Health & Fitness
Tucson Coronavirus Update: 283 New Cases, 19 New Deaths
Arizona's number of new coronavirus cases is dropping but the number of deaths is at its peak, as of Thursday.
TUCSON, AZ — Arizona’s number of new coronavirus cases is dropping but the number of deaths is at its peak, as of Thursday. The Arizona Department of Health Services said 172 additional known COVID-19 deaths — the most in a single day — and 2,525 new cases on Thursday.
The state has now amassed 170,798 COVID-19 infections and 3,626 fatalities since the start of the pandemic.
Of the newly reported deaths, 78 are from the death certificate matching process, according to an ADHS tweet. The process allows public health officials to identify more COVID-19 deaths than case investigations alone would allow.
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Data update: Of the 172 #COVID19 deaths being reported today, 78 are from the death certificate matching process. You can help slow the spread of COVID-19, wear a face mask when out in public. #MaskUpAZ pic.twitter.com/kOKyRyT5kk
— AZ Dept of Health (@AZDHS) July 30, 2020
Pima County counted 283 new cases and 19 deaths Thursday, a decline from its peak in late June and early July. Hospitalizations with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 cases have also declined in recent weeks. On July 24, 39 people were admitted to Pima County hospitals with positive COVID-19 tests while 34 were discharged.
Many Arizona schools are set to start back this week as the pandemic continues to rage. Each school district in the state will need to open at least one school in-person starting Aug. 17, according to a joint announcement from Ducey and Superintendent Kathy Hoffman. Classes will be taught virtually until then.
Find out what's happening in Tucsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The Tucson Unified School District announced its intention Thursday to ask the state to delay in-person openings, according to the Arizona Daily Star.
In a Thursday afternoon press conference, Ducey announced that metrics for schools to use safely reopen for in-person classes will be released Aug. 7.
The governor also addressed the backlog of test results in the state; Arizona Department of Health Services Director Dr. Cara Christ said there are currently 29,000 backlogged tests. Calling out laboratory Sonora Quest, the governor said, "They need to step their game up."
Still, Ducey said Arizona is heading in the right direction and encouraged residents to "stay the course" with social distancing and mask-wearing. The number of ICU beds and ventilators is down across the state.
"Where we are today is dramatically different than where we were just a few weeks ago," he said.
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