It doesn’t “mean nothing”, it’s another data point. If you see test positivity rate remaining low but cases increasing - which we do in many areas with sufficient testing - then it does suggest more people are getting the virus.
You can also corroborate this by comparing it to new hospitalizations, which are also up.
“Deaths is the only relevant measure” - not sure where to start with this except to say that this is not at all what epidemiologists seem to think and I won’t address it further without some very dramatic reasoning and evidence.
Deaths are not an entirely useful measure to see how the pandemic is progressing because they are a lagging indicator.
Positive test rates measure what was happening about a week ago. Hospital admissions reflect activity a week or two before that, and deaths often get reported a month or more after the events that caused people to get infected.
You have to look at all the data to get an idea of what is happening.
There has been a slight uptick in weekly deaths, roughly on par with what was observed in the last week of September. Given the trend of the line and the delayed reporting from most states, it’s more accurate to say that deaths have flattened:
breakfastduck|5 years ago
Deaths is the only relevant measure.
ffdjjjffjj|5 years ago
You can also corroborate this by comparing it to new hospitalizations, which are also up.
“Deaths is the only relevant measure” - not sure where to start with this except to say that this is not at all what epidemiologists seem to think and I won’t address it further without some very dramatic reasoning and evidence.
chimprich|5 years ago
Positive test rates measure what was happening about a week ago. Hospital admissions reflect activity a week or two before that, and deaths often get reported a month or more after the events that caused people to get infected.
You have to look at all the data to get an idea of what is happening.
irq11|5 years ago
https://covid-19.direct/US?tab=daily