Tenth Coronavirus Case Confirmed in Arizona
The latest is in Pima County.
The latest is in Pima County.
“We’re rationing the tests for the really sick people,” one doctor said.
Basic questions, unanswered.
A spokesperson for ICE said a letter had been sent to Congress informing them of the change.
The closures include popular sites in Arizona.
At least seven school districts in the Valley have closed schools indefinitely.
Other major utilities offered flexibility to customers affected by the pandemic.
The Democratic debate in Phoenix this Sunday won’t have a live audience or press room amid COVID-19 concerns, the network announced in an email Tuesday.
The change will go into effect Monday, March 23, when students return from their spring break.
The county will “be working directly with that health care provider to ensure there is appropriate cleaning put in place.”
One of the new cases is in Maricopa County, while the other two are in Pinal County.
These precautions don’t cover a nearby encampment of hundreds of people.
Officials have not forgotten what happened during the swine flu outbreak of 2009.
“Been thinking about life and mortality today. I’d rather die gloriously in battle than from a virus. In a way it doesn’t matter. But it kinda does.”
A sixth person has tested positive for the 2019 novel coronavirus in Arizona. The latest presumptive positive case is in Pima County.
A third person has been diagnosed with the 2019 novel coronavirus. The latest case involves a woman in her 40s. She is currently hospitalized.
Five Scottsdale first responders who transported and evaluated the second person to test positive for the virus are under isolation protocol.
The first case of the illness in Indian Country was confirmed earlier this week.
We went to 10 stores across metro Phoenix to see how coronavirus fears have affected their supply of hand sanitizer. All but two were completely sold out.
The case is a “presumptive positive,” meaning while it has tested positive by the public health lab, it is still pending confirmatory testing at CDC.
The ASU member “has received multiple negative tests from CDC and meets the criteria to be released from isolation,” public health officials said.
“It was clearly, clearly a misunderstanding.”