The latest cohort analysis, this is the current week version, which just shows that week’s cohort. There is also a cumulative version, which shows the cumulative analysis for each week. As a reminder, the cohort analysis takes a week’s cases and goes forward during a defined lag period set by research from the CDC and others to identify likely hospitalizations and deaths among that set of cases. Gives you a sense of whether case rates are changing. Thanks again to DD. I am dubious about the rise in hospitalization rates. Likely reflects reduced testing among the young, reduced detection of infections among the vaccinated, and non CV-19 hospitalizations that are called CV-19 ones.
✅ Subscribe via Email
About this Blog
The Healthy Skeptic is a website about the health care system, and is written by Kevin Roche, who has many years of experience working in the health industry. Mr. Roche is available to assist health care companies through consulting arrangements through Roche Consulting, LLC and may be reached at [email protected].
Healthy Skeptic Podcast
Research
MedPAC 2019 Report to Congress
June 18, 2019
Headlines
Tags
Access
ACO
Care Management
Chronic Disease
Comparative Effectiveness
Consumer Directed Health
Consumers
Devices
Disease Management
Drugs
EHRs
Elder Care
End-of-Life Care
FDA
Financings
Genomics
Government
Health Care Costs
Health Care Quality
Health Care Reform
Health Insurance
Health Insurance Exchange
HIT
HomeCare
Hospital
Hospital Readmissions
Legislation
M&A
Malpractice
Meaningful Use
Medicaid
Medical Care
Medicare
Medicare Advantage
Mobile
Pay For Performance
Pharmaceutical
Physicians
Providers
Regulation
Repealing Reform
Telehealth
Telemedicine
Wellness and Prevention
Workplace
Related Posts
Commentary
April 19, 2024
Another Body Blow to Gender Dis-Affirmation
A review from Britain reveals the complete lack of any scientific evidence to support the…
Commentary
April 18, 2024
Progress Against Cancer
The US has made particularly good progress in treating cancer and limiting mortality, but much…
Commentary
April 17, 2024
I Am Done With Coronamonomania, Part 4, Vax Safety Edition
A somewhat lengthy examination of recent studies related mostly to vax safety, the results of…
I thought you had stated that Ivermectin(sp) treatment was done in hospital, or at any rate considered a hospital treatment? Could this be part of the hospitalization statistics if more doctors are using it?
that is remdesivir, which for some bizarre reason the FDA has not approved as an outpatient infusion, so you have to be hospitalized to get it. I don’t think ivermectin requires hospitalization, but I am not 100% on that. Ivermectin is repurposed by physicians, it is not formally approved for use against CV-19 I believe.
Do some of the hospitalization stats reflect Ivermectin(sp) treatments? BTW if this comment looks redundant it’s because it’s the same person different email. Your blog doesn’t fancy yahoo so I am trying gmail but I’m not a robot I swear.