COVID-19 cases make big jump in Graham County

Health department reports 44 new positive tests on Saturday and 26 on Sunday to put total at 1,434

By Jon Johnson

jonjohnsonnews@gmail.com

SAFFORD – The positive tests for the novel coronavirus COVID-19 skyrocketed in Graham County on Saturday.

The Graham County Department of Health and Human Services (GCDHHS) reported 44 new positive results for COVID-19 in Graham County on Saturday and 26 on Sunday. The new positive tests from Saturday include 22 from Safford, 16 from the San Carlos Apache Tribe, four from Thatcher, and two from Pima. After having its biggest increase of cases in one month in October, Graham County is on its way of eclipsing that mark with 208 new positive tests in the first eight days of November alone.  

As of Sunday, the Graham County Department of Health and Human Services reported 1,434 total confirmed cases, with 881 recovered and 522 actives. According to GCDHHS criteria, a positive test is not considered a recovered patient until they have 30 days symptom-free. Graham County has about 39,000 residents. Slightly more than 3.6 percent of Graham County has tested positive for COVID-19, with the currently active number at slightly more than 1 percent.

A total of 31 people, mostly all over the age of 65 and who had pre-existing health conditions, have died with COVID-19 in Graham County. There were currently six patients hospitalized for COVID-19 at the Mt. Graham Regional Medical Center on Friday.

Due to the increase of cases, the Fort Thomas School District has gone back to distance learning for the month of November, and the Arizona Interscholastic Association has recommended both Graham and Greenlee postpone the start of school winter sports. Both Graham and Greenlee fail the Winter Sports Metrics of thresholds as defined by the Arizona Department of Health Services by having too many cases per 100,000 people and too high of a positive percentage rate of tests given.    

According to the state’s database, Graham County’s positive test cases include 321 who are under 20 years of age, 607 between 20-44, 161 between 45-54, 148 between 55-64, and 195 who are 65 years old or older.

As of Saturday, the ADHS continues to list Graham County in its “moderate” business reopening status, even though the county is in the “substantial transmission” zone in both cases per 100,000 individuals, and percent positivity, for the weeks of Sept. 27, Oct. 4, Oct. 11, and Oct. 18. ADHS metrics are roughly two weeks behind current results. The metrics show Graham County had 146 cases per 100,000 for the week of Sept. 27, 140 cases per 100,000 for the week of Oct. 4, 239 cases per 100,000 for the week of Oct. 11, and 343 cases per 100,000 for the week of Oct. 18, all over the 100 threshold to enter the substantial zone. The percent positivity for those four weeks was listed at 12.4 percent, 14.6 percent, 18.2 percent, and 12.4 percent, respectively, all over the 10 percent threshold to enter the substantial zone. Hospitalizations for the Southeast Region – which includes Graham, Greenlee, Pima, Cochise, and Santa Cruz counties – rose slightly from 2.1 percent to 2.4 percent for the week of Oct. 11, but lowered to 2 percent for the week of Oct. 18, and is still in the “minimal transmission” zone under 5 percent.  

Greenlee County

Greenlee County Health Department listed five new positive tests on Friday and two new positive tests on Saturday to raise its total for the pandemic to 116.

The health department has administered tests to 1,761 people as of Saturday, with 1,645 being negative, and 116 positives, according to the department. The county has 42 active cases, 72 recovered cases, and two deaths. Greenlee County has about 10,000 residents.

The breakdown of the Greenlee cases currently listed on the ADHS’ data dashboard includes 11 under the age of 20, 61 between 20-44, 23 between 45-54, 15 between 55-64, and six who are 65 years old or older.

Greenlee County’s percent positivity skyrocketed from 0 percent to 17.6 percent for the week of Oct. 4, putting that metric into the substantial zone. It lowered to 9.8 percent for the week of Oct. 11, putting it back into the moderate zone, but then rose the week of ct. 18 to 12.5 percent into the substantial zone. Its cases per 100,000 individuals also raised from 10 for the week of Sept. 27 to 39 for the week of Oct. 4, 67 for the week of Oct. 11, and 270 for the week of Oct. 18, putting it into the substantial zone. However, Greenlee County is still in the “minimal transmission” status for business reopening, according to ADHS.  

Raymundo Frasquillo File Photo/Gila Herald: Volunteers hand out masks at an event in Morenci. Greenlee County has a mask mandate for public places until mid-December.

San Carlos Apache Tribe

The San Carlos Apache Tribe stretches into both Graham and Gila counties and its cases add to the respective counties’ cases based on the geography of where the patients reside.

On Sunday, the San Carlos Apache Tribe Department of Health & Human Services reported 28 new cases. To date, the Tribe has administered 12,251 tests with 10,134 negatives, 1,979 positives, and 138 results pending.

The Tribe lists 219 currently active cases, with 1,735 recovered cases, and 25 deaths. That is an increase of five deaths since Friday.

The area breakdown on the reservation includes Gilson Wash – 328 positive, 292 recovered, 28 active, eight deaths; Peridot – 658 positive, 573 recovered, 74 active, 11 deaths; 7-Mile – 390 positive, 353 recovered, 32 active, five deaths; Bylas – 484 positive, 416 recovered, 67 active, one death; other areas – 119 positive, 101 recovered, 18 active.   

Statewide

For the state, the Arizona Department of Health Services reported 1,880 new cases Sunday to bring the total to 259,264 for the state. It reported 17 new deaths to bring the total fatalities due, at least in part, to COVID-19 to and amended 6,164 in Arizona. The state has about 7.3 million residents and nearly two million tests have been taken.  

Reported positive cases in the various counties include Maricopa County with 166,850, Pima County – 30,419, Yuma County – 14,512, Pinal County – 12,805, Navajo County – 6,803, Coconino County – 5,846, Mohave County – 4,740, Apache County – 4,127, Yavapai County – 3,284, Santa Cruz County – 3,130, Cochise County – 2,384, Gila County – 2,168, Graham County – 1,434, La Paz County – 646, Greenlee County – 116.