Florida announces further reduction in providing Covid data... Now will only put out information every two weeks. Since they already cut the reporting of hospitalizations in DeSantisLand and now are cutting the reporting to a mere twice per month or so -- at this point the DeSantis administration might as well report nothing at all. Waiting two weeks to see if Covid cases are rising or falling -- with no associated hospitalization data is next to meaningless.
Florida limits COVID data to every 2 weeks, state says via meme
Department of Health officials announced the change via Twitter, using Vince McMahon and cat memes
https://www.tampabay.com/news/healt...-data-to-every-two-weeks-state-says-via-meme/
Florida officials have again rolled backaccess to the state’s COVID-19 data, and will now only release key pandemic metrics such as the number of people who have been infected, died and vaccinated once every two weeks instead of every week.
The state did not announce the new policy in any traditional fashion, such as issuing a press release or an official statement via its social media accounts.
Instead, Florida Department of Health spokesperson Jeremy Redfern made the announcement at 4:31 p.m. Friday using his personal Twitter account. The tweet included a popular meme featuring World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Vince McMahon reacting to the news.
The Florida Department of Health then retweeted Redfern’s announcement at 7:49 p.m., adding a cat meme and noting that it’s “no longer season 1 of the pandemic.”
It is the second time in nine months that the state has reduced the frequency that it shares the latest pandemic data with the public. The state said it will continue to send daily data to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which posts them online in conjunction with other states.
“Creating multiple reports is time consuming, and we are working to shift our focus onto the endemic stage of COVID-19,” Redfern said in a Monday email to the
Tampa Bay Times.
However, Florida officials have also criticized the CDC for repeated errors posting the state’s data. County level deaths
went missing, cases were
misreported and, the state says, testing numbers
were mislabeled. The
New York Times reported last month that the federal agency does not report critical data including hospitalizations and deaths by race and vaccination status.
When the state
changed its data policy in June, the announcement was made by Gov. Ron DeSantis’ spokesperson.
Public health messaging should be clear, transparent and packaged in a way to reach as many people as possible said Joshua Scacco, a professor of political communication at the University of South Florida.
Releasing the news via meme on a Friday evening “is the exact opposite of what a health department should do,” he said.
“Memes on Twitter aren’t intended to be taken as official statements,” said Department of Health spokesperson Weesam Khoury in an email sent to the
Times on Monday. She elaborated further in another email:
“While some may think using this style of language is not orthodox of government, I would argue that we should welcome it into the public sector. Social media is the most effective platform to distribute information quickly to our constituents we serve.”
The state had not issued an official statement as of 5 p.m. Monday.
“It’s a curious choice not to further explain (to the public) how these numbers are going to be reported and why this change is being made,” Scacco said, “especially in a public health crisis when people continue to die of this virus every day.”
Once, experts praised Florida for its data transparency. The state released data every day and set up a website that allowed the public, experts and journalists to easily analyze the trajectory of the pandemic when the virus started spreading in 2020.
Then state officials shut down its online COVID-19 database and switched to weekly reports in June 2021, weeks before the delta variant appeared in Florida. At the time the state also shut down its daily COVID-19 data website and stopped issuing other reports, including on infections in prisons, schools and long-term care facilities.
The weekly reports are only available as a PDF, making it difficult for reporters and researchers to collect and analyze outbreaks and trends of the infectious coronavirus.
Florida has recorded 5.8 million infections and 71,860 deaths during the 2-year pandemic, according to
last week’s state report.