Des Moines, Iowa — Governor Kim Reynolds says the state website that lists COVID-19 data is a work in progress and a glitch that reported recent positive test results as having been confirmed weeks and sometimes months ago has been addressed.
(as said) “The reporting issue occurred due to an effort to avoid duplicating test results for individuals who tested multiple times,” Reynolds says.
For example, nurses are frequently tested and the governor revealed she has been tested 10 times. The state’s medical director became aware of the discrepancy in reporting SOME positive results at the end of July, shortly after the governor announced the website’s data would determine if a district would be allowed to switch students to online instruction. Dr. Caitlin Pedati — the state medical director — acknowledged Thursday during the governor’s news conference that the glitch — in her words — wasn’t ideal.
(as said) “I know that this is hard, but as we move through this response we continue to look at our processes, our tools, and the information we have available and so it does mean that we have to make adjustments,” Pedati says. “It does mean that we have to be flexible.”
The governor told reporters she was not made aware of the inaccurate data until last week. Early THIS week, a nurse practitioner in Iowa City alerted various media outlets she’d received an email from the Department of Public Health to confirm discrepancies on the website.
(as said) “I do want to thank Iowans who use the data that we provide, who dig into it and raise questions when they have ’em,” Reynolds says. “We continue to encourage that. It helps us constantly improve the data.”
The governor told reporters 79 counties saw a decline and 20 counties saw an increase in “positivity” rates. The positivity rate is the measure of the percentage of tests that are positive. The governor said Iowa’s overall positivity rate during the pandemic held steady at nine-point-four percent as the website updates were being made.