Vaccinations of Evanston Residents
The City’s vaccine dashboard reflects that a total of 53,690 doses of vaccines have been administered to residents of Evanston. This number is reported by the Illinois Department of Public Health and includes all vaccinations no matter where the vaccination was administered.
So far, 94% of Evanston residents 65 and older have received at least one vaccine; 71% are fully vaccinated.
Fifty nine percent of Evanston residents 16 and older have received at least one vaccine; 31% are fully vaccinated.
About 3% of the vaccinations have been with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, and the rest are fairly evenly distributed between the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.
The City of Evanston continues to host multiple vaccination events each week to administer the doses it receives from the State. The City says registration for these events is being prioritized by age, from oldest to youngest. This week, the City began administering vaccinations of people over 50. Next week, the City plans to begin vaccinations of people 45 and older.
If appointment slots are still available after individuals in the targeted age groups have had a chance to register, the City will notify residents in the next age group.
People 16 and older are eligible to receive the vaccine. The City recommends seeking appointments through multiple trusted providers, including:
- City of Evanston. If anyone has not done so already, complete the City’s Vaccination Contact Form to be notified of City of Evanston vaccination events.
- Cook County. Evanston residents are eligible to be vaccinated at Cook County Mass Vaccination sites. Register with the County.
- Other trusted providers. View vaccination locations in Illinois.
If anyone needs assistance, call the toll-free, multilingual IDPH hotline at 833-621-1284 to book an appointment. Evanston residents may also call/text 847-448-4311 or email vaccine@cityofevanston.org for questions about vaccine registration in Evanston.
Risk of Community Spread
The charts in the above chart box show that new cases are continuing to rise in suburban Cook County, Chicago, and Illinois. The pace of the Increase in Illinois, though, seems to be lessening.
For total cases in the last seven days per 100,000 people, IDPH says that more than 100 cases indicates a risk of “substantial spread.” The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that more than 100 cases indicates a risk of “high transmission.” [1, 2, 3, and 4]
For test positivity in the last seven days, IDPH uses a target of 5%. The CDC says between 5% and 7.9% represents a “moderate” risk of transmission. [1, 2, and 3]
Evanston – COVID-19
The City reported 11 new COVID-19 cases of Evanston residents today, up from six yesterday.
The average number of new cases per day in the last seven days is 9.7, down from the seven-day average of 12.7 on April 8.
In the last seven days, there was a total of 68 new COVID-19 cases of Evanstonians. The 68 new cases equate to about 92 new cases per 100,000 people in the seven-day period.
Evanston’s case positivity rate for the last seven days is 1.0%.
There has been a total of 4,370 COVID-19 cases of Evanston residents during the pandemic, 210 of which are active.
No Evanstonian has died due to COVID-19 since April 10. The number of deaths due to COVID-19 is 116.
Impact of Northwestern University. Northwestern University has posted data on its website reporting that between April 8 and April 14 there were 27 new confirmed COVID-19 cases of NU faculty, staff, and students. If the faculty, staff or students reside in Evanston, they are included in the City’s numbers. The number reported by NU, though, includes people who live outside of Evanston. [5]
Illinois – COVID-19
In the State, there were 3,581 new COVID-19 cases reported today, up from 3,536 yesterday.
Statewide, the average number of new cases per day in the last seven days is 3,331. The seven-day average one week ago on April 8 was 3,012, so today’s number is up by 11%. The average number is up 34% in the last two weeks.
Today’s seven-day average is up from a low this year of 1,513 on March 15. Cases have more than doubled since then. An accompanying chart shows the trend.
In the seven days ending April 15, the number of new cases per 100,000 people in the State was 184, up from 166 one week ago.
The seven-day case positivity rate for the State today is 4.2% and the test positivity rate is 4.9%.
On a Statewide basis, the number of hospitalizations due to COVID-19 was 2,043 as of midnight on April 14. This is up from 1,112 on March 15.
The number of patients using ICU beds is 468, up from 227 on March 15. The number of patients on ventilators is 190, up from 95 on March 15.
On a Statewide basis, there were 40 deaths due to COVID-19 in the last 24 hours, which brings the total to 21,609.
For the last seven days, the numbers of deaths in the State are 21, 13, 16, 18, 17, 30, and 40 today. The seven-day average is 22.
Variants in Illinois
IDPH is reporting a total of 1,203 confirmed cases of COVID-19 variants in the State. Of those 888 are the variant first discovered in the U.K.
Vaccinations in the State
A total of 9,636,355 doses of vaccine have been delivered to providers in Illinois, including Chicago and long-term care facilities. IDPH is currently reporting that a total of 7,612,405 doses of vaccines have been administered. The Illinois National Guard has administered more than 1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines at State-supported vaccination sites around Illinois.
FOOTNOTES
1/ On Feb. 12, the CDC issued a K-12 School Operational Strategy. As part of that strategy, the report says, “CDC recommends the use of two measures of community burden to determine the level of risk of transmission: 1) the total number of new cases per 100,000 persons in the past 7 days; and 2) the percentage of nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs), including RT-PCR tests that are positive during the last 7 days. The two measures of community burden should be used to assess the incidence and spread of SARS-CoV-2 in the surrounding community (e.g., county) and not in the schools themselves.” The CDC provides a chart to assess whether the risk of transmission is low, moderate, substantial, or high. The CDC recommends different types of mitigations depending on the risk level. If the two indicators suggest different levels of risk, the mitigations recommended in the higher level of risk should be implemented, says CDC. The table below, reprinted from CDC’s report, provides CDC’s Indicators and Thresholds for Community Transmission of COVID-219.
CDC’s guidelines are available here: Operational Strategy for K-12 Schools through Phased Prevention | CDC
2/ Number of Cases per 100,000 Population. On July 1, a network of research, policy and public health experts convened by Harvard’s Global Health Institute and Edmond J. Safra Center published a Key Metrics for COVID Suppression framework that provides guidance to policy makers and the public on how to target and suppress COVID-19 more effectively across the nation. The targets for new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people are as follows (these are converted from cases per day to cases per week): a) fewer than seven cases: “on track for containment;” b) seven to 63 cases: “community spread,” rigorous test and trace program advised; c) 70 to 168 cases: “accelerated spread,” stay-at-home orders and/or rigorous test and trace programs advised; and d) 169+: ”tipping point,” stay-at-home orders necessary. The article is available here: https://globalepidemics.org/key-metrics-for-covid-suppression/
IDPH provides these categories and ratings: 1) “minimal” – fewer than 50 cases per 100,000 in a week; 2) “moderate” – between 50 and 100 cases per week; and 3) “substantial” more than 100 cases per 100,000 in a week. In its Metrics for School Determination of Community Spread, IDPH says the “target” is 50 cases per week per 100,000 people.
3/ The Test Positivity Rate. In addition, on May 26, Johns Hopkins University & Medicine Coronavirus Resource Center said on its website that “the World Health Organization advised governments [on May 15] that before reopening, rates of positivity in testing (i.e., out of all tests conducted, how many came back positive for COVID-19) should remain at 5% or lower for at least 14 days.” Link: https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/testing/testing-positivity
The Harvard Global Health Institute says, “A network of research, policy, and public health organizations convened by Harvard and MIT called the TTSI Collaborative has agreed on a 3% test positive rate or below as a key indicator of progress towards suppression level testing.”
IDPH says the test positivity target is 5% or less. IDPH provides these categories and ratings: 1) “Minimal” – test positivity rate is equal to or less than 5%: 2) “Moderate” – test positivity rate is between 5% and 8%; and 3) “Substantial” – test positivity rate is over 8%. In its Metrics for School Determination of Community Spread, IDPH says the target is 5%.
4/ Calculations. The RoundTable calculates the number of cases per 100,000 using case data provided by IDPH and assuming that the population of Suburban Cook County is 2.469 million, that the population of Chicago is 2.710 million, and that the population of Illinois is 12.671 million.
5/ Northwestern University COVID-19 Cases. Ike C. Ogbo, Director of Evanston’s Health & Human Services Department, told the RoundTable that the COVID-19 cases reported by the City include cases of faculty, staff, and students attending Northwestern University who live in Evanston. The RoundTable asked the City in an FOIA Request to provide the number of NU students who tested positive for COVID-19 and who live in Evanston. The City refused to provide the data. On Oct. 26, the RoundTable appealed the City’s decision to the Public Access Counselor of the Attorney General’s Office. On Nov. 13, the City filed a response claiming it does not have any records showing the number of NU students who tested positive for COVID-19 and who live in Evanston.
The RoundTable has asked Northwestern University on several occasions to provide information breaking out the number of new COVID-19 cases of its faculty, staff and students by residency in Evanston. NU did not respond.
Operational Strategy for K-12 Schools through Phased Prevention | CDC
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