The
central city where the outbreak emerged late last year added 1,290
more fatalities to the 2,579 previously counted as of Thursday,
reflecting incorrect reporting, delays and omissions, according to a
local government task force in charge of controlling the coronavirus.
Reflecting the additional deaths in Wuhan, China revised its
national death toll later on Friday up to 4,632.
The revision follows widespread speculation that Wuhan's death toll
was significantly higher than reported.
Rumours of more victims were fuelled for weeks by pictures of long
queues of family members waiting to collect ashes of cremated
relatives and reports of thousands of urns stacked at a funeral home
waiting to be filled.
"In the early stage, due to limited hospital capacity and the
shortage of medical staff, a few medical institutions failed to
connect with local disease control and prevention systems in a
timely manner, which resulted in delayed reporting of confirmed
cases and some failures to count patients accurately," state media
cited an unidentified Wuhan official as saying.
Suspicion that China has not been transparent about the outbreak has
risen in recent days as death tolls mount in many countries,
including the United States, with President Donald Trump on
Wednesday expressing scepticism about China's previously declared
death figure of about 3,000.
"Do you really believe those numbers in this vast country called
China, and that they have a certain number of cases and a certain
number of deaths; does anybody really believe that?” he said.
'RESPONSIBILITY TO HISTORY'
Foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said on Friday that while
there might have been data collection flaws earlier during the
outbreak, China has "a responsibility to history, to the people and
to the deceased" to ensure numbers are accurate.
"Medical workers at some facilities might have been preoccupied with
saving lives and there existed delayed reporting, underreporting or
misreporting, but there has never been any cover-up and we do not
allow cover-ups," he said.
Wuhan's total number of cases was revised up by 325, suggesting that
some of the new deaths had been recorded as cases but not confirmed
as fatalities, taking the total number of cases in the city of 11
million people to 50,333, or about 60% of mainland China's total.
The topic "Wuhan revises its death toll" was one of the most read on
China's Weibo microblogging platform, which is heavily moderated.
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Many commentators praised the government for admitting its mistakes and
correcting them, although some still questioned the numbers and one urged other
provinces to reassess their data.
Doctors and government officials in Wuhan have been repeatedly questioned about
the accuracy of the death toll by journalists on government-arranged trips.
CHAOTIC EARLY DAYS
Some of those officials acknowledged that people may have died without being
counted in the chaotic early days of the outbreak, before testing was widely
available.
"There couldn't have been many because that was a very short period," Wang
Xinghuan, head of one of two field hospitals built for the outbreak, told
reporters in Wuhan on April 12. He stressed that he was not speaking for the
government.
It is not unusual in epidemics for case and fatality numbers to be revised after
authorities carry out retrospective re-testing or reclassify the cause of
infection or death.
The Spanish region of Catalonia on Wednesday announced an additional 3,242
coronavirus deaths since the start of the pandemic, nearly doubling its previous
tally, citing a change in methodology to include data from funerary services on
suspected and confirmed COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes and private homes.
Before the revised Wuhan numbers were released, China said it had recorded 26
new cases of the coronavirus on Thursday, down from 46 cases a day earlier,
according to the National Health Commission.
It brought the total number of cases in mainland China to 82,367.
Of the new cases, 15 were imported infections, the lowest since March 17. The
remaining 11 confirmed cases were locally transmitted, down from 12 a day
earlier. The number of new asymptomatic cases increased to 66 from 64 a day
earlier.
China does not include patients with no clinical symptoms such as a cough or a
fever in its tally of confirmed cases.
No new deaths were reported.
(GRAPHIC: Coronavirus: knowns and unknowns -
https://graphics.reuters.com/
HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-UNKNOWNS/0100B5M447T/index.html)
(GRAPHIC: World-focused tracker with country-by-country interactive -
https://graphics.reuters.com/
HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/COUNTRIES/
oakveqlyvrd/index.html?id=united-kingdom)
(Reporting by Yawen Chen and Brenda Goh; Additional reporting by Ryan Woo,
Catherine Cadell, Stella Qiu, Lusha Zhang, Se Young Lee, Tom Daly and the
Shanghai newsroom, and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva; Writing by Engen Tham and
David Stanway; Editing by Tony Munroe, Robert Birsel, Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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