T-Squared: We’re sunsetting our COVID-19 data tracker

Case numbers are incomplete because many people are using home tests instead of testing at a clinic or doctor’s office. This makes it hard to compare past surges with what we’re seeing now.
The milder omicron variants — along with increases in the number of people who have been vaccinated and the amount who have been previously infected — mean cases no longer lead to high hospitalization levels and an overburdened health care system.
Vaccination rates in Texas have been mostly stagnant this year, with the rate of immunized people increasing by only 1.4 percentage points to 61.6% in the last four months.

DSHS updates its case, hospitalization, test and vaccine dashboards every weekday.
Many cities, towns and counties in Texas still have COVID-19 dashboards they update regularly, including Harris County, Dallas County, San Antonio, Austin and El Paso. The Houston Health Department has a wastewater monitoring dashboard, which detects the prevalence of the virus in the city’s wastewater and is a good early indicator of whether it’s spreading in the community.
Some news outlets, like The New York Times, track numbers in Texas daily.
Johns Hopkins University & Medicine has its own dashboard.