County’s COVID-19 death rate likely higher than reported

Graphics provided by Indiana State Department of Health

Reporter Publisher

Hamilton County health officials announced Monday that the county’s COVID-19 death rate could be nearly three times more than reported.

Chris Walker of the Hamilton County Health Department said in an interview with Hamilton County Communications Director Tammy Sander that probable COVID-19 deaths are not included in the confirmed deaths being reported. Probable COVID-19 deaths are physicians attributing COVID-19 to the cause of death, but not having an actual test done on the patient.  According to Walker, doctors can look at X-rays and CT scans of the patient and determine without a test that most likely COVID-19 was a cause of death.

On Tuesday, the Indiana State Department of Health reported 58 confirmed COVID-19 deaths in the county. In addition, the state reported 91 total COVID-19 probable deaths, bringing the county’s death count to a potential total of 149 people.

According to Walker, Indiana should be seeing the peak in COVID-19 this week. “Looking at the numbers quickly it looks like we might be hitting that.”

Walker also said the county is now working with municipalities to find the right way to get people back to work and open up the local economy.

“Be patient and understand this is a process,” Walker said. “The target is moving. We may open up business, we may open it up and find that we need to take a step back, reevaluate and reassess, and attack it again.”