Verde Valley and Sedona COVID cases increasing4 min read

Jon Hecht/Larson Newspapers

After a spike in the early summer, the spread of the novel coronavirus in the Verde Valley was low for most of the late summer through early fall, dropping as low as just two new posi­tive tests in a week in early September.

However, recent trends indicate that the fallow period may be over, as numerous communities have started to see an increase in new cases.

In the week between Monday, Oct. 19, and Monday, Oct. 26, there were 70 new COVID-19 cases in the Verde Valley, the highest one-week increase since early August, though still below the highest rate of spread in June and July.

The biggest increase came in Cottonwood, which had 26 new cases in the previous week, bringing the city’s total since the beginning of the pandemic to 337.

Camp Verde had 18 new cases in the same time period, with a total of 124, Sedona had 11 new cases and a total of 124, and Rimrock had nine with a total of 62.

Other places in the Verde Valley have not seen the same spread yet, with Clarkdale and Cornville seeing just three new cases in the past week, bringing their totals to 74 and 43, and the Village of Oak Creek and “other” holding steady at 40 and two, respectively.

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“We have some concerning trends right now. We are seeing an uptick in the Verde Valley cases,” Yavapai County Community Health Services Director Leslie Horton said. Horton said her biggest concern is the discovery of coronavirus cases at three assisted living facilities in the county, including at least one at Sedona Winds in the Village of Oak Creek. “Those are probably our highest risk groups.”

While the number of cases in the area is increasing, the rate of hospitalizations has not yet spiked in the same way. As of Oct. 25, Verde Valley Medical Center had just five COVID-positive cases, far below the 23 that the hospital experienced at the height of the previous wave, but still above last week, when it had just one case. Hospital administrators say that the past few months of fighting the pandemic have left the medical staff more adept at fighting the virus, and they believe they can better deal with patients who do come in.

“We’ve gotten better at treating this,” Dr. Derek Feuquay, chief medical officer at Flagstaff Medical Center told reporters on a Northern Arizona press call. “Early on, ‘Don’t use steroids’ was one of the things that we were told, because that made it worse. What we’ve found as time goes on is that’s one of the most effective treat­ments that we have. We’ve also found Remdesivir to be effective and we treat patients with that …. We’re just getting better at it.”

Public health officials nevertheless warn that even if the virus is becoming less deadly due to improved treatment, it remains dangerous, especially when it reaches populations with other complicating factors, such as older people or people with compromised immune systems. Horton expressed concern that many people are passing the virus from generation to genera­tion within households and insisted that when a family member tests positive, all members of the household should quarantine in order to prevent the spread.

Registered Nurse Amy Evans administers a COVID-19 nasal swab test at a drive-thru testing site at Spectrum Healthcare in Cottonwood. After a drop in late summer, local cases are slightly increasing. Daulton Venglar/Larson Newspapers

“If a healthy 30-year-old with a low chance of dying contracts COVID, there’s a chance they’ll transmit it to someone with a higher chance of dying, like a 70- or 80-year-old,” VVMC Chief Medical Officer Leon Pontiffs said, while stressing as well that some younger and seemingly healthy patients have ended up seriously ill or dying from the virus as well. “It’s highly contagious.”

Horton warned people not to lower their guard in fighting the virus despite the long time that has been spent under precautions.

“We just want to make sure that as a community we place an emphasis on doing what we know works — not convening in large groups of people, being very careful with big groups of people, avoiding house parties,” Horton said. “I think we are seeing some increases, and to me it is concerning. There’s a lot on the line for meeting the metrics that the state has placed for schools and businesses reopening. We want them to remain open.”

Jon Hecht

Jon is born and bred in the northeast but moved from New York City to Cottonwood in search of beautiful scenery and the small town life. He hikes a lot, and can usually be found sitting in the corner of school board and city council meetings, taking notes. He used to cover national politics for Bustle but likes covering small town politics more. Tell him whatever is going on in your neighborhood because he’ll probably be interested.

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Jon is born and bred in the northeast but moved from New York City to Cottonwood in search of beautiful scenery and the small town life. He hikes a lot, and can usually be found sitting in the corner of school board and city council meetings, taking notes. He used to cover national politics for Bustle but likes covering small town politics more. Tell him whatever is going on in your neighborhood because he’ll probably be interested.