Current:Home > NewsAs the pandemic ebbs, an influential COVID tracker shuts down -VitalWealth Strategies
As the pandemic ebbs, an influential COVID tracker shuts down
View
Date:2025-04-16 14:40:09
In another sign of the changing state of the pandemic, an invaluable source of information about the virus over the last three years is shutting down, NPR has learned.
The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center plans to cease operations March 10, officials told NPR.
"It's bittersweet," says Lauren Gardner, an engineering professor who launched the project with one of her students on March 3, 2020. "But it's an appropriate time to move on."
When the pandemic erupted, no one knew much of anything about the virus and how to respond. Was it safe to go grocery shopping? How easily could someone get infected on a bus or train? Could runners get sick just by passing another jogger in the park?
"As everyone can remember, there was very little information, particularly at the beginning of the pandemic," says Beth Blauer, an associate vice provost at Johns Hopkins who has helped run the center.
"And when we started to see the cases move out of China and in through Europe and headed toward our shores, we knew that there were going to be a series of public policy decisions that would have to be made," Blauer says.
Those decisions included where to impose dramatic but crucial public health measures. Should mayors close schools? Should governors mandate masks? Should CEOs shut down factories? Should heads of state seal borders?
But there was no good data available to make those decisions. Neither the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention nor the World Health Organization were providing enough useful numbers in real time. So journalists and academic researchers at places like Johns Hopkins jumped in to fill the void.
NPR launched its own tracker in March, 2020, drawing data from Johns Hopkins. It was viewed over 52 million times over the last three years as readers sought to stay updated on COVID metrics. On Feb. 1, NPR ceased updating the page, recognizing that Americans can find the information they need on the CDC's COVID website. This was not the case early in the pandemic.
"I know CDC has the ability to do this and has done it numerous occasions in the past," says Dr. Ali Khan, a former CDC official who is now dean of the College of Public Health at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. "So it was unusual that at the beginning of this COVID pandemic that they did not collect this data and put it out in a timely manor. Extremely unusual and very surprising."
Johns Hopkins "essentially filled the vacuum," Khan says, "That was invaluable to understand what was going on."
After Johns Hopkins launched the project, the website quickly became crucial for deciding everything from where drug companies should test vaccines to where Hollywood should film movies. Even the White House and the British prime minister were relying on Hopkins data.
Gardner recalls many conversations "with people that were just out about doing their job — traveling in Japan, here and there — who would tell me the dashboard was the driving force in decision-making for them ... about quitting their job and then coming home so that they wouldn't get stuck."
The site's maps of the world and individual countries became an iconic way of tracking the virus's inexorable spread.
"I would refresh my computer screen over and over again over the course of the work day looking to see what the latest numbers were," says Dr. Celine Gounder from the Kaiser Family Foundation, who was working as an infectious disease specialist at the Bellevue Hospital in New York when the pandemic began.
"It was really startling to see even over the course of the day how the numbers were evolving. I think my colleagues thought I was a little obsessive," Gounder says. "But it was also watching history unfold in real time on your screen."
The site, which Blauer and Gardner note was created and run largely by women, cost $13 million and eventually drew more than 2.5 billion views, Blauer says.
"It is a staggering amount of traffic," she says. "These are numbers I don't think I'll ever see again in my professional career."
But now that the threat of the pandemic is receding, states are reporting data less frequently and the CDC has ramped up the agency's data reporting, the university decided it was time to shut it down.
"There's definitely a bitter sweetness about the end," Blauer says. "But we are at an inflection point."
Both Blauer and Gardner say they hope the CDC and the public health system will continue to invest in data collection so the nation will be better prepared in the future. But they're prepared to step back in if necessary.
"There will be another pandemic," Gardner says. "And, so we'll have to see."
veryGood! (2344)
Related
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, NATO Members
- Prosecutors file sealed brief detailing allegations against Trump in election interference case
- Kaitlyn Bristowe Is Begging Golden Bachelorette Joan Vassos for This Advice
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- 'Wolfs' review: George Clooney, Brad Pitt bring the charm, but little else
- The Best New Beauty Products September 2024: Game-Changing Hair Identifier Spray & $3 Items You Need Now
- Son accused of killing father, stepmother, stepbrother will be extradited
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Titan implosion hearing paints a picture of reckless greed and explorer passion
Ranking
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Pink Shuts Down Conspiracy Theory About Sean Diddy Combs Connection
- What to know about Hurricane Helene and widespread flooding the storm left across the Southeast US
- Lana Del Rey obtains marriage license with Louisiana alligator tour guide Jeremy Dufrene
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Lady Gaga uncorks big band classics, her finest moment yet on 'Joker 2' album 'Harlequin'
- Don't ask the internet how much house you can afford. We have answers.
- Ozempic is so popular people are trying to 'microdose' it. Is that a bad idea?
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Pregnant Mormon Wives' Star Whitney Leavitt Reveals Name of Baby No. 3 With Husband Connor Leavitt
Judge orders US government to leave Wisconsin reservation roads open
FBI agent says 2 officers accepted accountability in fatal beating of Tyre Nichols
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
Is there a better live sonic feast than Jeff Lynne's ELO? Not a chance.
Emmanuel Littlejohn executed in Oklahoma despite clemency recommendation from state board
Are flying, venomous Joro spiders moving north? New England resident captures one on camera