The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says its removal of tens of thousands of deaths it had attributed toย COVID-19ย happened because the agency was mistakenly counting deaths not related to COVID-19.
The CDC removed 72,277 deaths, including 416 among children, that were said to have been from COVID-19 from its data tracker webpage this week.
โCDC constantly reviews our COVID-19 data to ensure its accuracy,โ Jasmine Reed, a spokeswoman for the agency, told The Epoch Times in an email, adding that the adjustment was made โbecause CDCโs algorithm was accidentally counting deaths that were not COVID-19-related.โ
The CDC had not announced when the change was made. On its website, the agency described the update as a statement from the resolution of a โcoding logic error.โ
The Epoch Times has filed a Freedom of Information Act request for internal communications relating to the change, which included the removal of some 24 percent of pediatric deaths attributed to COVID-19.
Reed said the CDC often has incomplete data when figures are first reported to the agency from states.
โOur rigorous quality control measures help us identify when new information changes our understanding of data that has previously been reported,โ she wrote.
The data tracker now reports 782,371 deaths from COVID-19.
Thatโs different from a separate measure, compiled from death certificates and managed by the CDCโs National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
The NCHS currently lists 967,748 deaths where COVID-19 was listed as the underlying or contributing cause of death. However, its death count for those under 18 is actually lower than the data tracker figure.
โDeath data on the COVID data tracker are real-time and subject to change,โ Reed said. In contrast, the NCHS tracker โis the most complete source of death data, including COVID-19 deaths, as they have a robust and rigorous process for reviewing death certificates in determining the official cause of death.โ
Some of the pediatric deaths attributed to COVID-19, according to a search of the CDCโs Wonder system, include deaths where drowning or drug use was listed as the primary cause of death.
Byย Zachary Stieber