New York governor reveals 12,000 more COVID-19 deaths than previously
counted
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[August 26, 2021]
By Anurag Maan and Barbara Goldberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York Governor
Kathy Hochul revealed 12,000 more people died of COVID-19 than was
reported under her disgraced predecessor, making good on her promise for
greater transparency on just her second day leading the state.
The state is now reporting a total of 55,400 people died in New York
from coronavirus, based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Hochul said in a statement .
That's an increase of 12,000 over the 43,400 reported by Andrew
Cuomo as of his last day in office before resigning in disgrace amid a
sexual harassment scandal.
"We're using CDC numbers, which will be consistent. And so there's no
opportunity for us to mask those numbers," Hochul told National Public
Radio on Wednesday.
Even with the additional 12,000 deaths, it does not change how New York
state ranks nationally. New York still has the third highest total
number of COVID deaths in the country, behind California and Texas. And
New York still ranks second for deaths per capita, behind New Jersey,
according to a Reuters tally.
Hochul is a Democrat who assumed the top job on Tuesday after serving as
Cuomo's lieutenant governor.
The number reported by Cuomo was incomplete because it focused only on
confirmed COVID-19 deaths and it excluded those who died at their own
homes and other places.
The revised count is based on death certificate data submitted to the
CDC, which includes any confirmed or suspected COVID-19 deaths in any
location in New York, Hochul said in the statement.
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New York City Fire Department (FDNY) Ambulances are parked at the
emergency entrance of St. John's Episcopal Hospital, during the
outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in the Far Rockaway
section of Queens in New York City, U.S., May 20, 2020.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
"These are presumed and confirmed deaths. People
should know both," Hochul told NPR.
The revelation came on Hochul's second day on the job as governor,
the first woman to hold New York's top office. After being sworn in
on Tuesday, Hochul made a point of promising the public greater
transparency to ensure that New Yorkers "believe in their government
again."
Immediately shining a spotlight on the numbers the Cuomo
administration chose to report, Hochul became only the latest
official to raise questions about whether he was massaging data to
improve his image during the pandemic that once gripped New York as
the U.S. epicenter.
According to a New York attorney general's report released in
January, Cuomo was criticized for undercounting coronavirus deaths
in nursing homes by as much as 50%.
In February, Cuomo acknowledged that his office should not have
withheld data on COVID-19 nursing home deaths from state lawmakers,
the public and press but fell short of apologizing.
(Reporting by Anurag Maan in Bengaluru and Barbara Goldberg in New
York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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