Coronavirus: confusion as Spanish death toll ‘frozen’

Thank you for your reading and interest in the news Coronavirus: confusion as Spanish death toll ‘frozen’ and now with details

Hind Al Soulia - Riyadh - Uncertainty has arisen around the true extent of Spain’s coronavirus outbreak after the country’s health ministry changed the way it tracks the death toll.

The virus has claimed more than 27,000 lives in Spain, but the numbers of deaths being reported have dropped off dramatically after the health authorities changed their method of recording new confirmed cases and fatalities.

Spain began reporting between 50 and 100 new deaths each day after May 25, but more recently the figure has fallen to five or fewer. On some days no deaths have been reported.

After reporting there had been no deaths for several days, Prime Minister Sanchez prompted a backlash from political rivals who have accused him of hiding the real number of fatalities.

The health ministry's emergencies co-ordinator, Fernando Simon, who for months has given a daily briefing on the pandemic's evolution, acknowledged the "astonishment" and "confusion" generated by the figures.

Much of Spain has entered into the second phase of its plan to exit the lockdown. EPA
Much of Spain has entered into the second phase of its plan to exit the lockdown. EPA

Mr Simon has said the new system was set up to facilitate rapid contact tracing for any new outbreak and that Spain’s regional health authorities must provide a detailed breakdown of cases, rather than lumping all figures together.

But last week he acknowledged that the overall number of deaths had remained "frozen" as a result of discrepancies in the figures, which he put down to delays in submitting data in certain regional areas.

Since June 7, Spain’s toll has been stuck at 27,136 while regional authorities "review the information on deaths... (until) they can give a precise death date which will give a clearer sequence," Mr Simon said.

But regional health chiefs have lashed out at the government for blaming them for the discrepancies in Covid-19 data, insisting they had submitted all the information required.

Jesus Aguirre, health minister of the southern Andalusia region which includes cities like Seville and Granada, criticised the central government’s "total lack of respect for the dead" in publishing lower figures than those submitted by the southern region itself.

The situation became even more chaotic this week after the National Statistics Institute (INE) and the Carlos III Health Institute published figures showing that Spain's death toll has been between 43,000 and 44,000 higher than it has been on average in recent years.

And this "excess mortality" has further inflamed the opposition who point to it as proof the government is playing down the death toll.

But the government in Madrid has rejected the claims, saying such figures include those who died of other causes or had coronavirus symptoms but never had a test.

_______________

A patient positive to Covid-19 rests in the quarantine area at the Somine Dolo Hospital in Mopti, Mali. AFP

Doctors check the temperature of a Covid19 patient, in Comas, northern outskirts of Lima, Peru. AFP

Municipal firefighters transfer a patient with symptoms related to coronavirus, at the Covid-19 unit of San Juan de Dios hospital in Guatemala City. AFP

Yoshiro Mori, President of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Organising Committee, attends an Executive Board Meeting in Tokyo, Japan. Kyodo via Reuters

Test takers have their body temperatures checked before entering the venue of an exam for public servants in the port city of Busan, south of Seoul, South Korea. EPA

Cemetery workers stand near relatives who attended to the burial of a man, who died of the coronavirus disease, at the Cementerio Jardin cemetery in Soyapango, El Salvador. Reuters

Funeral workers move the coffin of a woman, who died of the coronavirus disease, at the Municipal cemetery in Nezahualcoyotl, State of Mexico, Mexico. Reuters

Pole vaulter Karsten Dilla of Germany competes during a "Flight Night" event at a drive-in cinema due to the coronavirus pandemic orders in Duesseldorf, Germany. AP Photo

A worker cleans the ceiling of a deserted mosque before reopened after nearly three months of lockdown amid the coronavirus pandemic in Colombo, Sri Lanka. EPA

Lord Mayor of Gorlitz Octavian Ursu, center right, and Mayor of Zgorzelec, Poland, Rafal Gronicz, center left, together open the border fence on the Gorlitz Old Town Bridge in Gorlitz, Germany. dpa via AP

Peter Bosciglio cuts Joe Krywionek's hair at Peter's Barber shop as the provincial phase 2 reopening from the coronavirus disease restrictions begins outside of the Toronto area, in Cobourg, Ontario, Canada. Reuters

Karen Suchy, of Baldwin, cries next to her niece Reese Temme as she catches a glimpse of her mother, Betty Milinski, for the first time in person in three months during a parade to celebrate the start of outdoor visits due to the coronavirus, at Norbert Personal Care Home in the Overbrook area, in Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP

A Buddhist nun cleans wax figures of venerable monks displayed in a Buddhist temple outside Bangkok in Thailand. AFP

Airport police officers wearing protective masks check the documents of travellers at an entrance to Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang, Selangor, Malaysia. Bloomberg

Migrant workers from Bihar state, wearing masks as a precaution against the coronavirus, watch local youth play football as they wait for buses to catch home bound train in Kochi, southern Kerala state, India. AP Photo

A labourer wearing protective face mask fills air in a tyre at a workshop along a road, as the outbreak of the coronavirus disease continues, in Karachi, Pakistan. Reuters

The Gravity Vault Manager, Nick Bowden vacuums in preparation for possible re-opening in Hoboken, New Jersey, US. AFP

Caregivers serve soup in disposable dishes to avoid contamination at Sao Francisco de Assis shelter for the elderly in Sao Joao do Meriti, near Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Reuters

A woman passes by a graffiti depicting Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and a figure representing the novel coronavirus pulling a rope against health workers with the question "Which side of the rope are you on?" in Sao Paulo, Brazil. AFP

6e8a888430.jpg

Updated: June 13, 2020 09:12 PM

These were the details of the news Coronavirus: confusion as Spanish death toll ‘frozen’ for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new.

It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at The National and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.

PREV Japan town to block Mount Fuji view from badly behaved foreign tourists
NEXT Barrage of Russian attacks aims to cut Ukraine's lights