Kerala to Add 7k COVID Deaths to Official List Amid Allegations of Undercounting

These are deaths that have not been documented and added to the official death list, the health minister said.

The News Minute
COVID-19
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<div class="paragraphs"><p>The Kerala government on Friday decided to include 7,000 more victims of the pandemic in its official death list.</p></div>
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The Kerala government on Friday decided to include 7,000 more victims of the pandemic in its official death list.

(Photo: Wasim Sarvar/IANS)

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Amid protests by the opposition alleging under-reporting of COVID deaths in Kerala, the state government on Friday decided to include 7,000 more victims of the pandemic in its official death list.

State Health Minister Veena George said 7,000 more deaths, which occurred before the hospitals started uploading the data of such deaths online, will be added to the COVID death list in the state.

The hospitals started uploading the COVID-19 deaths online in June this year.

These are deaths that had not been documented and added to the official death list so far, she told reporters.

When the matter came up in the Assembly today, the minister rejected the opposition charge that a large number of families of COVID victims in the state were being denied the compensation ordered by the Supreme Court and said no deserving family would be excluded from receiving the promised financial aid in the southern state.

Veena George said Kerala was the first in the country to set up COVID Death Assessment Committees as per the revised guidelines of the Centre and expedited proceedings to provide COVID death certificates to the family members of the victims hassle-free.

Kerala has previously come under criticism many times for excluding deaths of people who had co-morbidities from its tallies, despite COVID-19 being the main reason behind their death, and also for leaving out deaths of people who tested COVID-19 negative at the time of death.

A new information portal was also developed to help family members of those not included in the list of pandemic fatalities to register their names online, she said, while replying to a notice seeking an adjournment motion by the opposition Congress-led UDF members.

Those who are facing any difficulty in applying via the digital way can register at their nearest primary health centre also, she said.

"The concerns of the registered families will be resolved within the next 30 days," Veena George said.
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The death of any person within 30 days of his admission as COVID patient at the hospital would be considered as COVID death, she said, adding that an order had already been issued to allot Rs 50,000 as financial aid to the close relatives of such people from the state distress relief fund.

"The state government has acted very swiftly to implement the directives as per the Centre's new guideline. We are moving ahead with a clear, concrete and time-bound plan to ensure the assistance to all applicants," the minister said.

The LDF government has a strong policy that compensation should not be denied to any deserving family, the minister added.

However, opposition leader V D Satheesan alleged that the southern state was facing a dire situation that tens of thousands of COVID victims were being denied the deserved financial assistance.

The government was reluctant to release the death toll before June 16, he said, adding that it also violated the ICMR guideline that deaths of people, suffering from deadly diseases like cancer and who died due to coronavirus infection, should be considered as COVID death.

(Published in an arrangement with The News Minute.)

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