Monday, February 15, 2021

Week by week: COVID-19 cases in Arizona



New York Times

Total tests (positive and negative):  3,628,163
  • Feb 8-14:              79,770
  • Feb 1-7:                91,077 
  • Jan 25-31:           107.070
  • Jan 18-24:           139,425
  • Jan 11-17:           135,559
  • Jan 4-10:             152,475
  • Dec 27-Jan 3:     147,281
  • Dec 20-26:         126,498
  • Dec 13-19:         136,292
  • Dec 6-13:           142,197
  • Nov 30-Dec 5:   134,174
  • Nov 23-29:        131,973
  • Nov 16-22:        129,854
  • Nov 9-15:          101,838 
  • Nov 2-8:              86,893
  • Oct 25-Nov 1:     79,360
  • Oct 19-25:           75,384 
  • Oct 12-18:           64,858
  • Oct 5-11:             70,034
  • Sep 28-Oct 4:      52,808
  • Sep 21-27:           63,716
  • Sep 14-20:           83,470
  • Sep 7-13:             45,268  
  • Aug 31-Sep 6:     59,577
  • Aug 24-30:          48,572
  • Aug 17-23:          58,895 
  • Aug 10-16:          79,411
  • Aug 3-9:              66,135
  • Jul 26-Aug 2:      89,236   

New cases week by week:

  • Feb 8-14:           16,633  (down 25% from previous week)
  • Feb 1-7:             22,233  (down 38%)
  • Jan 25-31:         35,830  (down 12%)
  • Jan 18-24:         40,672  (down 25%)
  • Jan 11-17:         54,337  (down 13%)
  • Jan 4-10:          62,162  (up 19%)
  • Dec 27-Jan 3:   52,047  (up 28%)
  • Dec 20-26:        40,740  (down 10%)
  • Dec 13-19:        45,155  (up 2%)    
  • Dec 6-13:          44,216 (up 16%)
  • Nov 30-Dec 5:  38,231 (up 45%)
  • Nov 23-29:       26,330 (up 9%)
  • Nov 16-22:       24,229 (up 50%)
  • Nov 9-15:         16,172 (up 37%)
  • Nov 2-8:           11,791 (up 23%)
  • Oct 25-Nov 1:    9,580 (up 37%)
  • Oct 19-25:          7,014 (up 26%)
  • Oct. 12-18:         5,574 (up 16%)
  • Oct 5-11:            4,821 (up 37%)
  • Sep 28-Oct 4:    3,517  (up 9%)
  • Sep 21-27:         3,219  (down 42%)
  • Sep 14-20:         5,506  (up 100%)
  • Sep 7-13:           2,746  (down 33%)
  • Aug 31-Sep 6:   4,105  (up 15%)
  • Aug 24-30:        3,558  (down 22%)
  • Aug 17-23:        4,566  (down 31%)
  • Aug 10-16:        6,614  (down 22%)
  • Aug 3-9:            8,456  (down 49%)
  • Jul 27-Aug 2   16,453  (down 11% )
  • July 20-26:      18,388  (down 13%)
  • July 13-19:      21,157  (down 13%)
  • July 6-12:       24,378 (up 1%)
  • Jun 29-Jul 5:  24,181 (up 12%)
  • June 22-28:    21,518  (up 29%) 
  •  June 15-21:    16,699  (up 90%)  
  • June 8-14:        8,802  (up 26%)
  • June 1-7;          6,959  (up 93%)
  • May 25-31:        3,597  (up 50%)
  • May 18-24:        2,402  
  • May 11-17:        2,819
  • May 4-10:          2,755
  • Apr 26-May 3:   1,648
  • April 19-25:       1,787 
  • April 12-18:      1,390
  • April 5-11:        1,270



COVID Tracking Project


Deaths reported:
  • As of March 15 -        0
  • As of March 22 -        2
  • As of March 29 -      15  (+  13)
  • As of April     5 -      64  (+  49)
  • As of April   12 -    115  (+  51)
  • As of April   19 -    184  (+  69)
  • As of April   26 -    275  (+  91)
  • As of May      3 -    362  (+  87)
  • As of May    10 -    536  (+174)
  • As of May    17 -    680  (+144)
  • As of May    24 -    800  (+120)
  • As of May    31 -    906  (+106)
  • As of June      7 - 1,044  (+138)
  • As of June    14 - 1,186  (+142)
  • As of June    21 - 1,339  (+153)
  • As of June   28 - 1,588  (+249)
  • As of July      5 - 1,809  (+221)
  • As of July    12 - 2,237  (+428)
  • As of July    19 - 2,761  (+524)
  • As of July    26 - 3,305  (+544)
  • As of Aug      2 - 3,765  (+450)
  • As of Aug      9 - 4,150  (+395)
  • As of Aug    16 - 4,506  (+356)
  • As of Aug    23 - 4,771  (+265)
  • As of Aug    30 - 5,030  (+259)
  • As of Sep       6 - 5,221  (+191)
  • As of Sep     13 - 5,322  (+101)
  • As of Sep     20 - 5,498  (+176)
  • As of Sep     27 - 5,623  (+125)
  • As of Oct       4 - 5,706  (+  83)
  • As of Oct     11-  5,759  (+  53)
  • As of Oct     18 - 5,827  (+  68)
  • As of Oct     25 - 5,874  (+  47)
  • As of Nov     1 -  5,981  (+107)
  • As of Nov     8 -  6,164  (+183)
  • As of Nov   15 -  6,302  (+138)
  • As of Nov   22 -  6,464  (+162)
  • As of Nov   29 -  6,634  (+170)
  • As of Dec     5 -  6,950  (+316)
  • As of Dec   12 -  7,357  (+407)
  • As of Dec   19 -  7,971  (+614)
  • As of Dec   26 -  8,427  (+456)
  • As of Jan     3 -   9,061  (+634)
  • As of Jan   10 - 10,141 (+1,080)
  • As of Jan   17 -  11,266 (+1,125)
  • As of Jan    24 - 12,238  (+972)
  • As of Jan    31-  13,120  (+882)
  • As of Feb    7 -  14,048  (+928)
  • As of Feb   14 - 14,978  (+930)

Related reading:
Health Experts Link Rise In Arizona COVID Cases To End Of Stay-At-Home Order.  (KHN, 6/16/2020)
After the state’s largest hospital system warned about a shortage of ICU beds, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, pushed back on claims that the health care system could soon be overwhelmed. 
“The entire time we’ve been focused on a possible worst-case scenario with surge capacity for hospital beds, ICU beds and ventilators,” Ducey told reporters on Thursday. “Those are not needed or necessary right now.” 
While he acknowledged a spike in positive cases, Ducey said a second stay-at-home order was “not under discussion.”
Doctors not surprised with rise in COVID-19 cases in Arizona. (azfamily.com, 6/3/2020)
One of the main reasons is that we're testing more. It's much easier to get a test today than it was a month ago or two months ago.” 
However, the total percentage of positive tests has grown in Arizona as well to 5.8%. 
“If you let up social distancing and just kind of go out and about as if nothing's wrong, you realize that some people are going to get sick and some of those people are going to die. And more likely to die are the older comorbidities, chronic health problems etc.,” said LoVecchio. “And I think we are accepting of that risk by loosening up social distancing, etc.”

Related posts:
Alabama.  (2/15/2021)
Arizona.  (2/15/2021)
Arkansas.  (2/4/2021)
California.  (2/7/2021)
Connecticut.  (8/21/2020)
Florida.  (2/15/2021)
Georgia.  (2/15/2021)
Idaho.  (2/7/2021)
Illinois.  (2/2/2021)
Indiana.  (2/6/2021)
Iowa.  (2/6/2021)
Kansas.  (2/4/2021)
Kentucky.  (2/4/2021)
Louisiana.  (2/6/2021)
Maryland.  (1/27/2021)
Massachusetts.  (2/2/2021)
Michigan.  (2/2/2021)
Minnesota.  (2/4/2021)
Mississippi.  (2/15/2021)
Montana. (2/5/2021)
Nebraska.  (2/4/2021)
Nevada.  (2/3/2021)
New Jersey,  (2/2/2021)
New York.  (2/2/2021)
North Carolina.  (2/7/2021)
North Dakota.  (2/7/2021)
Ohio.  (2/6/2021)
Pennsylvania.  (2/2/2021)
South Carolina.  (2/5/2021)
South Dakota.  (2/4/2021)
Tennessee.  (2/5/2021)
Texas   (2/6/2021)
Utah.  (2/3/2021)
Virginia.  (1/22/2021)
Washington State.  (6/12/2020)
West Virginia.  (2/3/2021)


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