AP tells staff to 'avoid emphasizing' COVID case counts amid shift in covering pandemic
The outlet previously considered case counts as 'barometers of the pandemic’s march across the world'
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
The Associated Press is shifting in how it covers the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, no longer hyping the number of cases as the Omicron variant continues to infect both the vaccinated and unvaccinated alike.
In an article titled, "Omicron wave prompts media to rethink which data to report," the AP cited COVID case counts and hospitalizations as "barometers of the pandemic’s march across the world" but that the latest surge "is making a mess of the usual statistics, forcing news organizations to rethink the way they report such figures."
CNN SHIFTS COVID NARRATIVE TO ‘WHAT MANY INDEPENDENT-MINDED AMERICANS HAVE BEEN THINKING’ ALL ALONG
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
"The number of case counts soared over the holidays, an expected development given the emergence of a variant more transmissible than its predecessors," the AP reported Wednesday. "Yet these counts only reflect what is reported by health authorities. They do not include most people who test themselves at home, or are infected without even knowing about it. Holidays and weekends also lead to lags in reported cases."
Due to the nuances of how COVID tests are being administered, the AP suggested the number of cases can't be added together and that the actual number of cases would likely be "substantially higher" than what's being reported at a state and federal level.
"For that reason, The Associated Press has recently told its editors and reporters to avoid emphasizing case counts in stories about the disease," the AP wrote. "That means, for example, no more stories focused solely on a particular country or state setting a one-day record for number of cases, because that claim has become unreliable."
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
The AP went on to cite several news organizations who have cited various rolling averages in their reporting like NBC News and the Washington Post relying on a one-week average of case counts, CNN and the New York Times two-week averages and MSNBC citing a three-day window on a state level.
The newswire service also highlighted its own story on Saturday with the headline "Omicron explosion spurs nationwide breakdown of services," noting the omission of the case count metric.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
"Hospitalization and death rates are considered by some to be a more reliable picture of COVID-19′s current impact on society. Yet even the usefulness of those numbers has been called into question in recent days," the AP wrote, acknowledging hospitalization numbers include those who happen to test positive of COVID but are not hospitalized because of COVID.