The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Officials slash COVID-19 death total by 201

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HARRISBURG » The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health slashed the state’s COVID-19 death toll on Thursday by 201, saying probable deaths it had previously included in the count were eliminated after further investigat­ion.

The overall death toll now stands at 1,421, down from 1,622 reported a day earlier.

The number of deaths confirmed by a positive virus test actually rose overnight by 69, to 1,394. But Health Secretary Rachel Levine said Thursday that 270 probable deaths that had been added to the death toll in recent days have been removed after further investigat­ion.

“This verificati­on process is very intensive and under normal

circumstan­ces it can take months to complete,” she said. “We continue to refine the data that we are collecting to provide everyone this informatio­n in as near time as we possibly can. This is really difficult with thousands of reports each day.”

State health officials had recently changed the way they count COVID-19 deaths — now including probable deaths along with confirmed deaths — which resulted in a doubling of the state’s death toll in just four days. A probable death is one in which a coroner or medical examiner listed COVID-19 as the cause or contributi­ng cause, but the deceased was not tested for the virus.

Officials have said they are trying to reconcile data provided by hospitals, health care systems, county and municipal health department­s and long-term care living facilities with the department’s own records. Some county coroners have accused the state Department

of Health of botching the numbers.

Statewide, more than 1,369 additional people tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19, bringing the statewide total to more than 37,000, the health department reported Thursday.

Other coronaviru­s-related developmen­ts in Pennsylvan­ia:

CONTACT TRACING

Levine said a state plan to do contact tracing to limit the impact of COVID-19 infection is in the works and will rely partly on volunteers.

She said much of the work will be done by public health nurses, along with county and municipal health department­s, hospitals and health systems.

Levine said it will also use volunteers.

Contact tracing, which identifies the people that COVID-19 patients have been in contact with, locates those who may be infected so they can be tested and isolated.

Levine did not say when the plan will be released, but a Department of Health spokesman said the agency is starting that

work in areas where stayat-home orders may be lifted first.

The department is still trying to determine exactly how many people will be needed, the spokesman said.

But, he said, with 1,200 new cases per day in Pennsylvan­ia, it would take 7,200 hours each day to conduct contact tracing if each case involves 10 people who were potentiall­y exposed. That would take 600 workers dedicated to contact tracing, he said.

Pennsylvan­ia’s stateowned liquor stores have processed about 25,000 curbside orders since that program began on Monday, for sales totaling about $2.3 million, the agency said.

The Pennsylvan­ia Liquor Control Board said Thursday that its online

order system also continues to expand its reach, from about 4,000 orders a day last week to more than 33,000 daily since Saturday, with five-day sales of more than $3 million.

More than 100 of the agency’s nearly 600 stores are currently filling online orders for delivery as well as curbside orders by appointmen­t.

The online ordering system has been able to meet just a fraction of the public demand in Pennsylvan­ia, where the stores retail nearly all hard liquor and much of the wine. Before the COVID-19 shutdown, the liquor stores handled about 180,000 transactio­ns a day.

 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A person wearing a protective face mask as a precaution against the coronaviru­s walks past a shuttered business in Philadelph­ia, Thursday, April 23.
MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A person wearing a protective face mask as a precaution against the coronaviru­s walks past a shuttered business in Philadelph­ia, Thursday, April 23.

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