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Delayed death reporting prompts review of COVID-19 fatalities by surgeon general

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ORLANDO, Fla. – The Florida Department of Health now plans to conduct a review of all coronavirus fatalities after 95 deaths were reported to the state Wednesday, including 16 that happened more than a month ago and others that tested positive for the virus but died months later.Health officials normally report the state’s COVID-19 data daily around 11 a.m.

in the form of several reports and a dashboard that shows new deaths, cases and hospitalizations along with overall testing numbers.

On Wednesday, however, hours went by after 11 a.m. with no update, prompting concern from the public about transparency and potential changes in reported COVID-19 information to the public.[TRENDING: Vote for Trump or else | Woman on Delta flight punches.

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Bill Blair - Three Red Cross nurses extend stay in Manitoba to help with COVID outbreaks - globalnews.ca - county Centre
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Three Red Cross nurses extend stay in Manitoba to help with COVID outbreaks
COVID-19 outbreaks in the province.In a tweet Tuesday, federal emergency preparedness minister Bill Blair said the province had requested assistance, and that Canadian Red Cross personnel have been deployed to help Manitoba deal with the pandemic.Our health care system is still feeling the strain of COVID-19. In response to a Request for Federal Assistance from @MBGov, @redcrosscan personnel will deploy to help manage COVID-19 outbreaks in the province.— Bill Blair (@BillBlair) March 1, 2022 Manitoba asks feds to send ICU nurses amid worsening COVID-19 health care crisis According to a spokesperson from the province, that help comes in the form of three Red Cross nurses currently working out of Health Sciences Centre in Winnipeg, who will continue to do so until mid-March.“This is simply a request for continued support of human health resources (nurses) to augment Manitoba’s COVID-19 response,” the spokesperson said.“While Manitoba’s COVID-19 case counts and hospitalization numbers continue to trend downwards, Manitoba’s ICU and acute care centres continue to be a few weeks behind those trends.“We appreciate the assistance from the federal government as we continue to add capacity in our health system to ensure Manitobans get the care they need, for COVID and other medical matters.”Red Cross spokesperson Jason Small said this is a continuation of support for Manitoba that began in late December.“We have had up to eight nurses working in support of the response,” he said.“At the moment, we have the three who have been extended for an additional two weeks.
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