The number of people who have died from the COVID-19 illness in France jumped by 61 percent to 6,507 over two days after data from nursing homes were included, and confirmed cases jumped by 44 percent to 82,165, the health ministry reported on Friday.
Medical staff wait for a patient, who infected with coronavirus, to be embarked onboard a medicalized TGV high speed train at the station in Strasbourg, France, April 3, 2020. /Reuters
The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in hospitals rose by 5,233, or nine percent, to 64,338 on Friday, health ministry director Jerome Salomon said at a daily briefing.
Salomon also reported a total of 17,827 confirmed or suspected cases in nursing homes, compared to 14,638 on Thursday, when the nursing home data were first reported.
Excluding the nursing home data, the number of people dying from COVID-19 in French hospitals also set a new daily record of 588, an increase of 13 percent to 5,091, health ministry data showed.
The ministry did not provide a breakdown for deaths per day in nursing homes, but said a provisional cumulative death tally since the start of the epidemic rose to 1,416 on Friday, an increase of 532 over the 884 first reported on Thursday.
Following criticism about French COVID-19 statistics not reflecting the dozens of people dying in senior citizens' residences or their own homes, the health ministry on Thursday provided the first data on deaths in nursing homes.
Elderly people living in close quarters in nursing homes are particularly vulnerable to the highly contagious virus.
The provisional nursing home tally while still incomplete accounts for more than a fifth of all French COVID-19 deaths.
One glimmer of hope came from another key metric. The number of patients in intensive care units (ICU) rose by 263 to 6,662, an increase of just four percent, as the growth in patients requiring ICU beds has come down from double-digit numbers in recent days.
But Salomon said it was too soon to call the peak of the epidemic.
"The number of people in ICU is not going down, even if the increase is slowing down, but we still need more beds and more teams to handle an ever-growing number of people," he said.