for the fading: giant sunspots. It is well-known that stars like Betelgeuse can get truly massive starspots — we’ve actually seen them in images of Betelgeuse. So this is one possible explanation for what happened.
[ThTh5] Numbers so big they can create a mental black hole? Well, only if you had a brain big enough to know all the numbers (H/T: Crazyfillyjonk
[ThTh6] Wait. Massive stars can just disappear? Well…maybe. A very luminous star in a nearby galaxy has become too faint to detect. There are a number of explanations: the star may have exploded behind a thick shroud of dust; we may have simply missed the explosion; or the earlier detections were of a very bright outburst that has since faded. But one possibility is that it by passed the supernova phase. Normally, when a massive star runs out of fuel in its core, that core implodes, crushing down to either a neutron star or a black hole, depending on how massive it is. The upper layers of the star crash down on the newly-formed remnant and then rebound, creating a supernova explosion that can outshine an entire galaxy. But if the star is too massive (not not quite massive enough to blow itself apart), there may not be enough energy for the shock wave to break out and create the intense light we see. Instead, that energy is pulled into the black hole.4 (H/T: Em)
[ThTh7] This has been a good week for the sky. Comet NEOWISE is visible. And we had a nice alignment of the planets. If you ever spot two planets and the Sun, you can draw a line through them that define the plane of our Solar System. Whenever I see it, something turns around in my head and I feel like I’m looking at the Solar System from the outside. And the scale of is is humbling.
Jupiter and Saturn are so bright tonight I can get a picture of them with my freakin phone! And they're lined up perfectly with the Moon.
(Moon not to scale) pic.twitter.com/uh1jaTM3qg
— Kojac! (@kojachusky) July 5, 2020
- I apologize in advance for the poor quality of my plots. I usually use professional software for this sort of thing and Excel and I … get along OK, but not great.
- The assumed IFR and time to death don’t actually matter very much; the absolute numbers changes but the overall result is unchanged.
- Several other outlets have done this kind of analysis using different techniques. They all get roughly the same result that I do.
- This really stretches my understanding of stellar physics, so I may be mis-stating some things here.
ThTh1 – I was interested in your likely infections graph, and while it seems high to me, it looks to sum up to about 10% of the US population. But in certain areas it’s likely 3x that rate.
It’s a mistake to think of the US as a single geographical area. The states are an approximation. But coronavirus has demonstrated something anyone who’s flown into NYC could tell you: the city is the center of a multistate megalopolis. It’s been interesting to see North and South Carolina moving in tandem. Florida, I haven’t looked at the coronavirus data by county, but everything else in the state can be divided into South, Orlando, and Other, so I’d bet the pattern of infections and deaths follows three different trend lines.Report
Has any definable area seen the pattern described? This is a really thoughtful and accessible analysis. Thank you. My take is that in some ways we are still in Wave 1 but Wave 1 is slowly moving around the country and hitting different areas at different times and with different impacts due to density, demographics, etc.
Have any states or cities or metro areas gotten hit with both humps? I know NY/NJ/NYCMetro are holding steady, even with some re-opening in place and increased testing, etc. We’re not (currently) getting the second wave… and not just because we are still locked down; we aren’t.
Of course, other areas getting hit like we did is a tragedy! So hoping against hope that even if this is Florida/Texas/ETC’s Wave 1, it isn’t like the Wave 1 we endured.Report
At the state level, Louisiana is definitely showing a second peak of new cases. Ohio had a small earlier peak and is on its way to a second one.
New York City has something like twice the public transportation usage of any other city in the US, so it’s unlikely that we’ll see an identical spike in new cases elsewhere. This article does a good job of explaining why we might not see the same kind of overwhelming of the medical system like happened in the first wave.
It’s been interesting how different states have gotten hammered at different times. Pennsylvania, Illinois, Michigan, and Maryland had later spikes than the New York megalopolis.Report
I’ve read some analyses that say we may achieve herd immunity at a much lower threshold than was previously though, so most areas are unlikely to go through multiple hellish peaks. Time will tell.
One of the challenges of all this is that borders don’t really matter. We have NY numbers. We have NJ numbers. We have CT numbers. NY as a state is more-or-less holding steady. But that is a bit of a balance of declining/steady numbers in NYC — which got HAMMERED — and very slight increases in some upstate areas, some of which are hundreds of miles away. If those areas start to go upwards, it may drive NY’s overall numbers up but that doesn’t necessarily mean a second peak is happening. It could just be a first peak upstate that followed an earlier peak in the metro area. How will we classify that?
There is still so much to see. But NY and NJ have both entered mid-phases of reopening (I think NY is on Phase 2 and NJ is on like 2.5… we’ve done some of Phase 3 but paused some) with very little corresponding rise in cases. Which may… MAY… MAY!!!… mean we won’t see a second peak because we did achieve sufficient herd immunity.
I dunno… I read the analyses and they make sense but I’m a layman. What you say here also makes sense. Time will tell.Report
The lowest estimate for what we need to get herd immunity i’ve read is 60% which no place is near. Even in spain which got hammered i think a recent study only found 5% of people had antibodies. It seems like we are several waves of infection from HI.Report
I read someone who said it could be as low as 17%. And then pointed to many areas where things improved after they hit 17%. He had a lot more than that but it went over my head.
I’m not saying he’s right. Or that anyone here is wrong. The one thing I’m certain of is how uncertain all this is… which is why I push back whenever someone starts a sentence with “We know…”
We’re learning. We may learn that every area will have to suffer through some peak but only one. We may learn high peaks can be avoided. Or multiple peaks will ravage an area any time it gets lax or lazy or dumb. I dunno.
My area got destroyed, recovered, and seems to be holding strong. I hope to god that continues. And I hope no where else has to go through what we did.Report
No one should get too worked up over the data unless it’s telling us something. If we discover that no area can have two peaks, that’s interesting. Whether it’s a lesson about once-bitten-twice-shy hygiene or about herd immunity, we may not know, but it’s something. If we see an area having a second peak, it doesn’t matter (beyond the personal) except to the extent it indicates an area’s medical infrastructure may be overwhelmed.
Ultimately, a lot of what we treat as stories and trends is just the reflection of two very un-intuitive math problems, probability and exponential growth. At this moment, a New Yorker is coughing. If he’s not infected, the chance of transmission is zero. If he is, there’s a chance that between 1 and everyone on earth will be infected by him, depending on masks, hand-washing, immunity, and a thousand other factors. The virus pushes the exponent higher, human precaution tries to push the exponent lower, but at the moment of contact it’s all about probability.
An example: Rome was practically untouched. You can’t create a spreadsheet that would have predicted that.Report
Re; herd immunity:
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It’s not clear that this means much. Antibody levels falls as an infection fades. What matters is cell memory, wich we can’t probe.Report
Could you elaborate on what cell memory is, if you have the time? (I spent four whole seconds trying to google it and came up with nothing.)
If you don’t have time, that’s fine. But I’m curious.Report
I don’t understand it well myself. But apparently antibodies can fade but the T cells will remember a virus and mitigate future infections.
https://blogs.sciencemag.org/pipeline/archives/2020/06/22/thoughts-on-antibody-persistence-and-the-pandemicReport
Thanks, so much!Report
Think of T-Cells as immune system librarians. The book that was popular a few weeks ago is no longer in print nor in circulation, but they have a copy stashed somewhere and they know how to get it.Report
Ahem, it’s possible the volume is in the rare books collection. They should ask an archivist for more information 🙂Report
ThTh2: Thanks for that, it’s an excellent video (and I love Schlieren Imaging!)Report
Ish like this pisses me off.
Good news! We can likely go outside, so long as we don’t touch anything!Report
Or, wait. Maybe the “germ theory of disease” is correct.
We just don’t know!Report
Anything, anything to avoid saying “yeah maybe all those protests were a bad idea”Report
Maybe I’m misunderstanding this but it doesn’t seem to tell us anything we didn’t already seem to know. Is it just confirming with more research what was theorized?Report
It doesn’t seem to be confirming anything.
Just saying that it still looks like wearing a mask doesn’t seem like a significant help against the COVID (but gloves and hand sanitizer would be).Report
Masks break up the airflow meaning droplets don’t go as far when you breath, speak, cough or sneeze.Report
*I* understand that.Report
Oh, OK. It’s too early for me to be reading the comments. 🙂Report
I don’t understand the anger here.
Scientists study the virus, discover new facts they didn’t have before, and revise their advice accordingly while being frank that they are uncertain about things.Report
The anger comes because society writ large wants definitive answers. Science is geared to surface and act on the next question. Normally all that happens in the ivory tower an dby the time it gets to public consciousness it appears to lay people to be “settled.” That’s not happening this time and no one seems comfortable with that.Report
Well, the WHO and CDC/Dr Fauci recommending *against* mask wearing strikes me as a not-evidence based decision, in particular given the WHO’s rationale for the advice. Early it was intended to protect PPE supplies for front line medical staff; later it was because masks would provide a false sense of security thereby inadvertently increasing spread. So the single easiest, most beneficial individual practice to ensure public safety was downplayed for non-evidence based reasons.Report
Dr. Fauci has been recommending wearing masks fro a couple of months now – and its one of the many reasons the President has sidelined him. WHO has said they are not sure of the mechanics of aerosolized spread – which is seems scientifically appropriate given the rapid pace of study on that topic. But they too have emphasized masks, especially when you have to inside recirculated air.Report
Ahh.Report
If they can’t give us good news, we need to find someone who can!Report
The first 3:30 of this video says it all (language warning):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQS_bX3sX8sReport
ThTh2 [video about masks]: I liked that video, but there’s one thing I’d like it to be clearer on and another thing is a misstep I see such public health efforts do a lot.
More information: At about 3:50, the presenter says masks can be too tight. He says a simple test is whether you can blow out a candle from about a foot away. So….if you can blow it out, is it too tight or not night enough?
Misstep: At 7:30, the presenter “answers” concerns about whether masks will deprive the wearer of oxygen, and he indulges the tried and frustrating “that’s a myth.” He assures us that several studies have been done on doctors who wear masks all day. Well, good for the doctors, but did none of them have problems? What about people with breathing problems generally? Have there been any studies with them, too? (Yes, some of the doctors probably have breathing conditions.) And even if studies have been done, there’s an underlying concern that the presenter (and probably the studies) don’t answer: Some people find it difficult to breathe with masks on even if theoretically they’re getting enough oxygen.
I harp on that point not only because it’s a piece of information I would like to have and the issue is underexplored (or underacknowledged int he video). I also harp on it because “that’s a myth” functions as a way to silence what are often legitimate concerns. When you raise a concern and someone says, “that’s a myth,” that’s a sign that someone is about to not listen to, acknowledge, or address your concern. In my experience (anecdotal, etc., etc.), much of the time, maybe even a majority of the time, there’s at least a kernel of legitimate concern that the myth-busting proof doesn’t address.
I’m not saying people do the “myth” trope with the INTENTION of silencing concerns. But I do suggest that’s what the myth trope does.Report