Infection rate estimated by website suggests Kentucky’s coronavirus hotspots are moving to Louisville-Bluegrass corridor

Christian County is among seven Kentucky counties with an estimated rate of transmission greater than 1.1. Epidemiologists want the rate below 1, which would make the virus die out eventually.

The hotspots for the coronavirus in Kentucky appear to be moving from a gaggle of counties in near Western Kentucky to more urbanized counties along Interstate 64.

Franklin County has the highest estimated rate of transmission, 1.36, on the CovidActNow website, which estimates rates for counties that have a sufficient number of cases and also categorizes counties by risk level, based on their hospitalizations, hospital capacity, positive-test rate and tracing of people who have had contact with infected people.

Louisville-Bluegrass corridor coronavirus infection rates graphic
(CovidActNow graphic enhanced by Kentucky Health News)

The estimated rate of 1.36 predicts that every 100 people who have the virus in Franklin County will pass it on to 136 other people, a rate that is likely to accelerate. Epidemiologists want the rate to be less than 1, which would make the virus die out eventually — or at least below 1.1, which many consider to be “controlled spread.” Kentucky’s estimated rate on Friday, June 12, was 1.1.

Other counties above 1.1 were Allen (Scottsville), 1.30, which has had a surge of cases lately; Christian (Hopkinsville), 1.26; Harrison (Cynthiana) and Shelby, 1.20; and the state’s two most populous counties: Fayette, 1.16; and Jefferson, 1.12.

Some of those counties were rated at critical risk of an uncontrolled outbreak, and others were rated at high risk, depending on their hospital, testing and tracing situations. Franklin County was rated critical because it was using 87 percent of its intensive-care beds on June 12, according to CovidActNow, which said the county’s testing and tracing were insufficient to rate. Its estimated infection rate on May 30 and June 2 was 1.40, which also put it into the critical category.

Logan County’s estimated infection rate was 1.08 but it was rated critical because it was using 83 percent of its intensive-care beds, the site said. Muhlenberg County’s rate was only 0.92 but it was rated critical because all its ICU beds were in use. (The county’s hospital is a satellite of the large Owensboro hospital, which easily accepts transfers from its affiliates.) Adjoining Ohio County was rated critical because it was using 75% of its ICU beds but had an infection rate of 1.08.

In the I-64 corridor, Scott County lacked the data for an infection rate but was rated critical because all its ICU beds were occupied. Georgetown is close to Lexington, which has several hospitals. Likewise, Shelby County, which adjoins Jefferson County, had all its ICU beds occupied, the site said.

CovidActNow’s Kentucky page is here. The page for Christian County is here.

CovidActNow says it is “a multidisciplinary team of technologists, epidemiologists, health experts, and public policy leaders working to provide disease intelligence and data analysis” on COVID-19 in the United States. Gov. Andy Beshear and state Health Commissioner Steven Stack have cited the site, which says it partners with the Georgetown University Center for Global Health Science and Security , Stanford University Clinical Excellence Research Center and Grand Rounds.

(Kentucky Health News is an independent news service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, based in the School of Journalism and Media at the University of Kentucky, with support from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky.)