New Guide for Understanding COVID Data

Back to All Perspectives Stories
09/14/2020 September 2020 Perspectives

Officials looking for COVID-19 statistics to help make public health decisions — such as when to open or close schools, businesses, and community facilities — have plenty data to choose from, including confirmed cases, deaths, hospitalizations, intensive care unit occupancy, emergency room visits, antibody tests, nasal-swab tests, the ratio of positive test results, and more. But interpreting those data can be challenging.

Adrian Raftery, professor of statistics and sociology, is lead author on a new guide published by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, designed to help officials nationwide make sense of different COVID-19 data sources when making public health decisions.

"...there is...a lot that officials can do with the statistics and data sources that hospitals and agencies are providing right now — provided that officials can be made aware of the strengths and weaknesses of each piece of data,” says Adrian Raftery.

“We intend for this guide to help these decision-makers and their advisors interpret the data on COVID-19 and understand the upsides and downsides of each data source,” says Raftery, who has worked extensively on statistical methods to measure and estimate the prevalence of other viruses, including HIV in Africa. 

The guide is the inaugural project of the National Academies’ Societal Experts Action Network.

Read the complete UW News story about the new guide.

More Stories

Starry sky above a glowing sunset

What the Sky Teaches Us

Brittany Kamai, an astrophysicist with knowledge of Pacific Islanders' Indigenous navigation using the sky, is teaching a new UW course, Pacific Indigenous Astrophysics.

A seated student consultant takes notes while another student stands to practice a speech.

The Truth About Public Speaking

Becoming an effective public speaker requires planning and practice. Professor Matt McGarrity and consultants at the UW Center for Speech & Debate are available to help.

Teens sitting in a row, focused on their cellphones.

A Closer Look at Teens & Digital Technology

The impact of digital technology on teens' mental health is the focus of a new course developed by Lucia Magis-Weinberg in the UW Department of Psychology.