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			 STATEWIDE MODEL 
			 
			Compared to the previous model forecasts which predicted peaking 
			between late April and early May, that timeframe of plateauing near 
			a peak has been expanded from mid-May into mid-June in Illinois. 
			Daily death and hospital capacity data over the course of the last 
			two and a half weeks have informed the model and led to the updated 
			predictions. 
			 
			A later and lower peak is a positive indicator of flattening the 
			curve and a result of a slowdown of the state’s rate of 
			transmission, which leads to a slower rate of increase over a longer 
			period. Under current mitigations, hospital bed and ventilator 
			capacity remains sufficient to treat COVID-19 patients. In other 
			words, Illinois will reach the peak without overloading the state’s 
			health care system as seen in other parts of the world. 
			
			    
			
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			The state’s modeling efforts are led by top 
			researchers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 
			Northwestern School of Medicine, the University of Chicago, the 
			Chicago and Illinois Departments of Public Health (IDPH), and 
			managed by Civis Analytics, using IDPH’s data of COVID-19 cases, 
			deaths, hospitalizations, ventilator and ICU usage from hospitals in 
			Illinois. 
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			  REGIONAL METRICS 
			 
			All four of the regions are meeting many of the key metrics, with 
			three of the four on pace to meet all of the Restore Illinois 
			reopening metrics to move forward after the 28-day period: 
			North-Central, Central and Southern. 
			 
			As of midnight, May 8, the Northeast region’s positivity rate is at 
			22.3 percent, higher than the 20 percent cap on this metric to move 
			into the next phase. The North-Central region is at 9.1 percent, the 
			Central region at 6.0 percent, and the Southern region at 10.5 
			percent. 
			 
			All of the regions have seen a dip in hospitalizations since May 
			1st: 18.6 percent decrease in the Northeast region, 35.8 percent 
			decrease in the North-Central region, 44.4 percent decrease in the 
			Central region, and 54.3 percent decrease in the Southern region. 
			 
			A requirement to move forward to next phase is that a region sees no 
			overall increase, rather stability or a decrease, in hospital 
			admissions for COVID-like illness across a 28-day period. 
			 
			As of midnight May 8, all four regions met the third requirement of 
			available surge capacity of at least 14 percent for ICU beds, 
			medical/surgical beds, and ventilators. 
			  
			
				
					| 
					 
					Region  | 
					
					 
					Med/Surge 
					Bed  
					Avail.  | 
					
					 
					ICU Bed 
					Avail.  | 
					
					 
					
					Ventilator Avail.  | 
				 
				
					| 
					 
					Northeast  | 
					
					 
					17.8%  | 
					
					 
					18.8%  | 
					
					 
					64.3%  | 
				 
				
					| 
					 
					
					North-Central  | 
					
					 
					41.1%  | 
					
					 
					40.6%  | 
					
					 
					64.9%  | 
				 
				
					| 
					 
					Central  | 
					
					 
					52.4%  | 
					
					 
					44.2%  | 
					
					 
					74.6%  | 
				 
				
					| 
					 
					Southern  | 
					
					 
					45.8%  | 
					
					 
					28%  | 
					
					 
					80.7%  | 
				 
			 
			
			
			  
			
			Please note that Illinois has begun using a seven-day 
			rolling average of daily-reports since May 1, to smooth volatility 
			in the daily metrics and to better inform the overall time trend. 
			
            [Office of the Governor JB Pritzker]  |