Ottawa Citizen

Italy death rate slows, but true tally higher

Lockdown extended as caution prevails

- GAVIN JONES AND GIUSEPPE FONTE

ROME • Italy’s daily death toll from coronaviru­s on Wednesday was the lowest for six days, authoritie­s said, but the overall number of new infections grew and the government extended a national lockdown until at least the middle of April.

The Civil Protection Agency said 727 people had died over the last 24 hours, down from 837 the day before, bringing total fatalities from the world’s deadliest outbreak of the viral pandemic to 13,155.

Italy accounts for around 30 per cent of all global deaths from the highly infectious respirator­y illness, and two new studies suggested its true death toll could be significan­tly higher.

New cases rose by almost 4,800 on Wednesday, a sharper spike than in the previous two days, bringing total infections since the outbreak came to light on Feb. 21 to more than 110,500.

A national lockdown in place since March 9 was due to expire on Friday, but Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced the restrictio­ns would remain in place until at least April 13.

“If we stopped respecting the rules, if we decided to relax these rules, all the sacrifices would be in vain,” he told a news conference late on Wednesday.

He added the government would start softening the measures only with the approval of its scientific advisers, without setting an exact date.

In the wealthy northern region of Lombardy, the epicentre of the outbreak, the daily tally of new infections jumped 50 per cent compared with the day before, reversing a recent downtrend.

The daily death toll in the region also grew, and a study suggested the number of fatalities is far higher than officially registered.

In the hardest-hit area around the city of Bergamo, some 4,500 people died of coronaviru­s in March, according to data analysis firm InTwig, while only 2,060 were included in the data provided by the Civil Protection Agency.

Most of the elderly victims died in their homes or in old age residences and, because they never made it to hospital, were never tested for the virus, according to the study based on data from doctors and overseen by a professor at Bergamo University.

Separate data from national statistics office ISTAT showed deaths in the north of Italy doubled in the first three weeks of March compared with the average during the same period between 2015 and 2019, reflecting the onset of coronaviru­s.

In Bergamo, fatalities more than quadrupled, while they increased between two- and three-fold in several other Lombardy cities.

In some small towns at the heart of the outbreak they were up ten-fold this year compared with 2019.

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