The Arizona Republic

State adds 10,775 new cases, 34 deaths

- Alison Steinbach

Reported COVID-19 cases in Arizona continued to climb last week and the percentage of tests returning positive for the virus rose, according to the state’s latest weekly update.

Health officials on Wednesday added 10,775 COVID-19 cases and 34 new known deaths over the weeklong period ending Nov. 12, well above the case additions recently. That’s the highest weekly case report since August.

Case counts are still far below last winter, data shows. Case numbers in recent months likely are not showing the full picture of infections as many more people have used at-home test kits and may not report positive results to their doctors or county health department­s.

Some epidemiolo­gists are predicting another wave of infections this fall and winter. Omicron subvariant­s that are fueling a rising number of COVID-19 cases in Europe and western Asia have been detected in Arizona, setting the stage for another bump in cases here.

Public health officials and medical providers say the best way for Arizonans to avoid serious illness from the emerging strains is to get the updated COVID-19 booster if eligible. The new bivalent booster is updated with protection­s against subvariant­s of the omicron variant and it’s available to people ages 5 and older.

Twelve of Arizona’s 15 counties were designated as “low” in terms of COVID-19 levels, according to guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as of Nov. 10. Apache and Navajo counties were “high,” meaning the CDC recommends people wear face masks indoors in public, and Mohave County was “medium.”

The CDC’s “community level” guidance metrics are based on a county’s COVID-19 hospital bed use, COVID-19 hospital admissions and case rates for the virus over the past week.

Reported cases since the pandemic began are at over 2.3 million. Known deaths in Arizona are over 31,600.

Wednesday marked the 38th of the weekly updates to the state’s data dashboard, instead of daily updates that Arizonans became accustomed to following for the latest data on infections, illnesses and deaths.

The previous week’s update added 7,360 COVID-19 cases and 40 deaths, compared with 5,129 COVID-19 cases and 25 deaths three weeks ago and 4,813 COVID-19 cases and 34 deaths four weeks ago.

This week’s update shows the difference­s between data reported for the week of Nov. 6-12 and Oct. 30-Nov. 5.

Health officials say weekly updates match how public health monitors trends and other disease reporting.

Case numbers generally were relatively lower in the past couple of months, and experts estimate cases of the highly contagious omicron variant peaked in Arizona around mid-January.

The state data dashboard no longer shows key hospitaliz­ation informatio­n since Gov. Doug Ducey ended the COVID-19 emergency declaratio­n March 30. State health officials said hospitals are no longer required to report some COVID-19 surveillan­ce data to the state, meaning certain graphs showing weekly hospitaliz­ation levels for the disease and bed usage by COVID-19 patients are no longer updated. At the time that data reporting stopped, hospitaliz­ations for the disease had dropped steadily since late January.

The CDC still reports state hospitaliz­ation data for Arizona and showed a 41.6% increase in the seven-day average of COVID-19 hospital admissions during Nov. 7-13 compared with Oct. 31-Nov. 6. Hospital admissions last week were down 82.7% from the peak seven-day average in early January 2021.

The number of known deaths in the state was at 31,647 as of Wednesday, after passing 30,000 known deaths in the May 4 update. The state surpassed 25,000 deaths on Jan. 13. Deaths are reported with a four-week lag.

The CDC places Arizona’s overall pandemic death rate since early 2020 as the third-highest nationwide.

Stay up to date on boosters

The state in December began publicly disclosing data on breakthrou­gh COVID-19 infections, and state officials say the data underscore­s the effectiven­ess of the vaccine, especially for people up to date on all recommende­d COVID-19 doses, including boosters.

Data from September show that 42.7% of hospitaliz­ations and 32.1% of COVID-19 deaths were among unvaccinat­ed people, 52.4% of hospitaliz­ations and 60.9% of deaths were among vaccinated but not up-to-date people, and 4.9% of hospitaliz­ations and 7% of deaths were among people up to date on vaccinatio­n. (Most Arizonans are vaccinated.)

State health officials previously broke down hospitaliz­ation and death data for unvaccinat­ed people and people with and without boosters, but said they changed the format in July to show the impact of staying up to date with a second booster shot plus future vaccine recommenda­tions.

Unvaccinat­ed people ages 5 and older had an 8.6 times greater risk of hospitaliz­ation and 6.5 times greater risk of dying from COVID-19 in September compared with people who were up to date on their vaccinatio­n. Unvaccinat­ed people were 8.7 times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed and 7.2 times more likely to die from COVID-19 compared with people who were vaccinated but not up to date, per the September analysis.

“Stronger protection from hospitaliz­ation and death is seen in those who are up-to-date on COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns,” interim state health Director Don Herrington wrote in a blog post.

As of Oct. 12, there had been 2,308 breakthrou­gh deaths in fully vaccinated individual­s with the primary series, according to state health officials’ preliminar­y data, which works out to a breakthrou­gh death rate of about 0.05% among all fully vaccinated people with the primary series. (The August breakthrou­gh number state health officials previously provided was incorrect, officials said.)

Health officials emphasize the best protection against severe illness from COVID-19 is to remain up to date with recommende­d vaccinatio­ns, including CDC guidance that people ages 5 years and older receive one updated bivalent booster if it has been at least two months since their last COVID-19 vaccine dose, either an original booster or the primary series.

Case rates and death reports

Contagious omicron subvariant­s, particular­ly BA.5, are contributi­ng to many of the cases in Arizona, according to results from sequencing labs. Sequencing data from the Translatio­nal Genomics Research Institute, or TGen, show an increase in recent weeks of “Omicron other,” though most recently BA.5 appeared dominant.

Percent positivity, which refers to the percentage of COVID-19 diagnostic tests that are positive, varies somewhat based on how it’s measured. It was high in the winter months, a sign of more community spread. Then it was much lower but began climbing upward in April, then back downward, and now again on an upswing.

Arizona’s percent positivity for COVID-19 testing was at 3% for the week of April 3, and went up in subsequent weeks, reaching a high of 29% for the week of July 10. It was 11% for the week of Sept. 4, 10% for the week of Sept. 11, 10% for the week of Sept. 18, 10% for the week of Sept. 25, 11% for the week of Oct. 2, 11% for the week of Oct. 9, 13% for the week of Oct. 16, 13% for the week of Oct. 23, 17% for the week of Oct. 30 and 21% for the week of Nov. 6. The percentage­s are for all diagnostic tests conducted, rather than for unique individual­s tested. A positivity rate of 5% or less is considered a good benchmark that the disease’s spread is under control.

The state’s overall COVID-19 death and case rates since Jan. 21, 2020, still remain among the worst in the country.

The COVID-19 death rate in Arizona since the pandemic began is 434 deaths per 100,000 people as of Tuesday, according to the CDC, putting it third in the country in a state ranking that separates New York City from New York state. The U.S. average is 322 deaths per 100,000 people as of Tuesday, according to the CDC.

New York City has the highest death rate, at 511 deaths per 100,000 people, followed by Mississipp­i at 436.

Arizona’s first known death from the disease occurred in mid-March 2020. Many of the deaths occurred days or weeks before because of reporting delays and death certificat­e matching.

A total of 2,311,150 COVID-19 cases were identified across the state through Nov. 12.

Arizona is still behind the US vaccinatio­n rate

Arizonans ages 6 months and older are eligible for the Pfizer vaccine, while the Moderna vaccine is approved for

children ages 6 months to 5 years and people 18 and older. The CDC has recommende­d the Johnson & Johnson vaccine on a more limited basis for 18 and older.

The state reported over 5.4 million people in Arizona – about 74.3% of the total state population – had received at least one vaccine dose through Nov. 12, with over 4.5 million residents fully vaccinated (completed the primary series) against COVID-19. The state’s data dashboard now separates out doses administer­ed to Arizona residents versus all doses administer­ed in the state.

Arizona’s rate of people with a completed primary series out of the total population was 65.4%, which was behind the national rate of 68.6%, according to the CDC as of Nov. 9.

There’s a wide range of vaccine uptake across the U.S. About 86.7% of the total population of Rhode Island had a completed primary series, which is the highest rate in the U.S. In Wyoming, which has the lowest rate, just 52.6% of the population had a completed primary series, per the CDC.

Out of people ages 5 and older, 69.3% of those in Arizona had a completed primary series, compared with 72.7% at the national level, CDC data shows.

Health experts strongly recommend booster shots for those eligible, especially with the omicron variant spreading. About 9% of Arizonans over the age of 5 had received an updated (bivalent) booster dose as of Nov. 9, similar to the national rate of 10.1%.

What to know about latest numbers

Reported cases in Arizona: 2,311,150, as of Nov. 12.

Cases by county: 1,446,029 in Maricopa; 298,146 in Pima; 149,657 in Pinal; 68,312 in Yuma; 64,671 in Mohave; 56,511 in Yavapai; 50,909 in Coconino; 45,497 in Navajo; 37,016 in Cochise; 33,543 in Apache; 20,260 in Gila; 18,750 in Santa Cruz; 13,542 in Graham; 5,789 in La Paz; and 2,518 in Greenlee.

The rate of cases per 100,000 people since the pandemic began is highest in Apache County, followed by Navajo, Santa Cruz, Gila, Graham and Coconino counties, according to state data. The rate in Apache County is 50,508 cases per 100,000 people. By comparison, the U.S. average rate since the pandemic began is 29,485 cases per 100,000 people as of Tuesday, according to the CDC.

The Navajo Nation reported 76,380 cases and 1,950 deaths as of Nov. 10.

The Arizona Department of Correction­s reported 15,524 inmates had tested positive for COVID-19 as of Tuesday, the highest number at its Tucson facility with 2,468 confirmed positive cases. A total of 5,716 prison staff members have self-reported testing positive, the department said. Sixty-three incarcerat­ed people in Arizona are confirmed to have died of COVID-19, with six additional deaths under investigat­ion.

The race/ethnicity breakdown of cases since the start of the pandemic in 2020 is 40% white, 28% Hispanic or Latino, 5% American Indian, 4% Black and 2% Asian/Pacific Islander. Race/ethnicity of positive cases since the onset of the pandemic is unknown in 14% of cases and listed as other races in 6%.

Of those who have tested positive in Arizona since the start of the pandemic, about 21% were younger than 20, 42% were 20-44, 13% were 45-54, 11% were 55-64 and 13% were age 65 or older.

Laboratori­es had completed 21,194,983 total diagnostic tests for COVID-19 as of Nov. 12, 12.7% of which have come back positive. That number includes both PCR and antigen testing.

Percent positivity was at 21% for the week of Nov. 6, an increase from recent weeks and the highest level since August. Percent positivity has been lower than the summer. The state numbers leave out data from labs that do not report electronic­ally.

Reported deaths in Ariz.: 31,647

Deaths by county: 18,067 in Maricopa; 4,052 in Pima; 1,743 in Pinal; 1,570 in Mohave; 1,303 in Yavapai; 1,220 in Yuma; 948 in Navajo; 627 in Apache; 598 in Cochise; 504 in Coconino; 401 in Gila; 239 in Santa Cruz; 184 in Graham; 152 in La Paz; and 39 in Greenlee.

People aged 65 and older make up 22,631 of the 31,647 deaths, or 72%. About 15% of deaths were among people 55-64 years old, 8% were 45-54 and 5% were 20-44 years old.

While race/ethnicity was unknown for 5% of deaths, 57% of those who died were white, 26% were Hispanic or Latino, 7% were Native American, 3% were Black and 1% were Asian/Pacific Islander, the state data shows.

The global death toll as of Wednesday was 6,613,252. The U.S. had the highest death count of any country in the world, at 1,075,211, followed by Brazil at 688,656 and India at 530,535, according to Johns Hopkins University.

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