COVID-19 Spread Increasing Again
Disease spread was trending downward, but is now accelerating.
The spread of COVID-19 is currently trending upward in Milwaukee County.
The latest data shows a resurgence in disease following a lull in December. “We are seeing what looks like a slight increase,” said Darren Rausch, director of the Greenfield Health Department, during a press briefing Thursday.
The team’s latest report shows that after the huge spike experienced in the early fall, which was followed by a massive increase in deaths in late fall and early winter, cases of COVID-19 began to trend down countywide last month leading up to the Christmas holiday.
The uptick, Rausch said, could be the numbers simply stabilizing after going so low around the holiday. “We know that historically we’ve seen small inflections in the data from time to time,” he said. But any potential cases from gatherings over the holidays would likely start showing up in the community now said the health director.
But at the same time that cases started to go up, so too did the transmission rate. This data point measures on average how many people a single case of COVID-19 is likely to infect in the community.
The latest data is from right before Christmas when the county’s transmission rate jumped up to 1.14, indicating that each new case would infect, on average, one or more people with the virus. This means that going into the holiday, the county was no longer suppressing the virus. A transmission rate below 1.0 is required for suppression of the virus.
Deaths have gone down since the high numbers witnessed in November and December. But deaths are a lagging indicator, and typically trail spikes in disease by several weeks because of the time it takes a patient to develop life-threatening symptoms from the virus.
Young people aged 24-39 continue to lead the county with the highest number of cases and the highest rate of disease. County residents aged 60 and above continue to have the highest rates of hospitalizations and deaths, as well as the highest total deaths.
Rausch said the county is starting to see COVID-19 increase among Asian-American residents. Hispanic county residents still have the highest rate of disease. And white residents have the highest case counts. Black residents still have the highest rate of hospitalization and death in the county.
Read the weekly COVID-19 report here. Read the children’s report here.
If you think stories like this are important, become a member of Urban Milwaukee and help support real, independent journalism. Plus you get some cool added benefits.
More about the Coronavirus Pandemic
- Governors Tony Evers, JB Pritzker, Tim Walz, and Gretchen Whitmer Issue a Joint Statement Concerning Reports that Donald Trump Gave Russian Dictator Putin American COVID-19 Supplies - Gov. Tony Evers - Oct 11th, 2024
- MHD Release: Milwaukee Health Department Launches COVID-19 Wastewater Testing Dashboard - City of Milwaukee Health Department - Jan 23rd, 2024
- Milwaukee County Announces New Policies Related to COVID-19 Pandemic - County Executive David Crowley - May 9th, 2023
- DHS Details End of Emergency COVID-19 Response - Wisconsin Department of Health Services - Apr 26th, 2023
- Milwaukee Health Department Announces Upcoming Changes to COVID-19 Services - City of Milwaukee Health Department - Mar 17th, 2023
- Fitzgerald Applauds Passage of COVID-19 Origin Act - U.S. Rep. Scott Fitzgerald - Mar 10th, 2023
- DHS Expands Free COVID-19 Testing Program - Wisconsin Department of Health Services - Feb 10th, 2023
- MKE County: COVID-19 Hospitalizations Rising - Graham Kilmer - Jan 16th, 2023
- Not Enough Getting Bivalent Booster Shots, State Health Officials Warn - Gaby Vinick - Dec 26th, 2022
- Nearly All Wisconsinites Age 6 Months and Older Now Eligible for Updated COVID-19 Vaccine - Wisconsin Department of Health Services - Dec 15th, 2022
Read more about Coronavirus Pandemic here
MKE County
-
J.D. Vance Plays Up Working Class Roots, Populist Politics in RNC Speech
Jul 17th, 2024 by Graham Kilmer -
Ron Johnson Says Free-Market Principles Could Fix Education
Jul 17th, 2024 by Graham Kilmer -
RNC Will Cause Some County Services To Be Moved to Wauwatosa
Jul 12th, 2024 by Graham Kilmer