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Weekly Arizona COVID-19 Data Report – Dr. Joe Gerald, March 12 Update

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Note this forecast page is not the most recent forecast available.

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Researcher Analyzes Arizona COVID-19 Spread Models for Decision-Makers


The following information regarding the spread of COVID-19 in Arizona was prepared by Joe Gerald, MD, PhD, a researcher at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health (MEZCOPH) at the University of Arizona. This information has also been reviewed by other MEZCOPH faculty.

This data were obtained from the Arizona Department of Health Services COVID-19 webpage and reflect conditions in Arizona as of March 12, 2021.

This information is intended to help guide our response to the outbreak. It is not intended to predict how this pandemic will evolve. Rather, this model extrapolates what might occur if current conditions remain unchanged. As regional authorities and healthcare providers respond, their actions are expected to mitigate the worst consequences of this pandemic.

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COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast
Arizona State and Pima County

Updated March 12, 2021

Disclaimer: This information represents my personal views and not those of The University of Arizona, the Zuckerman College of Public Health, or any other government entity. Any opinions, forecasts, or recommendations should be considered in conjunction with other corroborating and conflicting data. Updates can be accessed at https://publichealth.arizona.edu/news/2021/covid-19-forecast-model.

For the week ending March 7th, at least 5721Covid-19 cases were diagnosed in Arizona (Figure 1). This represents a 17% decrease from last week’s initial tally of 6872 cases and marks the eighth straight week of decline. The prior week’s tally was upwardly revised by <1% (8 cases) to 6880 cases this week. The outbreak remains evenly distributed by age (Figure 2).

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 1. Newly Diagnosed Covid-19 Cases in Arizona and Number of Individuals Undergoing Covid-19 Diagnostic Testing March 1, 2020 through March 7, 2021.

 

Arizona is now securely in a period of substantial (versus high) risk with continuing, albeit smaller, improvements in case counts expected over the coming weeks. Hospital capacity remains adequate to meet Arizona’s foreseeable needs; however, the backlog of non-Covid care has yet to be fully addressed as evidenced by unseasonably high hospital occupancy.

While residents and businesses should continue to follow public health mitigation recommendations, normalization of lower risk activities is reasonable as case rates have fallen below 100 new diagnoses per 100,000 residents per week. New cases are now being diagnosed at a rate of 79 per 100K residents per week. For reference, September 8th marked the fall nadir between the summer and winter outbreaks at 38 per 100K per week. Arizonans who are at risk of developing severe disease (e.g., age or comorbid conditions) should remain sheltered as much as feasible until fully vaccinated.

Note: Data for this report was updated Friday, March 12 allowing 4 full days to adjudicate cases and keep week-over-week backfill <10%. This allows more interpretable comparisons and graphics. All comparisons are week-over-week changes. Future updates will be released on Saturdays.

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 2. Newly Diagnosed Covid-19 Cases in Arizona by Age Group March 1, 2020 through March 7, 2021.

 

Test positivity among those undergoing traditional nasopharyngeal PCR testing continues to decline, declining from 10% the week ending February 28th to 9% the week ending March 7th (Figure 3). Positivity is now within the recommended 5 – 10% for optimal public health practice.

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 3. Weekly Number Patients Undergoing Traditional Nasopharyngeal PCR Testing and Associated Percent Positivity March 1, 2020 – March 7, 2021.

 

As of March 12th, 814 (10%) of Arizona’s 8557 general ward beds were occupied by Covid-19 patients, a 16% decrease from the previous week’s 966 occupied beds (Figure 4 and Figure 5 Panel A). Another 1011 (12%) beds remained available for use. The number of available beds is higher than the previous week’s 952 beds.

Covid-19 occupancy has dropped by 84% from its January 11th peak of 5082 ward patients. Nevertheless, hospitals remain above seasonal occupancy.

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 4. Arizona Daily Covid-19 General Ward and ICU Census April 20, 2020 – March 12, 2021.

 

As of March 12th, 238 (14%) of Arizona’s 1750 ICU beds were occupied with Covid-19 patients, a 15% decrease from the prior week’s count of 280 patients (Figure 4 and Figure 5 Panel B). An additional 262 (15%) ICU beds remained available for use. This is similar to the prior week’s 263 available beds. ICU occupancy has fallen 80% from its January 11th peak of 1183 occupied beds.

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 5. Covid-19 Occupancy as a Percent of Listed General Ward (A, left) and ICU (B, right) Capacity in Arizona April 20, 2020 – March 12, 2021.

 

While Arizona hospitals’ safety margins remain low, they are slowly improving (Figure 6). Medically necessary procedures are now being scheduled in a more typical manner. The backlog of postponed care will take several more months to resolve. As capacity constraints are lessened, care practices should return to those prior to the outbreak ensuring all patients will receive optimal care. Hospitals will remain crowded through early April before returning to pre-outbreak levels assuming continued reductions in viral transmission.

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 6. Observed Excess Non-Surge General Ward and ICU Capacity April 20, 2020 – March 12, 2021.

 

The week ending January 17th remains Arizona’s deadliest with 1032 deaths (Figure 7). The week of January 17th represents peak mortality with subsequent improvements for the foreseeable future. Covid-19 deaths are expected to remain high for the next 1 - 2 weeks, falling below 200 per week by the end of March.

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 7. Weekly Arizona Covid-19 Deaths March 1, 2020 – March 7, 2021.

 

Pima County Outlook

For the week ending March 7th, 684 Pima County residents were diagnosed with Covid-19, a 17% decrease from the 826 cases initially reported last week (Figure 8). Last week’s initial tally was downwardly revised by 5% (41 cases) to 785 cases.

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 8. Covid-19 Cases and Individuals Undergoing Diagnostic Testing in Pima County March 1, 2020 – March 7, 2021

 

New cases are being diagnosed at a rate of 65 cases per 100K residents per week. For reference, October 9th marked a nadir between the summer and winter outbreak at 46 cases per 100K residents per week. Trends are similar across the various age groups (Figure 9).

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 9. Covid-19 Cases by Age Group in Pima County from March 1, 2020 – March 7, 2021.

 

Summary

  • This week saw an eighth straight week of meaningful declines in Covid-19 cases and hospital occupancy. In all but Coconino County, absolute levels of SARS-CoV-2 viral transmission have fallen below the 100 new cases per 100,000 residents per week threshold.
    • As of March 7th, new cases were being diagnosed at a rate of 79 cases per 100,000 residents per week (Figure 10 below). This rate is declining by 16 cases per 100,000 residents per week.
    • Arizona has the 13th highest viral transmission rate in the US according to the CDC; however, it remains the 6th hardest hit state overall.
    • All residents should continue to wear a mask in public, avoid large social gatherings, maintain physical distance from non-household contacts, avoid >15 minutes contact in indoor spaces, especially if physical distancing is inadequate and adherence to face masks is low.
    • While residents and businesses should continue to follow the recommended public health mitigation efforts, normalization of lower risk activities is reasonable in communities where case rates are below 100 new diagnoses per 100,000 residents per week.
    • The test positivity rate for traditional nasopharyngeal PCR testing is now <10% which is within the recommended 5 – 10% range for optimal public health practice.

COVID-19 Disease Outbreak Forecast

Figure 10. 7-Day Moving Average of Arizona Covid-19 Cases by Date of Test Collection Mar 1, 2020 – March 7, 2021.

  • In some communities, absolute levels of transmission and test positivity have reached levels that warrant a return to in-person instruction using a hybrid mode or reduced attendance (see CDC Recommended Mitigation Strategies for K – 12 Learning Modes). Full in-person instruction is not recommended by the CDC until transmission falls below 50 cases per 100K residents per week.
  • Hospital Covid-19 occupancy continues to decline in the ward and ICU. Access to care however, remains somewhat restricted as the backlog of medically necessary non-Covid procedures is addressed.
  • Arizona is still reporting a large number of weekly deaths and this count may underestimate true fatalities. The week ending January 17th will be Arizona’s deadliest with >1000 deaths. Arizona’s weekly tally of deaths ranks it 9th in the nation while its overall rank remains 6th since the outbreak began.
  • According to the CDC, 14.6% of Arizona adults have received at least 2-doses of vaccine while another 13.4% have received 1-dose. The ADHS Dashboard is reporting slightly higher levels.

 


Forecast reports to date, available as PDFs

Download PDF to view additional charts of Arizona counties, available in appendix of report.

March   5   |   12  

February   5   |   12   |   19   |   26  

January   4   |   8   |   15   |   22   |   29


2020 Reports

December   4   |   11   |   18   |   28

November   4   |   11   |   20   |   27

October   2   |   9   |   16   |   21   |   28

September   4   |   11   |   18   |   25

August   7   |   14   |   21   |   28

July   3   |   10   |   17   |   24   |   31

June   5   |   12   |   19   |   26

May   1   |   8   |   15   |   22   |   29

April   8   |   13   |   23   |   28

March   17   |   22   |   28


Based on what we know now about this pandemic, we support guidelines for social distancing to slow the spread of the virus and urge everyone to follow the recommendations provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to protect yourself, your family, your neighbors, and your employees. Please heed the recommendations as provided by the CDC, found at the following website: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prepare/prevention.html

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