Ohio slows down coronavirus death reporting: Capitol Letter
Updated Mar 03, 2021;
Posted Mar 03, 2021
Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center personnel administer a dose of the Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccine to Barbara Schmalenberger Tuesday March 2 at the Schottenstein Center in Columbus. OSU was among the first to give the J&J shots in the U.S. after the federal government provided emergency use authorization for them on Saturday. (Logan Wallace/The Ohio State University)The Ohio State University/Logan Wallace
Facebook Share
Rotunda Rumblings
ODH opts for slower death reporting: The Ohio Department of Health has given up reporting coronavirus deaths as quickly as possible. Beginning Tuesday, it is now opting for a new system that will delay reporting of some deaths by up to months, but should prove to be more accurate, Rich Exner reports. ODH will now depend solely on CDC case confirmations after death certificates are received, rather than earlier reports from hospitals and local health districts. This change follows the department’s discovery last month that more than 4,000 deaths had gone unreported.