Sun. Dec 22nd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

If you’ve tried to look up the number of COVID cases in your area recently, you may have found it a frustrating exercise.

The reporting frequency in states and territories has been slowing down, from daily to weekly, and now fortnightly or monthly.

On top of that, what do the numbers even mean now? And how many are being missed?

It’s been a long time since we were asked to get a PCR test at the slightest sign of a tickly throat.

Now, the vast majority of cases are going undiagnosed or unreported.

That degradation in data quality is visible for everyone to see, and it’s no surprise: it would’ve been a big ask for us to keep up the COVID surveillance effort of 2020 and 2021 forever.

Likewise, behind the scenes governments have been steadily dismantling many other elements of a surveillance system that we were so reliant on in the emergency period of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Some public health experts think it’s a shame that we’re apparently returning back to the pre-pandemic ways we handled respiratory disease, after we’ve learned so much.

Weekly forecasting of COVID-19 has ended

The most recent thing to be discontinued is a weekly series of forecasts and “situational assessment reports” for federal and state officials.

The federal government had been contracting a group of mathematical modellers across multiple institutions to produce it, and it was one of the key regular pieces of advice they received.

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