Overview of COVID-19 Surveillance

This report is updated daily at approximately 1:00 p.m. Information on COVID-19 cases changes rapidly, and this report may not reflect updates made after 1:00 p.m. by local health departments or health care systems.

Report Date: June 04, 2020

10813

Total COVID-19 Cases

227507

Total Reported People Tested

850

Total COVID-19 Hospitalizations

117

Total COVID-19 Deaths

Total Number of Lab-Confirmed COVID-19 Cases in Utah
COVID-19 Case Counts
COVID-19 Case Counts
1,0002,0003,0004,0005,000

Leaflet | © OpenStreetMap contributors, CC-BY-SA
COVID-19 Case Rates per 100,000 Population
COVID-19 Case Rates
5001,0001,5002,000

Leaflet | © OpenStreetMap contributors, CC-BY-SA
Cases Reported by Indian Health Service and Tribal Nations (these cases are also reflected in case counts by health district)
COVID-19 Cases by the Date a Positive Test was Reported to Public Health
Mar 01Apr 01May 01Jun 010100200300
DateLab-Confirmed COVID-19 Cases
COVID-19 Cases by Date of Symptom Onset or Diagnosis (data will backfill)
Mar 01Apr 01May 01Jun 010100200300
Date of Symptom Onset or DiagnosisNumber of lab-confirmed COVID-19 casesIllnesses that beganin this time maynot yet be reported
Number of People Tested by Date
Apr 01May 01Jun 010200040006000
NegativePositiveDateNumber of People TestedTest ResultTests completed in this timemay not yetbe reported
Cumulative COVID-19 Cases with Estimated Recoveries * (does not include the current day)
Mar 01Apr 01May 01Jun 010300060009000
DiedEstimated ActiveEstimated Recovered *DateCumulative CasesRecovery Status

Small Area Case Rates

The below map shows the crude case rate per 100,000 people per Utah Small Area. Crude case rates show the number of COVID-19 cases in an area given its population. Case rates may be higher or lower depending on the age of people living in a small area and how much testing has occurred there. Small areas with low populations may have disproportionately high or low rates depending on few cases and the number of tests performed in an area. A high rate in an area does not necessarily indicate a current outbreak because rates are calculated from the beginning of the pandemic. “Utah Small Areas” are geographic areas with population sizes ranging from about 8,000 to 86,000. Small areas were created by UDOH and local health departments to assess health data and policies. More information on Utah Small Areas can be found at: ibis.health.utah.gov.

Crude Case Rate Per 100,000 People in Utah by Small Area
COVID-19 Rate/100,000
5001,0001,5002,0002,5003,0003,500

NA
Leaflet | © OpenStreetMap contributors, CC-BY-SA
Data Notes:

* The number of recovered persons is estimated by the number of cases whose first positive laboratory test was reported at least 21 days ago, excluding deaths.

Laboratory: The Utah Department of Health (UDOH) is currently reporting PCR positive and negative results and will begin reporting serology results in the coming weeks. Positive cases are reported immediately; negative results may have up to a 72-hour lag before being reported. Results prior to March 19th may be under-reported. Laboratory positives may not match confirmed cases due to ongoing investigations and confirmatory testing. When available, laboratory data is shown by the date a sample was tested. If unavailable, it is shown by the date reported to public health. As of May 27th, UDOH has updated the laboratory reporting criteria to include one test per person, by their earliest positive then negative result. Previously data were reported as one test per person, taking positive results first, but not preferentially taking the first result by date if a person was tested multiple times. This change will improve testing data stability.

Case data: As of April 15th, case data are displayed by both the date the first positive laboratory result (FPLR) is reported to public health and the self-reported symptom onset date. Previously this was reported by the first day a person was reported (through laboratory results or contact tracing) to public health. The FPLR date will provide a more stable estimate of the new cases reported to public health, however, there will be small differences in cases by date as public health receives additional information. Onset date is taken preferentially from the following dates when available: 1) self-reported date of first symptoms, 2) date diagnosed by a clinician, 3) date first positive specimen was collected, 4) first report to public health. The actual number of cases in Utah is higher than what is reported due to mild cases not feeling ill enough to seek care, clinician judgement for testing, and expanding laboratory capacity.

Death Counts: Deaths reported by UDOH include confirmed and probable cases as defined by the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) case definition. This includes 1) confirmed cases with a positive COVID-19 PCR result and no alternative cause of death noted on the death certificate or reported by the Office of the Medical Examiner (OME) 2) probable cases where the death certificate lists COVID-19 disease or SARS-CoV-2 as a cause of death or a significant condition contributing to death and no alternative cause of death reported by the OME and 3) probable cases with COVID symptoms and close contact to a laboratory confirmed case and has no alternative cause of death reported by the OME or the death certificate. As of May 26th, all reported deaths in Utah have been laboratory confirmed. UDOH will be showing these data separately in future updates. Death counts are provisional and subject to change as investigations are completed.

Data for this report were accessed on June 04, 2020 07:54 AM.

Pre-Existing Conditions

Cases are interviewed by public health to determine what potential medical risk factors they may have had prior to getting COVID-19. This is not a complete list of conditions and rates may change as public health collects more data and performs additional analysis. Examples of persons with compromised immune systems include those with cancer and transplant patients who are taking certain immunosuppressive drugs, persons with HIV/AIDS, and those with inherited diseases that affect the immune system. Examples of persons with chronic pulmonary conditions include those with uncontrolled asthma or COPD.

Pre-Existing Conditions of All Cases
 
Pre-Existing Conditions of All Cases (tooltip shows the percent among all cases, including unknowns)
0%25%50%75%100%Chronic LiverChronic KidneyNeurologicImmunocompromisedCurrent SmokerCardiovascularDiabetesChronic PulmonaryOtherFormer SmokerAny Condition
UnknownNoYesPercent
Pre-Existing Conditions of Hospitalized Cases
 
Pre-Existing Conditions of Hospitalized Cases (tooltip shows the percent among all cases, including unknowns)
0%25%50%75%100%Chronic LiverCurrent SmokerNeurologicImmunocompromisedChronic KidneyChronic PulmonaryFormer SmokerCardiovascularOtherDiabetesAny Condition
UnknownNoYesPercent

Potential Exposures

Exposures are determined through (local health department) LHD and UDOH case investigations. Each case is mapped to a single “primary exposure”. Please note that some cases have multiple potential exposures, so cases are mapped to exposures in the following order: 1) Known close contact to a confirmed case, 2) Travel in the past 14 days, 3) Healthcare (either through being a healthcare worker, patient, or visitor in a healthcare setting), 4) In-state transmission with no known contacts, 5) Under investigation. In-state transmission with no known contacts is defined as a patient with no known out of state travel, close contacts, or healthcare exposures. These exposures are commonly referred to as community spread or community transmission. Known exposures are further broken down by type (green pie chart). “Social” refers to exposures between friends and acquaintances; “Other” refers to known contact with a lab confirmed case outside of home, work, and social settings; “Unspecified” is known contact to a confirmed case but without enough information to determine the setting of that exposure.

As of May 27th, UDOH updated the exposure mapping criteria to include additional case data collected on travel, known contacts, and healthcare exposures. Additionally, healthcare exposures in clinical and long-term care facilities are now assigned preferentially to “healthcare” if the person did not have a household exposure instead of “known contact”. These changes increased the number of “Healthcare”, “Travel”, and “Known Contact” exposures reported, and slightly decreased the number of “Unknown/Under Investigation” and “In-state with no known contacts” exposures. Exposure categories are not all encompassing and may change as public health collects more data and updates analyses.

Primary Exposures by Week
MarAprMayJun050010001500
HealthcareIn-state Without Known ContactKnown ContactTravelUnknown / Under InvestigationWeek End DateCountPotential Exposures
Primary Investigated Exposures
 
Type of Known Contact
 
Type of Known Contact
Household60.2%Social21.9%Unspecified13.1%Workplace4.33%Other0.496%
HouseholdSocialUnspecifiedWorkplaceOther

Daily Hospital Survey Data

Through a partnership with the Utah Hospital Association, hospitals in Utah self-report the number of COVID-19 cases currently in their facilities each day. The data below provide a snapshot of the number of people with COVID-19 who are currently hospitalized. If a report from a facility is not received in a given day, the report from the previous day will be used. Due to differences in reporting systems, these numbers should not be compared to the cumulative hospitalization data identified through public health investigations.

Current Hospital Data Snapshot
Statewide COVID-19 Hospital Survey Data
Number of patients currently hospitalized for confirmed COVID-19 118
Patients currently hospitalized as COVID-19 persons under investigation 46
Facilities using prior day data 4
Daily Hospital Survey

Cumulative Hospital Data

Hospitalizations included below represent the total number of cases that have been admitted to hospitals. This count does not represent the number of COVID-19 cases currently in the hospital. Hospitalization data is collected from patient interviews and medical chart abstractions by Local Health Departments (LHDs). While UDOH and LHDs capture most hospitalizations through provider reporting, some patients may be hospitalized after the case was investigated by an LHD and therefore not included in this count. Hospitalizations by age may not sum to total hospitalizations because some cases are initially reported without complete age data. Due to differences in reporting systems, these numbers should not be compared to the daily hospitalization data collected through hospital reporting.

Total Utah COVID-19 Cases by Hospitalization Status and Age
0-11-1415-2425-4445-6465-8485+01000200030004000
NoUnder InvestigationYesAge GroupCountHospitalization
Level of Care Required for Patients Who Have Been Hospitalized with COVID-19
Hospitalizations
Hospitalization Case Count % of Investigated Cases
Yes 850 8.2%
No 9461 91.8%
Under Investigation 502
ICU Admissions
ICU Case Count % of Investigated Cases
Yes 258 2.5%
No 9953 97.5%
Under Investigation 602
Intubation/Ventilator Use
Intubated/Ventilator Use Case Count % of Investigated Cases
Yes 108 1.1%
No 9541 98.9%
Under Investigation 1164
Total Hospitalizations by Age
 

Hospitalization Epidemic Curve

One way to look at how quickly COVID-19 is spreading in Utah is the number of new hospital admissions every day. Hospitalizations are less dependent on testing than case counts. Admission dates are obtained through public health investigations and not all new hospitalization dates are reported if a case had previously been investigated by public health. The plot below shows the number of laboratory confirmed cases reported by admission date (blue bars).

COVID-19 Hospitalizations by Date of Admission (data will backfill, n=758)
Apr 01May 01Jun 0105101520
HospitalizationsDate of AdmissionNumber of HospitalizationsHospitalizationsin this time maynot yet be reported

Mortality Summary Statistics

The below table presents a variety of summary statistics about deaths associated with COVID-19 in Utah. The pre-existing conditions included are those on the “Risk Factors” tab (cardiovascular, chronic pulmonary, diabetes, immunocompromised, chronic kidney, chronic liver, neurological, current smoking, former smoking, and other).
High Risk: at least 65 years of age and/or having at least one pre-existing condition.

Mortality Summary Statistics
 
COVID-19 Deaths by Date of Death (data will backfill, n=117)
Apr 01Apr 15May 01May 15Jun 010246
DeathsDate of DeathNumber of DeathsDeaths in thistime may not yetbe reported
Total Utah Residents with COVID-19 by Age
 
Total Utah Residents with COVID-19 Demographics Chart
0-11-1415-2425-4445-6465-8485+01000200030004000
FemaleMaleAge GroupCount
Total Utah COVID-19 Cases by Sex
Cases and Hospitalizations by Race/Ethnicity
 
Data Notes:

Demographic data: There will be small count differences in data presented by age groups, self-reported sex, and hospitalization status. This is because some cases are not initially reported with all of these data elements and unknowns are excluded from this report. Case data will be updated as local health departments (LHDs) and the Utah Department of Health (UDOH) complete investigations.
Race & Ethnicity: Race and ethnicity groups follow US Census estimates for race alone or in combination in order to provide a broad snapshot of Utah’s growing diversity, including the many multi-racial and multi-ethnic individuals who call Utah home. Groups are not mutually exclusive and will not sum to total.

Two-Week Cumulative Incidence Rate

The two-week cumulative incidence rate summarizes new cases reported in the past 14 days per 100,000 people. It looks at the recent burden of cases in an area given its population. Areas with elevated incidence rates will have a higher burden of ill people who may be infectious and/or currently accessing healthcare.

Case Incidence Per 100,000 People in Utah by Health District in the Last 14 Days
Case Incidence Per 100,000 People in Utah by Small Area in the Last 14 Days

Epidemic Curve Status

The current epidemic curve looks at how the trend in cases is changing over time and assigns a trend category to each day, based on whether the three-day daily average of cases is increasing, staying stable, or decreasing. It is calculated by using the daily case incidence rate per 100,000 people (bars), finding the three-day moving average of daily incidence rates (grey points), fitting a smoothed curve to these incidence rates (grey line), and looking at the slope of that curve (colors on the bars). If the slope of the curve is above 0, incidence is increasing. If the slope is about zero, incidence is holding stable (a plateau). If the slope is decreasing after at least 5 days of plateau, incidence is decreasing.
Please note: Recent increases or decreases in testing can lead to changes in daily incidence. Epidemic curve status can fluctuate from day to day so trends need to be interpreted cautiously and in conjunction with other surveillance data.

Epidemic Curve Status - Statewide
Mar 09Mar 16Mar 23Mar 30Apr 06Apr 13Apr 20Apr 27May 04May 11May 18May 25Jun 010.02.55.07.510.0
Incidence GrowthIncidence PlateauIncidence DeclineMean Incidence CurveReport DateDaily Incidence / 100,000 PeopleCurve Status