Toronto’s most productive physician didn’t have much to say about coVID-19 knowledge published through Toronto Public Health.
At a news conference Monday, Dr. Eileen de Villa declined to answer direct questions about how and why knowledge of undeclared cases since the beginning of the year was included in the figures for new infections late last week. , instead of describing the procedure that led to the correction of the mistakes of months ago.
“This is the quality assurance effort that continues at all times in the context of an epidemic,” he said, calling the resolution “responsible. “
Shortly after Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott tweeted on Friday the 732 new COVID-19s expected to break the record on October 2, she included a note describing “in the spring or summer it is reported today. “
Elliott tweeted that 323 of the instances were from Toronto, and the Toronto Sun reported Friday that the total included 73 in past un reportered instances.
At friday and Monday press meetings, however, Villa reported only 311 new cases in the city by October 2 and did not mention past instances of his comments.
On Friday, de Villa asked his provincial counterpart, Dr. David Williams, to ban meals at Toronto’s restaurants, which presented Friday’s “record” figures.
It seems that neither the province nor the people corrected the exaggerated figures.
Daily case counts are archived on the city’s COVID-19 news site, and your past instance charts have been exceeded for more than a week.
The province’s new daily case chart still shows 732 new instances for Friday and does not mention all 73 in past un reportered instances.
This is the first time disorders have arisen with city data.
In May, the Sun asked de Villa about chronic data posted online through Toronto Public Health.
At the end of the month, the firm reviewed poor knowledge about the city’s hardest-hit communities, attributing it to a “TechnicalArray”