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What you need to know now about the coronavirus: New method of diagnosing illness

A spike in new cases and deaths stems from casting net wider so fewer cases are missed. Stay up to date on the outbreak from novel coronavirus and what Canadians need to know.

Spike in new cases, deaths stems from casting net wider so fewer cases are missed

Residents wearing masks wait at a traffic light in Beijing on Thursday. A spike in reported cases of the novel coronavirus does not represent a heightened emergency, but rather a change in reporting and diagnosis, the World Health Organization says. (Ng Han Guan/The Associated Press)

The latest:

  • Death toll reaches1,367, up 254 from the previous day.
  • Apparent spike in cases and death toll relates to new method of diagnosis for COVID-19.
  • China has worked through backlog of cases from earlier in the outbreak, some now clinically confirmed positive.
  • China now has59,805 laboratory and clinically confirmed cases, up15,152.
  • Diamond Princess cruise ship docked in Yokohama, Japan, is largest cluster outside of China.
  • 12 Canadians who were aboardhave the illness.
  • No additional countries are reporting cases.

A new method of diagnosing the illness caused by novel coronavirusis allowing front-line medical workers in China to get patientsinto care more quickly andpublic health departments to then track down people who may have come into contact with the virus.

At a World Health Organization newsconference Thursday, Dr. Mike Ryan,executive director ofWHO's emergency program, explained an apparent spike in deaths and new cases reported by Chinese authorities.

China now has 59,805 confirmed cases, up 15,152 from Wednesday, and the number of deaths increased by 254 to reach 1,367.

The increase comes after many suspect cases from Hubei province that had been backlogged werereclassified using patients' chest images, rather than waiting for laboratory confirmation, said Ryan.

So, the increase is largely due to a change in how cases are being diagnosedand reported,he said.

A mother and toddler wear masks and plastic rain coats in an attempt to protect from exposure to the novel coronavirus at the Shanghai railway station on Thursday. (Aly Song/Reuters)

"Crucially, we understand that most of these cases relate to a period going back over days and weeks and are retrospectively reported as cases, sometimes back to the beginning of the outbreak itself," he said.

"We've seen this spike in the number of cases reported in China, but this does not represent a significant change in the trajectory of the outbreak."

The number of countries reporting cases of the illness has held steady at 24.

Higher numbers may contain some good news

Medical expertssay the higher numberslikely reflect a more accurate picture of the illness.

Dr. Mike Tildesley, an associate professor at the University of Warwick in the U.K. who studies zoonoticdiseases those that spread from animals to humans said many of these new cases werepreviously defined as "probable" cases.

"Given this change in classification, it is unsurprising that we have seen an increase in confirmed cases, but this does not necessarily mean that we are seeing an increase in the rate of infection," he said in a written statement.

"What it does mean is that we may now have a more accurate measure of the true extent of the outbreak, which in the longer term will improve our ability to predict how the virus may spread in the future."

Indeed, cases are not rising dramatically outside China apart from among passengers on a cruise liner now quarantined off the Japanese port of Yokohama,said Ryan.

12 Canadians test positive on cruise ship

A further 44 cases were reported on the vessel Thursday, raising the total to 219. Authorities said some elderly people would finally to be allowed to disembark on Friday.

Foreign Affairs MinisterFranois-Philippe Champagnesaid12 Canadians who were aboard the ship have contracted COVID-19.

A gray-haired man in a suit speaks and gestures with his hand.
Foreign Affairs Minister Franois-Philippe Champagne says 12 Canadians aboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship have contracted the virus. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

They've sincebeen moved to Japanese health facilities, and at least three require hospitalization, he said.

Champagne said emergency response teams and consular officials are in Japan to make sure Canadians are receiving the help they need.

"We know that there are some people who need medications on board, they want to have contact with their families, we're facilitating that," Champagne said at a briefing in Senegal, where he is on a diplomatic trip.

Passengers of the Diamond Princess cruise ship continue to be quarantined at Daikoku Pier Cruise Terminal in Yokohama, south of Tokyo. (Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters)

As for Canadians still in the centre of the viral outbreak, Champagne said all the 400 or so Canadians who wished to leave Hubei, the Chinese province that includes the city of Wuhan, have been repatriated and are quarantined in southern Ontario, at Canadian Forces Base Trenton.

The last flight chartered by the Canadian government to evacuate people from Wuhan, which landed at CFB Trenton on Tuesday, was the last the government plans to send to the region. Those Canadians who chose to stay behind in Hubei have been provided with consular services, Champagne said.

Death toll steady around 2%

Mark Fielder, a professor ofmedical microbiology atLondon'sKingston University, said the new clinically confirmed cases are now added to those previously identified only throughnucleic acid-based lab tests.

"I am reassured that despite the rise in numbers, the death rate still stands at around twoper cent," said Fielder.

"As it stands, I think the data and the situation remain one that we need to have global eyes fixed upon.We should be concerned and take it seriously, but not worry."

With files from Reuters and The Canadian Press