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Peru probes whether 27,253 coronavirus deaths uncounted

Published:Friday | July 31, 2020 | 12:06 PM
Funeral workers lift a coffin containing a body to be taken to the crematorium at El Angel cemetery in the section dedicated to COVID-19 victims in Lima, Peru, Thursday, July 23, 2020. All the other coffins also hold bodies to be cremated. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

LIMA, Peru (AP) — Peruvian authorities and the Pan American Health Organization are investigating whether the country failed to count 27,253 deaths caused by the novel coronavirus, a figure that could more than double the country’s official death toll from COVID-19.

Peru already has one of the world’s highest tolls from the disease. If a large number of the suspected cases are confirmed, Peru’s death toll could surpass those of larger countries such as Spain, France and Italy.

Health Minister Pilar Mazzetti announced Thursday night that thousands of death certificates list COVID-19 as one of several causes of death, but they were not included in the country’s official toll because the victims did not undergo a coronavirus test before dying.

She said that Peru had only listed 19,021 victims as dying from COVID-19 because international standards required both a death certificate listing coronavirus and a positive test for the disease in order for a death to be included in official statistics.

She described the new review as part of an ongoing process of updating and verifying the country’s death statistics, but analysts said it appeared the government was responding to increasing public scepticism of the country’s figures on the disease.

Many Latin American countries are grappling with alleged undercounts of their coronavirus death tolls, but Peru’s more than 27,000 possibly uncounted deaths appears to be one of the highest.

The nation of some 32 million people confirmed its first case of coronavirus on March 19 and conducted very little coronavirus testing in the first few months of the epidemic.

It was the first country to impose a near-total quarantine requiring citizens to remain at home, but many were unable to comply because of poverty and dependence on informal jobs that required them to work illicitly during months of quarantine.

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